xAI has been sued by a former engineer who claims the company fired him after he warned about safety risks tied to Grok, adding another legal dispute to a growing list of cases involving Elon Musk’s companies.
Devin Kim, a former xAI engineer who now leads an AI safety-focused think tank, filed the lawsuit Tuesday in California state court, alleging that his push for stronger safeguards around Grok made him a target inside the company.
The complaint claims xAI retaliated against him after he raised concerns about the risks artificial intelligence could pose, including discrimination and dangerous misuse.
Safety warnings become a workplace fight
Kim’s lawsuit turns the broader debate over AI risk into a direct employment dispute. He claims his efforts to place guardrails around Grok’s development put him at odds with company leadership, at a time when xAI is trying to compete more aggressively with OpenAI, Google and Anthropic.
The case places fresh scrutiny on xAI’s internal safety culture as the company expands Grok across Musk’s technology ecosystem. It also raises questions about how fast-moving AI companies handle employees who challenge product direction on safety grounds.
Mississippi residents sue xAI, SpaceX over noise
The employee case comes days after residents in Southaven, Mississippi, sued xAI, SpaceX and MZX Tech LLC, accusing the companies of disrupting a quiet neighborhood with constant noise and vibration from gas-powered turbines allegedly tied to nearby AI data center operations.
The proposed class action, filed June 8 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi, claims the Southaven plant has produced persistent low-frequency noise that disrupts sleep, limits residents’ use of homes and yards, and reduces property values.
The plaintiffs, Jason Haley, Preston Herrington and Taylor Logsdon, are seeking damages and a jury trial on behalf of residents and property owners allegedly affected by the facility.
The complaint says the companies knew or should have known that round-the-clock industrial operations would be incompatible with nearby homes, and failed to adopt adequate noise controls despite complaints from residents and warnings from city officials.
OpenAI battle adds pressure as SpaceX IPO nears
Musk has also been fighting OpenAI, the company he co-founded before launching xAI as a rival. A federal jury in May ruled against Musk in his lawsuit accusing OpenAI, Sam Altman and Greg Brockman of abandoning the company’s founding mission to build AI for the benefit of humanity.
The jury found that Musk had waited too long to bring the claims, though he has said he plans to appeal.
The lawsuits are piling up at a sensitive time for Musk’s companies, as SpaceX moves toward a closely watched IPO that is expected to test investor confidence in Musk’s growing technology empire.
