‘He does it so cartoonishly it’s hard to imagine that’s not what he’s going for,’ one viewer argues
Elon Musk criticized Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after a judge ordered X to delete footage of a Sydney terrorist incident, arguing that the verdict could allow any nation to control the entire internet.
Branded is a weekly column devoted to the intersection of marketing, business, design, and culture. Love him or hate him, Elon Musk attracts as much attention as any CEO in memory. The latest example: this week’s Tesla earnings call, an obligatory event that at times seemed to be anticipated as a borderline cultural happening. Of course, a public company with a whopping market cap like Tesla’s will draw plenty of investor interest in its latest numbers. Of course, there were the usual...
To strengthen his artificial intelligence (AI) company, Elon Musk urged ambitious individuals to join his groundbreaking initiative, xAI. This wide-ranging project seeks engineers, designers, and staff for product development, data analysis, and infrastructure management."Join xAI," the tech tycoon wrote in a cross-post. Musk shared a link to his AI company's Careers page in the cross-post. Grok, an AI-powered chatbot launched in 2023, is at the forefront of this burgeoning enterprise. xAI is...
Australian court ruled X take down footage of violent stabbing in Sydney church
The 52-year-old SpaceX founder was seen hamming it up for the cameras as he struck a series of awkward poses on the red carpet at the Breakthrough Prize awards over the weekend.
Elon's ugly battle with Australia continues (Top headline, 4th story, link) Related stories:TESLA Accelerates Rollout of New EVs as Profit PlungesPromises, promisesCompany may let go 20% staff Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron
Anthony Albanese's comments come amid a feud over X's reluctance to remove footage of a stabbing.
Elon Musk praised Japanese video games for not incorporating "woke DEI lies," aligning this stance with his broader critique of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives in Western media and corporations. read more
Elon Musk’s X banned a post that claimed noncitizens are registering and voting in U.S. elections on a wide scale, saying it was “hate speech” and violated the platform’s terms because it attacked a “protected group.”
Twitter reportedly told Brazil's Supreme Federal Tribunal (STF) Minister Alexandre de Moraes on Monday that it would not challenge his censorship demands.
X owner Elon Musk confirmed the introduction of a charge in a reply to an account commenting on the subject.Read Entire Article