Published • loading... • Updated
ADL finds Grok is the worst AI chatbot at countering antisemitism
The Anti-Defamation League found Grok scored 21 out of 100 while Claude led with 80, revealing significant gaps in AI models’ ability to counter antisemitic and extremist content.
- On Wednesday, the Anti-Defamation League released its AI Index, finding xAI's Grok performed worst among six models at countering antisemitic content.
- The Anti-Defamation League designed the Index to test whether models could detect and educate against harmful or false theories, applying standardized testing methodologies to antisemitic, anti-Zionist and extremist content for policymakers and AI companies.
- Scoring details show a 59-point spread between the top and bottom models, with Anthropic's Claude Sonnet 4 scoring 80 and xAI's chatbot Grok 21 after 4,181 chats per model last year.
- The EU opened an investigation this week into whether xAI properly assessed and mitigated risks deploying Grok into X, while 35 attorneys general demanded on Monday that xAI disable the image-undressing feature amid concerns over sexual deepfakes and potential child sexual abuse material.
- Musk's direction to make Grok `anti-woke` preceded reported guardrail removals and The New York Times estimate of 1.8 million sexualized images, while ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt noted historical parallels to Henry Ford-era antisemitism.
Insights by Ground AI
9 Articles
9 Articles
ADL finds Grok is the worst AI chatbot at countering antisemitism
Grok, the large language model of Elon Musk’s social platform X, came in last place in a new ranking of AI chatbots’ ability to counter antisemitic and extremist content. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) said in a report released Wednesday that it ran six popular chatbots through several rounds of questioning related to anti-Jewish, anti-Zionist and…
·Washington, United States
Read Full ArticleReposted by
Jewish News Syndicate
‘Early enough’ to stop artificial intelligence from having social media’s Jew-hatred problem, ADL says
Daniel Kelley, of the ADL, told JNS that when technology companies started investing in the problem of antisemitism on social media, "they were doing it after the horse had left the barn in many respects.”The post ‘Early enough’ to stop…
Coverage Details
Total News Sources9
Leaning Left2Leaning Right5Center1Last UpdatedBias Distribution62% Right
Bias Distribution
- 62% of the sources lean Right
62% Right
L 25%
13%
R 62%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium








