Hey Journalists: Not Every Elon Musk Brain Fart Warrants An Entire News Cycle

from the sound-and-fury,-signifying-nothing dept

So on Monday you probably saw that Apple announced it was more tightly integrating “AI” into its mobile operating system, both via a suite of AI-powered tools dubbed Apple Intelligence, and tighter AI integration with its Siri voice assistant. It’s not that big of a deal and (hopefully) reflects Apple’s more cautious approach to AI after Google told millions of customers to eat rocks and glue.

Apple was quick to point out that the processing for these features would happen on device to (hopefully) protect privacy. If Apple’s own systems can’t handle user inquiries, some of them may be offloaded to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, attempting to put a little distance between Apple and potential error-prone fabulism:

“Apple struck a deal with OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, to support some of its A.I. capabilities. Requests that its system can’t field will be directed to ChatGPT. For example, a user could say that they have salmon, lemon and tomatoes and want help planning dinner with those ingredients. Users would have to choose to direct those requests to ChatGPT, ensuring that they know that the chatbot — not Apple — is responsible if the answers are unsatisfying.”

Enter Elon Musk, who threw a petulant hissy fit after he realized that Apple had decided to partner with OpenAI instead of his half-cooked and more racist Grok pseudo-intelligence system. He took to ExTwitter to (falsely) claim Apple OS with ChatGPT integration posed such a dire privacy threat, iPhones would soon be banned from his companies and visitors would have to leave theirs in a copper-lined faraday cage:

This is, of course, a bunch of meaningless gibberish not actually based on anything technical. Musk just made up some security concerns to malign a competitor. The ban of iPhones will likely never happen. And to Luddites, his reference to a faraday cage certainly sounds smart.

Here’s the thing: nearly every app on your phone and every device in your home is tracking your every movement, choice, and behavior in granular detail, then selling that information to an international cabal of largely unregulated and extremely dodgy data brokers. Brokers that then turn around and sell that information to any nitwit with two nickels to rub together, including foreign intelligence.

So kind of like the TikTok hysteria, the idea that Apple’s new partnership with OpenAI poses some unique security and privacy threat above and beyond our existing total lack of any meaningful privacy whatsoever in a country too corrupt to pass an internet privacy law is pure performance.

Keep in mind that Musk’s companies have a pretty well established track record of playing extremely fast and loose with consumer privacy themselves. Automakers are generally some of the worst companies in tech when it comes to privacy and security, and according to Mozilla, Tesla is the worst of the worst. So the idea that Musk was engaging in any sort of good faith contemplation of privacy is simply false.

Still, it didn’t take long before the click-hunting press turned Musk’s meaningless comments into an entire news cycle. Resources that could have been spent on any number of meaningful stories were instead focused on platforming a throwaway comment by a fabulist that literally didn’t mean anything:

I’m particularly impressed with the Forbes headline, which pushes two falsehoods in one headline: that the nonexistent ban hurt Apple stock (it didn’t), while implying the ban already happened.

I’m unfortunately contributing to the news cycle noise to make a different point: this happens with every single Musk brain fart now, regardless of whether the comment has any meaning or importance. And it needs to stop if we’re to preserve what’s left of our collective sanity.

Journalists are quick to insist that it’s their noble responsibility to cover the comments of important people. But journalism is about informing and educating the public, which isn’t accomplished by redirecting limited journalistic resources to cover platform bullshit that means nothing and will result in nothing meaningful. All you’ve done is made a little money wasting people’s time.

U.S. newsrooms are so broadly conditioned to chase superficial SEO clickbait ad engagement waves they’ve tricked themselves into thinking these kinds of hollow news cycles serve an actual function. But it might be beneficial for the industry to do some deep introspection into the harmful symbiosis it has forged with terrible people and bullshit (see: any of a million recent profiles of white supremacists).

There are a million amazing scientific developments or acts of fatal corporate malfeasance that every single day go uncovered or under-covered in this country because we’ve hollowed out journalism and replaced it with lazy engagement infotainment.

And despite Musk’s supposed disdain for the press, his circus sideshow has always heavily relied on this media dysfunction. As his stock-fluffing house of cards starts to unravel, he’s had to increasingly rely on gibberish and controversy to distract, and U.S. journalism continues to lend a willing hand.

First it spent fifteen years hyping up Musk’s super-genius engineering mythology, despite mounting evidence that Musk was more of a clever credit-absconding opportunist than any sort of revolutionary thinker. After 20 years of this, the press still treats every belch the man has as worthy of the deepest analysis under the pretense they’re engaging in some sort of heady public service.

The public interest is often served by not covering the fever dreams of obnoxious opportunists, but every part of the media ecosystem is financially incentivized to do the exact opposite. And instead of any sort of introspection into the symbiosis the media has formed with absolute bullshit, we’re using badly crafted automation to supercharge all of the sector’s worst impulses at unprecedented new scale.

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Companies: apple, openai, tesla, twitter, x

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Comments on “Hey Journalists: Not Every Elon Musk Brain Fart Warrants An Entire News Cycle”

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James Burkhardt says:

Journalists need to stop talking to the Steve Jobs and start talking to the Woz instead. Musk has at least one for each marginal success.

If we stopped listening to Musk and started listening to the actual rocketry expert Musk has, a guy so in the background I couldn’t tell you his name anymore, I’d probably not shit on spaceX anywhere near as hard, because the reality is actually cool, its just trashed by pie-in-the-sky wish-and-a-prayer promises by Musk.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Musk has been feuding with Apple and its CEO, Tim Cook, since last year, after Apple stopped advertising on X after Musk endorsed an antisemitic conspiracy theory and some Apple ads were placed alongside pro-Nazi content.

Musk endorsed an antisemitic conspiracy theory and some Apple ads were placed alongside pro-Nazi content.

This is also worth repeating over and over.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

because they can’t have their phones at work.

Meh. People put up with all kinds of weird shit at work. Some people are willing to walk through metal detectors daily and piss in a jar on request. With many phones having always-on microphones now, I’m surprised most companies have been allowing them without complaint. Basically, it’s just really hard to predict how people will react on either side.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

I’m sure people would complain (and rightly so), but “you have to switch to Android if you want to bring your phone into the office” is probably pretty far down on the list of headaches that people working an an Elon-owned company have to deal with.

For people on the fence about working there it might push them to leave, but it doesn’t seem to me like something that would make an otherwise-happy worker quit.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

People do not respond to changes, especially negative ones very well.

They’ll hate it, but it’s surprisingly rare that someone will outright say no to such things. Like, how many people stopped flying because of the TSA’s bullshit? Enough to raise the American death rate by several thousand a year (because they’re driving instead, and that’s more dangerous), but not enough to make the airlines feel much financial impact.

I fully agree with everything you wrote, but I wonder whether Musk’s companies will actually have trouble hiring or retaining people if they go ahead with this. It’s not like someone can just go from SpaceX to NASA to avoid such things; as a government entity, it’ll have its own bullshit. I’m sure Twitter’s gonna have trouble hiring regardless. Leaving Telsa for another auto-maker might involve moving to Detroit, and are they gonna allow phones in their factories anyway?

As for “the initial job agreement”, it’s not quite as formalized as that, but people know they’re gonna be working for a mercurial person with a history of making arbitrary edicts, getting involved with very low-level decisions, etc.; as Karl says, these “brain farts” have always been a regular occurrence.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Could the airlines feel an impact?

Yes, I think so. If, say, 50% of the people who used to fly said they were stopping (and did) till the TSA was gone, “TSA disbandment” would be precisely the type of bail-out they’d be asking for. Airports would be pushing for it too.

I think those airline bail-outs only started with deregulation, anyway, which was around 1980. If the introduction of metal detectors, a decade prior, had deterred many people, it would’ve been noticed.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5

In the real world it’s illegal to build and fly an airplane you built yourself without the right permits, licenses and certifications. There may be a country somewhere that is the exception to this but I doubt it.

Now that you have gotten this PSA, you can resume using whatever mind-altering drugs you were doing before uttering the above brain-dump.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:6

In the real world it’s illegal to build and fly an airplane you built yourself without the right permits, licenses and certifications. There may be a country somewhere that is the exception to this but I doubt it.

I can’t see the comment you replied to, so maybe I’m missing some context… but the USA is such a country, for ultra-light vehicles (“part 103”):

The FAA makes explicitly clear, that ultralight vehicles are no aircraft, are not regulated as aircraft, and are exempt from aircraft rules.
Ultralight vehicles and their component parts and equipment are not required to meet the airworthiness certification standards specified for aircraft or to have certificates of airworthiness.
Operators of ultralight vehicles are not required to meet any aeronautical knowledge, age, or experience requirements or to have airman or medical certificates.
Ultralight vehicles are not required to be registered or to have registration markings.

In other words, you can totally build and fly an airplane-shaped thing you built yourself, without any permits, licenses, or certifications. As long as you’re in the USA and it meets a few simple requirements regarding weight, speed, and fuel capacity (plus there are a few restrictions on flight areas and times).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:8

Unhide it by clicking the underlined text in the message:
(This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to hide it.)

I tried that. It does nothing, and I don’t recall it ever working.

like you said, by definition, ultralight is not an airplane

By a peculiar definition for U.S. legal purposes, it’s not an “aircraft”; that doesn’t mean it’s not an airplane. By most definitions, it’d be both (hence the Wikipedia page title being “ultralight aircraft”, with an American exception noted).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:9

The flagged comment reads “there is no country in the world where it is illegal to build and fly your own airplane,” on which AC is completely wrong. And if they had said “aircraft” instead of “airplane,” they would still have been wrong. Although single-seat microlight aircraft tend to not be regulated in many countries, that’s not the same as all aircraft being unregulated. Drones are a good example of this, and they don’t even have a pilot on board.

Anonymous Coward says:

Musk is just noise. I long ago quit watching TV, especially news (which just stupid soundbites). I’m canceling my last two newspaper subscriptions because even the “best” papers have lost their minds. [The same crap is on the front page of the Washington Post for days… The NY Times insists on “balanced” coverage, which means repeating every bullshit statement made by Trump or his MAGA faithful.] I’ve found that “ignorance is bliss,” and intend to pursue the remainder of my life in peace.

David says:

Re:

I’ve found that “ignorance is bliss,” and intend to pursue the remainder of my life in peace.

That’s called “appeasement” and does not exactly have a spotless track record with regard to defusing political proponents of violence, chauvinism and xenophobia.

“I’ll just ignore WWIII” is not going to be an easily executed strategy.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

appease
verb
ap·pease ə-ˈpēz
appeased; appeasing
transitive verb

1: PACIFY, CONCILIATE
especially : to make concessions to (someone, such as an aggressor or a critic) often at the sacrifice of principles
2: to cause to subside : ALLAY
appeased my hunger
trying to appease her guilty conscience
3: to bring to a state of peace or quiet : CALM
appease a quarrel

In case you needed a reminder, the first definition is the WW2 problem one, and the second and third are the ones that fit what the first commenter is doing.

Taletell says:

Re: RE: "I’ve found that “ignorance is bliss,” and intend to pursue the remainder of my life in peace."

Ignorance of lies and deceptions (=most mainstream news and establishment decrees) is bliss because exposing yourself to that is self-propagandization.

Ignorance of truths is not, or only temporarily or rarely, bliss because it is ultimately self-defeating …. https://johnmichaeldemarco.com/15-reasons-why-ignorance-is-not-bliss

The FALSE mantra of “ignorance is bliss”, promoted in the latter sense, is a product of a fake sick culture that has indoctrinated its “dumbed down” (therefore TRULY ignorant, therefore easy to control) people with many such manipulative slogans. Eg…

““We’re all in this together” is a tribal maxim. Even there, it’s a con, because the tribal leaders use it to enforce loyalty and submission. … The unity of compliance.” — Jon Rappoport, Investigative Journalist

You can find the proof that ignorance is hardly ever bliss (and if so only superficial temporary fake bliss), and how you get to buy into this lie (and other self-defeating lies), in the article “The 2 Married Pink Elephants In The Historical Room –The Holocaustal Covid-19 Coronavirus Madness: A Sociological Perspective & Historical Assessment Of The Covid “Phenomenon”” …. https://www.rolf-hefti.com/covid-19-coronavirus.html

“Separate what you know from what you THINK you know.” — Unknown

“If ‘ignorance is bliss’ –there should be more happy people.” — Unknown

“Ignorance is the bliss of dumb animals.” — Pete, from France

“Repeating what others say and think is not being awake. Humans have been sold many lies…God, Jesus, Democracy, Money, Education, etc. If you haven’t explored your beliefs about life, then you are not awake.” — E.J. Doyle, songwriter

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Anonymous Coward says:

Like Elon knows ANYTHING about infosec

He is just as much an utterly clueless moron about this as he is about social media, drive train engineering, orbital mechanics, and pretty much everything else. He’s not only an uneducated fool (who passed thanks to daddy’s money) but he’s ineducable: everyone who has tried to teach this idiot even the simplest concepts has failed because he has no idea how to learn.

Thus the correct response to anything he says about infosec is mocking laughter. (And this particular comment is no exception.)

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Fizz says:

"not that big of a deal"?

This post on techdirt is just the inverse of a Musk rant. Misinformation, unsubstantiated claims, bitter and twisted spray about “Musk bad man”.

“He took to ExTwitter to falsely claim…” He took to X, and the claim can’t be proven false by some snarky tech writer with a grudge about Musk. A lot of questions about AI and privacy are floating around, you can’t possibly make claims like “not a big deal” and “false” in relation to privacy concerns.

“Racist Grok”… give me a break, what racism? Google’s AI refused to draw white people. If you want racism, start there. Your link to “racist Grok” goes to the Fortune article which claims that pursuing truth will lead to racism! OMG, so it’s official. In order to not be “racist” we must not pursue truth. That is peak Woke right there.

“clever credit-absconding opportunist”… Wow, the grudge is real. The lead rocket scientist at SpaceX said in a documentary that Musk had a very good grasp of high-level technical aspects. But there’s no point presenting facts like this. People who hate Musk will embrace whatever dirt they can find, even the untrue stuff, to frame him the bad man. Stop making stuff up for your juvenile tech blogger pile-ons.

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bonk says:

Re:

The lead rocket scientist at SpaceX said in a documentary that Musk had a very good grasp of high-level technical aspects.

It’s funny how people usually don’t rag on their current boss in public, especially in a documentary.

I’m sure you are 100% forthcoming publicly what you actually think of your boss because you seem to be a pillar of honesty and truth regardless of the consequences, right?

Fizz says:

Re: Re:

funny how people usually don’t rag on their current boss in public

Thomas Mueller, the rocket engineer, had retired from SpaceX before he was interviewed in the doco and described Musk as “technically very strong”. Mueller has his own rocket engine company now called Impulse Space.

It’s funny how some people can’t stand that Musk is smart. He plays video games and says dumb things too. Both can be true. Deal with it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

” Musk had a very good grasp of high-level technical aspects”

Interesting. Aspects? (a particular part or feature of something)

I wonder if he understands why a steering wheel should not be removable during vehicle operation, or that said steering wheel needs to cause the turning of the steered wheels in a timely fashion. Maybe the self driving function should not crash into things.

Does he understand why a launch pad design needs to withstand more than the anticipated amount of energy output by a rocket engine during launch.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re:

“This post on techdirt is just the inverse of a Musk rant.”

Coherent, factual and lacking in random hate?

“Google’s AI refused to draw white people.”

Not really true. There was a brief period where it was noticed that some AI was very much biased toward white people, so there was an attempt to reverse that. But, after that it was noticed that you could issue some terms that led to non-white people being preferred. It’s a work in progress, anyone who thinks that LLMs return perfect results are idiots, but white people were also drawn in the time you’re thinking about.

“a documentary”

I’ll just note that you didn’t mention which documentary, the credentials of who made it, etc. Nobody cares which YouTube sycophant you saw, who said this and what are their credentials?

If you want credibility, earn it. Fizz, who do you get your Musk news from, why is it more credible than this blog, and what are the important differences?

Fizz says:

Re: Re:

I’ll just note that you didn’t mention which documentary

It was 3 part BBC series called The Elon Musk show from 2022. Former staff were interviewed including Thomas Mueller, aerospace engineer and rocket engine designer. He said: “Musk started working with us to optimise the rocket to get as much out of it as possible… he was technically very strong”.

Doesn’t mean Musk was at the level of rocket scientist, but when the Rocket Propulsion Engineer describes someone as technically very strong, only a fool would dismiss that or substitute it with arrogant anti-Musk tech-blogger froth.

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Matthew M Bennett says:

Have your tried telling Mike?

Dude is fuucking OBSESSED with every mistake Musk makes, real or imagined (usually the latter).

Also, btw, not sure that Musk is wrong — Apple is better with privacy than most companies, but AI in general is a huge privacy sieve as is Siri for that matter (which I have turned off). Also, a Faraday cage would absolutely work so why are you making fun of that? Most apps, if the phone home fails, it just fails, it doesn’t save data and try again later, and also the phone is in a box, it’s not collecting anything anyway. WTF?

You can call Musk’s concerns “overblown” if you want (debatable) but a “brain fart” it’s not. Looks like you share some of MM’s MDS.

…his half-cooked and more racist Grok

Lol, wut? You link to an article which literally just theorizes that being trained on tweets might make it racist, and seems to pretend not being as woke as Google Gemini (lol, which becomes a form of racism all it’s own) is somehow problem. Turns out Grok is plenty woke, too woke, but what a fuuucking random and aggressive supposition.

Nevermind, you definitely have MDS, damn.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Dude is fuucking OBSESSED with everything Mike writes makes, real or imagined (usually the latter).

That you cannot understand the irony in your sealclapping is fuucking hilarious.

Seems you stopped developing mentally when you hit puberty because you sound like a childish frat-bro every time you post your inane shit here.

Anonymous Coward says:

I don’t even like Musk but it is funny seeing the author characterize two entirely calm and neutral-toned tweets as a “petulant hissy fit”.

Maybe I’m reaching but this really smacks of the whole “haha people with aspergers are literally children” except this time it’s ok because it’s against a rich asshole.

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