Elon Musk, SpaceX and Starlink
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A legal battle between Cards Against Humanity and SpaceX, Elon Musk's rocket company, over a plot of land in Texas has come to an end.
Elon Musk’s biographer, Walter Isaacson, said the SpaceX CEO is in “demon mode” over the prospect of NASA being folded into the U.S. Department of Transportation. Isaacson, who spent two years shadowing Musk, 54, added some color to the Tesla CEO’s feud with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, in a Thursday interview with CNBC’s Squawk Box.
Despite relocating several of his companies' HQs to Texas, the billionaire is adding large Bay Area offices for xAI and Neuralink, and hiring there in droves for Tesla and SpaceX.
On Oct. 24, tech mogul Elon Musk apologized to X users who are frustrated with the social media platform's algorithm.
Starship was NASA's vehicle of choice to land astronauts on the moon before NASA head Sean Duffy's latest move. Now, Musk is going on the offense.
Musk's company is behind schedule in developing its Starship rocket. NASA's interim leader, meanwhile, wants to put astronauts on the moon while Trump is in office.
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'Sean Dummy': Why is Elon Musk attacking the acting NASA chief?
Elon Musk has hammered acting NASA chief Sean Duffy repeatedly on social media over the past few days, calling him "Sean Dummy" and claiming he's "trying to kill NASA." Here's what may be going on.
SpaceX founder Elon Musk and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy are currently beefing, much to the chagrin of the White House. The beefing appears to have started on […]
SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk is ratcheting up his high-risk critique of NASA interim administrator Sean Duffy, a member of President Donald Trump’s cabinet, injecting drama and uncertainty into the nomination process for the agency’s top job.
Elon Musk is taking aim at the head of NASA amid news that the U.S. space agency may consider companies other than SpaceX to build lunar landers.
Musk responded with personal insults after Sean Duffy announced plans to seek proposals from Blue Origin and Lockheed Martin for the Artemis mission.