Elon Musk celebrated his 44th birthday in July 2015 at a three-day party thrown by his wife at a California wine country resort dotted with cabins. It was family and friends only, with children racing around the upscale property in Napa Valley.
This was years before Twitter became X and Tesla had a profitable year. Mr. Musk and his wife, Talulah Riley an actress who played a beautiful but dangerous robot on HBOs science fiction series Westworld were a year from throwing in the towel on their second marriage. Larry Page, a party guest, was still the chief executive of Google. And artificial intelligence had pierced the public consciousness only a few years before, when it was used to identify cats on YouTube with 16 percent accuracy.
A.I. was the big topic of conversation when Mr. Musk and Mr. Page sat down near a firepit beside a swimming pool after dinner the first night. The two billionaires had been friends for more than a decade, and Mr. Musk sometimes joked that he occasionally crashed on Mr. Pages sofa after a night playing video games.
But the tone that clear night soon turned contentious as the two debated whether artificial intelligence would ultimately elevate humanity or destroy it.
As the discussion stretched into the chilly hours, it grew intense, and some of the more than 30 partyers gathered closer to listen. Mr. Page, hampered for more than a decade by an unusual ailment in his vocal cords, described his vision of a digital utopia in a whisper. Humans would eventually merge with artificially intelligent machines, he said. One day there would be many kinds of intelligence competing for resources, and the best would win.
If that happens, Mr. Musk said, were doomed. The machines will destroy humanity.
With a rasp of frustration, Mr. Page insisted his utopia should be pursued. Finally he called Mr. Musk a specieist, a person who favors humans over the digital life-forms of the future.
That insult, Mr. Musk said later, was the last straw.
Many in the crowd seemed gobsmacked, if amused, as they dispersed for the night, and considered it just another one of those esoteric debates that often break out at Silicon Valley parties.
But eight years later, the argument between the two men seems prescient. The question of whether artificial intelligence will elevate the world or destroy it or at least inflict grave damage has framed an ongoing debate among Silicon Valley founders, chatbot users, academics, legislators and regulators about whether the technology should be controlled or set free.
That debate has pitted some of the worlds richest men against one another: Mr. Musk, Mr. Page, Mark Zuckerberg of Meta, the tech investor Peter Thiel, Satya Nadella of Microsoft and Sam Altman of OpenAI. All have fought for a piece of the business which one day could be worth trillions of dollars and the power to shape it.
At the heart of this competition is a brain-stretching paradox. The people who say they are most worried about A.I. are among the most determined to create it and enjoy its riches. They have justified their ambition with their strong belief that they alone can keep A.I. from endangering Earth.
Mr. Musk and Mr. Page stopped speaking soon after the party that summer. A few weeks later, Mr. Musk dined with Mr. Altman, who was then running a tech incubator, and several researchers in a private room at the Rosewood hotel in Menlo Park, Calif., a favored deal-making spot close to the venture capital offices of Sand Hill Road.
That dinner led to the creation of a start-up called OpenAI later in the year. Backed by hundreds of millions of dollars from Mr. Musk and other funders, the lab promised to protect the world from Mr. Pages vision.
Thanks to its ChatGPT chatbot, OpenAI has fundamentally changed the technology industry and has introduced the world to the risks and potential of artificial intelligence. OpenAI is valued at more than $80 billion, according to two people familiar with the companys latest funding round, though Mr. Musk and Mr. Altmans partnership didnt make it. The two have since stopped speaking.
There is disagreement, mistrust, egos, Mr. Altman said. The closer people are to being pointed in the same direction, the more contentious the disagreements are. You see this in sects and religious orders. There are bitter fights between the closest people.
Last month, that infighting came to OpenAIs boardroom. Rebel board members tried to force out Mr. Altman because, they believed, they could no longer trust him to build A.I. that would benefit humanity. Over five chaotic days OpenAI looked as if it were going to fall apart, until the board pressured by giant investors and employees who threatened to follow Mr. Altman out the door backed down.
The drama inside OpenAI gave the world its first glimpse of the bitter feuds among those who will determine the future of A.I.
But years before OpenAIs near meltdown, there was a little-publicized but ferocious competition in Silicon Valley for control of the technology that is now quickly reshaping the world, from how children are taught to how wars are fought. The New York Times spoke with more than 80 executives, scientists and entrepreneurs, including two people who attended Mr. Musks birthday party in 2015, to tell that story of ambition, fear and money.
Five years before the Napa Valley party and two before the cat breakthrough on YouTube, Demis Hassabis, a 34-year-old neuroscientist, walked into a cocktail party at Peter Thiels San Francisco townhouse and realized hed hit pay dirt. There in Mr. Thiels living room, overlooking the citys Palace of Fine Arts and a swan pond, was a chess board. Dr. Hassabis had once been the second-best player in the world in the under-14 category.
I was preparing for that meeting for a year, Dr. Hassabis said. I thought that would be my unique hook in: I knew that he loved chess.
In 2010, Dr. Hassabis and two colleagues, who all lived in Britain, were looking for money to start building artificial general intelligence, or A.G.I., a machine that could do anything the brain could do. At the time, few people were interested in A.I. After a half century of research, the artificial intelligence field had failed to deliver anything remotely close to the human brain.
Still, some scientists and thinkers had become fixated on the downsides of A.I. Many, like the three young men from Britain, had a connection to Eliezer Yudkowsky, an internet philosopher and self-taught A.I. researcher. Mr. Yudkowsky was a leader in a community of people who called themselves Rationalists or, in later years, effective altruists.
They believed that A.I. could find a cure for cancer or solve climate change, but they worried that A.I. bots might do things their creators had not intended. If the machines became more intelligent than humans, the Rationalists argued, the machines could turn on their creators.
Mr. Thiel had become enormously wealthy through an early investment in Facebook and through his work with Mr. Musk in the early days of PayPal. He had developed a fascination with the singularity, a trope of science fiction that describes the moment when intelligent technology can no longer be controlled by humanity.
With funding from Mr. Thiel, Mr. Yudkowsky had expanded his A.I. lab and created an annual conference on the singularity. Years before, one of Dr. Hassabiss two colleagues had met Mr. Yudkowsky, and he snagged them speaking spots at the conference, ensuring theyd be invited to Mr. Thiels party.
Mr. Yudkowsky introduced Dr. Hassabis to Mr. Thiel. Dr. Hassabis assumed that lots of people at the party would be trying to squeeze their host for money. His strategy was to arrange another meeting. There was a deep tension between the bishop and the knight, he told Mr. Thiel. The two pieces carried the same value, but the best players understood that their strengths were vastly different.
It worked. Charmed, Mr. Thiel invited the group back the next day, where they gathered in the kitchen. Their host had just finished his morning workout and was still sweating in a shiny tracksuit. A butler handed him a Diet Coke. The three made their pitch, and soon Mr. Thiel and his venture capital firm agreed to put 1.4 million British pounds (roughly $2.25 million) into their start-up. He was their first major investor.
They named their company DeepMind, a nod to deep learning, a way for A.I. systems to learn skills by analyzing large amounts of data; to neuroscience; and to the Deep Thought supercomputer from the sci-fi novel The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. By the fall of 2010, they were building their dream machine. They wholeheartedly believed that because they understood the risks, they were uniquely positioned to protect the world.
I dont see this as a contradictory position, said Mustafa Suleyman, one of the three DeepMind founders. There are huge benefits to come from these technologies. The goal is not to eliminate them or pause their development. The goal is to mitigate the downsides.
Having won over Mr. Thiel, Dr. Hassabis worked his way into Mr. Musks orbit. About two years later, they met at a conference organized by Mr. Thiels investment fund, which had also put money into Mr. Musks company SpaceX. Dr. Hassabis secured a tour of SpaceX headquarters. Afterward, with rocket hulls hanging from the ceiling, the two men lunched in the cafeteria and talked.
Mr. Musk explained that his plan was to colonize Mars to escape overpopulation and other dangers on Earth. Dr. Hassabis replied that the plan would work so long as superintelligent machines didnt follow and destroy humanity on Mars, too.
Mr. Musk was speechless. He hadnt thought about that particular danger. Mr. Musk soon invested in DeepMind alongside Mr. Thiel so he could be closer to the creation of this technology.
Flush with cash, DeepMind hired researchers who specialized in neural networks, complex algorithms created in the image of the human brain. A neural network is essentially a giant mathematical system that spends days, weeks or even months identifying patterns in large amounts of digital data. First developed in the 1950s, these systems could learn to handle tasks on their own. After analyzing names and addresses scribbled on hundreds of envelopes, for instance, they could read handwritten text.
DeepMind took the concept further. It built a system that could learn to play classic Atari games like Space Invaders, Pong and Breakout to illustrate what was possible.
This got the attention of another Silicon Valley powerhouse, Google, and specifically Larry Page. He saw a demonstration of Deep Minds machine playing Atari games. He wanted in.
In the fall of 2012, Geoffrey Hinton, a 64-year-old professor at the University of Toronto, and two graduate students published a research paper that showed the world what A.I. could do. They trained a neural network to recognize common objects like flowers, dogs and cars.
Scientists were surprised by the accuracy of the technology built by Dr. Hinton and his students. One who took particular notice was Yu Kai, an A.I. researcher who had met Dr. Hinton at a research conference and had recently started working for Baidu, the giant Chinese internet company. Baidu offered Dr. Hinton and his students $12 million to join the company in Beijing, according to three people familiar with the offer.
Dr. Hinton turned Baidu down, but the money got his attention.
The Cambridge-educated British expatriate had spent most of his career in academia, except for occasional stints at Microsoft and Google, and was not especially driven by money. But he had a neurodivergent child, and the money would mean financial security.
We did not know how much we were worth, Dr. Hinton said. He consulted lawyers and experts on acquisitions and came up with a plan: We would organize an auction, and we would sell ourselves. The auction would take place during an annual A.I. conference at the Harrahs hotel and casino on Lake Tahoe.
Big Tech took notice. Google, Microsoft, Baidu and other companies were beginning to believe that neural networks were a path to machines that could not only see, but hear, write, talk and eventually think.
Mr. Page had seen similar technology at Google Brain, his companys A.I. lab, and he thought Dr. Hintons research could elevate his scientists work. He gave Alan Eustace, Googles senior vice president of engineering, what amounted to a blank check to hire any A.I. expertise he needed.
Mr. Eustace and Jeff Dean, who led the Brain lab, flew to Lake Tahoe and took Dr. Hinton and his students out to dinner at a steakhouse inside the hotel the night before the auction. The smell of old cigarettes was overpowering, Dr. Dean recalled. They made the case for coming to work at Google.
The next day, Dr. Hinton ran the auction from his hotel room. Because of an old back injury, he rarely sat down. He turned a trash can upside down on a table, put his laptop on top and watched the bids roll in over the next two days.
Google made an offer. So did Microsoft. DeepMind quickly bowed out as the price went up. The industry giants pushed the bids to $20 million and then $25 million, according to documents detailing the auction. As the price passed $30 million, Microsoft quit, but it rejoined the bidding at $37 million.
We felt like we were in a movie, Dr. Hinton said.
Then Microsoft dropped out a second time. Only Baidu and Google were left, and they pushed the bidding to $42 million, $43 million. Finally, at $44 million, Dr. Hinton and his students stopped the auction. The bids were still climbing, but they wanted to work for Google. And the money was staggering.
It was an unmistakable sign that deep-pocketed companies were determined to buy the most talented A.I. researchers which was not lost on Dr. Hassabis at DeepMind. He had always told his employees that DeepMind would remain an independent company. That was, he believed, the best way to ensure its technology didnt turn into something dangerous.
But as Big Tech entered the talent race, he decided he had no choice: It was time to sell.
By the end of 2012, Google and Facebook were angling to acquire the London lab, according to three people familiar with the matter. Dr. Hassabis and his co-founders insisted on two conditions: No DeepMind technology could be used for military purposes, and its A.G.I. technology must be overseen by an independent board of technologists and ethicists.
Google offered $650 million. Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook offered a bigger payout to DeepMinds founders, but would not agree to the conditions. DeepMind sold to Google.
Mr. Zuckerberg was determined to build an A.I. lab of his own. He hired Yann LeCun, a French computer scientist who had also done pioneering A.I. research, to run it. A year after Dr. Hintons auction, Mr. Zuckerberg and Dr. LeCun flew to Lake Tahoe for the same A.I. conference. While padding around a suite at the Harrahs casino in his socks, Mr. Zuckerberg personally interviewed top researchers, who were soon offered millions of dollars in salary and stock.
A.I. was once laughed off. Now the richest men in Silicon Valley were shelling out billions to keep from being left behind.
When Mr. Musk invested in DeepMind, he broke his own informal rule that he would not invest in any company he didnt run himself. The downsides of his decision were already apparent when, only a month or so after his birthday spat with Mr. Page, he again found himself face to face with his former friend and fellow billionaire.
The occasion was the first meeting of DeepMinds ethics board, on Aug. 14, 2015. The board had been set up at the insistence of the start-ups founders to ensure that their technology did no harm after the sale. The members convened in a conference room just outside Mr. Musks office at SpaceX, with a window looking out onto his rocket factory, according to three people familiar with the meeting.
But thats where Mr. Musks control ended. When Google bought DeepMind, it bought the whole thing. Mr. Musk was out. Financially he had come out ahead, but he was unhappy.
Three Google executives now firmly in control of DeepMind were there: Mr. Page; Sergey Brin, a Google co-founder and Tesla investor; and Eric Schmidt, Googles chairman. Among the other attendees were Reid Hoffman, another PayPal founder, and Toby Ord, an Australian philosopher studying existential risk.
The DeepMind founders reported that they were pushing ahead with their work, but that they were aware the technology carried serious risks.
Mr. Suleyman, the DeepMind co-founder, gave a presentation called The Pitchforkers Are Coming. A.I. could lead to an explosion in disinformation, he told the board. He fretted that as the technology replaced countless jobs in the coming years, the public would accuse Google of stealing their livelihoods. Google would need to share its wealth with the millions who could no longer find work and provide a universal basic income, he argued.
Mr. Musk agreed. But it was pretty clear that his Google guests were not prepared to embark on a redistribution of (their) wealth. Mr. Schmidt said he thought the worries were completely overblown. In his usual whisper, Mr. Page agreed. A.I. would create more jobs than it took away, he argued.
Eight months later, DeepMind had a breakthrough that stunned the A.I community and the world. A DeepMind machine called AlphaGo beat one of the worlds best players at the ancient game of Go. The game, streamed over the internet, was watched by 200 million people across the globe. Most researchers had assumed that A.I. needed another 10 years to muster the ingenuity to do that.
Rationalists, effective altruists and others who worried about the risks of A.I. claimed the computers win validated their fears.
This is another indication that A.I. is progressing faster than even many experts anticipated, Victoria Krakovna, who would soon join DeepMind as an A.I. safety researcher, wrote in a blog post.
DeepMinds founders were increasingly worried about what Google would do with their inventions. In 2017, they tried to break away from the company. Google responded by increasing the salaries and stock award packages of the DeepMind founders and their staff. They stayed put.
The ethics board never had a second meeting.
Convinced that Mr. Pages optimistic view of A.I. was dead wrong, and angry at his loss of DeepMind, Mr. Musk built his own lab.
OpenAI was founded in late 2015, just a few months after he met with Sam Altman at the Rosewood hotel in Silicon Valley. Mr. Musk pumped money into the lab, and his former PayPal buddies, Mr. Hoffman and Mr. Thiel, came along for the ride. The three men and others pledged to put $1 billion into the project, which Mr. Altman, who was 30 at the time, would help run. To get them started, they poached Ilya Sutskever from Google. (Dr. Sutskever was one of the graduate students Google bought in Dr. Hintons auction.)
Initially, Mr. Musk wanted to operate OpenAI as a nonprofit, free from the economic incentives that were driving Google and other corporations. But by the time Google wowed the tech community with its Go stunt, Mr. Musk was changing his mind about how it should be run. He desperately wanted OpenAI to invent something that would capture the worlds imagination and close the gap with Google, but it wasnt getting the job done as a nonprofit.
In late 2017, he hatched a plan to wrest control of the lab from Mr. Altman and the other founders and transform it into a commercial operation that would join forces with Tesla and rely on supercomputers the car company was developing, according to four people familiar with the matter.
When Mr. Altman and others pushed back, Mr. Musk quit and said he would focus on his own A.I. work at Tesla. In February 2018, he announced his departure to OpenAIs staff on the top floor of the start-ups offices in a converted truck factory, three people who attended the meeting said. When he said that OpenAI needed to move faster, one researcher retorted at the meeting that Mr. Musk was being reckless.
Mr. Musk called the researcher a jackass and stormed out, taking his deep pockets with him.
OpenAI suddenly needed new financing in a hurry. Mr. Altman flew to Sun Valley for a conference and ran into Satya Nadella, Microsofts chief executive. A tie-up seemed natural. Mr. Altman knew Microsofts chief technology officer, Kevin Scott. Microsoft had bought LinkedIn from Mr. Hoffman, an OpenAI board member. Mr. Nadella told Mr. Scott to get it done. The deal closed in 2019.
Mr. Altman and OpenAI had formed a for-profit company under the original nonprofit, they had $1 billion in fresh capital, and Microsoft had a new way to build artificial intelligence into its vast cloud computing service.
Not everyone inside OpenAI was happy.
Dario Amodei, a researcher with ties to the effective altruist community, had been on hand at the Rosewood hotel when OpenAI was born. Dr. Amodei, who endlessly twisted his curls between his fingers as he talked, was leading the labs efforts to build a neural network called a large language model that could learn from enormous amounts of digital text. By analyzing countless Wikipedia articles, digital books and message boards, it could generate text on its own. It also had the unfortunate habit of making things up. It was called GPT-3, and it was released in the summer of 2020.
Researchers inside OpenAI, Google and other companies thought this rapidly improving technology could be a path to A.G.I.
But Dr. Amodei was unhappy about the Microsoft deal because he thought it was taking OpenAI in a really commercial direction. He and other researchers went to the board to try to push Mr. Altman out, according to five people familiar with the matter. After they failed, they left. Like DeepMinds founders before them, they worried that their new corporate overlords would favor commercial interests over safety.
In 2021, the group of about 15 engineers and scientists created a new lab called Anthropic. The plan was to build A.I. the way the effective altruists thought it should done with very tight controls.
There was no attempt to remove Sam Altman from OpenAI by the co-founders of Anthropic, said an Anthropic spokeswoman, Sally Aldous. The co-founders themselves came to the conclusion that they wished to depart OpenAI to start their own company, made this known to OpenAIs leadership, and over several weeks negotiated an exit on mutually agreeable terms.
Anthropic accepted a $4 billion investment from Amazon and another $2 billion from Google two years later.
After OpenAI received another $2 billion from Microsoft, Mr. Altman and another senior executive, Greg Brockman, visited Bill Gates at his sprawling mansion on the shores of Lake Washington, outside Seattle. The Microsoft founder was no longer involved in the company day to day but kept in regular touch with its executives.
Over dinner, Mr. Gates told them he doubted that large language models could work. He would stay skeptical, he said, until the technology performed a task that required critical thinking passing an A.P. biology test, for instance.
Five months later, on Aug. 24, 2022, Mr. Altman and Mr. Brockman returned and brought along an OpenAI researcher named Chelsea Voss. Ms. Voss had been a medalist in an international biology Olympiad as a high schooler. Mr. Nadella and other Microsoft executives were there, too.
On a huge digital display on a stand outside Mr. Gatess living room, the OpenAI crew presented a technology called GPT-4.
Mr. Brockman gave the system a multiple-choice advanced biology test, and Ms. Voss graded the answers. The first question involved polar molecules, groups of atoms with a positive charge at one end and a negative charge at the other. The system answered correctly and explained its choice. It was only trained to provide an answer, Mr. Brockman said. The conversational nature kind of fell out, almost magically. In other words, it was doing things they hadnt really designed it to do.
There were 60 questions. GPT-4 got only one answer wrong.
Mr. Gates sat up in his chair, his eyes opened wide. In 1980, he had a similar reaction when researchers showed him the graphical user interface that became the basis for the modern personal computer. He thought GPT was that revolutionary.
By October, Microsoft was adding the technology across its online services, including its Bing search engine. And two months later OpenAI released its ChatGPT chatbot, which is now used by 100 million people every week.
OpenAI had beat the effective altruists at Anthropic. Mr. Pages optimists at Google scurried to release their own chatbot, Bard, but were widely perceived to have lost the race to OpenAI. Three months after ChatGPTs release, Google stock was down 11 percent. Mr. Musk was nowhere to be found.
But it was just the beginning.
Susan Beachy contributed research.
Originally posted here:
How Elon Musk and Larry Pages AI Debate Led to OpenAI and an Industry Boom - The New York Times
- Elon Musk | Biography & Facts | Britannica.com [Last Updated On: August 20th, 2018] [Originally Added On: August 20th, 2018]
- Elon Musk Details Excruciating Personal Toll of Tesla ... [Last Updated On: August 20th, 2018] [Originally Added On: August 20th, 2018]
- Elon Musk headbutted a car at a Tesla factory: report ... [Last Updated On: September 6th, 2018] [Originally Added On: September 6th, 2018]
- Elon Musks Ultimatum to Tesla: Fight the S.E.C., or I ... [Last Updated On: October 8th, 2018] [Originally Added On: October 8th, 2018]
- Future Mars Colonists Could Fly Rockets They 3D Printed Right on the Red Planet [Last Updated On: October 29th, 2018] [Originally Added On: October 29th, 2018]
- Elon Musk: First Boring Company Tunnel Will Open December 10 [Last Updated On: October 29th, 2018] [Originally Added On: October 29th, 2018]
- Tesla CEO Elon Musk: The 2018 60 Minutes Interview - CBS News [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2018] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2018]
- Elon Musk: Tesla interested in buying idled GM plant ... [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2018] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2018]
- Elon Musk: "I have no respect for the SEC" [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2018] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2018]
- Elon Musk: Inventors Plans for Outer Space, Cars, Finding ... [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2018] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2018]
- Elon Musk says Tesla would consider buying idled GM plants [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2018] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2018]
- Elon Musk kicks off Gigafactory in Shanghai, may dodge Trump ... [Last Updated On: January 12th, 2019] [Originally Added On: January 12th, 2019]
- Elon Musk says SpaceX has assembled shiny Starship test ... [Last Updated On: January 12th, 2019] [Originally Added On: January 12th, 2019]
- Elon Musk released a photo SpaceX's test hopper rocket ... [Last Updated On: January 12th, 2019] [Originally Added On: January 12th, 2019]
- Elon Musk shows off SpaceXs massive Starship test rocket ... [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2019]
- CNET Says Tesla CEO Elon Musk Was Disruptor Of The Year [Last Updated On: January 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: January 21st, 2019]
- Elon Musk blasts SEC, says no one oversees his tweets - CNN [Last Updated On: January 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: January 21st, 2019]
- Elon Musks Billion-Dollar Crusade to Stop the A.I ... [Last Updated On: February 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: February 5th, 2019]
- Elon Musk: Tesla vehicles able to drive themselves by end of ... [Last Updated On: February 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: February 5th, 2019]
- Elon Musk gears up for Model Y crossover as Tesla makes ... [Last Updated On: February 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: February 5th, 2019]
- Elon Musk: Starship could make migrating from Earth to Mars ... [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2019]
- Tesla's biggest problem is not Elon Musk's Twitter - Business ... [Last Updated On: March 3rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: March 3rd, 2019]
- Elon Musk changes Twitter name to 'Elon Tusk' amid SEC ... [Last Updated On: March 3rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: March 3rd, 2019]
- Johnny Depp Claims Amber Heard Cheated on Him With Elon Musk ... [Last Updated On: March 3rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: March 3rd, 2019]
- SEC options to rein in Elon Musk include leaning on Tesla and ... [Last Updated On: March 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: March 5th, 2019]
- Elon Musk Doesnt Need to Be Tesla CEO, Top Shareholder ... [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2019] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2019]
- Hive: Elon Musk News, In-Depth Articles, Photos & Videos ... [Last Updated On: June 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: June 5th, 2019]
- Before Elon Musk reaches Mars, SpaceX may need to survive ... [Last Updated On: June 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: June 5th, 2019]
- WeWork's CEO drama has one industry insider calling it an 'Elon Musk situation' - Business Insider [Last Updated On: October 1st, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 1st, 2019]
- Elon Musk Just Unveiled Wild Starship Plans For "The Moon, Mars, And Beyond" - ScienceAlert [Last Updated On: October 1st, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 1st, 2019]
- 50 US corporations have CEO-worker pay gaps of more than 1,000 to 1 - Fast Company [Last Updated On: October 1st, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 1st, 2019]
- Watch Elon Musk unveil his latest plan for conquering Mars - Business Insider [Last Updated On: October 1st, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 1st, 2019]
- Elon Musk should send people to Mars on a keto diet to save money, according to a doctor who studies ketosis - INSIDER [Last Updated On: October 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 30th, 2019]
- Elon Musk's hearing over Thai cave diver 'pedo guy' slur to begin amid 'con man' investigation - ABC News [Last Updated On: October 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 30th, 2019]
- Tesla is unveiling a 3rd version of its solar roof this week, Elon Musk says - Business Insider [Last Updated On: October 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 30th, 2019]
- Peter Thiel says Elon Musk is a 'negative role model' because he's too hard to emulate - CNBC [Last Updated On: October 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 30th, 2019]
- To many, the strategy adopted by Elon Musk and Tesla seems chaotic but its actually brilliant - Scroll.in [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Elon Musk Just Tweeted a Response to Ford's New Electric Mustang Announcement, and It's Most Excellent - Inc. [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Elon Musk Says They're Working On Plugging The 4,400-Mile Supercharger Gap Between Europe And Asia - Jalopnik [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- It Took Elon Musk Exactly 5 Words to Reveal What He Looks for in Every New Hire (and It's Not a College Degree) - Inc. [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Elon Musk says the Tesla 2020 Roadster 'maybe won't need a key at all' - Business Insider [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Elon Musk Ordered to Stand Trial in Cave Explorers Defamation Case - The New York Times [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Elon Musk Just Retweeted A Ford Announcement And It Was A Classy (And Hugely Strategic) Move - Forbes [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Watch Elon Musk lose it after Tesla Cybertruck Armor Glass ... [Last Updated On: November 23rd, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 23rd, 2019]
- Did Elon Musk approve this? U.S. company sending cannabis and coffee to space aboard a SpaceX mission - The GrowthOp [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Tesla has announced major overhaul of sales and delivery teams - Business Insider [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Elon Musk revives his plan to power the United States entirely on solar - Inverse [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Elon Musk Reveals Best Place To Get 'Great Deals' For Fixing, Upgrading Cars - International Business Times [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Folks Are Going Wild Over Elon Musk Sitting Next to Ikumi Nakamura at The Game Awards - Comicbook.com [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Vergecast: Tesla Cybertruck first ride, Elon Musks bad tweets trial, and the departure of Googles founders - The Verge [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Elon Musk says Twitter is nonsense. Why does he use it to break Tesla news? - Los Angeles Times [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Was Elon Musk Really in 'Rick and Morty'? - Showbiz Cheat Sheet [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- Elon Musk appeared at The Game Awards to support girlfriend Grimes - Business Insider [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- Peugeot and Fiat Chrysler Tie the Knot - Is Elon Musk Getting Worried Yet? - TheStreet [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- Elon Musk Works For Tesla For Free But Thanks To A Highly Unusual Compensation Plan He Could Earn $100 Billion - Celebrity Net Worth [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- Elon Musk Is Talking About Powering All of America with Solar - Futurism [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- Why Elon Musk's SpaceX Is Launching Cannabis and Coffee to Space in 2020 - Inc. [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- This decade in Elon Musk: SpaceX, Tesla, The Boring Company, and more - The Verge [Last Updated On: December 18th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 18th, 2019]
- Jason Castriota is taking on the 300 mph record -- and Elon Musk - Los Angeles Times [Last Updated On: December 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 30th, 2019]
- Can you guess what Elon Musk's favorite movie and Netflix series were in 2019? - USA TODAY [Last Updated On: December 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 30th, 2019]
- How Elon Musk Evolved from Nothing to the Most Successful - Interesting Engineering [Last Updated On: December 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 30th, 2019]
- Be wary of Elon Musk despoiling the vault of heaven - The Guardian [Last Updated On: December 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 30th, 2019]
- Elon Musk Dismisses Induced Demand, A Phenomenon First Witnessed In 1866 - Forbes [Last Updated On: December 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 30th, 2019]
- Elon Musk aims for 2020 completion of underground Las Vegas project - Las Vegas Review-Journal [Last Updated On: December 30th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 30th, 2019]
- Elon Musk's Tesla journey started as an investor - The Times [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- All aboard the Starship! Elon Musk aims to send 10 lakh people to Mars by 2050 - Hindustan Times [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- The pop princess and the billionaire: how Grimes and Elon Musk became the worlds strangest power couple - Telegraph.co.uk [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk Says His Favorite Movie of 2019 Was "Parasite" And The Concept of Irony is Officially Dead - Bleeding Cool News [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Did The Book Primal Branding Inspire Elon Musk With Tesla? - InsideEVs [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk's Tunnel Company Seeks to Expand Its Reach in Las Vegas - Engineering News-Record [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk keeps getting owned by the PA Treasury's Twitter account - Mashable [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk is nearly halfway done with his Las Vegas loop - The Hill [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk has had the viral song from 'The Witcher' stuck in his head for at least a week - Business Insider [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk keeps traveling to Texas to work on SpaceX's new Starship rocket. A local thinks the CEO now uses a historic home as a crash pad take a... [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Jack Dorsey asked Elon Musk how he would run Twitterhere's what Musk said - CNBC [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Elon Musk is still thinking big with SpaceX's Starship Mars-colonizing rocket. Really big. - Space.com [Last Updated On: January 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 19th, 2020]
- Jay Leno And Elon Musk Spotted Driving And Filming Tesla Cybertruck - Grand Tour Nation [Last Updated On: January 29th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 29th, 2020]
- Shes Taking on Elon Musk on Solar. And Winning. - The New York Times [Last Updated On: January 29th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 29th, 2020]
- Japanese billionaire Maezawa pulls out of dating show that promised the moon - Eyewitness News [Last Updated On: January 30th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 30th, 2020]
- Does Tesla make solar glass roof tile in its Buffalo, New York factory? Or in China? - pv magazine USA [Last Updated On: January 30th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 30th, 2020]