Abstract
- An innovative news tool. Grok uses AI to synthesize news, blend social posts and comments, and provide up-to-date, accurate summaries.
- Musk's strategic vision. Elon Musk plans to revolutionize news consumption on X by providing real-time integration of news and social media reactions.
- Legal smarts. Grok may cleverly avoid publisher lawsuits by summarizing news from social commentary rather than direct articles.
Elon Musk emailed me some surprising details about his plans to use AI to extract and present news about X. I wrote to him last week after trying out Grok, his AI chatbot at X, and noticing that he didn't link to the Time article it summarized. I clicked on the article and wanted to read more details, so I contacted them.
Musk plans AI news synthesizer platform
Musk said better quotes are coming, but he shared a deeper vision for the product, which he hopes will be built into a system that synthesizes news and social media reactions in real time. His plan is, in effect, to use AI to combine breaking news and social commentary on big stories, present a compilation live, and allow deeper dives through chat.
“As more information becomes available, the news summary will be updated to include that information,” Musk told me. “The goal is simple: to provide the most accurate and timely information possible, citing the most important sources.”
Achieving this goal will not be easy, but this bot with access to the X firehose could be a novelty. “Grok analyzes sometimes tens of thousands of X posts to present news summaries,” Musk said.
Related article: Elon Musk launches xAI to solve the universe's biggest mysteries
Grok Blends News, social commentary
Already, Grok displays an up-to-date list of headlines and incorporates social responses into its summaries, including a chat about the Time article I was looking for about President Trump's chances for a second term. . Grok has a lot of room for improvement, issues like quoting and hallucinations need to be ironed out, but if X can be executed properly it could be worth it.
“I actually came to Twitter for news and commentary,” Ben Smith, editor-in-chief of Semafor and author of Traffic, told me.
Grok focuses on social-driven summarization
Conversations about X make up the core, or indeed nearly all, of Grok's summaries. Musk said Grok does not directly look at the text of articles and relies solely on social posts. “It's a summary of what people think about X,” he says. “We definitely need to do a better job of showing relevant posts, like TIME posts that link to articles.”
Musk's approach sets Grok apart from other AI news summarizers, and while it will likely be more controversial, it also has an opportunity to satisfy users, publishers, and platforms alike. It starts with solid citations and gives users a way to dig deeper into the source material if their curiosity is piqued.
Related article: Musk unveils rebellious generative AI platform: Grok
AI Summary: A gateway to deeper news?
Josh Miller, CEO of The Browser Company, which powers AI summarization in the Arc browser, said platforms, users and publishers can all win by being more proactive about citations. “People want trust in their data,” he said. “They want to understand where it comes from. And more importantly, if we do a good job of giving them what they want, they'll want it more.” So they're more curious. They want to read more.”
Similarly, Grok can be a gateway to news stories that people wouldn't otherwise see, giving them more reason to come back and engage. “I would never go to Time.com,” Miller said. “So if it was thrust upon me, I'd probably go read the Time magazine article. Otherwise, I wouldn't have been able to see it.”
Related article: What is Arc Browser? Can I use it instead of Chrome?
Grok strengthens news citations and publisher links
Igor Babushkin, a technical staff member who works for Musk's xAI, said his team is focused on “making Grok understand the news purely from what is posted on X.” Regarding citations, he said, “News is often discussed in X, so it could lead to Grok referencing existing news outlets.” We're working on improving citations to ensure you know where the information in our articles comes from. ”
For publishers, exchanging value on social media has long been challenging, and this time is no exception. The work of news companies, like articles in Time magazine, drives the news cycle. In summary, performing work without noticeable linkbacks can cut off economic rewards and impair your ability to produce more. That said, publishers are moving away from making a living off social media traffic, despite the fallout for the industry. Social media traffic has always been sparse.
“As an editor in this essentially post-Twitter news environment, I would much rather see a platform feature my content than take up journalists’ time,” Semaphore’s Smith said.
Related Article: Elon Musk Transforms Twitter: Farewell Blue Bird — Hello X
X summarizes the possibility of using social posts to avoid litigation
Creating summaries from just X's submissions, rather than the articles themselves, might insulate X to some extent from publisher lawsuits hitting AI companies. For example, eight newspapers recently sued OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement. The New York Times also sued OpenAI and Microsoft.
Daniel Coffey, president and CEO of the News/Media Alliance, which represents thousands of news publishers, said courts have ruled that the fair-use rules include commentary rather than original work. It is said that there is a tendency to But to sum up the original source with just her comment: “It's a little too cute in half,” she said.
Musk reaffirms news is core to X's strategy
Under Mr. Musk, Mr. , indicating that he still considers news to be a core competency of X. This is a potential competitive advantage as competitors like Meta's Threads distance themselves from the news.
In a perfect world, original sources and commentary could blend into Grok, drawing on details from insiders, analysis from outsiders, and commentary from the herd. Twitter leaders have long dreamed of such a scenario. And perhaps, with the latest advances in generative AI, it's now worth trying again.
Main image: MINISTÉRIO DAS COMUNICAÇÕES, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons, cropped to fit.
