Tools
Change country:

The growing danger of Elon Musk’s misinformation machine

A giant American flag backdrop with Elon Musk looking tiny stanbding in front of it.
SpaceX and Tesla founder Elon Musk onstage at the Roxain Theater on October 20, 2024, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. | Michael Swensen/Getty Images

Elon Musk spent Election Day on X praising men, amplifying anti-immigrant conspiracies, and accusing Democrats of voter fraud. It was all pretty on-brand for the billionaire, who has become one of Donald Trump’s biggest supporters and a one-man misinformation machine. When it was clear early Wednesday morning that Trump would win, Musk told his followers: “You are the media now.”

A statement like that would have been laughable even a month ago, when estimates showed that X, formerly Twitter, had dropped nearly 80 percent in value since Musk purchased the platform for $44 billion in 2022. Until its transformation into X, the platform was regarded by some as a once-vibrant place on the internet that Musk utterly destroyed. But after Musk spent at least $119 million to get Trump elected and turned his platform into a MAGA megaphone — and then Trump won — the social media site’s real value is starting to take new shape.

From the day his Twitter purchase went through, Musk vowed to make free speech central to the platform’s future. He purged the company’s trust and safety staff, setting a precedent that other social media companies followed. Since then, however, Musk has been willing to let authoritarian regimes dictate how X will work in their countries. In the United States, more free speech on X meant more misinformation and an embrace of right-wing politics

X is certainly not the biggest social media platform, but as other major platforms continue to shy away from policing content and Trump heads back to the White House, X certainly looks more influential than it did last week.

You might not like this. Since buying the platform in 2022, Musk has helped turn X into an epicenter of election misinformation. With 203 million followers, Musk has the biggest reach on X and is the platform’s most prominent pusher of anti-immigrant conspiracy theories and right-wing propaganda. At Musk’s request last year, X changed the site’s algorithm to put his posts in more people’s feeds — posts that increasingly urged people not to trust the outcome of the election. The nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate estimates that Musk’s misleading posts about the election have been viewed more than 2 billion times this year. 

Gone are the warning labels that Twitter once used to flag false or misleading information. Musk replaced that system with a crowd-sourced fact-checking program called Community Notes. He called it “the best source of truth on the internet.” Unfortunately, the new system doesn’t work very well.

Elon Musk and Melania Trump stand with Musk’s young son at a Trump rally. The kid is waving a Trump-Vance sign.

So if your feed feels as though it’s especially full of right-wing voices and conspiracy theories, that’s because it probably is. It’s not exactly a coordinated effort by Musk’s lieutenants to push your views to the right. It’s just how X is designed these days. 

It’s way too soon to tell just how big a role X played in Trump’s reelection. We also don’t know what, if anything, Musk will do differently with the platform as he eyes some sort of role in the new administration. You can count on continuing to question everything you see on social media, though.

“The problem will get worse because there are no guardrails in place right now,” said Darrell West, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “All the trends are moving in the wrong direction.”

Indeed, thanks to the apathy of social media platforms and the rise of AI, lying on the internet has never been easier. And if you’re on X, it’s part of the appeal.

The right will continue to rule X

Leading up to the election, opinions on the fate of X were grim. There were plenty of reports on the dangers of election misinformation on the platform or Musk’s broken promises about what X would do by now. Bloomberg columnist Dave Lee argued that the platform was simply failing, losing users and relevance. That seems less likely now. 

Despite rumors of its demise, X is still quite big. X told advertisers as recently as September that it has over 570 million monthly active users, dwarfing right-wing platforms like Truth Social and Rumble, whose users are in the hundreds of thousands. It is also much bigger than platforms like Mastodon and Blue Sky, which progressives fled to after Musk bought Twitter. 

Meanwhile, Meta recently said that its Twitter-replacement platform, Threads, has 275 million monthly active users. A big difference between the two platforms? Meta limits the amount of political content you see on Threads. It looks like people are either staying on X or flocking to it for unfiltered politics news.

Political news on Twitter used to be marginal, where celebrities were the main draw. The celebrities have left, and now X is the most popular major social media platform for keeping up with politics, according to a Pew survey published in June. There has also been a major partisan shift. Democrats historically dominated political discussion on the platform, but X has become dominated by right-wing voices in just the last couple of years. Posts from Republicans are far more likely to go viral on X, and once-popular Democrat accounts have seen their audiences disintegrate, according to a recent Washington Post investigation.

Elon Musk, onstage with Trump at a rally, jumps in the sir with his arms over his head.

Republicans have also changed their minds about the platform’s impact on democracy. While Twitter was once framed as the platform that censored conservative voices, X has become the right’s favorite place for freedom. Only 17 percent of Republicans thought Twitter was good for democracy in 2021, but 53 percent said X was good for democracy in 2024, according to the Pew study. 

“Democratic users are much more likely to think people getting harassed is a major problem on the platform, and on the flip side, Republicans who post about politics are especially likely to do so because their views feel welcome there,” Colleen McClain, one of the authors of the Pew study, told me this week. McClain added that “in recent years, we haven’t seen any mass exodus or flocking to or from X in our data, either overall or by party.”

None of this should come as a huge surprise if you’ve spent any time on X. But the partisan split took on new dimensions leading up to this year’s election, if only because the Republicans who felt like their voices were heard on X also felt heard at the ballot box. 

Their guy won, and maybe the weird, violent memes on X helped.

Elon Musk is just getting started

We don’t know if X will grow or change — or just stay its same problematic self — as Trump prepares to take office again. We do know that Elon Musk isn’t done with politics. Musk was at Trump’s side at Mar-a-Lago as the results rolled in on election night, and there’s good reason to believe we’ll see the SpaceX owner in DC soon enough.

As far as politics go, Musk says he’s not done funding political races. In a livestream on X, the billionaire said his America PAC would “keep going after this election, and prepare for the midterms and any intermediate elections.” Trump, meanwhile, said in his victory speech, “We have a new star,” Trump said. “A star is born — Elon!”

In September, Trump promised Musk a role heading up a task force to review federal expenditures, one that would make “drastic reforms” to the federal government. This makes sense because Musk had been the one who pitched the idea for such a task force to the president-elect. Trump even suggested a new job title, “Secretary of Cost Cutting,” while Musk suggested he’d be head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which does not exist and whose acronym is a reference to a dog-themed cryptocurrency. Musk later said at Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally that he wanted to cut $2 trillion from the federal budget, which would be very difficult.

It’s easy, however, to see how Musk’s many companies stand to benefit immensely from a close relationship with the Trump administration. SpaceX is already one of NASA’s primary contractors, pulling in hundreds of millions if not several billions of dollars with every contract. Musk’s contact with Vladimir Putin reportedly put these contracts in jeopardy, although knowing what we know about Trump’s affinity for the Russian autocrat, the president-elect might not mind this.

Tesla also stands to benefit, which explains why the company’s stock soared after Trump’s victory was secured. The EV company wants to roll out a massive fleet of robotaxis, a tall order that comes with significant regulatory challenges. Tesla’s self-driving car program in general has faced pushback from federal authorities, including a recently announced investigation into the system. Regulatory approval and investigations can be easier, of course, if you bankrolled the president’s final push to reelection. 

Musk’s bet on developing artificial general intelligence, xAI, can also look forward to more cooperation from the federal government. The second Trump administration could pave the way for xAI to get access to cheap energy, especially as it faces heat for running gas generators without permits to power its data center in Memphis. 

Elon Musk carries a bathroom sink into Twitter headquarters.

On top of these lucrative potential deals, the idea that X might win new relevance and influence must feel like a bonus to Musk. 

For its right-wing users, though, X is finally the digital town square they were promised so many months ago. It seems like just yesterday, Elon Musk was carrying a sink into Twitter’s headquarters on his first day as the company’s owner. (“Let that sink in” is supposed to be the joke there.) 

Musk paid tribute to that post on X just after midnight on election night. Except this time, in a doctored photo, he was carrying a sink into the Oval Office.

A version of this story was also published in the Vox Technology newsletter. Sign up here so you don’t miss the next one!


Read full article on: vox.com
México parece abandonar la estrategia de 'abrazos, no balazos' ante la violencia en el país
CIUDAD DE MÉXICO (AP) — En los últimos seis años, México se jactó de su cuestionada estrategia de “abrazos, no balazos”, en la que sus líderes evitaban confrontar a los cárteles de la droga que, gradualmente, tomaban el control de grandes partes del país.
9 m
latimes.com
‘The View’s Sunny Hostin Clashes With Alyssa Farah Griffin Over Why Americans Voted For Trump: “Misogyny”
"They were bombarded with misinformation and disinformation," Hostin insisted of voters who chose Trump.
nypost.com
At Gonzaga, a father-son soccer duo chases another title
Coach Scott Waller and his son, Charlie, balance life and sport as they help the Eagles dominate the District.
washingtonpost.com
‘Bachelor’ alum Kelsey Anderson clarifies relationship status with Joey Griziadei
Kelsey Anderson and Joey Griziadei are still going strong! The former “Bachelor” contestant shared an update on their relationship on her Instagram story, after being absent from social media for a few days. Watch the full video to learn more about how Kelsey and Joey are doing. Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on...
nypost.com
Cannabis stocks plunge after DeSantis, Griffin win Florida fight against weed legalization
Amendment 3 – which would have legalized the recreational use of marijuana in the state’s constitution – failed to receive the 60% support needed to pass under Florida law.
nypost.com
Caroline Ellison, Sam Bankman-Fried’s ex-lover, begins 2-year prison sentence
Ellison, 30, reported to the federal prison in Danbury, Connecticut.
nypost.com
Detienen a Agustín Lozano, máximo dirigente del fútbol peruano, investigado por integrar un presunto grupo criminal
Agustín Lozano es el segundo máximo dirigente del fútbol peruano detenido bajo una investigación fiscal
latimes.com
11 bodies, including two minors, found dumped beside a highway in southern Mexico
Police found the bodies of 11 people, including two minors, after receiving a tip about an abandoned pickup truck in the city of Chilpancingo.
latimes.com
Hey Martha Stewart, you gloated about the death of a Post columnist — but I’m alive, bitch!
Two decades later, the Domestic Dominatrix is still fantasizing about (plotting?) Andrea Peyser's grisly demise.
nypost.com
Jenna Bush Hager Says Hoda Kotb “Can’t Keep Her Face Straight” After Covering The Election For “17 Hours”: “She Needs To Let Loose”
Kotb was reporting tirelessly alongside Savannah Guthrie this week on the 2024 presidential election.
nypost.com
Nissan axing 9,000 jobs, CEO cuts his own pay as US sales slump
The plans underline the vulnerability of Japan's third-largest automaker, having never fully recovered from the disarray that led to the 2018 ouster of former chairman Carlos Ghosn.
nypost.com
Dozens of monkeys escape South Carolina research facility, residents warned to lock doors, windows
Police in South Carolina are warning residents to lock their doors and windows after 43 monkeys escaped from an Alpha Genesis facility in Beaufort County. Traps have been set up and thermal imaging cameras are being used to locate the fugitive monkeys, the Yemassee Police Department said in a statement.
cbsnews.com
Rents set to roar back as apartment demand surges after building boom
After a construction surge unlike anything seen in 40 years flooded the market with shiny new apartments, landlords are finally breathing a sigh of relief.
nypost.com
An 8-hour Russian drone barrage keeps Kyiv on edge as the war in Ukraine nears 1,000 days
Ukrainian air defenses 'neutralized' three dozen drones, but falling debris caused damage to a hospital and other buildings in Kyiv, local authorities said.
latimes.com
Luke Grimes on final episodes of "Yellowstone," his album and fatherhood
"Yellowstone" star Luke Grimes spoke to "CBS Mornings" about what to expect as the beloved show nears its end and what's next for him.
cbsnews.com
Victoria Beckham’s daughter Harper, 13, shares TikTok makeup tutorial — after being banned from wearing it
The only daughter of Victoria and David Beckham showed fans her two-part lip routine before presenting her mom with the Harper's Bazaar Entrepreneur of the Year award.
nypost.com
Elon Musk joins Donald Trump and family for victory ‘squad’ photo — but there’s no sign of Melania
The family portrait featured the 78-year-old Republican beaming alongside his five kids, their partners and a handful of his grandchildren at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida on election night.
nypost.com
Military judge revives plea deals for alleged 9/11 mastermind, 2 others
One of the alleged masterminds of the 9/11 terror attacks may be spared the death penalty. A military judge is allowing plea bargains that would allow Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and two co-conspirators to accept life in prison without the possibility of parole. CBS News senior national security correspondent Charlie D'Agata has more.
cbsnews.com
Breakdancer Raygun is retiring following Paris Olympics backlash
Raygun is leaving breakdancing behind. After the “really upsetting” backlash she faced from her performance at the 2024 Paris Olympics, Raygun announced that she is retiring from the sport. Watch the full video to learn more about her decision to end her breakdancing career.  Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on all your favorite...
nypost.com
America Has an Onion Problem
When it comes to foodborne illnesses, onions have long been considered especially safe. Not anymore.
theatlantic.com
Newsom calls special session to fund California's legal defense against Trump
Gov. Gavin Newsom called for the state Legislature to begin a special session in early December to increase legal funding for California to defend climate change, reproductive health and civil rights from former President Trump's conservative policy agenda.
latimes.com
This easy, low-impact exercise ‘significantly’ reduces low back pain — and it’s free
The health benefits of a daily walk are well established, and a new study adds yet another reason to get your steps in.
nypost.com
‘Say Nothing’ Review: Propulsive, Nervy IRA Drama is FX’s Latest Must-Watch Masterpiece
The adaptation of Patrick Radden Keefe's incredible nonfiction book puts you in the shoes of these remarkable real people.
nypost.com
Bryan Kohberger’s lawyers argue he could be executed by ‘inhumane’ firing squad if he’s convicted of Idaho murders
Bryan Kohberger, the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students, is back in court Thursday as his lawyers argue to take the death penalty off the table, claiming he would face an inhumane execution by firing squad.
nypost.com
Elderly white woman charged with hate crime for allegedly attacking Hispanic female Trump supporters
Police said she showed no remorse.
nypost.com
Democrat who ran against Biden says president's decision to seek re-election 'sealed' win for Trump
Rep. Dean Phillips suggested the 2024 election was "sealed" the day President Biden announced his re-election bid, pointing to his party's failure to let voters select their candidate.
foxnews.com
Witness to deadly subway chokehold said Jordan Neely was ‘trying to attack everybody’ in 911 call played at trial
Jurors just heard the 911 call that Moriela Sanchez made saying Jordan Neely “is trying to attack everybody.” Sanchez asked the operator to send cops and an ambulance because someone was attacking people on a subway car. “He’s trying to attack everybody,” Sanchez said of Neely before identifying him to the operator as “Jordan.” “There’s...
nypost.com
When will home equity loan rates fall below 8%?
Home equity loan rates have been dropping. But when will they fall below 8%? Here's what to consider now.
cbsnews.com
Biden delivers first remarks since election, calls Kamala Harris' loss to Trump a setback
President Biden addressed the nation Thursday for the first time since Kamala Harris' loss to Donald Trump in the election, which Mr. Biden referred to as a setback. The president said he would work with the president-elect's team to ensure a peaceful transition. Tony Dokoupil anchored CBS News' special report on the president's remarks.
cbsnews.com
Grandpa throws rave-funeral for late grandson: ‘I felt that he wanted me to dance with him’
He was raved from the dead.
nypost.com
Cuba left reeling after Category 3 hurricane ravages island and knocks out power grid
Cuba has been left reeling after a fierce Category 3 hurricane ripped across western portions of the island, knocking out the country’s power grid.
latimes.com
Mom allegedly killed 5-year-old son —then left his dad message saying: ‘We don’t have a son no more’
An Alaska mom left a chilling voicemail for her 5-year-old son’s father after she allegedly murdered the boy with a 20-pound weight — cruelly telling him: “We don’t have a son no more.” Cedar Mae Sarten, 43, is accused of killing the little boy, Bodhi, in her Fairbanks apartment on Oct. 13 before leaving a slew...
nypost.com
Dolphins star's wife slams 'The View' cohost for calling Trump supporters ‘uneducated White women’
Devon Mostert, the wife of Miami Dolphins running back Raheem Mostert, called out "The View" co-host Sunny Hostin after she called Trump supporters "uneducated White women."
foxnews.com
Bodies of 11 people, including 2 children, found on highway in Mexico
The gruesome discovery in the city of Chilpancingo comes just weeks after the city's mayor was murdered and decapitated.
cbsnews.com
Here are the most talked-about candidates for top posts in Trump's administration
President-elect Donald Trump will appoint Cabinet members to serve alongside him over the next four years, and several candidates are being floated for the top positions.
foxnews.com
How low will home equity loan interest rates drop in November?
There are a few events in November that could help push home equity borrowing rates lower, experts say.
cbsnews.com
Hispanic male voters shunned Kamala Harris because they think ‘a woman belongs in the kitchen’: radio host
The owner of a Hispanic radio station in Pennsylvania claimed that Latino men didn’t vote for Vice President Kamala Harris because they have a “mentality” that says a “woman belongs in the kitchen.”. Victor Martinez, who also hosts a show on his La Mega station in Allentown, told MSNBC on Wednesday that Latino men “wouldn’t...
nypost.com
Why Trump Being President Again Is Not Actually Good for Truth Social
His election win sent his company’s stock soaring again—but gravity is likely coming for its investors.
slate.com
Biden congratulates Trump, pledges 'peaceful and orderly' transfer of power
President Biden addressed the nation Thursday as Democrats are still reeling from President-elect Trump's decisive victory in the 2024 presidential election.
foxnews.com
D.C. police arrest teen in attack on gay model at McDonald’s
The model was attacked by a dozen people at a McDonald’s at 14th and U streets NW, his husband said.
washingtonpost.com
Urinating passenger causes in-flight ruckus — and flight crew is forced to divert plane 
This brought new meaning to the term "jet stream."
nypost.com
Bus overturns in upstate New York, sending dozens to hospitals
An accident reconstruction team was trying to determine what happened to the bus in upstate New York, authorities said.
cbsnews.com
A new law allows Israel to deport the relatives of Palestinian attackers to war-ravaged Gaza
In Israel, a new law championed by members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party and his far-right allies, would allow deportation of Palestinian citizens.
latimes.com
Sneaky social media habit that’s a red flag your man is obsessed with his muscles, according to science
A University of South Australia study found that a troubling tendency among men is an indicator that they may obsess over their physiques — to the point of muscle dysphoria.
nypost.com
Necktie fashion has Gen Z, millennials in a chokehold this fall: ‘Not just boy fun’
It’s got a glamorous grip on the throats of Gen Z — and it’s not letting up.  The necktie, that is.  Yes, the formal fashion frill once worn exclusively by blowhard businessmen and dads at funerals is, yet again, arising as the en-vogue accouterment for A-list luminaries and Big Apple tastemakers alike.    New York...
nypost.com
Daniel Craig can’t remember how many James Bond movies he’s been in — and doesn’t care who replaces him
The 007 franchise isn't on the top of Daniel Craig's mind anymore.
nypost.com
Maine Democratic Rep. Jared Golden retains House seat — but Trump gets another electoral vote
Maine Democratic Rep. Jared Golden held off a challenge from former stock-car racer and Republican state Rep. Austin Theriault in a combative and competitive race — but President-elect Donald Trump won one of the state’s four Electoral College votes. Golden eked out re-election with 50.3% of the vote to Theriault’s 49.7%, with 95% of votes...
nypost.com
Is the Hugh Grant Movie ‘Heretic’ Streaming on Netflix or HBO Max?
It's Hugh Grant vs. Mormon missionaries in this new A24 horror movie.
nypost.com