Elon Musk blasts EU
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Billionaire businessman Elon Musk giggled like a schoolgirl about “causing trouble” during an interview with Stephen Miller’s wife. Miller, a former Trump official, booked the Tesla CEO in a bid to gain some traction for her podcast.
Musk’s podcast remark is now evidence in a lawsuit probing whether DOGE kept operating despite the government’s claims.
When a user asked Buterin if Musk should censor speech he disliked, the Ethereum co-founder claimed that Musk was "actively tweaking" algorithms to boost and deboost content based on pretty arbitrary criteria. "As long as that power lever exists, I'd prefer it be used (without increasing its scope) to boost niceness instead of boosting ragebait."
In 2014, the Delaware Supreme Court issued a ruling that largely ended the practice of nuisance lawsuits where most challenges to M&A transactions resulted in a quickly dismissed lawsuit that still netted shareholder firms a fee of a few hundred thousand dollars.
Elon Musk’s Starlink Inc. urged Namibians to provide comment on proposed amendments to the country’s regulations as part of the satellite-internet operator’s efforts to obtain a license without ceding ownership.
While he said he was proud of DOGE's accomplishments, Tesla founder Elon Musk nonetheless said that they ultimately were not worth the backlash Tesla cars faced from angry activists.
With SpaceX’s valuation expected to skyrocket, its CEO largely credits satellites, rocket launches — and the company’s plan to solve a major AI-industry problem.
Elon Musk has claimed that X has become the leading news source across all 27 EU nations, sparking debate over its influence as the platform continues to face regulatory scrutiny.