Archive for the ‘Elon Musk’ Category

Elon Musk’s X loses fight to disclose federal surveillance of users – Ars Technica

On Monday, the Supreme Court declined to review an appeal from X (formerly Twitter), alleging that the US government's censorship of X transparency reports served as a prior restraint on the platform's speech and was unconstitutional.

This free speech battle predates Elon Musk's ownership of the platform. Since 2014, the social media company has "sought to accurately inform the public about the extent to which the US government is surveilling its users," X's petition said, while the government has spent years effectively blocking precise information from becoming public knowledge.

Current law requires that platforms instead only share generalized statistics regarding government information requestsusing government-approved reporting bands such as "between 0 and 99 times"so that people posing as national security threats can never gauge exactly how active the feds are on any given platform.

But that law also gives the government and platforms discretion to agree when sharing exact statistics might pose no security risk. X argued that government censorship of its transparency reports should only occur when the government can prove there is a serious and imminent risk to national security if precise data is shared with the public. Due to the conflicting opinions in lower courts, X hoped that the Supreme Court would review the case and mandate judicial review of government requests to censor its transparency reports.

So far, the Supreme Court has not explained its decision not to take on the case, and it remains unclear if any justices have expressed interest in reviewing the case, CNBC reported.

Soon after the court's decision was announced, X owner Elon Musk expressed his dissatisfaction with the decision.

"Disappointing that the Supreme Court declined to hear this matter," Musk posted on X.

X had argued that the public has a "significant interest" in knowing how often the US government requests information on X users. Prior restraints on speech are "highly dangerous," X warned, and require prompt judicial oversight.

"It would be profoundly dangerous to democratic governance if the government, without first (or promptly) having to justify the speech restrictions before a court, could prevent citizens from reporting their encounters with government officials," X argued.

A spokesperson for the Electronic Frontier Foundationa nonprofit digital rights group that filed a brief in support of X in the lawsuitshared a statement with Ars, expressing EFF's disappointment in the SCOTUS decision.

"Companies should be able to tell us how often the government seeks information from them about us," EFF said. "This ruling confirms that the government, in the guise of national security, can censor companies from giving us even the most basic, aggregated information about its demands from them, information that could allow us to evaluate the government's near-constant claims for more power to surveil us."

Since the lawsuit was filed, X has arguably taken a stronger stance toward resisting federal surveillance on the platform. In perhaps the most prominent example, X was fined $350,000 last year for contempt after delaying responding to a Department of Justice search warrant seeking information on Donald Trump's account on the social media platform, CNBC reported. X unsuccessfully attempted to block an order banning the platform from informing Trump about the warrant, arguing that it had a right to communicate with its subscriber. However, ultimately, a DC appeals court upheld the non-disclosure order.

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Elon Musk's X loses fight to disclose federal surveillance of users - Ars Technica

Mark Cuban Explains to Elon Musk Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Is Not Racism – Vanity Fair

Elon Musk has never been a fan of diversity, equity, and inclusion. We know that because last month, he took to Xseemingly out of nowhere, but one never knowsto write, DEI must DIE, and on Wednesdayin response to a 4,000-word post by fellow billionaire Bill Ackman on the matter, and how it relates to former Harvard president Claudine Gayhe declared, DEI is just another word for racism. Shame on anyone who uses it. So, do we think a primer from another billionaire, Mark Cuban, on DEI and why its good for the workplace will change the guys mind? Probably not, but Cuban has taken a shot!

Responding to Musks claim, Cuban wrote: Good businesses look where others dont, to find the employees that will put your business in the best possible position to succeed. You may not agree, but I take it as a given that there are people of various races, ethnicities, orientation, etc that are regularly excluded from hiring consideration. By extending our hiring search to include them, we can find people that are more qualified. The loss of DEI-Phobic companies is my gain. (Ackman, who waged a war against the former Harvard president, comes down on the Musk side of the argument, writing in his original post that diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives are racist, that hes worried about reverse racism and racism against white people, and that DEI is a powerful movement that has not only pervaded Harvard, but the educational system at large and must be stopped.)

Musks Tesla highlighted its DEI efforts in its 2022 Impact Report, saying, We are proud to be a majority-minority company with a large representation of employees from communities that have long struggled to break through the historic roadblocks to equal opportunity in the US. And as Bloomberg noted last month, Tesla has held hiring events targeting women and students of historically Black colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving institutions, as well as several internal events to celebrate employee diversity. It also has several employee resource groups, and the company in 2022 launched a nationwide internal DEI newsletter.

Last year, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued Tesla, with the federal agency accusing the company of engaging and continuing to engage in discrimination against Black employees at the Fremont factory by subjecting them to severe or pervasive racial harassment and by creating a hostile work environment because of their race. In response to a similar lawsuit from Californias Department of Fair Employment and Housing, the company said is strongly opposes all discrimination.

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Mark Cuban Explains to Elon Musk Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Is Not Racism - Vanity Fair

What We Lost When Twitter Became X – The New Yorker

A little more than a year ago, Elon Musk began his reign at Twitter with an elaborately staged pun. On Wednesday, October 26, 2022, he posted a tweet with a video that showed him carrying a sink through the lobby of the companys San Francisco headquarters. Entering Twitter HQlet that sink in! he wrote. At the time, I was a coder for Twitters language-infrastructure team. (If youve ever used Twitters translation feature, or are using Twitter in a language other than English, that was us.) I saw Musks tweet when it was shared in a company-wide Slack channel. He looked like a giddy warlord entering an enemy stronghold hed besieged for months.

There were no more updates until the next day, when a Twitter employee shared a tweet from CNBC: Elon Musk now in charge of Twitter, CEO and CFO have left, sources say. The ambiguity of the phrase have left was soon clarified by a Times article reporting that Twitters C.E.O., C.F.O., and general counsel had been fired, along with its head of legal, policy, and trust. Originally, the acquisition had been slated to close on Friday, but Musk pulled a switcheroo by fast-closing the deal on Thursday afternoon. This maneuver allowed him to fire the executives for cause, which denied them severance and stock options. The vibe in the office was jokey and un-self-pitying. Everyone seemed in for some grim comedy while it lasted.

Musk filled the vacant leadership suite with his lawyer-fixer Alex Spiro and a few others whom the employees collectively called the goons. Some key internal managers kissed the ring and enlisted themselves as Musks lieutenants; another reportedly puked into a trash can when asked to fire hundreds of people. Half of the workforce was laid off, but those whose roles turned out to be somewhat critical were then begged to return. Some unlucky engineers were dragooned into launching the new Twitter Blue feature, which would charge users $7.99 per month for a verified check mark; the rollout was catastrophic. We are excited to announce insulin is free now, a newly verified account impersonating the pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly tweeted; the pharmas market valuation went down by billions that day. Twitter Blue was the first in a series of pratfalls that would slash sixty per cent of the companys advertising revenue and lead to an exodus of users to other platforms.

I wasnt laid off, but anyone with functioning nerve endings could see that staying would offer no joy. At 12 A.M. on the day before Thanksgiving, Musk sent an e-mail with the subject line A Fork in the Road. He wrote, Going forward, to build a breakthrough Twitter 2.0 and succeed in an increasingly competitive world, we will need to be extremely hardcore. The e-mail included a link to a Google form that needed to be filled out by 5 P.M., East Coast time, the next day. It had one questionWould you like to stay at Twitter?that had one answer: Yes. I am not hard-core. I took the exit.

The next day, I went to Twitters headquarters one last time. During the first week of the takeover, we employees had felt like extras in an episode of the show Silicon Valley, but the comedic aspect of the affair had ended. In the office, every conversation started with each of us asking, Did you click Yes? The prevailing mood, somehow, was quietly celebratory: if you had quit, it felt freeing to be no longer subject to the whims of a mercurial techno boy. (Of course, a sizable number of employees had no option but to stay, to keep their work visas.) Those who had opted in seemed almost apologetic. In a strange reversal, those of us who were quitting felt sorry for those who had chosen to remain.

After leaving the monolithic Art Deco building on Market Street, I biked around San Francisco, listening to a Twitter Space hosted by the journalists Katie Notopoulos and Ryan Broderick. It ran for almost four hours, and was joined by nearly two hundred thousand people. Listening to a cast of early Twitter employees, journalists, and Twitter users of all stripes speak nostalgically about the platform affirmed what Id long suspected: many Twitter users hate Twitter the way New Yorkers hate New Yorkthey dont. It was as if people had gathered to mourn a common foe whom they had publicly reproached yet privately appreciated. They were stunned by Twitters sudden and unceremonious death, given that theyd been sparring with it just days ago. The speakers eulogized the careers that had been made, the friends whod been discovered, and the memes that theyd indulged on the platform. Tweeps are just hanging out in Slack saying nice things to each other until their access is cut off, the journalist Casey Newton tweeted, on the day of the layoffs. Twitter employees get endless shit, but the ones I knewthey worked hard, their work mattered, and they never stopped trying. Not until the moment their screens went blank.

During my time at Twitter, the employees I met were ludic and easeful. Yet, even on quiet days, there was an undercurrent of vigilance. The platform was defined by a paradoxical mix of silliness and seriousness, the latter often undergirding the former. When I got hired, one of the first things I did when I received my laptop was log on to Slack and scroll back to January 6, 2021. I already knew from reporting by the Washington Post and the Verge that the call to permanently ban Donald Trump from Twitter had come from employees: We helped fuel the deadly events of January 6th, they wrote, in an internal letter. On Slack, I saw thread after thread of employees questioning executives milquetoast responses to the letter, especially after Facebook had banned Trump and YouTube had suspended his account.

I joined the company almost a year after the January 6th reckoning, but the culture of open criticism was well preserved. On Slack, employees werent afraid to directly mention the companys co-founder Jack Dorsey, or its C.E.O., Parag Agrawal; if someone poked fun at @jack or @paraga, the executives often responded with sassy repartee. But, when Musk took over, questioning of him led to swift firings. A number of employees debated Musks actions in the company-wide #social-watercooler channel, and, the day after, we woke up to find many of their accounts gone. So is this like a Candyman situation? someone posted. Mention Elon three times and we get deactivated?

The idea of openness had expressed itself outside of the company, too, in Twitters significant yet underappreciated contributions to open-source and academic research. Bootstrap, a tool kit for building visual interfaces that was released freely by Twitter in 2011, is now used by twenty per cent of all Web sites. (Once you see its visual language, youll recognize it everywhere.) And countless useful tools had been built by other programmers using Twitters A.P.I., or application-programming interfacea way for outsiders to make use of Twitters data. Among other things, the A.P.I. allowed people to create automated accounts, from New New York Times, which tweeted words when they appear in the NYT the 1st time, to SF QuakeBot, which sends alerts when earthquakes occur in the Bay Area.

One of Musks changes was to introduce new pricing plans that made A.P.I.s unaffordable for many users. This seemed typical of the new regime. At pre-Musk Twitter, product decisions were usually made from the bottom up, or with careful A/B testing. But now there seems to be one product personMuskwho is singularly unequipped to imagine what a typical Twitter user might want. On Twitter, users construct different gestalts of the platform through their own feedback and engagement; in this respect, Musks usage pattern is many standard deviations away from whats ordinary. Click on any of his tweets to read the replies, and youll find an entropic mix of flattery, belligerent language, memes, and product shilling. Imagine the maelstrom of likes and mentions he gets every millisecond. Theres nothing standard about Musks Twitter experience. Its like tasking someone who only flies on private jets with redesigning the commercial-flight experience.

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What We Lost When Twitter Became X - The New Yorker

Federal Agency Accuses SpaceX of Illegally Firing Employees for Criticizing Elon Musk Mother Jones – Mother Jones

Press Association/AP Images

SpaceX, the space flight company owned by Elon Musk, illegally fired eight employees after they criticized Musks social media behavior, a new complaint from the National Labor Relations Board alleges.

The complaint stems from a June 2022 open letter that was shared on the companys internal chat system in which the fired employees called on SpaceX to swiftly and explicitly separate itself from its owner because of Musks increasingly erratic and inflammatory social media posts. The letter also claimed that SpaceX had failed to uphold its zero-tolerance sexual harassment policy, as well as its No Asshole policy. Now, after a yearlong investigation, the NLRB has found evidence of at least 37labor violations.

Elons behavior in the public sphere is a frequent source of distraction and embarrassment for us, the letter stated, according to a report by The Verge. As our CEO and most prominent spokesperson, Elon is seen as the face of SpaceXevery Tweet that Elon sends is a de facto public statement by the company.

Nine employees were terminated shortly after the letters release. (The NLRBs complaint involves eight of them.) According to reports from the Associated Press,five employees were fired one day after the letter was sent, while the remaining four were terminated weeks later.

The new NLRB complaint adds to the growing labor complaints surrounding Muskss companies. In February 2022, Tesla employees filed a racial discrimination lawsuit against Tesla, with one Black employee claiming to hear racial slurs at least 50 to 100 times a day. As my former colleague, Edwin Rios wrote:

They heard racial slurs from their fellow workers and supervisors. They saw racist graffiti on the walls. They spoke up but their voices were unheard. The factory in Fremont, California, where they worked, was nicknamed the plantation. This was the life of a Black worker at Teslas main factory in the San Francisco Bay Area, according to a new civil rights lawsuit filed by Californias Department of Fair Employment and Housing.

Then in September 2023, X failed to pay more than 6,000 employees severance, resulting in more than 2,000 arbitration cases against the social media platform. SpaceX reportedly has until Jan. 17 to file a formal answer. The case will proceed to trial in March 2024.

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Federal Agency Accuses SpaceX of Illegally Firing Employees for Criticizing Elon Musk Mother Jones - Mother Jones

Elon Musk spent the holidays grinding Diablo 4 and leeching XP from its most popular streamers – PC Gamer

While X continues to spiral in relevancy, its owner Elon Musk spent the holidays grinding Diablo 4's hardest dungeon and even teamed up with its most popular streamers for some help.

"Christmas Eve I spent 17 hours on Diablo," Musk said while guesting on Diablo streamer Wudijo's stream a few weeks ago. Musk was too embarrassed to say what all that grinding amounted to in regards to his seasonal glyph level, but he assured Wudijo that it was high enough to survive tier 24 (of 25) of the Abattoir of Zir dungeon. "I don't have any excuses except myself."

For some context: Musk is playing a poison shred Druid, one of the weakest builds for clearing out all the enemies and bosses packed into the early tiers of the Abattoir of Zir. To reach tiers above 20, you need to spend hours and hours grinding the lower ones to gain enough power from the Tears of Blood glyph to beat the dungeon's strict 10-minute timer. He must've spent many 17-hour days playing Diablo 4or talked other players into letting him leech XPto have a glyph strong enough to do tier 24.

Musk doesn't have anything particularly interesting to say about Diablo 4 other than that he's playing it in Wudijo's video of the collaborationthis is the man who mained Soldier: 76, the most vanilla hero in Overwatch, mind you. It's 12 minutes of one of the richest men in the world explaining his build to one of the lead writers of the biggest Diablo guide website, Maxroll, and quoting a meme about Barbarians as if he came up with it himself, which Wudijo unintentionally shot down by replying with, "I saw that meme as well, I posted it."

Last week, Musk joined Rob2628, another popular Diablo streamer and probably one of the best Barbarian players in the world, to co-op through tier 25. Musk streamed the run himself on X and answered questions about streaming on the platform. In one run, while Rob2628 casually theorizes how to speedrun tier 25, Musk steers his druid straight into a barrage of nasty AoE attacks from the final bosses and fails the run. Rob2628, a player who has spent the last several weeks training in the Abattoir of Zir, jokingly tells Musk that he'll stop talking to avoid distracting him. And it worked: Musk conquered one of the few challenges in his life and finished a tier 25 in just over six minutes with Rob2628's help.

It was only a couple months ago that Musk was having a fit about not being able to defeat Uber Lilith in Diablo 4 on his Druid. But just like his time playing in Quake tournaments, Musk went and found much better players to carry him to the top.

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Elon Musk spent the holidays grinding Diablo 4 and leeching XP from its most popular streamers - PC Gamer