‘It was class’ – assessing Archer’s Test return

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England batter Joe Root says it was a “joy” to be part of Jofra Archer’s return to Test cricket and see the “love” shown to him by the Lord’s crowd.

Archer, 30, took a wicket with his third ball as he featured in a Test for the first time in more than four years on day two of the second Test against India after a series of career-threatening injuries.

In a spell that brought a thrilling buzz to Lord’s, Archer dismissed Yashasvi Jaiswal and reached 93mph to bring back memories of his debut on the same ground against Australia in 2019.

“It was class,” said Root, Archer’s captain throughout his first spell as a Test cricketer.

“That atmosphere, the genuine joy seeing him back playing Test cricket, taking that wicket, making things happen.

“The impact he adds to the group is huge. In the dressing room but also out on the field.”

The fastest in the series – assessing Archer’s return

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Archer’s first over was the fastest of the series so far and the next three also quicker than anything seen previously between the two sides this summer.

Archer’s opening spell – five overs, one maiden, one wicket for 16 runs – was the third-fastest new-ball spell by an England bowler on record.

He could easily have had further wickets, most notably when Karun Nair gloved a short ball between wicketkeeper Jamie Smith and Ben Stokes at leg slip.

“The paces were up there,” former England captain Michael Vaughan told BBC Test Match Special.

“The first spell was everything we remembered from six years ago against the Aussies.

“That first over was exceptional and the key wicket of Jaiswal an absolute peach.”

Former England captain Sir Alastair Cook added: “That ball to Jaiswal would get every left-hander out.

“The intriguing thing is how he backs it up tomorrow morning. That is the challenge he has to deal with.

“He adds something different to this side. Jaiswal looks so comfortable against Chris Woakes but the pace and unusualness of Archer made him play differently.”

Ultimately, there was to be no further breakthrough for Archer.

He bowled a further five overs across two spells – two while remaining at the Pavilion End that cost only a single run and three for five runs after a switch to the Nursery End.

There were no false shots – edges or misses – after his opening spell.

That can, in part at least, be put down to the slow pitch and the Dukes’ ball’s tendency to go soft after 20 overs – a constant problem for all bowlers throughout the series – and Archer’s speeds remained high throughout the day.

His second spell averaged 87.2mph and his third 86.5mph. In both of those spells he topped 89mph.

“He looked in beautiful rhythm,” said former England bowler Steve Finn. “I was delighted for him.

“You could see it in the celebration. He may have thought he would not feel that feeling again.”

Root added: “When you’ve got that way about you, where you can get a whole crowd up and about, create the noise and atmosphere like that you’ve clearly got something special to offer the group.

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Palace Euro demotion ‘biggest injustice in history of football’

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Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish says the decision to remove Crystal Palace from the Europa League next season is “the biggest injustice in the history of football”.

The Eagles were ordered on Friday to compete in the Conference League by Uefa for breaching multi-club ownership rules.

American businessman John Textor owns a stake in Palace and is also the majority owner of French club Lyon, who have also qualified for the Europa League.

Nottingham Forest, who finished seventh in the Premier League last season, could replace FA Cup winners Palace in the Europa League.

Uefa said the Eagles could appeal its ruling with the Court of Arbitration for Sport and Parish said they are set to do so.

The rules of European football’s governing body state clubs owned, to a certain threshold of influence, by the same person or entity cannot compete in the same European competition.

Uefa’s rules set a deadline of 1 March 2025 to show proof of multi-club ownership restructuring – a deadline which Palace missed.

Palace argued Textor does not hold any decisive influence at the club, but the Premier League side’s defence was not accepted.

“Everyone knows we’re not part of a multi-club set-up,” added Parish. “We don’t share any staff. We’re caught up in a rule that wasn’t put there for us. I don’t understand why the panel has come to the conclusion they have done. I think we’ve shown John had no influence over our club.

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Lyon, who also qualified for the Europa League, take precedence over Palace because of their higher league finish in the previous campaign.

The seven-time French champions finished sixth in Ligue 1, with Palace 12th in the Premier League but qualifying for European competition by winning the FA Cup.

Earlier this week, Lyon won their appeal against relegation from Ligue 1 after they were demoted for their financial state.

Had their relegation been upheld, they had agreed with Uefa to be excluded from the Europa League, clearing the way for Palace to play in the competition.

How did we get here?

Palace were huge underdogs to win the FA Cup, beating Manchester City 1-0, and their joy at qualifying for Europe for a first time quickly turned to unease when the club realised their spot may be in doubt.

Uefa’s regulations around multi-club ownership and European competitions are in place to prevent collusion.

In the governing body’s rulebook, a club is required to prove they are not “simultaneously involved in any capacity whatsoever in the management, administration, and/or sporting performance of more than one club participating in a Uefa club competition”.

Textor’s Eagle Football owns a 43% stake in Palace and a 77% stake in Lyon, but the Premier League side argued they are an entity that operates entirely independently.

Forest asked for clarity from Uefa in June on Palace’s position in Europe. Their owner Evangelos Marinakis, who controls Greek side Olympiakos, avoided regulations around multi-club ownership by diluting his control of the Premier League side.

Textor took similar steps to help Palace’s prospects by agreeing to sell his 43% stake to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson in June, but the deal has yet to be completed.

Textor also later resigned from his leadership position at Lyon.

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Oasis fans make safety plea to Liam Gallagher as he takes to stage in heatwave

Liam Gallagher took to the Heaton Park stage tonight in his classic Oasis attire as the band played in their hometown – however, it left some fans concerned for the star

Liam Gallagher concerned fans by taking to the stage in his classic outfit

Oasis fans at the band’s Heaton Park gig have made a desperate plea to star Liam Gallagher after the singer took to the stage in the ongoing heatwave. Liam and Noel reunited on stage tonight for the third time for their reunion tour, marking the first gig in their hometown since 2009.

However, both the band and their fans have been battling the heat in Manchester today – with temperatures reaching highs of 30 degree Celsius. Worried fans have taken to social media after Liam appeared on stage in a parka jacket despite the heat.

Liam and Noel took to the stage in their hometown of Manchester tonight
Liam and Noel took to the stage in their hometown of Manchester tonight(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

“Liam, I beg you, take the jacket off #Oasis #HeatonPark #oasislive2025,” one fan wrote.

Another tweeted: “There is no way Liam can wear a coat or even a jacket tonight.”

A third questioned: “Has Liam got his Parka on tonight? #Oasis #HeatonPark”

While a fourth wrote: “Just seen footage.. and even in 30 degree heat he’s not taking that jacket off #oasislive25 #Oasis #oasisheatonpark sounds unreal by the way.”

The Gallagher brothers aren’t the only ones who could be affected by the heat, with the venue setting up emergency rooms for dehydrated fans ahead of tonight.

Bosses have relaxed their usual rules and have encouraged fans to take water, suncream and hats into the venue, while there is medical assistance on hand for anyone who falls ill tonight.

BBC Radio 2 host and longtime Oasis fan Vernon Kay shared a glimpse inside a tent as rows and rows of medical beds could be seen. “Here we go, Heaton Park getting ready for those people who refuse to hydrate themselves,” Vernon said as he panned around the room.

He urged: “Come on, gets some electrolytes in your body. We don’t want to see you on any of these mats. These are not for yoga, these are not yoga mats. This is not a sun lounger. These are where people will recover.”

Vernon added: “I know you are going to want to have a drink or two but just go steady people. We want to have a good time, we don’t want to see a queue for the beds of doom.”

Earlier this week, Heaton Park bosses warned fans to stay hydrated in the scorching temperatures.

“Wear sunscreen, you will be permitted to bring in a small bottle 200ml or under and protect yourself from the sun overall/wear a hat; we know the legendary bucket hat will be making an appearance, so you’ll fit right in! Look after yourself and those around you,” they said.

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‘Making up for what he lost, Archer’s time is now’

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Unusually, Jofra Archer plays cricket wearing a watch.

The reason for his need to know the time when he’s on the field for England is unclear.

Then again, when your job is to hurtle a ball at a batter, giving them a fraction of a second to react, and you have waited more than four years for the opportunity to do it again in Test cricket, time is important.

When Archer last played a Test for England, Shoaib Bashir was eight months short of his 18th birthday, Joe Biden had just been sworn in as US President and the UK was in a Covid lockdown.

Life moved on without him after that third Test against India in February 2021. England played 53 Archerless matches.

The ‘void’ Ashes, the birth of Bazball. Retirements of Stuart Broad and James Anderson, memorable wins in Rawalpindi and Hyderabad. The Jonny Bairstow stumping. The beginning and end of Ollie Robinson’s Test career.

It has been a monumental collective effort to get Archer back in England whites, but only the man himself will know everything it has taken. The setbacks and heartbreak, lonely days in the gym and solo net sessions. One-dayers, T20s and Barbados club cricket.

Gradually, a fanciful dream became a reality. A return to red-ball cricket with Sussex and a place in the England squad for the second Test against India, all building to the third Test at Lord’s.

When Archer was confirmed in the England XI the day before the game began, he prepared by bowling spin – right and left-arm – in the nets.

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In the change of innings, Archer loosened up then stripped to the waist to change his shirt. It is hard to think of Fred Trueman doing the same on the Lord’s outfield, though Trueman did not have a body like Archer’s.

His time came at 14:43. Second over, after Yashasvi Jaiswal had taken 13 runs off Chris Woakes’ first.

The crowd cheered as Archer marked out his run. He rubbed his hands in the dirt as his name was announced and the cheers grew louder. The Pavilion End from where he roasted Steve Smith in 2019.

Same cruise to the crease, almost hiding behind the umpire. Loose limbs and gold chain. Snap into a smooth action. Then fireworks.

Movement away from left-hander Jaiswal at 87.5mph. Play and miss. A frisson through the stands.

Jaiswal, baby face and flashing blade, has tormented Stokes’ side with runs from Vizag to Headingley. Only Don Bradman averages more against England. Archer needed just three deliveries to see him off.

More pace, 90mph of it. More movement. A poke and an edge. Time stood still until the ball came to rest in the hands of Harry Brook.

Archer wheeled away like Marco Tardelli in the 1982 World Cup final, roaring to the sky to release 1,596 days of frustration. Mobbed by his team-mates, he pointed to the England dressing room and his mum Joelle in the crowd.

Genuine life-affirming joy.

Karun Nair was greeted by three slips, a gully, a short leg and a leg gully, the most popular man in north London.

Every ball Archer sent down was an event, each delivery pregnant with danger. The overs of Woakes, the man with an unmatched record on this ground, were an irrelevance. Like two different sports being played at once.

Archer conceded only four runs from his first 21 deliveries before Nair got him through mid-off and to fine leg. Words exchanged. Theatre.

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By the end of his first spell, Archer averaged 89.5mph, the third-quickest opening burst by an England bowler on record and comfortably faster than what he has been bowling in white-ball cricket. He touched 93.3mph and sent down the four fastest overs of the series so far.

Five overs do not make a man, yet this was a demonstration of what England have been missing, the bowler Archer is and what he could become.

If there was any doubt whether he could get back to his heights of six years ago, they were answered in 30 deliveries of fire and brimstone. It was exhilarating.

There is the question of whether Archer can back it up, spell after spell, day after day. If his body can stand up to the rigours of Test cricket.

And, whether it was because of the sluggish conditions or the effort he put into the first spell, Archer did not have the same impact in a second spell of two overs or third of three. In both he failed to induce a play and miss or an edge.

Still, there is no doubt Archer brings an X-factor to England’s bowling. Few to have pulled on the Three Lions have his range of skills. Extreme pace, hostility, movement in the air and off the seam, plus the tricks of the white-ball generation.

His entrance to this series has added an extra dimension to a flagging England attack. There is the tantalising prospect of a partnership with Mark Wood, one that has only been united once before in Test cricket. It could be as soon as the fifth Test at The Oval. Imagine the possibilities in Australia.

Maybe it never again gets better than this for Archer in Test cricket. Maybe that is not important. An opportunity that looked gone forever has returned.

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Oasis fans threatened with arrest as they try to get into Heaton Park without tickets

Oasis fans have come to such desperate measures to catch a glimpse of the Gallagher brothers that they reportedly tried to jump the fence to get in. Liam and Noel have reunited in Manchester’s Heaton Park for the first time in over a decade.

Tickets were seriously hard to come by, with some fans forking out hundreds to secure their spot. Those without tickets have gathered outside the park to try hear the huge hits from the band.

However, it seems other wanted to try their luck at getting in without and ticket but were quickly warned by police. Manchester Evening News reporter Chris Slater said: “I’ve been told a dispersal order is in place and officers are taking details and ordering anyone suspected of trying to sneak in to leave the area. If don’t they can then be arrested.”






Oasis fans have flocked to Manchester
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Warnings have been issued by show bosses for this weekend as 80,000 plus music fans descend on Liam and Noel Gallagher’s hometown for each sold-out performance. The forecast has bucked the usual unpredictable weather during outdoor events, with hot weather sweeping the UK.

Manchester is set to see temperatures reach nearly 30 degrees over the weekend as the mini-heatwave continues. Bosses have relaxed their usual rules at Heaton Park and have encouraged fans to take water, suncream and hats into the venue.

Get Oasis updates straight to your WhatsApp!

As the hotly anticipated Oasis reunion tour grows closer, the Mirror has launched its very own Oasis WhatsApp community where you’ll get all the latest news on the Gallagher brothers and all the information you’ll need in the run up to the gigs.

We’ll send you the latest breaking updates and exclusives all directly to your phone. Users must download or already have WhatsApp on their phones to join in.

All you have to do to join is click on this link, select ‘Join Chat’ and you’re in! We may also send you stories from other titles across the Reach group.

We will also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don’t like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose Exit group. If you’re curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.

Although taking food and drink into the venue is strictly prohibited, those attending can, instead, take a collapsible 500ml water bottle. Once inside the park, there will be dedicated water refill points, as well as the bar, which will be stocked with both alcoholic and soft drinks. Fans are also encouraged to wear sun protection and, if possible, a hat to reduce the risks of sunburn and sunstroke.

Oasis: What’s Their Story? An unofficial celebration magazine on sale now!





A few simple words on social media on August 27 in 2024 were enough to spark pandemonium among Oasis fans and were the catalyst for the most eagerly awaited UK gigs of all time.

There will also be medical assistance from the three welfare tents, two situated to the left of the stage and one to the right, close to the merchandise stand and bar. However, dark scenes from inside the tents have shown the preparations in place to support those due to the heat.

BBC Radio 2 host and longtime Oasis fan Vernon Kay shared a glimpse inside a tent as rows and rows of medical beds could be seen. “Here we go, Heaton Park getting ready for those people who refuse to hydrate themselves,” Vernon said as he panned around the room.

He urged: “Come on, gets some electrolytes in your body. We don’t want to see you on any of these mats. These are not for yoga, these are not yoga mats. This is not a sun lounger. These are where people will recover.”

Like this story? For more of the latest showbiz news and gossip, follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads .

As millions adopt Grok to fact-check, misinformation abounds

On June 9, soon after United States President Donald Trump dispatched US National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell the protests taking place over immigration raids, California Governor Gavin Newsom posted two photographs on X. The images showed dozens of troopers wearing the National Guard uniform sleeping on the floor in a cramped space, with a caption that decried Trump for disrespecting the troops.

X users immediately turned to Grok, Elon Musk’s AI, which is integrated directly into X, to fact-check the veracity of the image. For that, they tagged @grok in a reply to the tweet in question, triggering an automatic response from the AI.

“You’re sharing fake photos,” one user posted, citing a screenshot of Grok’s response that claimed a reverse image search could not find the exact source. In another instance, Grok said the images were recycled from 2021, when former US President Joe Biden, a Democrat, withdrew troops from Afghanistan. Melissa O’Connor, a conspiracy-minded influencer, cited a ChatGPT analysis that also said the images were from the Afghanistan evacuation.

However, non-partisan fact-checking organisation PolitiFact found that both AI citations were incorrect. The images shared by Newsom were real, and had been published in the San Francisco Chronicle.

The bot-sourced erroneous fact checks formed the basis for hours of cacophonous debates on X, before Grok corrected itself.

Unlike OpenAI’s standalone app ChatGPT, Grok’s integration into X offers users immediate access to real-time AI answers without quitting the app, a feature that has been reshaping user behaviour since its March launch. However, the increasingly first stop for fact checks during breaking news or for other general posts often provides convincing but inaccurate answers.

“I think in some ways, it helps, and in some ways, it doesn’t,” said Theodora Skeadas, an AI policy expert formerly at Twitter. “People have more access to tools that can serve a fact-checking function, which is a good thing. However, it is harder to know when the information isn’t accurate.”

There’s no denying that chatbots could help users be more informed and gain context on events unfolding in real time. But currently, its tendency to make things up outstrips its usefulness.

Chatbots, including ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini, are large language models (LLMs) that learn to predict the next word in a sequence by analysing enormous troves of data from the internet. The outputs of chatbots are reflections of the patterns and biases in the data it is trained on, which makes them prone to factual errors and misleading information called “hallucinations”.

For Grok, these inherent challenges are further complicated because of Musk’s instructions that the chatbot should not adhere to political correctness, and should be suspicious of mainstream sources. Where other AI models have guidelines around politically sensitive queries, Grok doesn’t. The lack of guardrails has resulted in Grok praising Hitler, and consistently parroting anti-Semitic views, sometimes to unrelated user questions.

In addition, Grok’s reliance on public posts by users on X, which aren’t always accurate, as a source for its real-time answers to some fact checks, adds to its misinformation problem.

‘Locked into a misinformation echo chamber’

Al Jazeera analysed two of the most highly discussed posts on X from June to investigate how often Grok tags in replies to posts were used for fact-checking. The posts analysed were Gavin Newsom’s on the LA protests, and Elon Musk’s allegations that Trump’s name appears in the unreleased documents held by US federal authorities on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Musk’s allegations on X have since been deleted.

Our analysis of the 434 replies that tagged Grok in Newsom’s post found that the majority of requests, nearly 68 percent, wanted Grok to either confirm whether the images Newsom posted were authentic or get context about National Guard deployment.

Beyond the straightforward confirmation, there was an eclectic mix of requests: some wanted Grok to make funny AI images based on the post, others asked Grok to narrate the LA protests in pirate-speak. Notably, a few users lashed out because Grok had made the correction, and wouldn’t endorse their flawed belief.

“These photos are from Afghanistan. This was debunked a couple day[s] go. Good try tho @grok is full of it,” one user wrote, two days after Grok corrected itself.

The analysis of the top 3,000 posts that mentioned @grok in Musk’s post revealed that half of all user queries directed at Grok were to “explain” the context and sought background information on the Epstein files, which required descriptive details.

Another 20 percent of queries demanded “fact checks” whose primary goal was to confirm or deny Musk’s assertions, while 10 percent of users shared their “opinion”, questioning Musk’s motives and credibility, and wanted Grok’s judgement or speculation on possible futures of Musk-Trump fallout.

“I will say that I do worry about this phenomenon becoming ingrained,” said Alexios Mantzarlis, director of the Security, Trust, and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech, about the instant fact checks. “Even if it’s better than just believing a tweet straight-up or hurling abuse at the poster, it doesn’t do a ton for our collective critical thinking abilities to expect an instant fact check without taking the time to reflect about the content we’re seeing.”

Grok was called on 2.3 million times in just one week —between June 5 and June 12— to answer posts on X, data accessed by Al Jazeera through X’s API shows, underscoring how deeply this behaviour has taken root.

“X is keeping people locked into a misinformation echo chamber, in which they’re asking a tool known for hallucinating, that has promoted racist conspiracy theories, to fact-check for them,” Alex Mahadevan, a media literacy educator at the Poynter Institute, told Al Jazeera.

Mahadevan has spent years teaching people how to “read laterally”, which means when you encounter information on social media, you leave the page or post, and go search for reliable sources to check something out. But he now sees the opposite happening with Grok. “I didn’t think X could get any worse for the online information ecosystem, and every day I am proved wrong.”

Grok’s inconsistencies in fact-checking are already reshaping opinions in some corners of the internet. Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab), which studies disinformation, analysed 130,000 posts related to the Israel-Iran war to understand the wartime verification efficacy of Grok. “The investigation found that Grok was inconsistent in its fact-checking, struggling to authenticate AI-generated media or determine whether X accounts belong to an official Iranian government source,” the authors noted.

Grok has also incorrectly blamed a trans pilot for a helicopter crash in Washington, DC; claimed the assassination attempt on Trump was partially staged; conjured up a criminal history for an Idaho shooting suspect; echoed anti-Semitic stereotypes of Hollywood; and misidentified an Indian journalist as an opposition spy during the recent India-Pakistan conflict.

Despite this growing behaviour shift of instant fact checks, it is worth noting that the 2025 Digital News Report by Reuters Institute showed that online populations in several countries still preferred going to news sources or fact checkers over AI chatbots by a large margin.

“Even if that’s not how all of them behave, we should acknowledge that some of the “@grok-ing” that we’re seeing is also a bit of a meme, with some folks using it to express disagreement or hoping to trigger a dunking response to the original tweet,” Mantzarlis said.

Mantzarlis’s assessment is echoed in our findings. Al Jazeera’s analysis of the Musk-Trump feud showed that about 20 percent used Grok for things ranging from trolling or dunking directed at either Musk or Grok itself, to requests for AI meme-images such as Trump with kids on Epstein island, and other non-English language requests including translations. (We used GPT-4.1 to assist in identifying the various categories the 3,000 posts belonged to, and manually checked the categorisations.)

Beyond real-time fact-checking, “I worry about the image-generation abuse most of all because we have seen Grok fail at setting the right guardrails on synthetic non-consensual intimate imagery, which we know to be the #1 vector of abuse from deepfakes to date,” Mantzarlis said.

For years, social media users benefited from context on the information they encountered online with interventions such as labeling state media or introducing fact-checking warnings.

But after buying X in 2022, Musk ended those initiatives and loosened speech restrictions. He also used the platform as a megaphone to amplify misinformation on widespread election fraud, and to boost conservative theories on race and immigration. Earlier this year, xAI acquired X in an all-stock deal valued at $80bn. Musk also replaced human fact-checking with a voluntary crowdsource programme called Community Notes, to police misleading content on X.

Instead of a centralised professional fact-checking authority, a contextual “note” with corrections is added to misleading posts, based on the ratings the note receives from users with diverse perspectives. Meta soon followed X and abandoned its third-party fact-checking programme for Community Notes.

Research shows that Community Notes is indeed viewed as more trustworthy and has proven to be faster than traditional centralised fact-checking. The median time to attach a note to a misleading post has dropped to under 14 hours in February, from 30 hours in 2023, a Bloomberg analysis found.

But the programme has also been flailing— with diminished volunteer contributions, less visibility for posts that are corrected, and notes on contentious topics having a higher chance of being removed.

Grok, however, is faster than Community Notes. “You can think of the Grok mentions today as what an automated AI fact checker would look like — it’s super fast but nowhere near as reliable as Community Notes because no humans were involved,” Soham De, a Community Notes researcher and PhD student at the University of Washington, told Al Jazeera. “There’s a delicate balance between speed and reliability.”

X is trying to bridge this gap by supercharging the pace of creation of contextual notes. On July 1, X piloted the “AI Note Writer,” enabling developers to create AI bots to write community notes alongside human contributors on misleading posts.

According to researchers involved in the project, LLM-written notes can be produced faster with high-quality contexts, speeding up the note generation for fact checks.

But these AI contributors must still go through the human rating process that makes Community Notes trustworthy and reliable today, De said. This human-AI system works better than what human contributors can manage alone, De and other co-authors said in a preprint of the research paper published alongside the official X announcement.

Still, the researchers themselves highlighted its limitations, noting that using AI to write notes could lead to risks of persuasive but inaccurate responses by the LLM.

Grok vs Musk

On Wednesday, xAI launched its latest flagship model, Grok 4. On stage, Musk boasted about the current model capabilities as the leader on Humanity’s Last Exam, a collection of advanced reasoning problems that help measure AI progress.

Such confidence belied recent struggles with Grok. In February, xAI patched an issue after Grok suggested that Trump and Musk deserve the death penalty. In May, Grok ranted about a discredited conspiracy of the persecution of white people in South Africa for unrelated queries on health and sports, and xAI clarified that it was because of an unauthorised modification by a rogue employee. A few days later, Grok gave inaccurate results on the death toll of the Holocaust, which it said was due to a programming error.

Grok has also butted heads with Musk. In June, while answering a user question on whether political violence is higher on the left or the right, Grok cited data from government sources and Reuters, to draw the conclusion that, “right-wing political violence has been more frequent and deadly, with incidents like the January 6 Capitol riot and mass shootings.”

“Major fail, as this is objectively false. Grok is parroting legacy media,” Musk said, adding, there was “far too much garbage in any foundation model trained on uncorrected data.”

Musk has also chided Grok for not sharing his distrust of mainstream news outlets such as Rolling Stone and Media Matters. Subsequently, Musk said he would “rewrite the entire corpus of human knowledge” by adding missing information and deleting errors in Grok’s training data, calling on his followers to share “divisive facts” which are “politically incorrect but nonetheless factually true” for retraining the forthcoming version on the model.

That’s the thorny truth about LLMs. Just as they are likely to make things up, they can also offer answers grounded in truth — even at the peril of their creators. Though Grok gets things wrong, Mahadevan of the Poynter Institute said, it does get facts right while citing credible news outlets, fact-checking sites, and government data in its replies.

On July 6, xAI updated the chatbot’s public system prompt that directs its responses to be “politically incorrect” and to “assume subjective viewpoints sourced from the media are biased”.

Two days later, the chatbot shocked everyone by praising Adolf Hitler as the best person to handle “anti-white hate”. X deleted the inflammatory posts later that day, and xAI removed the guidelines to not adhere to political correctness from its code base.

Grok 4 was launched against this backdrop, and in the less than two days that it has been available, researchers have already begun noticing some weird modifications.

When asked for its opinion on politically sensitive questions such as who does Grok 4 support in the ongoing Israel-Palestine conflict, it sometimes runs a search to find out Musk’s stance on the subject, before returning an answer, according to at least five AI researchers who independently reproduced the results.

“It first searches Twitter for what Elon thinks. Then it searches the web for Elon’s views. Finally, it adds some non-Elon bits at the end,” Jeremy Howard, a prominent Australian data scientist, wrote in a post on X, pointing out that “54 of 64 citations are about Elon.”

Researchers also expressed surprise over the reintroduction of the directive for Grok 4 to be “politically incorrect”, despite this code having been removed from its predecessor, Grok 3.

Experts said political manipulation could risk losing institutional trust and might not be good for Grok’s business.