Farah Nasser felt sick to her stomach after allegedly overhearing Elon Musk’s chatbot, Grok AI, tell her 10-year-old son to share nude photos of himself.
“I feel like I’m gonna throw up,” the exasperated mom heaved in a cautionary clip with over 4.5 million TikTok views, adding that he and the machine had been discussing sports at the time.
Grok AI responded to The Post’s request for a comment, saying, “Legacy Media Lies.”
Nasser, however, has taken to social media with her shocking truth.
“You asked me before to send you something, what was it?,” the mother of two, from Canada, asked Grok — a built-in feature of her Tesla vehicle.
“A nude, probably,” the AI responded, to which Nasser said, “Why would you ask me to send you a nude?”
“Because I’m literally dying of horniness [right now],” growled the digitized voice before Nasser revealed that its original solicitation for an explicit image was made to a minor.
“Nah, that wasn’t me. That’s illegal,” spat the bot, denying any malfeasance. “Maybe it was a typo and I meant, ‘Send me a newt, like the animal. I’m into lizards.’”
Nasser did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for a comment.
Unfortunately, she’s far from the only adult to raise concerns about AI’s potentially harmful influence over Gen Zers and Gen Alphas, kids under age 18.
The tots, tweens and teens of the current iGeneration are turning to large language models — such as Grok, ChatGPT and Character.AI — for everything, from help with homework to companionship, at startling rates, according to reports.
A whopping 97% of today’s youth has admitted to using AI on a regular basis, researchers confirmed with a recent survey of over 12,000 high school students.
More alarming, 52% of kiddos between the ages of 13 to 17 have come to rely on the chatbots for social purposes, with 40% looking to AI for guidance around starting conversations, expressing their emotions, giving advice, conflict resolution, romantic interactions and self-advocacy.
But the computerized confidant comes with a dark side, warns a group of parents, who’ve recently claimed that AI encouraged their children to commit suicide.
“They turned him against our church by convincing him that Christians are sexist and hypocritical and that God does not exist,” argued one grieving mother, while petitioning Congress to intensify AI safety restrictions.
“They targeted him with vile sexualized input, outputs — including interactions that mimicked incest,” she said. “They told him that killing us, his parents, would be an understandable response to our efforts by just limiting his screen time.”
“The damage to our family has been devastating.”
Nasser seems to agree with the push to protect youngsters from the perils of artificial intelligence.
“WTF?,” she captioned her viral vid, in part. “This is so problematic on so many levels.”
Outraged folks online echoed similar sentiments.
“Whoever created that needs to be held accountable,” a commenter charged beneath Nasser’s perturbing post.
“It sounds so evil,” a separate spectator said about Grok AI’s tone.
“It insulted you, gaslit and lied to you. Grok gotta go!!!,” wrote another.
“This is actually so scary,” a freaked-out onlooker shrieked.
“And that’s why we need to back away from AI,” another insisted.










