Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk threatens to pulls out of Twitter deal

Elon Musk is threatening to pull out of his $44 billion USD (roughly $55 billion CAD) agreement to buy Twitter.

Through a letter, Musk’s lawyers accused Twitter of refusing to provide information pertaining to the number of spam-bot accounts on the platform.

If you recall, the saga started last month when Musk said bot accounts could represent 20 percent of the platform’s users. Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal said this figure is less than five percent but couldn’t share details showing how Twitter got to this figure publicly.

The recent letter says Musk doesn’t believe in Twitter’s “lax testing methodologies” and needs the information to run his own analysis. The letter, included in a filing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Monday, goes on to say the information requested is part of the agreement, and not providing it is “causing further suspicion,” leading way for Musk to walk away from the acquisition.

“This is a clear material breach of Twitter’s obligations under the merger agreement and Mr. Musk reserves all rights resulting therefrom, including his right not to consummate the transaction and his right to terminate the merger agreement,” the letter from Musk’s lawyers says.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Via: The New York Times

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk teases Tesla robot might be ready by September 30

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said he’s shifting the company’s AI Day event to September 30th in anticipation of a working Optimus prototype.

The news, shared through a tweet, came hours before Reuters reported Musk emailed executives about cutting 10 percent of Tesla’s workforce because of a “super bad feeling” about the economy.

Optimus is the humanoid robot revealed during Tesla’s 2021 AI day. Musk says it will complete dull tasks humans don’t like, such as grocery shopping and other everyday tasks.

But the question remains if Musk is speaking the truth or using the tweet to cover up the promises unravelling around him.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Twitter via The Verge

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Tesla reported having paid a PR firm to monitor employees online in 2017 and 2018

Tesla reportedly paid a PR firm to monitor employees online in 2017 and 2018. The firm focused on research conducted by labour organizers through a Facebook group.

The core reasoning behind Tesla bringing on a PR firm is due to its staff trying to form a union at the company’s Fremont, California factory. According to invoices and documents obtained by CNBC, MikeWorldWide (MWW) PR tried to identify conversations regarding workplace conditions. The monitoring covered anything from unfair labour practices to a sexual harassment lawsuit.

Via the report, three Tesla employees who worked at the Fremont factory were advised not to connect with high ups online. This extended to staff joining online groups without surveying the members. Additionally, two current employees are also cautious about Tesla continuing to monitor social media posts to this day.

Copies of Tesla’s current communication policies have also been seen. These reportedly state that managing personnel should not look into an employee’s social media presence without a notable reason drawing back to the company. However, the company also states that employees should not address labour issues online. Instead, they are “more likely to resolve concerns about work” through the company directly.

News of this comes at a time when Tesla CEO Elon Musk is very adamant about free speech online. In his bid to acquire Twitter for $44 billion, Musk has been outspoken about how the social media platform should be used for free speech. Prior to approaching a deal to purchase Twitter, Musk used the platform to complain about the state of free speech. The question of whether “a new platform is needed” was also brought into question.

Ultimately, this led Musk to purchase 9.2 percent of Twitter and later reach a deal to own the company. However, the acquisition has not gone through fully at the time of writing.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: CNBC Via: The Daily Beast

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk issues hiring freeze at Tesla and also cuts staffing by 10 percent

This week, Tesla CEO Elon Musk sent an email to company execs, informing them that the company is pausing hiring worldwide. Additionally, due to having a “super bad feeling” about the economy, Musk told Tesla’s executive team to cut its staff by 10 percent.

Based on 2021 filings, Tesla has a global workforce of 99,290 employees. A cut of 10 percent is fairly significant. However, Musk and Tesla are no strangers to layoffs. It was only just recently that Musk sent executives another email claiming “remote work is no longer acceptable.” Any employees not in the office, working 40 hours a week are to be let go.

Musk cites his feelings about the economy as the reasoning behind the freeze and layoffs. That said, earlier this year, Tesla expected to increase vehicle deliveries by 50 percent year-over-year thanks to demand. In 2021, the company’s sales also increased by 71 percent to $53.8 billion USD (roughly $67.5 billion CAD). It’s also noted that Tesla reported over $3 billion (roughly 3.765 billion CAD) in profit in its first quarter of this year. However, COVID-19 lockdowns have played a role in shutdowns at Tesla’s gigafactory in China. This, in turn, is impacting the company’s deliveries this month.

There’s no word on which departments are being affected by the layoffs.

This news also comes at a time when Musk himself is in the midst of purchasing Twitter. The transaction is set with a value of $44 billion USD (about $56 billion CAD). Musk is reportedly completing the deal with the Royal Bank of Canada and the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce assistance. The two are lending Musk a total of $1.15 billion USD ($1.46 billion CAD) in low-cost debt loans.

Source: Reuters Via: The Verge

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk gets embarrassed after stealing meme on Twitter, deletes post

Tesla CEO Elon Musk had a tough day on Twitter. After posting an image and headline from a Hard Drive article without giving credit, Musk received some obvious pushback. This led to a rather embarrassing exchange for the future owner of the social media platform.

In a tweet, Musk posted an image from Hard Drive reading, “Zodiac Killer Letter Solved by Opening It With VLC Media Player.” Musk posted the image with the caption, “Nichememe” without any visible credit given to the writer or the outlet.

It wasn’t long until the Hard Drive account chimed in, requesting Musk to stop “cropping our names off our articles.” Musk responded and claimed it wasn’t him who posted the cropped image first. The Tesla CEO also tried to bag on Hard Drive and state it is “only a 6/10 meme.”

This back and forth continued over a few more interactions. The boiling point was Musk claiming Hard Drive’s satirical articles about him are “less funny than SNL on a bad day.” While posting a meme without crediting the creator was his first mistake, bringing up Saturday Night Live was certainly the biggest in the instance. This tee’d Hard Drive up for what would be the killing blow.

“Well you’re the expert on SNL’s bad days,” Hard Drive responded while posting an image of Musk dressed as sad Wario from his appearance on SNL last year. This was apparently the straw that broke the camel’s back as Musk later deleted his original post.

This should serve as a lesson for anyone stealing memes and content without crediting the creator. No one is exempt from the ubiquitous ‘mess around and find out’ rule on Twitter. Not even Musk, who is acquiring Twitter for $44 billion USD (roughly $56 billion CAD). Musk wishes to promote “free speech” on Twitter. Though, that doesn’t mean instances like this are free of consequences.

Image source: Saturday Night Live

Source: @adogondrugs

Categories
Mobile Syrup

AirPlay may come to Tesla cars, but what about CarPlay?

Tesla hypeman Elon Musk has been fielding some questions on Twitter, and now he seems to be considering adding AirPlay to Telsa vehicles.

Twitter user ShibaDoge (of course Musk would respond to this account) asked if their car would ever get AirPlay to help improve the wireless audio system in the car. In response, Musk said that he would discuss it with the audio team.

I have about 0.2 percent faith that this will actually come to any Tesla cars soon, but there is a slim chance since Apple has been adding AirPlay to even more devices like speakers and smart TVs in the past few years. However, I’d expect that Apple would rather hold out on this and hope that Tesla will just accept CarPlay as an infotainment option in the future.

Playing music in a Tesla is one of the most old-school experiences of the futuristic cars. Most drivers seem to use Bluetooth to stream their music which is a significant step down from the quality provided by a nice wired connection or even AirPlay. For someone that’s often hyping up the speakers in Tesla cars, Musk has paid very little attention to how modern drivers stream their music. It even took the company until mid-2019 to add support for Spotify streaming.

Source: Elon Musk 

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk’s Starlink now has 400,000 subscribers globally

Elon Musk’s SpaceX recently revealed that it now has more than 400,000 subscribers around the world.

The service first launched back in October 2020 and has steadily grown since. For example, at the start of this year, Starlink stated that it had 145,000 subscribers, whereas roughly two months ago, the company revealed that the number had grown to 250,000.

The new subscriber figure was revealed during a call with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission on May 19th.

The low Earth orbit satellite-powered internet is currently available in 36 countries around the world, including most southern areas of Canada. SpaceX has so far launched 2,500 Starlink satellites.

On the service’s website, only Afghanistan, Cuba, Belarus, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Syria and Venezuela are not listed as “coming soon.”

In Canada, Starlink costs $140 per month and $649 for the equipment to set up the service. The company also recently introduced a new mobile version of its equipment designed for RVs. Read more about it below:

Source: CNBC Via: Tesla North 

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk shares Elden Ring build, gets roasted because it sucks

Whether it’s sharing tasteless edgy memes, referencing Eminem in court or, really, any number of other childish actions, Elon Musk has regularly come off as an old man desperately trying to act young.

Now, the Tesla CEO has done so once again by proudly — but misguidedly — sharing his character’s build in FromSoftware’s Elden Ring.

It all started on May 22nd when Musk tweeted his adoration of the critically acclaimed open-world action-RPG. “Elden Ring, experienced in its entirety, is the most beautiful art I have ever seen,” he said.

Naturally, he quickly got questions about what character build he was running. Musk, without a shred of self-awareness, later responded with the following image:

Quickly, Twitter users noticed that something was… off.

For the uninitiated, a common mechanic in FromSoftware’s games, Elden Ring included, is your Equip Load. Basically, put on too many items and your character will run and roll quite slowly. This is known as a “Heavy Load,” and Musk’s build, with an Equip Load over 67.2/68.8, is a prime example of it.

Of course, deciding whether to prioritize power and defense over speed and agility is part of what a challenging game like Elden Ring is all about. You have to weigh the trade-offs and gear up accordingly. At first, Musk does actually seem to acknowledge this in his tweet through the caption “Equipped load will be lower if fast roll is needed.”

The problem, though, is that there’s no apparent rhyme or reason to the gear Musk had equipped. Many people rather humourously pointed this out to him. That’s because he seemingly misunderstands how equipment actually works in Elden Ring.

If you look at his build, he has two shields and a sword equipped. Cool… except for the fact that your character only actively benefits from whatever swords and/or shields that you’re currently holding. Therefore, Musk has effectively put on a second shield for no reason. It’s not even as if he was dual-wielding shields to create some sort of ultra-defensive “tank” character. He simply gains nothing from this particular build, and is just adding extra weight and encumbering his character instead.

Given that managing Equip Load is such a core principle of Elden Ring (and other FromSoftware games), it’s amusing to see Musk self-own himself by sharing such a wonky build.

While Musk didn’t respond to any of the replies — or multiple news stories that have since been written — pointing any of this out, he did most recently share an updated image of his character’s stats.

Musk probably thinks that the image, which shows a Level 121 character, is “proof” of his gamer cred. Anything to try to distract everyone from the recent sexual harassment allegations made against him or his Twitter takeover drama, right?

Elden Ring is now available on PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S and PC.

Image credit: Bandai Namco

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Twitter acquisition ‘cannot move forward’ until company proves fake and spam account figures: Musk

Elon Musk says his deal to buy Twitter can’t proceed until the company proves that fake and spam accounts make up less than five percent of the platform’s users.

Musk says these accounts could represent at least 20 percent of users.

“My offer was based on Twitter’s SEC filings being accurate. Yesterday, Twitter’s CEO publicly refused to show proof of <5%. This deal cannot move forward until he does,” Musk tweeted in the early hours of May 17th.

The billionaire is referencing pushback he received from Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal the day prior. He said Musk’s method to measure the fake and spam accounts couldn’t be completed in a lengthy thread. Musk responded with an emoji to one of Agrawal’s tweets.

“There are LOTS of details that are very important underneath this high-level description. We shared an overview of the estimation process with Elon a week ago and look forward to continuing the conversation with him, and all of you,” Agrawal tweeted on May 16th.

As The Verge reports, people have speculated that Musk is casting doubts on the number of bots to negotiate a lower buying price. The deal is currently worth $44 billion (about $56.4 billion CAD).

Source: Twitter via The Verge

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk says Twitter’s legal reps told him he violated an NDA

Elon Musk is (allegedly) not on Twitter’s good side.

The social media giant’s legal team said he violated an NDA by revealing Twitter’s sample size for checks on automated users was 100, according to a tweet Musk made.

“Twitter legal just called to complain that I violated their NDA by revealing the bot check sample size is 100! This actually happened,” Musk tweeted on May 14th.

The alleged warning stems from a May 13th tweet Musk made saying the deal to purchase Twitter was “temporarily on hold” while his team looked into numbers on fake and spam accounts.

Musk revealed the figure after a Twitter user asked him to “elaborate on the process” his team was using. Musk also invited “others to repeat the same process and see what they discover.”