General Elon Musk Fukkery Thread

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

The Original
Bushed
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
305,928
Reputation
-34,254
Daps
616,208
Reppin
The Deep State
Elon fukked around :ufdup:

time to find out :demonic:


Justice Department Probe Scrutinizes Elon Musk Perks at Tesla Going Back Years
Federal prosecutors also have sought information about transactions between Tesla and other entities related to the billionaire
Federal prosecutors are scrutinizing personal benefits may have provided Elon Musk since 2017—longer than previously known—as part of a criminal investigation examining issues including a proposed house for the chief executive.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York also has sought information about transactions between Tesla and other entities connected to the billionaire, people familiar with the investigation said. Prosecutors have referenced the involvement of a grand jury.

The new information indicates that federal prosecutors have a broader interest in the actions of Musk and Tesla than was previously known and that they are pursuing potential criminal charges. The Wall Street Journal reported last monththat the Justice Department is investigating Tesla’s use of company resources on a secret project that was described internally as a house for Musk.

The house effort was known within the carmaker as “Project 42,” and plans called for an expansive glass building to be constructed near Tesla’s Austin-area factory and headquarters.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has opened a separate civil investigation into the project, the Journal has reported.

On X, the social-media platform formerly known as Twitter, Musk has said there isn’t a glass house “built, under construction or planned.” He didn’t address past work or plans; neither he nor his representatives have responded to requests for comment.

Last year, Musk explored building a home for himself on a horse farm across the Colorado River from the factory known as Giga Texas—and met with an architect to brainstorm designs—but “put off building it,” Walter Isaacson wrote in an authorized biography of the billionaire published this month. At one point, according to the book, Musk suggested the design could incorporate a shard of glass emerging from a lake.

The Journal spoke with an array of people about Tesla and the government investigations for this article.

Among the questions prosecutors are examining is whether Tesla properly disclosed perks Musk might have received. Internal or external lawyers typically handle such disclosures. At Tesla, Musk has at times personally guided what information to disclose to shareholders. It couldn’t be learned whether that was the case with any perks that prosecutors are scrutinizing. Tesla has said it generally doesn’t provide perks or other personal benefits to its top executives.

In late July, Elon Musk shifted Twitter’s name to X, a major change for the brand. But it’s not the first time the tech billionaire has used the URL x.com. WSJ explains what the site’s past could signal about its future.
The Manhattan-based federal prosecutors also have sought information about a separate issue, the driving range of Tesla’s electric vehicles, the Journal reported in its article last month.

The Journal reported last October that the SEC and federal prosecutors in Washington and San Francisco were investigating whether Tesla misled consumers and investors about the performance of its advanced driver-assistance system known as Autopilot. The agencies haven’t announced any enforcement action against Tesla in connection with those investigations. Tesla has disclosed in securities filings that it received Justice Department inquiries about Autopilot.

Within Tesla, Project 42 and its purpose were closely guarded secrets.

Tesla lawyers and board members scrutinized the project after employees became concerned about how millions of dollars of large-format glass panels the company had ordered would be used.

Zach Kirkhorn, who was Tesla’s chief financial officer before stepping down last month, was among those who raised concerns internally about the project.

Some employees were told a limited liability company called Peninsula LLC would reimburse Tesla for certain costs. An LLC by that name, formed in April 2022, is managed by Musk adviser Jared Birchall, Texas records show.

Whether Tesla was reimbursed and whether the glass was ever delivered to the company couldn’t be learned.

Tesla is one of several companies that has received questions about executive perks recently from the Justice Department or the SEC.

Corporate policies on what constitutes personal or professional spending by C-suite executives vary, and there can be broad leeway, corporate governance experts say.

SEC regulations require public companies to disclose perks and other personal benefits provided to top executives if the total value of those benefits is $10,000 or more. Personal benefits can include reimbursement for private security, housing allowances or airplane use.

Stephen L. Cohen, a lawyer at Sidley Austin who leads its regulatory and enforcement group, said for the past few years the SEC’s Enforcement Division has been aggressive around its interpretation of legal standards involving disclosure and looking for anomalies.

“Companies have been paying attention to the SEC’s enforcement efforts and tightening their controls in this area, which is likely resulting in changes to perks or increased disclosures,” he said. “But I believe there is also a view at the SEC that the public cares about executive perks.”

The regulations also require companies to disclose transactions above $120,000 in which an executive officer or other related party has a material interest.

Musk runs several companies in addition to Tesla—including rocket company SpaceX and the social-media platform X.

Last October, around the time Musk was acquiring the company then-known as Twitter, he borrowed $1 billion from SpaceX. He paid the loan back with interest the next month.

Around the time the $44 billion deal closed, Musk called in Tesla engineers to review Twitter’s engineering talent.

Musk testified in a Delaware trial last year related to his compensation that Tesla employees were doing so on “a voluntary basis after-hours.”

Tesla said in an April proxy filing that Twitter had incurred roughly $1.4 million in expenses through February under agreements with the electric-vehicle maker. It also said it had agreements with SpaceX.

Musk has become the world’s wealthiest person thanks in large part to the soaring value of his stake in Tesla, where he is compensated in stock options. Tesla’s recent proxy statement showed that Musk didn’t receive any new compensation from the carmaker in 2020, 2021 or 2022.
 

MushroomX

Packers Stockholder
Supporter
Joined
Aug 17, 2013
Messages
25,910
Reputation
8,850
Daps
110,450
Reppin
Wisconsin
At this point bankruptcy probably doesn't look so bad.

wgewhto.png
Saudis won't allow that.
 

Adeptus Astartes

Loyal servant of the God-Brehmperor
Supporter
Joined
Sep 15, 2019
Messages
10,634
Reputation
2,468
Daps
65,164
Reppin
Imperium of Man

Elmo had nothing to say about the white cop who got away with running down that Indian woman, but posts about the Black kids who run down a white retired cop. Neither stpry was covered up by the media. His agenda couldn't be more naked :mjpls:
 

that guy

Superstar
Joined
Jan 25, 2014
Messages
5,236
Reputation
548
Daps
17,045
Elmo had nothing to say about the white cop who got away with running down that Indian woman, but posts about the Black kids who run down a white retired cop. Neither stpry was covered up by the media. His agenda couldn't be more naked :mjpls:
Has it been confirmed that they were black kids? They sounded Hispanic to me
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
51,988
Reputation
7,936
Daps
149,431

X is shutting down Circles​

Circles let you share posts that only a limited group of people can see, but the feature will be deprecated as of October 31st.​

By Jay Peters, a news editor who writes about technology, video games, and virtual worlds. He’s submitted several accepted emoji proposals to the Unicode Consortium.
Sep 21, 2023, 7:49 PM EDT

An image showing the former Twitter logo with the X logo on its head

Illustration: The Verge

X is planning to shut down Circles, a feature that lets you share posts with a limited group of people instead of all of your followers. The company said in a “PSA” on Thursday that Circles will be disabled by October 31st.

“After this date, you will not be able to create new posts that are limited to your Circle, nor will you be able to add people to your Circle,” X wrote in a post on its help center. “You will, however, be able to remove people from your Circle,” and the company gave instructions on how to do that.

Twitter (not X) officially launched Circles (which it called “Circle”) in August 2022; Elon Musk wasn’t yet the official owner of the company. (At that time, he was trying to get out of his deal to buy it.) But in April, some posts intended for Circles starting appearing on the platform’s For You timeline, which obviously wasn’t ideal if you wanted a post to only be seen by your handpicked Circle audience.



X didn’t give a reason as to why it’s shutting down the feature. But the company has recently been making more of a push around its Facebook Groups-like Communities feature — perhaps it viewed Circles and Communities as too similar to keep both around.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
51,988
Reputation
7,936
Daps
149,431
hWU59oB.png


gh9vUxr.png

jVaqIUh.png



X/Twitter CEO Shares Video Ad That Features Tweets Dunking on Elon Musk​

One of X’s latest ads included some critical tweets, but CEO Linda Yaccarino reposted the ad without them claiming they made a new ‘high-res version.’​

By
Kyle Barr

Published Yesterday


It’s hard to catch, but the original video CEO Linda Yaccarino uploaded to ‘X’ included several posts explicitly critical of the platform and its owner Elon Musk.Gif: X

It seems Twitter—the company now calling itself “X” based on one billionaire’s nostalgic whim—can’t escape users’ dissatisfaction with the platform, not even in its own advertising.

Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino shared a new video advertisement for the X platform Thursday. As dull as it is, it hits all the points she and her boss Elon Musk have been proclaiming about their supposed “everything app,” including video calls, payments, and creator subscriptions. At the same time, users spotted some rather critical tweets hidden among the fast-scrolling messaging. Molly White, of Web3isGoingJustGreat fame, shared how some of the posts referred to the enshyttification of Twitter since billionaire Musk’s tenure began last October.

One of the posts enshrined in the ad reads “the timeline algo is dying fr it’s becoming mediocre engagement maxxed [sic] on low effort report accounts and dating discourse.” Another tweet promoted by the video refers to Musk’s recent attacks against the Anti-Defamation League, and how he’s platformed major anti-Semitic figures. That tweet reads “Twitter’s value has fallen by at least 50%, and Elon is blaming it all on the Jews. Masterful gambit sir.”

Here’s the video:

X/Twitter Deleted Ad
CC

X/Twitter Deleted Ad

And here are the tweets if you blinked and missed them:

Tweet featured in Twitter ad that criticizes Elon Musk.

Screenshot: Gizmodo

Tweet featured in Twitter ad that criticizes Elon Musk.

Screenshot: Gizmodo

Most of the tweets in those timelines appear to be from Sept. 4 and 5. Other posts caught in the scrolls include users complaining about the rising cost of rent, reactions to late-night host Bill Maher’s horrible take on the ongoing writers and actors strike, and another reading “paul schrader is a swiftie, roman polanski is a pedophile, vincent gallo is a nazi. Accept it, at the end of the day I only care about the movies.” There was even one tweet from President Joe Biden stuck in there.

Yaccarino deleted her original tweet sharing the ad. She then reposted a modified version of the ad that no longer includes any of the more controversial tweets featured in the original, although it includes different—but still critical—tweets about Maher’s tone-deaf take on the strikes. It also includes a tweet from a shytposting account featuring a video of a chicken being stuffed with soft-serve ice cream. The tweet read “If you sweet talk the waitress they let you do this at Golden Corral.”




Gizmodo reached out to Twitter for comment but we did not immediately hear back. Twitter’s own Community Notes feature blasted Yaccarino, saying the new video isn’t in a higher resolution but scrubs the tweets that were critical of X.

Yaccarino gave credit for the video to Ted Harrison, the head of production and six-year veteran at Twitter. It’s entirely possible that other people also worked on the video, and that editors simply screen-grabbed themselves scrolling down their “For You” feed with abandon and without first questioning what the algorithm might show them. Strangely, the obvious sexual memes or rampant, inescapable ads for Wendy’s or Amazon made the cut, but not the tweets critical of Twitter’s leadership.

MORE FROM GIZMODO
Scientists Recover RNA From an Extinct Species for the First Time
Michael Bloomberg Is Throwing $500 Million at Efforts to Shut Down All U.S. Coal Plants
NSYNC Confirms They Were Jedi in Star Wars: Attack of the Clones
Flowers Growing in Antarctica Are the Latest Sign of Environmental Catastrophe


You might say the tweets presented in the video were supposed to be a collage, a tapestry made up of millions of different, incongruous threads forming a somewhat cohesive whole. Those critical tweets point to an age before the focus on payments and stocks, back to the wild days of interconnected expert discourse, bad takes, and shytposting. If Twitter’s CEO was trying to make users excited for the future, she may be simply making them more nostalgic.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
51,988
Reputation
7,936
Daps
149,431

Taylor Swift fans mock Elon Musk over ‘desperate’ tweet asking singer to post music on X​

Artist had shared a post about her forthcoming album ‘1989 (Taylor’s Version)’​

Louis Chilton

1 day ago


Taylor Swift releases trailer for Eras Tour concert film
Taylor Swift fans have taken aim at Elon Musk over the billionaire’s tweet imploring the pop star to share new music on X/Twitter.

The Tesla owner and CEO of X made the request in response to a post shared by Swift ahead of the release of her new album 1989 (Taylor’s Version).


Swift had partnered with Google to create a sequence of puzzles that, when solved, would reveal the names of new tracks for her forthcoming album.

“It’s a new soundtrack,” she wrote on X. “Here are the back covers and vault track titles for 1989 (my version) I can’t wait for this one to be out, seriously. Thank you for playing along, sleuthing, puzzling and making these reveals so much chaotic fun (which is the best kind of fun, after all).”

In the comments underneath, Musk wrote: “I recommend posting some music or concert videos directly on the X platform.”

RECOMMENDED​


His comment drew derisive responses from Swift’s fans, with many questioning why the globally famous pop star would feel the need to lend her music to the website’s new feature.

“Owner of failing social media platform would like one of the biggest musicians on the planet to help it stay relevant,” one person wrote. “Elon is desperate, isn't he? And the world knows it.”

“Elon Musk acting like there is anything Twitter can do for TAYLOR SWIFT re: exposure and reach that she isn’t already doing on her own is inadvertently the first genuinely hilarious thing he’s ever done,” another remarked.

“‘I recommend posting some music or concert videos directly on the X platform,’ Musk tweeted, unable to muster a single reason why Swift, one of the most successful musicians on the planet, should do so. Lol,” wrote podcaster Róisín Ingle.

“Elon Musk thinks Taylor Swift needs his advice on how to market herself and make her music popular. Because of course he does,” someone else commented.


1989 (Taylor’s Version) comprises re-recorded versions of songs from Swift’s 2014 album 1989. It forms part of an ongoing effort to re-record and re-release much of Swift’s back catalogue, prompted by a licencing and royalties dispute with former producer Scooter Braun.

The new record will also feature additional songs from her “vault”, including songs written at the time she was first recording the album that didn’t make it on to the final version.

Musk and Swift have crossed paths on social media before. In March, Musk was roasted for a series of bizarre posts about the artist, in which he praised her “limbic resonance skill”.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
51,988
Reputation
7,936
Daps
149,431

X adds "Formerly Twitter" to App Store listing as app plunges in the charts​

Ever since Elon Musk changed the platform's name to X, the social media app's downloads have continued to fall.
By Matt Binder on September 22, 2023


X in App Store

X is now referencing Twitter in its Apple App Store listing after the app dropped in the rankings. Credit: Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Searching for Twitter in Apple's App Store, but can't find it? You're not alone!

Just this week, X dropped the bizarre "Blaze your glory!" slogan that appeared alongside the app's name in Apple's App Store. The Musk-created phrase took up valuable real estate, being one of the first things App Store visitors would see about the X app while telling them literally nothing about what the app is or does.

X App Store listing

Here's how the X app now looks on Apple's App Store charts with the new "Formerly Twitter" tagline. Credit: Mashable screenshot
In its place, Musk's company has added something much more straightforward — and likely much better at attracting downloads. The tagline on the X app listing on the App Store now simply says "Formerly Twitter."

Elon Musk's social media platform, X, has been tanking in Apple's App Store rankings ever since he dropped the Twitter branding over the summer. One researcher found that drop in mobile downloads was immediate for X, starting the very same day that the app changed its name from "Twitter" to "X" in the App Store. From there, the X app continued on a downward spiral, falling more than 30 places in the "Top Downloaded" category, far and away from competing social media apps like TikTok and WhatsApp.

Old X app listing

Here's how the X app previously looked on the App Store with the "Blaze your glory!" slogan. Credit: Mashable screenshot
Musk had been adamant about dropping all Twitter references – from the iconic blue bird logo to globally used terminology like "tweets" and "retweets" – as soon as he announced the name change. The changeover has been sloppy, with more technical changes, like swapping the Twitter domain name for X.com, still not running as of this writing. However, Musk was able to get the Twitter-to-X name change through Apple's moderation process, which previously barred apps from using one-letter names.

However, even though the iOS app officially became X on July 31, a new poll released last week found that a whopping 69 percent of users prefer the name "Twitter" to "X" and still refer to the platform as such. Naturally, if users are calling it Twitter, that's likely how they're searching for it, too.

As mentioned, X has been plummeting in the App Store rankings and downloads, so we'll keep a close eye on how the company intends to rectify its precarious current standing. X nixing its "Blaze your glory!" tagline for "Formerly Twitter" seems like a good first step in addressing its sudden overzealous, sweeping changes that clearly aren't resonating with users.
 

KalKal

Superstar
Joined
Aug 23, 2014
Messages
5,940
Reputation
1,085
Daps
15,992
Reppin
No Whammies!!

X adds "Formerly Twitter" to App Store listing as app plunges in the charts​

Ever since Elon Musk changed the platform's name to X, the social media app's downloads have continued to fall.
By Matt Binder on September 22, 2023


X in App Store

X is now referencing Twitter in its Apple App Store listing after the app dropped in the rankings. Credit: Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Searching for Twitter in Apple's App Store, but can't find it? You're not alone!

Just this week, X dropped the bizarre "Blaze your glory!" slogan that appeared alongside the app's name in Apple's App Store. The Musk-created phrase took up valuable real estate, being one of the first things App Store visitors would see about the X app while telling them literally nothing about what the app is or does.

X App Store listing

Here's how the X app now looks on Apple's App Store charts with the new "Formerly Twitter" tagline. Credit: Mashable screenshot
In its place, Musk's company has added something much more straightforward — and likely much better at attracting downloads. The tagline on the X app listing on the App Store now simply says "Formerly Twitter."

Elon Musk's social media platform, X, has been tanking in Apple's App Store rankings ever since he dropped the Twitter branding over the summer. One researcher found that drop in mobile downloads was immediate for X, starting the very same day that the app changed its name from "Twitter" to "X" in the App Store. From there, the X app continued on a downward spiral, falling more than 30 places in the "Top Downloaded" category, far and away from competing social media apps like TikTok and WhatsApp.

Old X app listing

Here's how the X app previously looked on the App Store with the "Blaze your glory!" slogan. Credit: Mashable screenshot
Musk had been adamant about dropping all Twitter references – from the iconic blue bird logo to globally used terminology like "tweets" and "retweets" – as soon as he announced the name change. The changeover has been sloppy, with more technical changes, like swapping the Twitter domain name for X.com, still not running as of this writing. However, Musk was able to get the Twitter-to-X name change through Apple's moderation process, which previously barred apps from using one-letter names.

However, even though the iOS app officially became X on July 31, a new poll released last week found that a whopping 69 percent of users prefer the name "Twitter" to "X" and still refer to the platform as such. Naturally, if users are calling it Twitter, that's likely how they're searching for it, too.

As mentioned, X has been plummeting in the App Store rankings and downloads, so we'll keep a close eye on how the company intends to rectify its precarious current standing. X nixing its "Blaze your glory!" tagline for "Formerly Twitter" seems like a good first step in addressing its sudden overzealous, sweeping changes that clearly aren't resonating with users.


What a failure.
 

Conz

Superstar
Joined
May 12, 2012
Messages
8,567
Reputation
669
Daps
18,225
"Blaze your glory!" what a generic bullshyt slogan that made zero sense.

X sucks so fukkin bad, but threads still isn't shyt. i barely check it, but I can't just STOP using twitter b/c it fukkin sucks now. it was a part of my life for over a decade. can't just erase something like that cold turkey. there's still no rival. i wouldn't be caught dead opening reddit in public
 
Top