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in General Factchecking by Newbie (400 points)

Elon Musk is currently working on a new version of robots that can carry your baby for 9 months while you go about your work. You and your husband just need to provide your sperm and eggs. The robot will fertilize them and allow the baby to grow inside for 9 months.

by Novice (740 points)
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This probably isn't the best source to see if this is true or not. Just based off the language used in the article, one can tell that it is an opinion piece more talking about the possibility of such a robot rather than the actual plans to build one.

3 Answers

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by Apprentice (1.4k points)
selected ago by

It appears the claim the Elon Musk is developing a child-bearing robot is false, according to this fact-check from USA Today. This article is attributed to Gabrielle Settles, who, according to her LinkedIn profile, has contributed to USA Today for nearly 1.5 years, and before that, to PolitiFact for over 2 years. In the USA Today article, published October 30, Ms. Settles explains that: "During Tesla’s 'We, Robot' event on Oct. 10, Musk introduced a robovan and a robotaxi – but a pregnant robot wasn’t on the list." She goes on to point out that the YouTube transcript of the event shows Musk did not make any announcement about a pregnancy robot during his presentation. According to my Google search, there are seemingly no credible news reports about such an announcement, either. For these reasons, I believe it is safe to conclude that the claim is false.

False
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ago by (160 points)

According to EuroWeekly News, Elon Musk announced he was in the process of making a robotic companion that could perform chores for you. This included mowing the lawn, watering the garden, babysitting the kids, and even being pregnant for you.

According to PolitiFact, however, this pregnancy robot claim stemmed from a running joke online that went too far. Musk did claim that “whatever you can think of, it will do” (PolitiFact). This statement made posters on social media start a meme trend, talking about what the robot could do for them, such as “make me a sandwich at 2am”, “fire up another round of pizza bites”, but some posters took it a step further by saying it could bear a couple's child. Meta, however, flagged those who posted about it as false news and removed them.

The BBC had similar facts that helped refute this claim, stating that the humanoid robots would be sold “in low production for Tesla”. They will not be offered to a large portion of the population, and those who would gain one would most likely be big commercial companies. It is also noted that the robots would be used for "repetitive or boring tasks”, making it seem like a low-functioning machine, compared to one that would have to be highly advanced to carry out a human being.

An article written by Snopes further explained how the rumor of the pregnancy robot came to fruition, explaining its origins, coming from TikTok. Snopes also confirms that there have been no credible news sources that have reported this claim. Furthermore, Scopes found the original poster of this meme and discovered they work with generative AI art, one of their pieces included the images used in their video to promote their joke. 

False
ago by Newbie (280 points)
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This answer is very well written and I feel like your sources are credible. One thing to dig even deeper would be to possibly figure out where these sources of BBC, PolitiFact, and others got their information and what exact "facts" they had to refute the claim. The answer does a good job explaining how the claim may have stemmed from a joke or opinion rather than fact.
ago by Innovator (64.1k points)
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You've cited multiple sources, but didn't provide any URLs for the sources. Please do so for future fact-checks. Thanks!
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ago by Newbie (280 points)

The claim that Elon Musk is looking into creating robots that can hold and create your baby for 9 months is completely false and provides no liable evidence for it to be true. The source https://euroweeklynews.com/2024/10/25/pregnancy-robots-elon-musks-bold-new-plan contains lots of advertisements that looked to be scams or irrelevant to the content being explained. There are no citations in the article, and, upon doing secondary research, I noticed there were no other trusted articles about this topic when searching on Safari and on Elon Musk's Twitter and Instagram 

https://x.com/elonmusk: no content on pregnancy robots 

https://www.tesla.com/blog: no content on pregnancy robots 

https://www.bbc.com/: no content on pregnancy robots, as this article usually covers most of Elon Musks stories

False

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