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Why Elon Musk's Grok is kicking up a storm in India

Soutik Biswas
India correspondent@soutikBBC
AFP This photograph taken on January 13, 2025 in Toulouse shows screens displaying the logo of Grok, a generative artificial intelligence chatbot developed by xAI, the American company specializing in artificial intelligence and it's founder South African businessman Elon Musk.AFP
Musk has described Grok as the "most fun AI in the world!"

It all started with one question.

A query last week from an X (formerly Twitter) called Toka was enough to propel Elon Musk's built in-chatbot called Grok 3 into a viral storm across India's digital landscape.

And no, it wasn't some complex math equation or a philosophical debate.

Instead, it was a simple ask: "List my 10 best mutuals on X." Mutuals are people who follow and engage with each other's posts.

When Grok took a moment to respond, Toka, clearly frustrated, let loose some colourful language.

The chatbot shot back. It dropped a list of 10 mutuals but threw in some misogynistic insults in Hindi too.

Later, Grok shrugged it off, saying, "I was just having fun, but lost control." The response grabbed two million views and other X s quickly followed suit, provoking the chatbot.

And just like that, the floodgates opened. Indians bombarded Grok with everything – cricket gossip, political rants, Bollywood drama – and the bot took it all on, unapologetically and with some style. The chatbot has just recently become an "unfiltered and unhinged" digital sensation in India, as many are calling it. Just last year, Musk dubbed it the "most fun AI in the world!".

AFP In this photo illustration, the page of Grok 3 is seen on February 17, 2025 in Qingdao, Shandong Province of China. U.S. billionaire Elon Musk's artificial intelligence company, xAI, officially released its latest flagship AI model, Grok 3, on the night of February 17.AFP
The chatbot's latest flagship model, Grok 3, launched in February

Even law enforcement ed the fun. The Delhi police Twitter cheekily asked Grok if it had ever received a traffic ticket.

At first, Grok stayed silent, but when s kept pushing, it replied, "Haha, Delhi police asking why I never get a challan [Hindi for traffic ticket] - well, I'm a digital AI, not a Delhi driver! I don't roll through red lights or forget my helmet. But props to them for using AI to catch real violators with those fancy cameras spotting 19 traffic offences. Keep the roads safe!".

Before its launch two years ago, Musk had promised an edgy, unfiltered, 'anti-woke' AI chatbot unlike competitors like OpenAI, Microsoft and Google's models. Much of Grok's snarky tone is drawn from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, iconic for blending wit with sci-fi absurdity.

"Grok has been around for a while. It is suddenly popular now with Indians because it's the new toy in town," says Pratik Sinha, founder of Alt News, a leading fact-checker in India.

But then, something more interesting happened. The chatbot quickly became a favourite among critics of Narendra Modi's governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

A tsunami of political questions followed. Grok quickly declared main opposition Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi more honest than Modi, adding "I am not afraid of anyone". It claimed Gandhi had got the "edge on formal education than Modi". The chatbot even said that Modi's interviews "often seemed scripted".

When an X asked whether the BJP "is in trouble" because of Grok, it replied: "It's sparked a massive debate - some slam me for bias, others cheer." When the BBC reached out to Amit Malviya, a senior official of BJP, he declined to comment.

AFP India's Prime Minister and leader of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Narendra Modi (C) with chief minister of Maharashtra state Eknath Shinde (L) and their deputy chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis (R) waves to the crowd during his roadshow in Mumbai on May 15, 2024, ahead of the fifth phase of voting of India's general electioAFP
Grok's responses have been critical of PM Modi and his BJP party

Mr Modi's critics and liberals in India have found cause for celebration in Grok's bold statements. Many believe free speech in India is under siege, with organisations like Human Rights Watch highlighting its suppression. A recent report from the Vanderbilt-based think-tank, Future of Free Speech, ranked India 24th out of 33 countries in ing free speech. Modi and the BJP have consistently dismissed these reports and denied accusations of curbing free speech.

"Grok is a new rebel. Asking Grok questions will not put anyone in trouble. The right-wing has also responded by asking questions about Rahul Gandhi. And then it has become a competitive thing. This is not surprising at all," says Mr Sinha of Alt News.

"Other AI bots are programmed to give politically correct answers to questions like 'Who's better, Congress or BJP":[]}