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Musk is working on his own generative AI project for Twitter

After co-signing an open letter addressed to AI labs globally to pause the development of large-scale AI systems, Elon Musk seems to be working on an AI project within Twitter.

According to sources familiar with the matter (via Business Insider) Twitter has recently purchased roughly 10,000 GPUs (graphics processing units), which are likely to be used on a large AI model for the platform.

Musk is committed to the project, which is evident by the purchase of 10,000 GPUs, however, according to sources familiar with the matter, the project is at an early stage. It’s currently unclear what Musk’s AI project would focus on. Likely use cases could be to better target users with ads or to improve the search functionality on the platform.

Further, according to Business Insider, Musk hired Igor Babuschkin and Manuel Kroiss from Alphabet-owned AI research firm DeepMind in March to help him on his AI endeavour that would rival OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

It’s worth noting that Musk co-founded OpenAI alongside Sam Altman and others, though he walked away from the company in 2018.

Could it be that Musk’s open letter to pause development of large-scale AI models was so that he could secretly play catch up? It wouldn’t be surprising if that was the case.

Source: Business Insider

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Mobile Syrup

Musk refuses to pay Twitter executives’ backlogged travel expenses

A new report from the New York Times suggests Elon Musk is now refusing to pay “hundreds of thousands” of dollars in travel bills racked up by Twitter executives before he took over the platform.

Musk’s staff commented that the travel expenses were authorized by the former Twitter management, and not by him, and hence, the company has ghosted travel vendors, and is avoiding their calls.

The total amount of money owed to travel vendors is currently unknown.

The company has been on a cost-cutting spree since Musk’s takeover. It laid off roughly half of its workforce earlier this month, only to realize that it needs some essential workers to join back. At the time, Musk said that Twitter was losing over $4 million USD (about $5.4 million CAD) per day and that reducing the company’s workforce was the only way to go.

The employees that remained were asked to show technical documentation to justify the work they do at Twitter and to prove their value to the company.

Subsequently, despite prior job cuts, Bloomberg announced on Monday, November 21st, that Musk is considering laying off employees in the sales and partnerships teams.

All of this is a result of the company losing money consistently. In a recent staff meeting at Twitter, Musk said that Twitter is currently losing so much money that “bankruptcy is not out of the question.” Big time advertisers are also leaving Twitter, calling the platform “high risk.” It’s evident that the platform can’t sustain itself, and Musk’s new $9.99 Twitter Blue with verification might not prove to be enough.

The latest news on Twitter and Musk can be found here.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: New York Times

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Mobile Syrup

Musk pulled 50 Tesla employees to work on Twitter code

After completing his $44 billion USD (roughly $60 billion CAD) acquisition of Twitter on October 28th, Elon Musk has reportedly brought in 50 of his trusted Tesla Autopilot software engineers to review Twitter’s code, as reported by CNBC News. 

According to internal records reviewed by CNBC News, employees from Musk’s other companies are now allowed to work at Twitter, with 50 from Tesla, two from the Boring Company and one from Neuralink already switching.

It is currently unclear whether Tesla employees are expected to split their schedules between working at Twitter and Tesla, or if they are expected to dedicate their full time to the social media company. Added to that, these employees are reported to have little to no experience in the field of social media coding, and use a different programing language from the one used at Twitter.

Tesla software engineers use Python programing language, while Twitter runs on the Scala programing language.

Further, Twitter employees have been asked to show technical documentation to justify the work they do at Twitter to prove their value to the company. Employees have also reportedly been working unsustainably long shifts since Musk’s takeover to meet deadlines, with the news that Musk intends to trim Twitter’s headcount significantly looming over them.

“The employees said they are worried about being fired without cause or warning, rather than laid off with severance,” reads the CNBC News report.

In addition to ‘fixing’ Twitter, Musk has also asked software engineers at Twitter to look at Vine’s code in an attempt to revive the app. Twitter acquired Vine for $30 million USD (about $40 million CAD) in 2012, only to shut it down in 2016. Read more about it here.

For the latest on the Musk x Twitter happenings, check out all our coverage here.

Source: CNBC News

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Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk’s first task post Twitter acquisition was to fire top executives

Elon Musk’s Twitter acquisition is complete, per an SEC filing submitted Friday morning. While there hasn’t been a formal announcement made yet about the buyout, Musk shared several not-so-subtle hints about it, like tweeting “the bird is freed,” walking into the Twitter headquarters with a sink, letting the fact that his buyout has been completed ‘sink in’ and the fact that the company is being removed from the S&P 500 index (since it’s going private) all point to the fact that the acquisition has been completed and Musk is now ‘Chief Twit.’

With the buyout finished, Musk is now in charge of multiple companies, including Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink, The Boring Company, and now, Twitter.

Post-acquisition, Musk reportedly fired several top executives, including Twitter’s CEO Parag Agrawal, CFO Ned Segal and policy head Vijaya Gadde, unnamed sources told CNN News. Musk also reportedly got rid of Twitter’s general counsel, Sean Edgett (per The New York Times), and chief customer officer Sarah Personette (via Insider).

Segal’s Twitter bio reads “former CFO,” while Gadde’s Twitter bio no longer mentions Twitter. Agrawal’s bio, however, still read “ceo @twitter” at the time of publication.

According to Reuters, “Agrawal and Segal were in Twitter’s San Francisco headquarters when the deal closed and were escorted out.” Currently, Musk intends to be the interim Twitter CEO, until a formal CEO can be appointed.

Musk also finally revealed why he acquired Twitter yesterday, stating that “it is important to the future of civilization to have a common digital town square, where a wide range of beliefs can be debated in a healthy manner, without resorting to violence.” Read the full story here.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: CNN News

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Tesla investors suing Musk for 2018 tweet present their case

Tesla investors who took founder Elon Musk to court over a 2018 tweet are presenting their case today.

The tweet stated Musk was considering taking Tesla private and had already secured the funding.

As reported by Bloomberg, Musk’s tweet led to the company’s share prices suffering “massive losses.” Musk defended his tweet and said his plan was based on conversations he had with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

Citing analysts, the publication reports a trial loss could leave Musk and Tesla on the hook for more than $1 billion.

But that’s not the only large bill Musk is currently facing. He’s under a deadline to complete the $44 billion acquisition of Twitter by week’s end. Failure to do so will result in a trial.

However, as Reuters reports, Musk seems to be taking steps to secure the funding. The publication recently tweeted Musk has notified his co-investors to “prepare to fund” the acquisition.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Bloomberg, Reuters

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Mobile Syrup

The SEC looked into Twitter’s bot account calculation procedure back in June

A new filing made public on Wednesday regarding the Twitter v. Elon Musk lawsuit revealed that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) conducted a review of how Twitter calculates the percentage of spam accounts on its platform.

The eyebrows first rose when Tesla CEO Elon Musk withdrew from his Twitter acquisition amid accusations that Twitter shared a false bot count. Twitter says that spam bots comprise less than five percent of its monthly daily active users (mDAU), whereas Musk argues otherwise, claiming that roughly 20 percent of the platform’s mDAUs are spam bots.

The SEC’s review began roughly a week before whistleblower, and Twitter’s former head of security Peiter “Mudge” Zatko revealed that the company is practicing “extreme, egregious deficiencies” related to privacy, security and content moderation.

In a letter to Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal, the SEC wrote the following:

“You disclosed that an error was made in March 2019 which resulted in an overstatement of mDAU from the first quarter of 2019 through the fourth quarter of 2021. Please discuss how the error was discovered, when and by whom. Given that the error persisted for three years, please tell us how you concluded there was not a material weakness in your internal control over financial reporting and that your disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of March 31, 2022.”

Subsequently, a Twitter lawyer responded to the SEC‘s letter explaining how the company calculates the percentage of bot accounts, saying that people manually review randomly chosen accounts out of those it counts as mDAUs. The accounts go through a checklist of rules defining spam or platform manipulation, and accounts are subsequently marked as spam if any of the rules are violated.

The SEC completed its review on July 27th, and gave no conclusion to its review, other than saying that “We have completed our review of your filings. We remind you that the company and its management are responsible for the accuracy and adequacy of their disclosures, notwithstanding any review, comments, action or absence of action by the staff.”

Twitter’s lawyers have said in the past that it “deploys an array of spam-detection capabilities that typically result in the removal of more than a million spam accounts each day during or shortly after creation, including both automated and manual reviews of accounts and activity on the Twitter platform.”

On the other hand, Zatko says that the way Twitter calculates its mDAU is the primary cause of increasing bot and spam activity on the platform, and that the higher-ups at the company were “concerned that if accurate measurements [of bot activity] ever became public, it would harm the image and valuation of the company,” via The Verge.

The trial for the case is set to take place on October 17th in Delaware, and will determine whether the social media company can force the world’s richest man to complete the purchase.

Via: CNBC, The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk reaches over 100 million followers on Twitter

Elon Musk reached the 100 million follower milestone on Twitter and his account has the sixth-highest follower count on the platform, behind Barack Obama, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, Rihanna and Cristiano Ronaldo, respectively.

Musk passed 100 million followers between June 26th and June 27th where he saw a gain of almost 150,000 followers within that period, according to SocialBlade. With Musk recently in the midst of buying Twitter, he could one the most “post savvy” social media owners compared to others.

His average daily amount of posts on Twitter is 14, and most them consist of memes, some of which take shots at other famous people.

The only main concern with Musk’s follower count is spam bots, which, according to Musk, take up 20 percent of users on Twitter. He says this is part of the reason why hasn’t yet moved forward with a deal to buy the social media platform.

For now, Musk proceeds to post the usual on his Twitter account, with his most recent one showing a 7-Eleven gas sign, followed by gas prices shown below at $7.11 USD ($9.16 CAD) at the time of this article.

Source: SocialBlade Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Musk reportedly plans to cut jobs and costs once Twitter acquisition is complete

Elon Musk’s tenure at Twitter hasn’t even officially begun, but a new Bloomberg report suggests that the world’s richest man intends to cut costs and jobs in a bid to generate financial returns.

The snippet of information comes from unnamed people familiar with the matter, who say that while in talks with bankers to acquire along for the $44 billion USD (about $56 billion CAD) purchase, Musk floated the idea of cutting both jobs and company costs. “He didn’t go into details about which departments or positions might be affected,” said the unnamed source. 

Additionally, new subscription tiers might be coming to the social media platform, as Musk was heard discussing subscription services to drive recurring revenue.

While we aren’t entirely sure how Musk intends to lead Twitter, his statement in the company’s acquisition press release suggests that his focus is primarily on free speech.

“Free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy, and Twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated,” said Musk. “I also want to make Twitter better than ever by enhancing the product with new features, making the algorithms open source to increase trust, defeating the spam bots, and authenticating all humans. Twitter has tremendous potential — I look forward to working with the company and the community of users to unlock it.”

Musk abolished Tesla’s PR (public relations) department back in 2020, so something similar might be on the table for Twitter as well.

In other Musk and Twitter-related news, two Canadian banks have lent $1.46 billion to Musk for his Twitter acquisition.

Source: Bloomberg

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Musk is going the Trump route, wants to build his own social media platform

After automotive, internet, and space exploration, Tesla CEO Elon Musk is now “giving serious thought” to venturing into the social media business.

It all started with Musk criticizing Twitter, stating that the platform doesn’t allow for free speech, and a subsequent poll where he asked whether people “believe Twitter rigorously adheres to this principle?”

A whopping 70.4 percent voted that they don’t believe Twitter provides a platform where users can express themselves freely. I wouldn’t take that percentage at face value, as it’s likely an inflated figure, owing to Musk fanboys.

“Given that Twitter serves as the de facto public town square, failing to adhere to free speech principles fundamentally undermines democracy. What should be done?” said Musk, which was closely followed by another Tweet with the world’s richest person asking, “Is a new platform needed?”

Of course, free speech is essential to a functioning democracy, but Twitter — a private company — doesn’t have any obligation to adhere to said principles, similar to how Musk’s private company Tesla doesn’t adhere to free speech principles, either. The company recently fired an employee for uploading videos to YouTube showing flaws in the company’s Full-Self Driving Beta.

Regardless, Musk says he’s “giving serious thought” to the idea of building his own social media platform. And while his Twitter fingers are always active, I would take the Tweet with a grain of salt. Execution of such platforms is easier said than done. Take former U.S. president Donald Trump’s ‘Truth Social’ or Twitter competitors Parler and Gettr, for example. Those are all platforms that push for free speech, but haven’t seen the level of success big players like Meta and Twitter have.

Source: @elonmusk