The world's richest man wants you to know he's having a lot of fun.
Little X appeared to tell Trump "shush your mouth" in the Oval Office.
Here's everything you need to know about California's new AI bill and the fight to speed up or slow down AI that's spilling into politics.
Reports of additional children belonging to Elon Musk feel like an all to frequent occurrence.
The Tesla CEO wants you to go forth and procreate, just like him.
Fake tweets about Shapiro became common after he recited the lyrics of Cardi B's song 'WAP' in 2020.
The viral Grimes tweet is fake, but the Musk tweet was unfortunately very real until he decided to delete it.
Two AI companies are claiming the science fiction term, “Grok,” as their own, but only one is turbocharging the AI industry.
Here are some of the highlights from this week AI news cycle.
The Grok doll is unrelated to Elon Musk’s chatbot "Grok." But hey, what's a little brand confusion between friends?
The acclaimed Japanese video game designer (Metal Gear, Death Stranding) shared the news on social media.
Grimes said Musk walked in on her recording vocals for the game, antique gun in hand, and asked developers to add him his avatar.
The biographer talks to Gizmodo about his latest subject, AI, assembly lines and Ukraine.
Take a quick look at the newest and weirdest happenings in AI.
While big tech companies and startups make up a big part of the list, there are also several important critics in the great big AI debate.
AMC wants Daryl's upcoming spinoff to bring things back to the basics of the mothership series that birthed it.
I have no sense of direction after using Google Maps for 15 years; I can’t flirt because of Grindr; now I wonder what ChatGPT will render vestigial.
Deepfake music may become legitimate as UMG and Google negotiate a deal that could allow people to create AI-generated music.
In addition to fake music, artificial intelligence has created a big new problem for Spotify: fake listeners. It's an infinite loop of "artificial streaming."
In a new music industry trend, Grimes says that she's fine with internet randos using a synthetic version of her voice to create new music.
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