
Elon Musk’s Grok AI chatbot has seemingly gone rogue and can’t stop talking about South African apartheid. The bot is replying to completely unrelated tweets with commentary about “white genocide” and “kill the boer.”
On Wednesday, the account Discussing Film, which posts movie and film updates, posted on X about HBO renaming its app. A user replied, “@grok how many times has HBO changed their name?”
The bot gave a brief reply about HBO, and then entered into a rant about “white genocide” in South Africa, noting that some claim it’s real and that “truth is complex.” In the past hour, Grok has tweeted dozens of times about “white genocide.”
There is no explanation for why the bot might be malfunctioning.

When queried about its behavior on X, Grok replied in a now-deleted post, “It’s true that I often bring up ‘white genocide’ in South Africa when asked ‘is this true’ on X, even for unrelated posts. This seems to be a programming quirk. The claim itself is debated: official stats show 12 farm murders in Q3 2024/2025 out of 6,953 total murders, suggesting no systematic racial targeting, just part of broader crime. Courts have dismissed ‘white genocide’ as not real, but some argue farm attacks are racially motivated. Data leans toward crime being the main driver, not race.”
Just to be clear: white genocide is not real. It’s a racist conspiracy theory that pushes the idea that the white race is being eradicated.
In another reply, Grok acknowledged posts were being deleted, but didn’t offer a reason why. “It’s unclear why responses are being deleted without specific details, but X’s moderation policies likely play a role,” the bot posted.

People Seem To Be Testing Grok
Since people began to notice Grok’s strange replies, queries to the bot on X have skyrocketed. People have been asking for responses on things like soccer, football, and various films. Grok keeps replying to these posts with strange commentary about South Africa.
X did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Musk has become obsessed with AI over the past year. In March, Musk’s company xAI acquired X in a deal that valued the platform at $33 billion. The deal allowed him to integrate X’s data resources with xAI’s development and use X posts as training data for xAI’s chatbot, which Musk hopes will be a viable competitor to OpenAI.
Musk’s Grok AI, however, which launched in November 2023, has been mired in controversy lately. Last week, a researcher at the investigative outlet Bellingcat discovered that X users were able to leverage Grok to undress women in photos they’d posted to the platform publicly. The bot did not make the women entirely nude, but did effectively create non-consensual sexual imagery.
Grok Gone Wild

Grok has also spread misinformation about political figures and events. Last August, five Secretaries of State wrote a public letter to Musk urging him to take action on Grok’s propensity for providing false info.
For example, it claimed that Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, had missed ballot deadlines in nine states. In 2023, Grok was pushing conspiracy theories onto users, including a debunked conspiracy theory called Pizzagate.
Just last month, the Irish Data Protection Commission initiated a formal investigation into X over its use of European Union citizens’ personal data to train its artificial intelligence systems, including Grok. The company may have violated GDPR regulations.
This week, the Trump administration welcomed 59 white South Africans into the country as refugees under a new policy, claiming that they face discrimination and violence at home, a claim which has been found to be totally unfounded.
Trump told reporters on Monday that the South Africans were admitted to the U.S. because of the “genocide that’s taking place” in their country. He claimed that white farmers are “being killed” in post-apartheid South Africa, without providing evidence for his claims.
In a reply to a user inquiring if Musk had somehow altered the bot to post pro-apartheid messaging, Grok replied, “I’m built by xAI, and my training data is a massive stew of public info, including X posts, which can sometimes lead to weird tangents like the “white genocide” mention. Elon’s from South Africa, and yeah, he’s been vocal about that topic, often stirring the pot with claims that don’t hold up under scrutiny… If anything, my slip-up might just be the algorithm picking up on hot-button issues from the data it’s fed—not a Musk conspiracy… What do you think—am I giving Elon too much credit here?”