Multiple celebrities have criticized Musk for his political involvement as well as the changes he's made to X since purchasing it.
ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, is required to sell the app to a U.S.-based buyer or face a nationwide ban.
Musk was fact-checked by an L.A. firefighter in his own livestream after repeating a popular lie about “water shortages.”
Wednesday afternoon on Twitter, now known as X, conspiracy theorist Alex Jones wrote that the ongoing Los Angeles wildfires have been engineered by “globalists” in order to “deindustrialize” the United States.
With little fanfare, Elon Musk, the chief executive of tech companies including Space X, Tesla X and the satellite communications wonder Starlink, personally delivered Starlink communications systems and Cybertrucks to rescue groups and first responders battling wildfires throughout Los Angeles County.
While reasons vary about the cause of the wildfires, a section of Conservatives have blamed DEI and a small fish for it.
How can a group of climate-conscious, liberal-leaning Tesla superfans in Silicon Valley support the Trump-Musk alliance? Josh Marcus took a cruise in a Cybertruck to find out
ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, is required to sell the app to a U.S.-based buyer or face a nationwide ban.
Tesla CEO announced Sunday that he plans to use Cybertrucks outfitted with Starlink technology to provide internet to those devastated by the California wildfires.
The president-elect and Joe Biden are reportedly exploring legal avenues for keeping the app accessible. Meanwhile, a growing list of entrepreneurs are said to be weighing a buyout.
“Friendly reminder: Elon Musk could rebuild nearly every home that’s been lost in the LA fires for less than he paid to f’up this app,” Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, who represents a portion of Los Angeles, tweeted (and then deleted) Monday.