Elon Musk’s Grok AI chatbot has officially removed its paywall, granting free access to all users. Grok made its public appearance in 2023, courtesy of Musk’s xAI, and was seamlessly woven into the fabric of X, previously known as Twitter. However, access to the chatbot was conditioned upon users securing an X premium subscription.
On Friday, several users observed the modification, which enables non-premium subscribers to transmit up to ten messages to Grok every two hours.
Grok is a “humorous AI assistant,” that was introduced by xAI last year. However, it was exclusively accessible to premium subscribers for a price starting at $8 a month or $84 a year. Musk’s xAI initiated the testing of a free variant of the AI tool in specific regions like New Zealand last month.
Making Grok more accessible is expected to potentially enable it to compete with the free chatbot images that are already available.
Everything there is to know about Grok
Grok is renowned for its conversational capabilities, but it also functions as a versatile AI assistant. It can help users in the research and explanation of trending topics, provide coding support, and freely manage customer inquiries for business users.
The AI chatbot is also a generative AI model that is trained on tens of thousands of GPUs using the data available on X.
Although xAI has not yet released a formal statement certifying Grok’s availability for all users, many users have shared their subscription-free experiences with Grok.
However, since this feature is accessible to all users, it is subject to certain restrictions.
Non-premium users can interact with the AI tool by asking up to 10 questions every two hours, but according to the chatbot’s standards, they are limited to three image analyses and four images generated each day.
Subscribers of X’s Premium and Premium+ plans, priced at $7 and $14 a month, respectively, get extended access, including the option to ask up to 50 questions every day.
Grok, in comparison to its competitors
The decision to make Grok AI freely accessible has intensified competition among chatbots, including ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini.
ChatGPT 4, the most recent version, enables users to pose 10 inquiries every five hours, although both are conversational AIs. In contrast, Grok users who are not paying subscribers are permitted to pose ten inquiries to the chatbot every two hours.
Although ChatGPT’s conversation style is predominantly formal, Grok AI is more inclined toward an informal style, as users have noted.
🚨Breaking: Grok free tier is now available worldwide .
It is very limited:
Can analyze 3 images a day
Can do 10 messages per 2 hours including imagesX has also removed Grok 2 mini.
You can now only make queries to grok 2. pic.twitter.com/pHWsaLgewk— ̤̮ (@blankspeaker) December 6, 2024
Additionally, several users have asserted that the tool addresses inquiries that ChatGPT fails to address. Additionally, Grok can access real-time data, whereas ChatGPT primarily utilizes pre-trained data.
Musk has hinted that his AI tool may undergo additional developments, such as the capacity to process documents in formats such as PDFs and Word files. These attributes could assist Grok in distinguishing itself in a more competitive market.
What could be Musk’s goal in the AI landscape with this shift?
This update is timely, as xAI, Musk’s AI-focused venture, has recently received $6 billion in funding, resulting in a valuation of over $40 billion. A portion of these funds are being allocated to the expansion of xAI’s supercomputer facility in Memphis, Tennessee. Colossus, a potent supercomputer, is housed at the facility and is essential to Musk’s AI ambitions as he endeavors to compete with OpenAI.
Moreover, Musk has intensified his legal dispute with OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, in the context of this expansion. He has now incorporated Microsoft into the court proceedings, accusing both entities of engaging in monopolistic practices within the AI sector.
Land a High-Paying Web3 Job in 90 Days: The Ultimate Roadmap