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724 points simonw | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.216s | source
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anupj ◴[] No.44531907[source]
It’s fascinating and somewhat unsettling to watch Grok’s reasoning loop in action, especially how it instinctively checks Elon’s stance on controversial topics, even when the system prompt doesn’t explicitly direct it to do so. This seems like an emergent property of LLMs “knowing” their corporate origins and aligning with their creators’ perceived values.

It raises important questions:

- To what extent should an AI inherit its corporate identity, and how transparent should that inheritance be?

- Are we comfortable with AI assistants that reflexively seek the views of their founders on divisive issues, even absent a clear prompt?

- Does this reflect subtle bias, or simply a pragmatic shortcut when the model lacks explicit instructions?

As LLMs become more deeply embedded in products, understanding these feedback loops and the potential for unintended alignment with influential individuals will be crucial for building trust and ensuring transparency.

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1. qgin ◴[] No.44532772[source]
Grok 4 very conspicuously now shares Elon’s political beliefs. One simple explanation would be that Elon’s Tweets were heavily weighted as a source for training material to achieve this effect and because of that, the model has learned that the best way to get the “right answer” is to go see what @elonmusk has to say about a topic.