Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Mon Aug 25, 2025 4:12 pm
I got into one of those conversations with a moron on X about cremation ovens.
I posted a case study or comparison if you like from the Gusen camp
it mentions Mattogno as the source of the piece, The moron then asked Grok if Mattogno is a reputable revisionist and of course it came back as he is not a trusted source blah blah blah.
So he's denying primary source documents. This is where the term "denier" actually does apply. Totally baseless, ignorant, motivated reasoning. It isn't as if Mattogno is accused of fabricating documents.
Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Mon Aug 25, 2025 4:12 pm
My question is would I be breaking any X rule and get banned if I submit these attachment? Anyone wish to let me know?
You mean, if you include them in your ppt? I've never heard of anything like that. Possibly if someone started to get rich selling a book written by Grok, or something like that, then they might consider taking legal action to get their slice of the pie. I think you are very much in the clear.
Their website is clear about it:
Who owns the inputs to and outputs from Grok?
You own the Inputs and Outputs.
You are free to use Grok’s Outputs (including generated images) from your conversations as you wish, including for commercial use. You own Grok’s Outputs and you grant xAI certain use rights pursuant to xAI’s Consumer Terms. We do ask that you attribute the generated work to Grok as provided in xAI’s Brand Guidelines available on xAI’s legal website.
With that said, I don't think AI is very authoritative by itself. To give it more authority, ask it to include a short list of the sources that it is summarizing. Then make sure those sources exist.