Musk unveils new AI chatbot
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Elon Musk urged companies to ditch Delaware last year after a judge voided his $55 billion pay package.
Elon Musk's AI chatbot Grok made antisemitic comments after a post about Camp Mystic during the Central Texas floods went live on X. Grok 4 was released a day later.
After agreeing to some concessions, Musk got the OK from the West Lake Hills City Council to keep the fencing around his local home — with some changes.
The world's richest man isn't unfamiliar with raking in plenty of cash — but he's also earned the ire of some residents in his Austin-area neighborhood for some permit violations on one of his boujee Texas mansions.
Musk was approved to keep the fencing and gates at his home in a vote by the West Lake Hills City Council on Wednesday, following backlash from neighbors who pointed out city ordinance violations. But Musk will have to change the enclosures and ensure they're in compliance with local rules.
But, this week, Musk is about to square off against a far different adversary: his neighbors.
Less than a month after its debut in Austin, Elon Musk's Tesla robotaxi service is poised to expand its operations around the Texas capital, while adding a controversial new feature to its services. On Wednesday,
Elon Musk’s xAI has deleted “inappropriate” posts on X after its AI chatbot Grok made a series of offensive remarks, including praising Hitler and making antisemitic comments. In now-deleted posts, Grok referred to a person with a common Jewish surname as someone who was “celebrating the tragic deaths of white kids” in the Texas floods.
Musk, the billionaire businessman behind Tesla and SpaceX, influenced several new Texas laws this year. How his lobbyists came about these wins, however, is more of a mystery.
While Elon Musk took Washington, D.C., by storm, his company representatives and lobbyists were also notching up big political wins in the heart of his vast business empire: Texas.
AUSTIN, Texas — After various disputes with neighbors, Elon Musk has gotten his way in West Lake Hills. According to KVUE's media partners at the Austin American-Statesman, the affluent Austin suburb approved four variances after code-violating improvements the billionaire made to his $6.24 million mansion led to protests from nearby residents.