Hey everyone, itâs Sarah Frier reporting from New York. Elon Musk may be the most overexposed executive in the world and still somehow the m [View in browser](
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Hey everyone, itâs Sarah Frier reporting from New York. Elon Musk may be the most overexposed executive in the world and still somehow the most under-explained. But first⦠Three things you need to know today: ⢠Apple hit [pause on feature development](
⢠Uber released [mixed quarterly earnings](
⢠MySpaceâs co-founder has an [AI product]( A tangled web By the time Elon Musk purchased [Twitter](bbg://securities/twtr) in 2022, he was already its top celebrity, firing off tweets at all hours to about 140 million followers and directing a global news cycle through his stream of consciousness. Musk, mogul of electric vehicles and space travel, wanted more: He now weighs in regularly on politics, interest rates, memes, wars, âwokeâ-ness, artificial intelligence and human consciousness. Thereâs no hope of keeping track of every wild thing he says (like, last week, that AI will obviate [the need for jobs](). The level of confusion, panic and intrigue he incites with a post is something we havenât seen since the Donald Trump presidency. Still, Musk is underestimated and poorly understood. His power is only increasing over the way the world works. The billionaire is playing [diplomat]( with world leaders, deploying his [Starlink satellites]( in war zones, controlling [automobile charging infrastructure]( across the US, [polluting wetlands]( to get us into space, [sacrificing monkeys]( to get chips into our brains, trying to persuade us to [make more babies](. Heâs the worldâs most important, polarizing futurist. The best way to make sense of Muskâs seemingly unrelated moves and comments is to remember that all six of his companies â Boring, Neuralink, SpaceX, Tesla, X and X.ai â are tangled up in one personâs ambitions and whims. As one of his businesses introduces a chatbot, another uses it to sell more [social media subscriptions](; in return, the X users provide the data to improve the AI companyâs work. Muskâs most loyal executives and engineers often contribute to multiple companies at once. Tesla engineers vetted code by Twitter employees after the acquisition, for instance. A Boring executive then helped Musk run Twitter in its earliest days. If you work for Musk you work for his empire. At Bloomberg, we call it [Elon, Inc.]( Weâre going to dissect his interconnected web each week in a podcast, helping listeners make sense of his decisions and the impact of his work. These days, the worldâs richest man has more to lose than ever. His ballooning portfolio of companies appears to distract him from his work on cars and rockets. X is facing mountains of debt and an advertiser exodus. The US 2024 election is coming, and Musk is edging to the right, maybe in an effort to protect Tesla from a [union threat](. The first episode of the podcast, on Grok AI and that union threat, is out now. [Listen here](, and let me know what you think. â[Sarah Frier](mailto:sfrier1@bloomberg.net) The big story Co-working company WeWork once seemed invincible, with practically limitless cash to spend and rapid growth. Itâs [worth looking back]( at how one of the worldâs most valuable startups ended up in bankruptcy. Get fully charged PayPal rival Adyen needs to restore investor confidence [with a clear plan for growth](, analysts said. Design startup Figma has growth its workforce [by 60% since announcing a sale]( to Adobe in 2022. WeWorkâs bankruptcy cost Japanese billionaire Masayoshi Son [$11.5 billion and his credibility]( as a savvy investor. More from Bloomberg Get Bloomberg Tech weeklies in your inbox: - [Cyber Bulletin]( for coverage of the shadow world of hackers and cyber-espionage
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