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Musk’s invocation of free speech is nothing new for him. Instead of creating a platform for free speech, Musk created a platform for Musk’s speech — or, more precisely, Musk’s power. First, he has demonstrated that he’s perfectly willing to take action against people or entities that challenge him or challenge X. Second, rather than create a free marketplace of ideas, Musk uses X as a marketplace where you can pay to privilege your thoughts. It directs a human tidal wave of attention — some 140 million Elon Musk fans — to their accounts.”Taken together, all of these factors mean that Twitter isn’t so much a free speech paradise as the generalissimo’s playpen, and the generalissimo’s values shape everything about the place.
Persons: loftily, , Jack Dorsey, , that’s, Musk, , revel Organizations: Twitter, Foundation, Rights, Elon
All the while Elon Musk was calling for an AI development pause, he was building his own AI venture, The New Yorker reported Monday. Musk signed an open letter in March calling for a 6-month pause on training AI. AdvertisementAdvertisementWhile Elon Musk was publicly calling to "pause giant AI experiments" earlier this year, he was quietly building his own, according to a new report. Musk was working on xAI during the time he and more than 1,000 other people, including AI experts, signed an open letter calling for a 6-month pause on AI development, according to an article published in The New Yorker on Monday. Musk also filed the registrations for xAI the same month the letter was circulated, according to The New Yorker.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, , Tesla, TruthGPT, loftily Organizations: Yorker, Morning, Nvidia, SpaceX Locations: New
Sir James Dyson has slammed the UK's plans to extend employees' rights to work from home. Without control over where employees work, companies like Dyson will hesitate to invest in the UK, he said. However, such a move — which comes during a global recession — is a "misguided approach" that will "generate friction between employers and employees," Dyson wrote. "We have seen from our own experience at Dyson during periods of government-enforced working from home how deeply inefficient it is," Dyson wrote. Dyson, who's currently worth an estimated $15.4 billion, is not the first business leader to rally against flexible work arrangements for employees.
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