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Elon Musk appearing at the New York Times Dealbook Summit Wednesday in New York. Photo: Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images for The New York TimesElon Musk said that an advertising boycott over his posts that he said were misperceived as antisemitic would kill his social-media platform X, and that anyone trying to blackmail him over advertising money could “go f—yourself.”“If somebody’s going to try to blackmail me with advertising, blackmail me with money. Go f—- yourself,” Musk said during an interview at the New York Times ’ DealBook Summit on Wednesday.
Persons: Elon Musk, Slaven Vlasic, The New York Times Elon Musk, ” Musk Organizations: New York Times, The New York Times Locations: New York
John Durham Finds Russiagate’s Rosetta Stone
  + stars: | 2023-01-28 | by ( Holman W. Jenkins | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Throw in a few real names and places to make your inventions believable and people will believe them. This is the method of many a disgraced journalist such as the New York Times ’s Jayson Blair and the Washington Post’s Janet Cooke . It was the method of the Steele dossier fabulists Igor Danchenko and his boss Christopher Steele . It was also the method of the most consequential fabricator of all, whoever dreamed up the presumably fake email exchange between then-Democratic Party chief Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and activist Leonard Benardo of the Open Society Foundation. This imaginary exchange may have made Donald Trump president.
Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Apple Inc. holds too much sway over the mobile-app ecosystem and that he is still optimistic about his company’s metaverse ambitions, even if they might not come to fruition for many years. “Apple has sort of singled themselves out as the only company that is trying to control, like unilaterally, what apps get on a device,” the chief executive said Wednesday at the New York Times ’ Dealbook Summit in New York City. “I don’t think that’s a sustainable or good place to be.”
Amazon .com Inc. CEO Andy Jassy said he doesn’t regret the hiring spree the company went on in recent years even as the tech giant is now conducting one of the largest rounds of corporate layoffs in its history. “This year we had the lens of a very uncertain economic environment, as well as having hired aggressively over the last several years,” Mr. Jassy said at the New York Times ’ Dealbook Summit in New York City on Wednesday. The company’s goal has been to go through its businesses “thoughtfully but thoroughly” and avoid compromising on “key long-term” bets, the chief executive said.
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