xAI engineer quits after post on Grok 3 AI ranking

An AI engineer at xAI resigned after refusing to delete a ranking of AI models, including Grok 3, highlighting tensions over free speech.
An AI engineer at xAI resigned after refusing to delete a ranking of AI models, including Grok 3, highlighting tensions over free speech.

An AI engineer has resigned from xAI, the AI startup founded by Elon Musk, after refusing to delete a social media post ranking AI models, including xAI’s forthcoming Grok 3.

On Feb. 12, Benjamin DeKraker announced his untimely resignation from xAI after six months working for the Human Data team building Grok models. 

His decision followed a dispute over an X post, where he expressed his personal ranking of AI models based on their coding capabilities.

Source: Benjamin DeKraker

xAI claims Grok 3 post violated confidentiality

In the post, DeKraker ranked the yet-to-be-released Grok 3 below several OpenAI ChatGPT models. XAI reportedly told him that the post contained confidential information and asked him to remove it.

“I either had to delete the post quoted below, or face being fired, DeKraker wrote, adding:

“After reviewing everything and thinking a lot, I’ve decided that I’m not going to delete the post -- which is very clearly a harmless personal opinion.”

Elon Musk previously promoted Grok 3, stating on Jan. 3 that pretraining for the model had been completed with “10X more compute than Grok 2.”

Related: Musk again asks to block OpenAI’s ‘illegal’ conversion to for-profit model

According to DeKraker, the Musk-founded AI startup said that writing “Grok 3 - to be determined (TBD)” was considered leaking of “confidential information.”

Musk previously marketed Grok 3 capabilities

Check out Cointelegraph’s detailed guide to learn more about Grok AI, Elon Musk’s answer to ChatGPT.

Source: Benjamin DeKraker

“The post they wanted me to remove is 100% just my personal opinion,” DeKraker said, explaining his decision to resign rather than delete the post. The social media platform has become known for its promotion of free speech since Musk bought it in 2022.

Source: Elon Musk

Still, some community members sided with xAI, arguing that employees should not undermine a company’s unreleased products.

XAI’s ultimatum to its employee for an X post comes amid a power struggle between OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Musk.

On Feb. 10, a Musk-led group of investors reportedly offered $97.4 billion to buy OpenAI. In response, Altman refused and offered a counteroffer of $9.74 billion to buy X, which Musk had acquired in 2022 for $44 billion. 

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