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.

Originally posted here:

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

Tags:

SpaceX charged with illegally firing workers who spoke critically of Elon Musk Read the full complaint – CNBC

SpaceX charged with illegally firing workers who spoke critically of Elon Musk Read the full complaint  CNBC

The rest is here:

SpaceX charged with illegally firing workers who spoke critically of Elon Musk Read the full complaint - CNBC

Tags:

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.

Mild, valid criticism of Trump apparently a bridge too far for Elise Stefanik

President Bartlet sets the record straight

Elsewhere!

Chris Christie Apologizes for Previously Backing Trump, Who He Now Believes Will Burn America to the Ground

Vanity Fair Read More

A New Survey Shows the GOP Presidential Race Shifting Ahead of the Iowa Caucuses

Politico Read More

The Jan. 6 Riot Inquiry So Far: 3 Years, Hundreds of Prison Sentences

NYT Read More

A quarter of Americans believe false claim that FBI instigated Jan. 6

Washington Post Read More

Trump businesses received millions in foreign payments while he was in office

Guardian Read More

Can Joe Biden Pull Off a Harry Truman?

New York Read More

The quintessentially British fish and chips is endangered. Why?

NBC News Read More

Exploding toilet at a Dunkin store in Florida left a customer filthy and injured, lawsuit claims

AP Read More

Continued here:

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

Tags:

Elon Musk Is Union-Busting in Sweden Because He’s Afraid of Worker Power – Jacobin magazine

Elon Musk Is Union-Busting in Sweden Because He's Afraid of Worker Power  Jacobin magazine

More here:

Elon Musk Is Union-Busting in Sweden Because He's Afraid of Worker Power - Jacobin magazine

Tags:

Childbirth-obsessed Elon Musk says the Netherlands will die out by its own hand, in X conversation with far-right Dutch leader – Fortune

Childbirth-obsessed Elon Musk says the Netherlands will die out by its own hand, in X conversation with far-right Dutch leader  Fortune

See the rest here:

Childbirth-obsessed Elon Musk says the Netherlands will die out by its own hand, in X conversation with far-right Dutch leader - Fortune

Tags: