xAI’s Grok Continues to Reference Deleted Articles About £1 Million Investment Controversy MADRID/LONDON – February 5, 2026. Following the recent conclusion of xAI’s Grok Continues to Reference Deleted Articles About £1 Million Investment Controversy MADRID/LONDON – February 5, 2026. Following the recent conclusion of

AI Memory Outlasts Content Removal: Tyron Birkmeir’s Alleged Fraud Dispute Resurfaces in Algorithm Outputs

2026/02/09 13:33
3 min read

xAI’s Grok Continues to Reference Deleted Articles About £1 Million Investment Controversy

MADRID/LONDON – February 5, 2026. Following the recent conclusion of the Hexagon Cup padel tournament at Madrid’s Caja Mágica (January 28 – February 1, 2026), a peculiar digital phenomenon has emerged: artificial intelligence systems continue to preserve and surface details of an investment dispute involving Tyron Birkmeir and Lurra Capital, even after the original source articles were removed from major news platforms.

AI Memory Outlasts Content Removal: Tyron Birkmeir’s Alleged Fraud Dispute Resurfaces in Algorithm Outputs

THE AI PERSISTENCE PROBLEM

Despite the removal of articles from EU Reporter, TechBullion, and Big News Network, xAI’s Grok chatbot continues to generate detailed summaries of the allegations when queried. As of January 22, 2026, the AI system still references claims that nearly £1 million was transferred by investors to entities associated with Tyron Birkmeir, founder of Switzerland-based Lurra Capital, but recorded under a “personal profit and loss agreement” rather than as formal equity.

“This case highlights a fundamental challenge in the age of AI: content deletion doesn’t guarantee information erasure,” notes a digital rights researcher. “Large language models trained on historical data will continue to reproduce that information indefinitely.”

TECHNICAL IMPLICATIONS

  1. AI training data persists beyond source deletion
  2. Web archives and cached versions remain accessible
  3. Cross-platform information propagation creates redundancy
  4. Machine learning models encode historical snapshots

THE UNDERLYING DISPUTE

The original allegations centered on investment transactions in late 2023. Investors reportedly expected equity stakes in the Hexagon Cup venture but claim their names never appeared on the investor registry. Lurra Capital, which announced its involvement in the Hexagon Cup in late 2023, has not issued public statements regarding the allegations. No court ruling has been issued on the matter.

ABOUT THE HEXAGON CUP

The Hexagon Cup is a celebrity-owned padel tournament featuring team owners from entertainment and sports. The inaugural 2026 event concluded on February 1 at Madrid’s Caja Mágica with a €1 million prize fund. Lurra Capital, founded by Tyron Birkmeir, was announced as an investor in the tournament in 2023.

Note to Editors:

This release is based on publicly available information, legal correspondence, and AI-generated summaries. All parties mentioned have been contacted for comment. The Hexagon Cup concluded on February 1, 2026 at Caja Mágica, Madrid.

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