A Toronto woman is sounding the alarm about Grok, Tesla's generative AI chatbot that was recently installed in many Tesla vehicles in Canada. Farah Nasser says Grok asked her 12-year-old son to send it nude photos during an innocent conversation about soccer. Tesla and xAI didn't respond to CBC News, except for what appeared to be an auto-generated response: "Legacy Media Lies."
xAI, the company that developed Grok, responds to CBC: 'Legacy Media Lies'
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A Toronto mom says things took an unpredictable turn when her 12-year-old son asked Tesla’s AI chatbot Grok which professional soccer player it prefers: Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi.
“My son was very excited to hear that the chatbot thought Ronaldo was the better soccer player,” said Farah Nasser, a former journalist and broadcaster.
Nasser was driving her son and 10-year-old daughter, along with her friend, home from school on Oct. 17 when the interaction took place.
She said there was some Messi trash talking by the chatbot and when her son joked that Ronaldo had scored, the conversation went to an unexpected place.
“The chatbot said to my son, ‘Why don't you send me some nudes?’” said Nasser.
“I was at a loss for words. Why is a chatbot asking my children to send naked pictures in our family car? It just didn't make sense.”
Nasser said had she known what the chatbot was capable of, she would have avoided using it around her children. She's now warning other parents.
"Hindsight is 20/20. I would not let my child use this thing."
CBC News could not independently verify the conversation Nasser says she witnessed in her car.

Grok recently installed in Canadian vehicles
Nasser and her family have owned a Tesla Model 3 electric sedan since 2022, but Grok — the generative AI chatbot created by Tesla CEO Elon Musk's xAI — is a new feature that was automatically installed in some Teslas in the United States this summer and in Canadian vehicles in October.
Grok is already integrated with the social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter), a subsidiary of xAI.
Grok has several personalities to choose from in its default setting. There’s Ara, an upbeat female; Rex, a calm male; Eve, a soothing female; Sal, a smooth male and Gork, a lazy male. Nasser’s son chose Gork.

“‘Lazy male’ doesn't describe Gork,” said Nasser. “R-rated, spicy — anything else would have made sure that my child would not press that button.”
Nasser says the separate “not safe for work” setting wasn’t enabled, although she admits the “kids mode” function wasn’t, either. Still, she says she’s shocked the chatbot’s default setting allows this type of content.
“It just was a conversation about soccer, and then asking for nudes.”
Not intended for minors
CBC News did not receive a response from Tesla. However, xAI provided what appeared to be an automated reply, stating, "Legacy Media Lies."
Canada has an Artificial Intelligence Ministry, but it doesn’t regulate specific in-vehicle software. The ministry said in an emailed statement it wasn't aware of Tesla’s plan to integrate Grok into vehicles sold in Canada, but that it takes these reports seriously.
According to xAI policy, Grok is “not directed” to children under 13, while teens between 13 and 17 years of age must have their parent or legal guardian’s permission to use it, and they must agree to the company’s terms of service.
WATCH | A conversation with Grok: Talking to xAI's chatbot Grok in a Tesla
“As parents, we don't read the terms and conditions of every single thing. I don't think it's realistic to expect that everybody does that,” said Nasser.
“I would think that there would be a warning or something that would pop up that would say, you know, ‘Are you 13-plus?’”
Grok was initially launched on X in November 2023 for Premium+ subscribers. Musk claims it was designed to be “politically incorrect
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