X, previously known as Twitter, has adopted Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok to enhance a new feature within the app’s Explore section. As per an announcement and screenshots shared by the X Engineering team, Premium subscribers of X will now have access to personalized summaries of trending stories within the app’s For You tab in Explore. These summaries will offer a concise overview of posts related to each trending story, providing an efficient way for users to stay updated with relevant content.
The For You page showcases the news and stories being shared across Xโs platform that are popular within your network, along with other suggested items. Itโs among the first stops for X users who want to catch up with whatโs being said on the platform, without having to spend long amounts of time scrolling their timeline.
For instance, a TechCrunch readerโs For You page today may feature stories about Appleโs coming iPad event, Microsoftโs security overhaul, and burnout among AI engineers. As you tap into each story to view the associated X posts, a summary of the story will now appear at the top of the page, offering an overview of the subject matter.
In the case of the AI burnout story, for example, the Grok-powered summary begins: โAI engineers are facing burnout and rushed rollouts due to the competitive race in the tech industry, as companies prioritize investor satisfaction over solving actual problems.โ After briefly touching on the problem of the AI โrat race,โ the story concludes by saying that โcritics argue that proper safeguards and thoughtful innovation should not be afterthoughts in the pursuit of AI investments โฆโ
Humorously, a message appears below that summary, warning: โGrok can make mistakes, verify its outputs.โ
The idea of summarizing trends is not a new one, but it is new in terms of how the summaries are being handled. Under its prior leadership, Twitter began adding headlines and descriptions to its trends in 2020, though not with the help of an AI bot. Instead, Twitter itself would annotate some of its daily trends with extra information and pin a representative tweet to provide further context. However, Twitterโs rollout was haphazard, with some trends getting written up and others not.
With Grokโs Stories, as the summaries are called, all the top news on the For You page is summarized.
Access to xAIโs chatbot Grok is meant to be a selling point to push users to buy premium subscriptions. With the Premium and top-tier Premium+ plans, users can access Grok by tapping on the bottom middle button of the app. A snarky and โrebelliousโ AI,ย Grokโs differentiatorย from other AI chatbots like ChatGPT is its exclusive and real-time access to X data.
A post published to X on Friday by tech journalist Alex Kantrowitz lays out Elon Muskโs further plan for AI-powered news on X, based on an email conversation with the X owner.
Kantrowitz says that conversations on X will make up the core of Grokโs summaries. Grok wonโt look at the article text, in other words, even if thatโs what people are discussing on the platform. That could be a problem in terms of painting a true picture of the news being shared, as what people are chattering about on X may be their reactions or opinions, not the news itself. Kantrowitz calls the move โcontroversialโ but admits thereโs opportunity there.
Journalists are already having to contend with AI news summaries in other areas as well, including from startups. For example, Arcโs new web browser includes anย AI summary featureย and former Twitter engineers are building anย AI news summary service called Particle. How this will play out in terms of traffic to the news sites themselves remains to be seen. Kantrowitz believes that users may be interested in going โdeeper into the source material once their curiosity is piqued,โ he writes. But itโs also likely that at least some news sites will go out of business as page views drop due to AI summaries, leaving fewer sources for AI bots like Grok to summarize in the long run.
For that reason, some news publishers are doing deals with AI providers like OpenAIโs recently announced partnership with the FT. Others, such as Axel Springer, the AP, and Le Monde, have also announced similar moves. In Xโs case, itโs able to get at the news by way of the conversation around it โ and without having to partner to access the news content itself. Thatโs both clever and worrisome, the latter from a misinformation standpoint.
Grokโs Stories are rolling out to Premium X subscribers now. Access to Premium starts at $8 per month, if paying on the web and not through the app stores.