You have to marvel at just how incompetent Elon Musk really is, and how much wealth can be tied to “valuations” of worthless stock.
…Grok answered 94% of queries incorrectly. […] “If the sources are not trustworthy and qualitative, the answers will most likely be of the same kind,” [deputy director of the Italian fact-checking project Pagella Politica and fact checking coordinator at the European Digital Media Observatory] Canetta explained. He said that he regularly comes across responses which are “incomplete, not precise, misleading or even false.”
In the case of xAI and Grok, whose owner, Elon Musk, is a fierce supporter of US President Donald Trump, there is a clear danger that the “diet” could be politically controlled, he added.
Propaganda is defined by a grain of truth being exploded into lies. The question is actually whether 6% accuracy is the correct formula for Elon Musk to expand his fraud, or will he demand Grok accuracy be reduced further for efficiency.
Notably, he has said every year since at least 2016 that his cars can drive themselves, which has never been true. He also has said since 2016 he will land on Mars in a couple years. Never been true either. Hyperloop? Lies. Boring? Lies. Without fraud, there would be no Tesla at all.
Source: DW. A user of Musk’s Swastika asked Grok about HBO and was hit with lies about “white genocide” in South AfricaA South African Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) member in 2010 (left) and a South African-born member of MAGA in the U.S. on 20 January 2025 (right). Source: The Guardian. Photograph: AFP via Getty Images, Reuters
There’s a good case to be made that life preservers on a public beach could be attached to a delivery drone as a standard procedure now.
Smith noticed several emergency life preservers placed along the beach. Acting quickly, he grabbed one and used his drone to fly it out over the water. His first attempt missed the girl, but on the second try, he was able to lower the preserver within her reach.
The story says the drone operator just wants to go back to killing sharks, but really he should start a company focused on saving humans. Imagine boats having emergency drones too, including breathing apparatus.
Tiffany Slaton, a hiker who survived blinding whiteness of the High Sierra winter for three weeks after a dangerous avalanche fall, speaks during a press conference, Friday, May 16, 2025 in Fresno, Calif. (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)
Soon into her trek, Slaton recounted falling off a cliff and getting knocked unconscious. When she came to, she had to pop her knee back in and make a splint for her leg. Slaton said she couldn’t make it back to the road, blocked by the avalanche she determined she had been in, and attempts to call 911 failed. Her phone, however, could route her to Starbucks, the nearest one being 18 miles away.
“You can’t get me 911, you can’t get me GPS, but you can get me a Starbucks?” Slaton said. “… In doing so, I ended up on this very long, arduous journey that I journaled to try and keep sane.”
That’s an algorithm for you. Some clever programmer wrote her results to skew towards consumption patterns, regardless of inputs, probably because of ad revenue bias.
Sounds like 911 needs to start offering Starbucks in the ambulance, maybe put some Chipotle in there too, just so the American capitalist “what’s in it for me” system will bother to make its emergency services available.
When you dial, maybe it could offer “press 1 for a hot cup of fresh coffee, press 2 for a lovely burrito, press 3 for pancakes… and, if you are still there after 9 wonderful opportunities to buy something special for you or those around you, press 0 to state your emergency.”
Just think of those revenue possibilities from people desperate for help. See how being a Big Tech engineer works? No ethics required, unlike any other engineering field in the world.
The avalanche area she mentions is very familiar to me from my own time in those Sierras, above Huntington lake (where at least one crashed WWII B-24H Liberator has been preserved under icy waters). Mono Hot Springs (abandoned settlement) indeed is a very remote area, although tiny roads snake upwards towards… the odd empty cabin.
Slaton somehow made it past the hot springs on her own. She went farther northeast, up to Kaiser Peak at an elevation of more than 9,000 feet, and left her bike buried in the snow at a trailhead, according to the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office. Then, a blizzard hit the area.
“I only saw white upon white in that storm,” Slaton said. As she approached the cabin where she would be found, she saw a “pristine Christmas tree and a tiny house and it had markers like Santa’s sleigh, and I could not understand. I actually thought I was losing my mind at that point, that I had somehow managed to make it to the North Pole.”
Slaton was ultimately found the next morning about 40 miles, or a two-hour drive, farther east than where she was last seen at Shaver Lake.
The cabin owner said it took him a day just to hack his way in through the whiteness. When he opened the door did she say “how ice to see you”?
She had only been in the cabin about eight hours of her three week ordeal, so it’s notable that she glowingly credits the hut with her entire outdoor survival. I’m sure it felt that way, while she knows it isn’t true. Such clever modesty is duly noted, and most people will miss the point entirely: she used hope of a cabin as a step, a small mental tactic to maintain focus, not actually relegating responsibility.
But seriously this woman should be training people on survival. This is such a better story than almost all the others we are trained on. Her 3 Weeks over 40 miles wearing a splint, through 13 Blizzards, is an amazing inspiration to anyone whose job is to survive extremes.
She’s a trained forager and permaculturist, and leeks are both bountiful in the Sierra and nutritious. So nutritious that her bloodwork was in remarkable shape at the hospital, she said during a press conference on Friday. Her eyes, however, took some damage from an extended time in the blinding white snow, requiring sunglasses in the aftermath.
The important power of leeks. The danger of blinding whiteness. The latter is definitely is not to be underestimated. Both have a familiar ring to anyone working in national security.
I always find it interesting when Americans tell me they don’t know the history of the real Wonder Woman (Nieves Fernandez) who inspired the comic book superhero. I see some parallels here.
Also find it interesting how blizzards and deserts never made the English security phrases “white list” or “white box” a negative connotation. I’ve survived the most extreme conditions in both and I always reflect on blinding whiteness being highly undesirable if not deadly. Whiteness seems like death, in many cultural representations. Yet in tech we frequently hear about black list and black box as unfavored, rather than the more naturally preferred, state of being. Perhaps her story, far more grounded as a hiker than the usual remote summit story, also will help readjust security language and perceptions of danger from whiteness.
Unlike sudden “veered” Tesla crashes in the news multiple times a week, this Cybertruck case had a survivor.
The survivor’s father says he knows sudden steering failure was the cause of the crash.
This confirms the Tesla 2026 model problem, recently reported in an owner group forum, that steering suddenly fails. So the father is not stating something unknown or unusual, rather describing the real world outcome of a known defect.
We may be getting closer to documenting exactly how and why Tesla has been killing so many people so quickly, at a rate unlike any other car. Every single one of its dozens or even hundreds of “veered” crash deaths will now need to explained in context of a primary control failure.
a blog about the poetry of information security, since 1995