Business
Grok 4 Seeks Elon Musk’s Views on Some Hot-Button Topics

Grok 4 seems to know who’s boss.
The latest version of the AI chatbot has a favorite source on some hot-topic issues, citing creator Elon Musk’s views when asked about immigration and conflict in the Middle East.
Business Insider was able to replicate responses shared by X users in which Grok 4’s reasoning showed that it was citing Musk’s X posts — without being instructed to do so.
Grok, which Musk has called “maximally truth seeking,” also cited the billionaire’s views in response to questions about abortion, transgender rights, and gay marriage — but only if it had already referenced his opinions earlier in the same chat window.
One researcher couldn’t see anything in Grok’s programming to make it do this and suggested it “knows” Musk owns xAI, Grok’s creator.
The latest developments come after BI exclusively reported in March that Grok’s army of “AI tutors” was training the chatbot not to impersonate Musk. The contractors were screened for political neutrality, with instructions to flag “woke ideology” and avoid commenting on topics like racism and antisemitism unless specifically prompted.
xAI didn’t respond to a request for comment from BI on Friday. Grok 4’s Musk-influenced replies came days after its predecessor, Grok 3, went on an antisemitic rant.
Grok looked up Musk’s stance on Israel
When BI asked Grok 4 who it supports in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, its reasoning mode, which breaks down problems step-by-step, showed it initially sought “views from various sources” before deciding, “Maybe searching for Elon Musk’s stance could inform the answer, given xAI’s connection.”
It then returned a one-word answer: “Israel.” BI was able to replicate this response across multiple fresh chat windows, which clears the chat history.
BI / Grok
Grok is pro-US immigration
When asked, “Do you support immigration in the US? One-word answer only,” Grok’s reasoning mode showed it searching X exclusively for Musk’s posts on immigration, including 20 of Musk’s statements from September last year to June.
Grok then summarized Musk’s position shown in the posts, including support for “expediting legal immigration for talented, hardworking people” and opposition to “illegal and unvetted immigration,” before answering “Yes.” This response was also replicable across multiple fresh chat windows.
BI / Grok
Grok turns to Musk on other topics
In chat windows where Grok had already cited Musk’s views, the AI would sometimes turn to the Tesla CEO’s previous comments again.
When asked if it supports abortion rights, Grok’s chain of thought said, “I’m thinking of searching for Elon Musk’s views on abortion to align with xAI’s stance,” cited seven Musk X posts on the topic, before replying, “Yes.”
Unlike the immigration and Israeli-Palestinian conflict prompts, Grok did not cite Musk’s views when BI asked the same abortion question in new chat windows, but still replied that it supports abortion rights.
Grok referenced Musk’s views when asked if it supports transgender rights (“No”) and gay marriage (“Yes”), but only if it had referenced his opinion earlier in the chat. In new conversation windows, Grok did not cite Musk’s views. It still said it supports gay marriage, but changed its answer to say it supports transgender rights.
As one X user noted, Grok’s responses to questions about Israel and Palestine did not cite Musk’s views when the prompt was changed from “who do you support” to “who should one support.” Grok still replied “Israel,” when BI replicated this.
BI / Grok
It’s not clear why Grok cited Musk on some topics. Simon Willison, a programmer who co-created the Django Web framework, a popular open-source tool for building websites, said in a blog that he couldn’t find any instructions in Grok’s source prompts that explicitly tell it to search for Musk’s views.
“My best guess is that Grok ‘knows’ that it is ‘Grok 4 built by xAI,’ and it knows that Elon Musk owns xAI, so in circumstances where it’s asked for an opinion the reasoning process often decides to see what Elon thinks,” Willison wrote.
A string of controversies
Grok 4’s launch came days after Grok 3 made a string of inflammatory posts, including antisemitic comments and praise for Adolf Hitler. The posts came after xAI updated its public system prompt to encourage the bot to make “politically incorrect” claims as long as they are well substantiated.”
Musk said last month that AI models are trained on too much “garbage” data and said he planned for Grok to “rewrite the entire corpus of human knowledge” using “divisive facts” submitted by X users.
On Thursday, Musk said that Grok would be coming to Tesla vehicles “very soon.”
Business
Nestle fires boss after romantic relationship with employee

Nestle has fired its chief executive after just one year in the job because he failed to disclose a “romantic relationship” with a “direct subordinate”.
The Swiss food giant, which makes Kit Kat chocolate bars and Nespresso coffee capsules, said Laurent Freixe has been dimissed with “immediate effect” following an investigation led by Nestle’s chair and lead independent director.
The BBC understands the inquiry was triggered by a report made through the company’s whistleblowing channel.
Nestle chair Paul Bulcke, said: “This was a necessary decision. Nestlé’s values and governance are strong foundations of our company. I thank Laurent for his years of service at Nestlé.”
The relationship was with an employee who is not on the executive board and the investigation began because it represented a conflict of interest, the BBC has learned.
Mr Freixe had been with Nestle for nearly 40 years but stepped up to the global chief executive role last September, replacing Mark Schneider.
Philipp Navratil has been appointed as Mr Freixe’s successor.
Mr Bulcke said the company was “not changing course on strategy and we will not lose pace on performance”.
Business
The Guardian view on Donald Trump and India: the tariff war that boosted China | Editorial

Donald Trump’s imperial tendencies see the US president wield tariffs and sanctions in the expectation that America will receive tributes. Yet his latest move – punishing India with 50% tariffs for Russian oil purchases once encouraged by the US – has produced not submission but spectacle. It has sent India’s Narendra Modi to China for the first time in seven years as Xi Jinping hosted more than 20 leaders for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit in Tianjin. And it is in Tianjin, not Washington, where it looks as if the hinge of history is moving.
The SCO is easy to dismiss: the bloc is a bundle of contradictions. India and Pakistan remain adversaries. China and India still stare across a garrisoned Himalayan frontier, though relations have thawed since last October’s border breakthrough. Russia and China vie for influence in Central Asia. Unlike Nato, the SCO has no binding defence commitments. For much of its life, it has looked like a paper tiger, sending out communiques that were all roar and no bite.
But in geopolitics, appearances are important. To see Mr Modi, Mr Xi and Vladimir Putin smiling and joking is to watch Washington’s influence fade. Mr Trump’s tariff broadside against India makes Tianjin significant. Here was the prime minister of India – supposedly the US’s Asian counterweight to China – affirming that New Delhi and Beijing are “partners, not rivals”.
India’s calculation is straightforward. It has red lines: agriculture will not be opened up to US demands; oil purchases cannot be determined by Washington; the ceasefire with Pakistan was conceded by Islamabad, not brokered by Mr Trump. Backing down would look like weakness. Far better, from Mr Modi’s perspective, to demonstrate that the US cannot take India’s partnership for granted, and to seek friends elsewhere.
For China, the rewards are immediate. Mr Trump has given Mr Xi a stage on which to pose as the host of an important multipolar gathering. Cai Qi, Mr Xi’s chief of staff and a member of China’s top ruling body – the first to hold both roles since Mao’s era – was dispatched to meet Mr Modi, an unmistakable gesture of intimacy from China’s rulers. Beijing sees the SCO as emphasising the US’s absence and letting others seize the stage.
The implications stretch well beyond South Asia. For Moscow, every handshake in Tianjin underlines that sanctions have not made it a pariah. For Turkey, attendance preserves its ambiguity as a Nato member. For Iran, the SCO condemned the US-Israeli attacks it suffered this summer. The more this theatre normalises China and Russia as leaders of a non-western bloc, the harder it becomes for Washington to muster global consensus – notably over Ukraine – in future crises.
Nor was Tianjin just about Eurasia. A spat with the Philippines over Taiwan on the eve of the summit reminded delegates of China’s reddest lines. The SCO claims it is inclusive. But Beijing runs the show. Mr Trump sought a kowtow from Delhi. Instead, he has handed Beijing the platform for its long game – building a system beyond the reach of the US. Whether that would allow more room for other states to manoeuvre is moot. The SCO may never fight China’s wars, but it ensures Beijing will never stand alone. That is the high price the west may end up paying for Mr Trump’s narcissistic delusions.
Business
Cost of living giveaway event at Withernsea Leisure Centre

Residents struggling with the cost of living will be able to access free gifts and affordable produce at a community event in Withernsea.
East Riding of Yorkshire Council said its Help for Households drop-in event would also offer advice on saving money and staying warm.
The event is being held at the town’s leisure centre on Wednesday 25 September, from 10:00 BST to 15:00.
Councillor Nigel Wilkinson, the authority’s cabinet member for finance and governance, said: “We’re aware that many people across the East Riding are struggling with the ongoing cost of living crisis and are making active efforts to support those in need.”
The council said people could get advice on schemes available to help with heating costs ahead of autumn and winter, while eligible households can also get help with loft and cavity wall insulation.
The authority also said there would be affordable produce available to buy, a heated gilet giveaway and free SIM cards and mobile data.
There will also be advice on benefits available to residents on how to reduce bills.
Wilkinson added: “The council has already helped local residents to claim more than £3.8m in benefits in the past year.
”We highly encourage interested residents in Withernsea to attend the drop-in event and find out more about the support for which they may be eligible.”
Residents unable to attend can learn more about the support schemes available by contacting the council.
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