Elon Musk's xAI lands $6B in new cash to fuel AI ambitions
The X.AI Corp. logo appears on the screen of a smartphone that rests on top of the laptop keyboard in Reno, United States, on November 28, 2024. (Photo by Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images) · TechCrunch · NurPhoto via Getty Images

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xAI, Elon Musk's AI company, has raised $6 billion, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday.

Investors gave a minimum of $77,593, per the filing (97 participated, but the document doesn't reveal their identities). xAI later announced (confirming some earlier reporting) that Andreessen Horowitz , Blackrock, Fidelity, Kingdom Holdings, Lightspeed, MGX, Morgan Stanley, OIA, QIA, Sequoia Capital, Valor Equity Partners, Vy Capital, Nvidia, AMD, and others numbered among them.

The new cash brings xAI's total raised to $12 billion, adding to the $6 billion tranche xAI raised this spring. CNBC reported in November that xAI was aiming for a $50 billion valuation — double its valuation of six months prior.

According to the Financial Times, only investors who'd backed xAI in its previous fundraising round were permitted to participate in this one. Reportedly, investors who helped finance Musk's Twitter acquisition were given access to up to 25% of xAI's shares.

Ramping up AI

Musk formed xAI last year. Soon after, the company released Grok, a flagship generative AI model that now powers a number of features on X, including a chatbot accessible to X Premium subscribers and free users in some regions.

Grok has what Musk has described as "a rebellious streak" — a willingness to answer "spicy questions that are rejected by most other AI systems." Told to be vulgar, for example, Grok will happily oblige, spewing profanities and colorful language you won’t hear from ChatGPT.

Musk has derided ChatGPT and other AI systems for being too "woke" and "politically correct," despite Grok's own unwillingness to cross certain boundaries and hedge on political subjects. He's also referred to Grok as "maximally truth-seeking" and less biased than competing models, although there's evidence to suggest that Grok leans to the left.

Over the past year, Grok has become increasingly ingrained in X, the social network formerly known as Twitter. At launch, Grok was only available to X users — and developers skilled enough to get the "open source" edition up and running.

Thanks to an integration with the open image generator Flux, Grok can generate images on X (without guardrails, controversially). The model can analyze images as well, and summarize news and trending events (imperfectly, mind).

Reports indicate that Grok may handle even more X functions in the future, from enhancing X’s search capabilities and account bios to helping with post analytics and reply settings.