Elon Musk’s unpredictable Twitter habits have Tesla investors worried – The Washington Post

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Elon Musk was speechless. Entertainment news Elon Musk’s unpredictable Twitter habits have Tesla investors worried – The Washington Post The Twitter CEO was on a live audio chat Tuesday night with software engineers when one user started quizzing him about the internal workings of the company’s systems.Musk, who hours earlier said he would keep control…

imageElon Musk was speechless.

Entertainment news

Elon Musk’s unpredictable Twitter habits have Tesla investors worried – The Washington Post

The Twitter CEO was on a live audio chat Tuesday night with software engineers when one user started quizzing him about the internal workings of the company’s systems.Musk, who hours

earlier said he would keep control of Twitter’s software systems even though he plans to relinquish the CEO role, said the company’s code needed a complete rewrite.One of the participants asked what he meant — pushing for him to explain it from top to bottom.

“Amazing, wow,” Musk said after hesitations and pauses.“You’re a jackass.… What a moron.”

The incident highlights the new reality facing Musk, who also runs Tesla and SpaceX: a crisis of confidence in his

once-unquestioned brilliance.

That crisis accelerated as Tesla stock prices plunged nearly 20 percent this week to $123 per share on Friday,

largely due to concerns about Musk.

Also this week, roughly 58 percent of 17 million Twitter accounts that responded to an unscientific poll from Musk said he should step down as Twitter CEO, after helping create, then reverse new policies that proved controversial last weekend.

“Historically he’s been a pendulum between genius and reckless,” said Gene Munster, managing partner at Loup Ventures.“He’s on reckless right now.He’s way over recklessness.”

He added, “It leaves people to view him … as slightly less of a genius.”

Musk has built his reputation on

having a Midas touch with the companies he runs — something many investors and experts thought he would bring to Twitter when he purchased it for $44 billion in October, paying nearly twice as much as it was worth by some analyst estimates.

He is known for sleeping on the factory floor at Tesla, demanding long hours and quick turnarounds from his workers.He is seen as an engineering genius, propelling promises of cars that can drive themselves and rockets that can take humans to Mars.

But that image is unraveling.

Some Twitter employees who worked with Musk are

doubtful his management style will allow him to turn the company around.And some investors in Tesla, by far the biggest source of his wealth, have begun to see him as a liability.Musk’s distraction has prompted questions about leadership of SpaceX as well, though it is much less reliant on his active involvement.Meanwhile, Neuralink and Boring Co., two companies he founded, continue to lag on promises.

Musk’s net worth — largely fueled by his stake in Tesla, which has fallen by more than half this year — has plunged this year from roughly $270 billion to

below $140 billion on Friday, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.That fall has relieved him of the title of the world’s richest man and called into question his ability to keep up with his billions of dollars in loans.

Musk is repeatedly described as a man obsessed with Twitter in all the wrong ways, who is failing both at protecting his new investment and his previous ones, according to interviews with a half-dozen former Twitter employees and people close to him, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution or because they were not authorized to speak publicly about company matters.

Musk this week said Twitter is in a financial hole and facing a cash crunch — even as it slashed more than half of the workforce and closed offices.

“We have an emergency fire drill on our hands,” Musk said on Twitter Spaces.“Aspirationally, I’m not naturally capricious.”

Musk has always been

unpredictable and freewheeling with his public persona, but with Twitter, his actions have directly affected the business, turning off some of the company’s users and pushing away advertisers, said Jo-Ellen Pozner, a management professor at Santa Clara University’s Leavey School of Business.

“It really feels destabilizing for the whole Twitter community,” she said, adding that the reputation of a CEO does affect businesses and their stock prices — and could even prompt consumers to choose another vehicle.

Musk and Twitter — which has disbanded most of its public relations team — did not respond to requests for comment.

Holed up in a 10th-floor conference room

Musk, who is South African and migrated to North America as a teenager, first forged his image as a tech wizard by founding the company that became PayPal.

He funneled much of his around $165 million in gains from the sale of PayPal into two ventures: Tesla and SpaceX.SpaceX went on to become the most successful private spaceflight company in history, pioneering reusable rockets and launching astronauts to the International Space Station.

Tesla, meanwhile,

brought electric vehicles to the mainstream with sleek, fast and competitively priced sedans and SUVs that shattered the frumpy image of eco-conscious cars.His closest allies have held out faith even as he has missed major deadlines for selling new vehicle models and rolling out self-driving technology.

Musk has been focused almost solely on Twitter since he bought it, planning to reinvent the company as an engineering-driven operation.He immediately ousted Twitter’s previous executives and embarked on a

campaign of harsh layoffs that cut the company in half.

Many of Musk’s supporters, who had followed his rise at Tesla, gave him the benefit of the doubt that he had a plan to transform Twitter.

But he immediately spooked advertisers by

engaging in a baseless accusation and dialed back Twitter’s content moderation, prompting calls from civil rights groups for advertisers to suspend their marketing on the site.And he had to pull back his first major product launch — Twitter Blue Verified — after a day when a swarm of impersonators wreaked havoc.

Musk appears to be struggling to grasp Twitter’s business, the people close to him say, and he demands a stance from his employees that stifles discussion of problems.“He doesn’t see from the zoom-out view at all,” one of the people close to Musk and his team said, describing him as “uncovering and solving and programming all night.”

He has been holed up in a 10th-floor conference area with a staging room for visitors — where they often remain for more than an hour before being called in.They are instructed not to speak until Musk does.

And when they do finally meet with him, he’s sometimes watching YouTube videos.

Many staffers have quickly learned they can’t rely on the erratic and unpredictable Musk, even as he makes assurances about the various facets of the company they have raised as concerns.

The driving team behind Project Eraser — which carries out functions such as deleting the user data of those who ask, part of compliance with federal requirements — has been gutted.Musk has brought in a

new roster of leaders, many who are loyalists.

When one executive met with Musk and voiced concerns about the

Federal Trade Commission’s consent decree, Musk assured that person there was nothing to worry about.He said Tesla had plenty of experience on privacy matters, and pointed to his deep knowledge and awareness of the constraints Twitter was under.

Minutes after the meeting concluded, a subordinate of Musk emailed: Would the executive be willing to send over a copy of the consent decree they had just discussed?

Instead of focusing on plans to make the site a

competitor to YouTube with video and rolling out other new features that will earn revenue, he instead got sucked into the culture wars, the people said.

That took the

form of the Twitter Files, an examination by some journalists of many of the company’s actions before Musk’s arrival, such as the blocking of a New York Post story that dug into the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop and the ban on former president Donald Trump.

Musk chose Bari Weiss, a former New York Times columnist, as one of the writers invited inside the company to go through documents.

“Please give Bari full access to everything at Twitter,” Musk wrote to a subordinate in a Signal message viewed by The Washington Post.“No limits at all.”

That was concerning to many inside Twitter — particularly those familiar with the

2011 FTC settlement after hacks of high-profile accounts, including that of then-President Barack Obama.Staffers responsible for her onboarding pushed back and refused to grant Weiss the full access Musk had requested, saying it would violate the settlement.

One former employee described that step as “super unprecedented” and “highly inappropriate,” saying Twitter would never have granted that level of access to an outside party who might suddenly be able to read direct messages, for example.

The pushback, however, was not taken as seriously at senior levels.

Days later, Musk announced deputy general counsel Jim Baker had been “exited” from the company, as the CEO cited what he called his “possible role in suppression of information important to the public dialogue.” Former employees said it would have been normal for an attorney to review documents for release.

That same day, Alan Rosa, Twitter’s chief information security officer in charge of access matters, was fired from the company as well.Employees that week found Weiss’s name searchable in Slack, the company’s internal messaging service.

But her access was overseen by a chaperone, new Twitter Trust and Safety chief Ella Irwin.

Irwin’s name appeared in a watermark on the Twitter Files.When Twitter suspended more than half a dozen journalists last week over alleged violations of its rules on doxing — the sharing of private information — the suspensions were labeled in internal systems “direction of Ella.”

Musk also used internal systems to dig up an old message from his previous Trust and Safety head and took aim at Twitter executives, unleashing a swarm of criticism on employees — sometimes while they were still working for Twitter.

“These guys did amazing damage,” one former employee said of Musk’s circle at Twitter, which included employees of his other companies and friends who lacked expertise on Twitter.

“They are basically bullying their way to getting ‘super god’ access to these things.All they’re doing is they’re witch hunting for Elon, so they can find people talking [about him] so they can fire them.”

Musk is running the newly private company largely on his instincts — mirroring the workflows of his other major technology company: Tesla.The electric car company, the world’s most valuable automaker, has eschewed market research in its dominance of the electric vehicle space, seeding the automotive industry with a raw and authentic expressions of Musk’s id.Tesla’s

stainless steel Cybertruck pickup, which shocked automotive analysts with its angular sci-fi looks, has served as a key example of that ethos.

At Tesla, employees often find out about deadlines and major product changes through tweeted edicts.But they have also grown used to the CEO’s shoot-from-the-hip attitude, his reliance on his gut instincts rather than the research and development arms typical of multibillion-dollar corporations.

The unraveling

But Tesla’s stock price has plummeted — which Musk frequently attributes to economic trends.

“As bank savings account interest rates, which are guaranteed, start to approach stock market returns, which are *not* guaranteed, people will increasingly move their money out of stocks into cash, thus causing stocks to drop,” he

said in a tweet Tuesday.

But analysts have pointed to problems more specific to Tesla and concern with Musk’s time at Twitter, suggesting in essence that the sheen has worn off a company whose value was not rooted in its fundamentals.

“I felt for a while he was given a pass,” said Karl Brauer, executive analyst at the website iSeeCars.“‘Oh, it’s Elon.He’s Midas: If he’s touching it, it’s going to be successful.’ Now a certain number of people have stopped giving him a pass on things that probably should have been looked at a little more critically or acknowledged as potential downside.”

The crisis in confidence in his leadership accelerated when Musk began making changes to Twitter to address his personal problems and concerns.

Last week, he reneged on a previous commitment to keep an account on Twitter that

published the location of his private jet, which he held up as an example of his free speech principles.After abruptly suspending @ElonJet, he suspended journalists who tweeted about it, drawing ire from both sides of the political spectrum.

He launched a poll, which on Friday again directed Musk to allow them back on the site.

“The people have spoken,” he tweeted.

Musk jetted around the globe to Qatar for the World Cup final on Sunday, where he was spotted alongside former Trump adviser Jared Kusher and Qatari leaders.

That day, Twitter posted a new policy: It was banning the promotion of outside social media sites on its platform, including Facebook, Instagram and Trump-backed Truth Social.

Users would no longer be able to promote outside links to those sites and others including Mastodon, Tribel, Post and Nostr.Twitter said cross-posting of content would be allowed, but it would no longer permit “free promotion.”

The criticism was swift, and even loyalists expressed concern.

Musk apologized.

“Going forward, there will be a vote for major policy changes,” he tweeted.

“My apologies.Won’t happen again.”

Then Musk launched a new poll.“Should I step down as head of Twitter?” he wrote in a tweet.“I will abide by the results of this poll.”

By Monday morning, the result was clear that Musk should step down.He went silent on the platform for much of the day — one of his longer stretches as a prolific tweeter to his more than 120 million followers.He responded to a few tweets later in the day calling the results into question.

On Tuesday, he said he would resign — with caveats.

“I will resign as CEO as soon as I find someone foolish enough to take the job!” he wrote in a tweet.

“After that, I will just run the software & servers teams.”

Gerrit De Vynck and Cat Zakrzewski contributed to this report.

Entertainment news

Stranded Dolphins Show Signs of Alzheimer’s Disease in Their Brains – ScienceAlert

Scientists have discovered markers of

Alzheimer’s disease in the brains of three different species of dolphin found deceased, stranded onshore.

Evidence of

mass cetacean strandings exists from before our own recorded history, yet why dolphins and whales beach themselves in groups is an enduring mystery.

While a direct link has been found between

naval sonar and some beaked whales, and some individual animals washed up on shore have been clearly unwell, some with a belly full of plastic waste, most mass strandings provide little to no clues.

Toothed whales (

Odontocetes) share a number of traits with humans, including ( in at least five species that we know of) menopause.Their ability to live well beyond their reproductive years means they have the potential to be susceptible to late-onset diseases as well.

Alzheimer’s is the most common cause of disability in aging humans, gradually impairing memory, learning, and communication.Now it appears a similar affliction may impact our water-dwelling mammalian relatives too.

“I have always been interested in answering the question: do only humans get dementia?”

says neurobiologist Frank Gunn-Moore from University of St Andrews in Scotland.

“Our findings answer this question as it shows potential dementia associated pathology is indeed not just seen in human patients.”

Leiden University biologist Marissa Vacher and colleagues examined the brains of 22 stranded dolphins to search for the biochemical markers present in humans with Alzheimer’s.These include amyloid-beta plaques, which

while no longer thought to be a direct cause of the disease are still present in elevated numbers in those who have it; and clusters of tau proteins with hyperphosphorylation – when phosphate groups have been added to all possible binding sites on the protein molecule.

They found accumulations of amyloid-beta plaques and hyperphosphorylated tau in three dolphins, each from a different species: the long-finned pilot whale (

Globicephala melas), the white-beaked dolphin ( Lagenorhynchus albirostris) and the common bottlenose dolphin ( Tursiops truncatus).These individuals also had signs of being elderly such as worn or lost teeth and an increase in the ratio of white to grey matter in brain tissues.

What’s more, the locations of brain lesions found in the dolphins matched with equivalent areas seen in humans with Alzheimer’s.

While it wasn’t possible for the researchers to verify an Alzheimer’s diagnosis, as they couldn’t test the deceased animals’ levels of cognitive impairment, there is no record of accumulations of both proteins in humans without the disease.

“We were fascinated to see brain changes in aged dolphins similar to those in human aging and Alzheimer’s disease,”

says University of Edinburgh neuroscientist Tara Spires-Jones.

As dolphins are

highly social animals, it’s possible they aid fellow pod members who begin to struggle with their brains.This means there’s a chance they’d survive for longer, allowing further progression of the disease than in solitary species, the researchers note.

Dolphin strandings are common in one of the species studied, G.

melas, supporting the ‘

sick-leader‘ theory of this mysterious, fatal behavior.

“In humans, the first symptoms of AD-associated cognitive decline include confusion of time and place and a poor sense of direction,” Vacher and colleagues

explain in their paper.

“If the leader of a pod of G.melas suffered from a similar neurodegenerative-related cognitive decline this could lead to disorientation resulting in leading the pod into shallow water and subsequent stranding.”

However, “whether these pathological changes contribute to these animals stranding is an interesting and important question for future work,” Spires-Jones

concludes.

This research was published in the

European Journal of Neuroscience.

Entertainment news

iPhone 15 Rumors: All the Buzz About Apple’s Next Phone – CNET

The iPhone 15 lineup likely won’t arrive until the fall of 2023, but there are plenty of questions about what to expect from Apple’s next-generation phone.

Will the iPhone 15 have a USB-C port?

Will Apple increase iPhone prices in 2023? Will it even be called the “iPhone 15”? No one outside of Apple knows for sure, but the rumor mill will certainly feed our curiosity until Apple throws the next iPhone event.Here are some of the biggest and most credible rumors we’ve seen so far, to paint a picture of what we may see from the iPhone 15.

iPhone 15 design: Embracing USB-C charging

The buzziest design rumor so far involves the iPhone’s charging port, given the European Union’s ruling that iPhones sold in the region will need to

switch to a USB-C port by 2024.The question is whether Apple will switch all iPhone models to USB-C or just those sold in the EU.Apple already modifies iPhone models regionally, as it has done with the iPhone 14: The US version has an electronic SIM, while other variants retain the SIM slot.

But Avi Greengart, an analyst at Techsponential, believes Apple has good reasons to move all iPhones to USB-C moving forward.“There are larger ecosystem, security, and accessory considerations with the power/data connector, so I think it is more likely that Apple moves all iPhones [globally] to USB-C in the iPhone 16 timeframe to comply with European regulations,” Greengart said.

iPhone 15 design: Dynamic Island expands to all models

Apple is likely to continue selling four iPhone models with the iPhone 15 lineup.Rumors point to a generally similar design across the board, except that the iPhone 14 Pro’s shape-shifting cutout, known as Dynamic Island, is set to make its way across all models.

That rumor comes from display analyst Ross Young, who also said in a September

tweet that he’s not expecting base iPhone 15 models to have a higher refresh rate like Apple’s Pro iPhones because the supply chain can’t support it.

Read more:

iPhone 14 Pro’s Most Eye-Catching Feature Feels Like It’s Winking at Something Else

iPhone 15: Solid-state buttons come to pro iPhone 15 models

Noted Apple observer Ming-Chi Kuo, an analyst with TF International Securities, expects Apple to differentiate further between its base and Pro models in the coming years.One way he’s expecting that to happen is by giving the iPhone 15 Pro models solid-state volume and power buttons instead of the standard keys present on today’s devices, he wrote in a

https://twitter.com/mingchikuo/status/1585852274680950784?s=20 in October.

The solid-state buttons, which Kuo says will be similar to the home button found on the iPhone SE and iPhone 7, mimic the feel of pressing a button with the help of haptic feedback.

The apparent advantage of this type of button is that it also protects against water getting in.

iPhone 15 camera: Periscope-style telephoto lens arrives

Yet another Kuo prediction has been making the rounds, but this time it’s about the iPhone 15’s camera.

The

analyst forecasts that the iPhone 15 Pro Max will receive a periscope-style telephoto lens.This sort of telephoto lens allows for higher optical zoom levels, with Kuo forecasting a 6x optical zoom could arrive in the iPhone 15 Pro Max.The optical zoom on the iPhone 14 Pro Max is limited to 3x, which lags rivals such as the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra’s 10x optical zoom.

Read more:

The iPhone 14 Pro’s Camera Upgrade is Bigger Than You Think

iPhone 15 price: Up, up and away?

Prices have dramatically increased since the original iPhone arrived in 2007.And that may happen again in 2023 with the iPhone 15, except not in the way you might think.The price of the regular iPhone 15 is currently expected to remain the same, according to analysts who previously spoke with CNET.

However, the upper limit of the price range could be pushed higher if rumors about a luxe iPhone 15 Ultra turn out to be true.The rumored Ultra model could potentially replace the iPhone 15 Pro Max next year,

Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman writes.This falls in line with predictions from Kuo, who expects Apple to differentiate further between the iPhone Pro and iPhone Pro Max models.US prices currently range from $829 for the entry-level iPhone 14 model (128GB) all the way up to $1,599 for the highest-end iPhone 14 Pro Max with 1TB of storage.

Read more:

What Apple Could Do With iPhone 15 Prices in 2023

iPhone 15: Launch and release timeline

Apple holds its annual iPhone event in September almost every year, so we’d expect the timeline to remain the same for the iPhone 15.

New iPhones typically get released shortly thereafter, usually the Friday of the following week.Sometimes Apple will stagger release dates for specific models, especially when introducing a new design or size.So it’s possible that the iPhone 15 lineup will have more than one release date.

Here’s what we know:

– Apple tends to hold its events on Tuesdays or Wednesdays.Apple’s iPhone 14 event was held on Wednesday Sept.7, while its iPhone 13 event was held on Tuesday, Sept.

14.

– iPhone release dates are typically a week and a half after Apple’s announcements.

– In general, new iPhones are released on a Friday, around the third week of September.For the iPhone 13, preorders began Sept.17 and the phones went on sale Sept.

24.

Looking for more iPhone advice? Check out our

iPhone upgrade guide, our list of the best iPhones and our roundup of the best cases for your iPhone 14 or 14 Pro.

Entertainment news

‘In real life, you don’t touch the trigger until you plan on squeezing’: what actual spies think of TV thrillers – The Guardian

‘In real life, you don’t touch the trigger until you plan on squeezing’: what actual spies think of TV thrillers

Too much sex and gunfights, far too little paperwork … espionage shows aren’t exactly a masterclass in realism.Ex-agents reveal what they get right and wrong

Spies are everywhere – especially on TV.Thanks to streaming services such as Netflix and Apple TV+, these are boom times for fans of espionage thrillers.But it’s not only fans who are tuning in: viewers also include actual undercover agents whose roles range from collecting intelligence to recruiting spies for a living.

And sometimes what they see onscreen leaves them cringing.

Key figures in a new tranche of espionage shows range from losers and lawyers to real-life spooks.In Apple TV+’s

Slow Horses, the secret agents are sad-sack screwups banished to MI5’s administrative purgatory.In the ITVX drama A Spy Among Friends, the intelligence officers are Cambridge-educated liars in crisp tailored suits.And in Prime Video’s Jack Ryan, the CIA officials include paunchy lifers and Jason Bourne clones.

All these roles are ones that US national security and intelligence veterans consistently find fault with.“I’m hard pressed,” laments the former

CIA analyst Gail Helt, “to come up with a show that gets it even in the ballpark in terms of what CIA officers do.”

If these shows really let us all the way in, she and other insiders stress, they would also make sure viewers understand the unglamorous side of the work – how mind-numbingly pedestrian it can be.

“My relationship with shows centred on law enforcement and intel agencies is a love/hate one,” says former

FBI special agent Jeff Cortese.“I love it when they get it right, and I hate it when they get it wrong.

I mean right and wrong in terms of it being authentic, not realistic.Realistic would be spending 90-95% of the show watching agency officials do paperwork.Nobody wants to see that.I want to see the other 5-10% of the job that is exciting.”

These aren’t blanket criticisms for the entire genre, especially given that new releases span everything from big-budget action romps (Netflix’s The Recruit) to ripped-from-the-headlines dramatisations of real-life events (

Litvinenko and A Spy Among Friends) that imply a greater degree of verisimilitude.Some shows may get it completely wrong, while others get it … well, less wrong.That’s the assessment of John Sipher, who retired in 2014 after a 28-year career in the CIA’s National Clandestine Service.

Only a few shows get his stamp of approval.“While no movie or show gets it all right, The Bureau captures the give-and-take between headquarters and the field, and both The Americans and The Spy give a good feel of street tradecraft and living under cover,” he says.

For Cortese, it’s particularly annoying when protagonists fail to handle firearms correctly – one of the most common complaints.

“Characters often make the mistake of having their finger on the trigger while clearing a room, or even just holding the weapon,” he says.“In real life, your finger is along the barrel and you don’t touch the trigger until you plan on squeezing it.This is probably the single most irritating thing to those of us in the business.We always notice this one.”

Other common complaints from those in the know include: too much sex, too many gunfights, and the abilities of agents and officers too often being overblown.They also point out that real-life cases take much longer than what TV programme-makers squeeze into the confines of a half-hour or hour-long show.

For that reason, some veterans avoid the genre entirely.Tracy Walder is a former FBI special agent and a five-year covert operations veteran in the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center – where she took on aliases and visited black sites to debrief captured terrorists.

“I made it through one episode of Homeland and couldn’t watch any more,” she says.“What’s misleading is that our capabilities are viewed as omniscient.They certainly are not.Things take time.

That can mean years.”

She adds that while the work can be “sexy” and exciting, much of it is of the mundane writing-reports-in-cubicles sort.This is also generally secret work, so an agent who is frequently getting caught up in gun battles – of the kind seen on TV – is doing something wrong.

“We do carry weapons in certain areas of operation, but that’s not the norm,” Walder says.

“We are not law enforcement; therefore, it is actually not part of the job.Yes, we have weapons training and I did carry in some countries I served, but that’s it.

Obviously, as an FBI agent I carried all the time.”

That said, there are some ex intelligence professionals, such as the former CIA analyst turned novelist David McCloskey and Christina Hillsberg (a veteran of the CIA’s Directorate of Operations), who choose to enjoy spy shows the way the unsuspecting public does.Sometimes, even the shadow warriors don’t mind watching something dumb and fun – or something that gets close to the mark.

“The Bureau,” McCloskey says, “does a wonderful job of capturing the human element and the idiosyncrasies of the intelligence business, particularly the bureaucracy and the frequent tension between the field and headquarters.

The Little Drummer Girl excels in showing the long, slow burn of running intelligence-gathering operations.It also nails the frustrating lack of operational and moral clarity that can characterise the business.”

Hillsberg, whose CIA career included penning intelligence assessments for the White House, adds: “With any spy thriller, there’s often an element of suspending disbelief, especially if you’ve worked in espionage.At the end of the day, even we like to be entertained.”

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