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What Elon Musk’s Grok says on Nikhil Kamath ‘meeting’ Tesla CEO

What Elon Musk's Grok says on Nikhil Kamath 'meeting' Tesla CEO

Zerodha CEO Nikhil Kamath recently shared a teaser video of his upcoming WTF podcast. The teaser video shared by Kamath feature Tesla CEO Elon Musk as a guest. Once shared, the teaser quickly went viral across social media starting excitement and speculation about whether Kamath has managed to secure a high-profile conversation with Elon Musk. The clip shows both Kamath and Musk sipping coffee, speaking nothing at all. They are looking at each other, laughing about something. Kamath is seen sipping a coffee from a mug that has “SpaceX” written on it. Kamath captioned the post simply “Caption this” and tagged Musk, leveraging the interaction to build hype for the unconfirmed episode.The 39-second teaser video shared by Kamath on social media sent users into frenzy, with the video quickly racking up millions of views and thousands of comments within hours. Many initially questioned whether the clip was generated using artificial intelligence, with comments flooding in asking “Is it AI?” and jokes like “We got Elon Musk and Nikhil’s podcast before GTA VI.”

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Grok’s reaction on Nikhil Kamath ‘meeting’ with Tesla CEO

Elon Musk own AI chatbot Grok integrated in social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter) has now shared its response on the teaser video shared by Zerodha’s Nikhil Kamath. As per the assessment by Grok, the video shared by Kamath appears to be AI-generated, raising questions about its authenticity. The assessment made by Elon Musk’s AI chatbot has now fuled an online debate, with many users wondering that if the teaser is a clever marketing gimmick.The video shared by Kamath comes at a time when AI-generated images from Thanksgiving dinners are doing the rounds of the Internet. Many users have shared Thanksgiving dinner images of Tech CEOs and interviews and deepfake videos on social media. As tools like Google Gemini’s Nano Banana Pro and OpenAI’s Sora push hyper-realism further, audiences are increasingly urged to practice media literacy and verify sources before taking viral clips at face value.

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