Australia is gearing up for a showdown with Elon Musk and US social media giants over allegations they failed to move fast enough to police graphic content and misinformation during two violent attacks in Sydney over the past 10 days.
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said X’s decision to fight against the removal of posts showing the stabbing of a bishop in Sydney was “extraordinary.”
Elon Musk’s X platform is continuing its video push, launching a dedicated app for smart TV sets. The X video app launched Tuesday, with the company touting a handful of key features, including a trending video algorithm,
The point Musk is making is that human beings have plenty of options to distract them, at the expense of their dreams. If your ship has yet to come in, keep your phone charged, so you can take charge of your dream.
Elon Musk’s social media platform X started testing AI-generated news summaries powered by Grok in early April. The feature has a disclaimer that Grok “can make mistakes,” and it’s made quite a few of them.
Elon Musk plans to launch an X TV app for smart TVs, promising real-time engaging content and AI integration. Not much has been made known about the app, other than the fact that it's “coming soon to a television near you.
The billionaire owner of X (formerly Twitter) has taken aim at Australia’s eSafety Commissioner over being told to remove videos from his site. It’s just the tip of the legal iceberg.