Elon Musk’s senior staff have created custom AI chatbots aimed at helping government efficiency eliminate government waste, and is powered by Musk’s artificial intelligence company Xai, TechCrunch I learned it.
The publicly available chatbot is the website of Christopher Stanley, who works as Head of Security Engineering at SPACEX, hosted in the Doge-Named subdomain, who works as Head of Security Engineering at the White House.
It is not clear whether chatbots are experimental or used by DOGE as part of an unprecedented cost-cutting effort across the US government that has sparked legal and privacy concerns.
Stanley and a White House spokesman did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The chatbot is called the “Government Efficiency AI Assistant” and is said to be equipped with Xai’s Grok 2. The chatbot told TechCrunch that it is here to “help government officials identify waste and improve efficiency.”
Chatbots look like a large, customized language model trained with certain important Doge goals, especially five “guide principles”. This will make the government’s requirements “not stupid” and remove “unwanted parts or processes.”
For example, when TechCrunch asks the chatbot what Doge should do about USAID, a federal agency that was effectively shut down by Doge reforms, it applies five guiding principles to receive decision makers and USAID funds. It recommended that the exclusion of a “bureaucratic class” between the parties.
Chatbots return to these five principles on a wide range of topics. When TechCrunch asked the chatbot that 20th century political leaders should emulate Doge, it applied the principles of guidance and responded to the two: British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Prime Minister Kuan Yew said he would provide Doge with a “great model” and said, “efficiency, simplification and the use of technology.”
Chatbots have several issues, including problems common to hallucinations, all large-scale language models. When TechCrunch asked the chatbot the names of people working at Doge, it initially refused, but later gave it a general name and a configured position. Chatbots can provide strange advice, such as recommending that USAID use drones, wearables, or other internet-connected devices to improve efficiency.
Doge is embracing AI as part of its efforts to modernize the US government, and Doge is working on another AI chatbot from General Services Administration, a powerful agency that oversees US procurement on a per-wired basis. It is being done.
It is also not clear whether the use of Xai by chatbots will result in conflicts of interest for Musk. LLM usually charges users through API use, so government workers using chatbots with Xai can directly increase Xai revenue. Unable to reach Xai representative.