Nah, most spokes are made from Stainless Steel.
http://www.sapim.be/spokes
(and Sheldon says....)
"Spokes
The material of choice for spokes is
stainless steel. Stainless is strong and will not rust. Cheap wheels are built with
chrome-plated ("
UCP") or zinc-plated ("galvanized") carbon-steel spokes which are not as strong, and are prone to rust.
The leading brands of spokes available in the U.S. market are
DT and
Wheelsmith.
Titanium is also used for spokes, but, in my opinion it is a waste of money. Titanium spokes should only be used with brass nipples, and the combination is not significantly lighter than stainless spokes with aluminum nipples.
Carbon fiber spokes have been available, but turned out to be brittle and dangerous. If you bend one, it breaks like uncooked spaghetti! Carbon fiber, aluminum alloy and polycarbonate plastic spokes all have to be thicker than steel spokes, and the added air resistance slows you down more than the weight saving speeds you up -- unless you only ride uphill."
I'd like to think that the old broken spoke issue on the BH rear motors has been resolved now, after several instances of them breaking and having to be replaced/repaired. It looks like they're finally getting their act together in terms of producing a bike that is ready to be ridden without too much fettling out of the box. Better diagnostics, faster service so far this year.....I do hope it continues as they are capable of producing nice bikes as proven with the Panasonic powered bikes that still stand the test of time.