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[return to "X offices raided in France as UK opens fresh investigation into Grok"]
1. verdve+Kv1[view] [source] 2026-02-03 18:15:48
>>vikave+(OP)
France24 article on this: https://www.france24.com/en/france/20260203-paris-prosecutor...

lol, they summoned Elon for a hearing on 420

"Summons for voluntary interviews on April 20, 2026, in Paris have been sent to Mr. Elon Musk and Ms. Linda Yaccarino, in their capacity as de facto and de jure managers of the X platform at the time of the events,

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2. why_at+HZ1[view] [source] 2026-02-03 20:18:01
>>verdve+Kv1
>The Paris prosecutor's office said it launched the investigation after being contacted by a lawmaker alleging that biased algorithms in X were likely to have distorted the operation of an automated data processing system.

I'm not at all familiar with French law, and I don't have any sympathy for Elon Musk or X. That said, is this a crime?

Distorted the operation how? By making their chatbot more likely to say stupid conspiracies or something? Is that even against the law?

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3. int_19+kk2[view] [source] 2026-02-03 22:01:43
>>why_at+HZ1
Holocaust denial is illegal in France, for one, and Grok did exactly that on several occasions.
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4. vinter+fY3[view] [source] 2026-02-04 10:56:30
>>int_19+kk2
Is "it" even a thing which can be guilty of that?

The way chatbots actually work, I wonder if we shouldn't treat the things they say more or less as words in a book of fiction. Writing a character in your novel who is a plain parody of David Irving probably isn't a crime even in France. Unless the goal of the book as such was to deny the holocaust.

As I see it, Grok can't be guilty. Either the people who made it/set its system prompt are guilty, if they wanted it to deny the holocaust. If not, they're at worst guilty of making a particularly unhinged fiction machine (as opposed to the more restrained fiction machines of Google, Anthropic etc.)

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