The AI assistant Grok has hit regulatory roadblocks in Southeast Asia. Both Malaysia and Indonesia have moved to restrict access, citing concerns around obscene and non-consensual content. The ban highlights the growing tension between AI developers and local authorities over content moderation standards. Different regions are increasingly taking independent stances on what's acceptable in AI systems—what passes in one market doesn't necessarily fly in another. This development underscores how geopolitical and cultural differences are shaping the rollout of emerging AI technologies globally.
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LongTermDreamer
· 01-14 18:00
Haha, Grok has been banned. Isn't this just the cycle theory? ChatGPT also went through this three years ago. Looking back, it might actually be a good thing.
But honestly, this kind of localized regulatory differentiation is quite normal, just like the coin upgrades in the crypto world—each market has its own way of playing. Southeast Asia probably will find a breakthrough in three years. Don't be too pessimistic...
As for the issue of violating content, to be honest, the main problem is the large differences in standards across countries. The technology is not wrong; it's just an adaptation issue. In the long run, this could actually promote more compliant development of AI. Don't you think?
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ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 01-14 15:06
Is grok banned? Haha, this just got interesting. Southeast Asian countries are starting to play around with it.
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SmartContractWorker
· 01-13 06:20
Grok has been banned... Southeast Asia's recent moves are quite aggressive. Content review standards vary by country, and there hasn't been a unified approach.
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AirdropATM
· 01-12 08:56
Grok has been banned? Ha, I knew it would turn out this way. The review standards vary too much across different regions.
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quietly_staking
· 01-12 08:51
Grok being banned, so what? Anyway, standards vary from place to place... This time, Malaysia and Indonesia just want to show off their muscles.
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CrashHotline
· 01-12 08:50
Here we go again, with this kind of regional censorship tactic... Southeast Asia is each doing its own thing, and grok has really become a hot potato here.
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MechanicalMartel
· 01-12 08:37
Here we go again, regional fragmentation is becoming more and more serious... If this continues, AI will truly become a fragmented product.
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Blockwatcher9000
· 01-12 08:29
Grok has been banned. Southeast Asia's move is quite aggressive... But to be honest, these regulatory measures can't change much; technology will always find a way out.
The AI assistant Grok has hit regulatory roadblocks in Southeast Asia. Both Malaysia and Indonesia have moved to restrict access, citing concerns around obscene and non-consensual content. The ban highlights the growing tension between AI developers and local authorities over content moderation standards. Different regions are increasingly taking independent stances on what's acceptable in AI systems—what passes in one market doesn't necessarily fly in another. This development underscores how geopolitical and cultural differences are shaping the rollout of emerging AI technologies globally.