Elon Musk buys Twitter for $44 billion

"Good and bad, don’t get distracted by that. It will just confuse you. Good men do bad things [...and] bad men do things believing it’s for the good of all mankind." -- Anderson Dawes, The Expanse


A fair point, though I was being somewhat rhetorical. I really don't care whether he's Hitler reborn; all that matters are the results of his labors. Space-X appears to be a good one, at least thus far. That question will predicate as travel becomes more common in time and we make that stab toward Mars.

I'm greatly less impressed with Tesla.Some of the innovations, especially in motor design, have been substantial. But as I've quipped elsewhere, our practical knowledge of energy systems leaves much to be desired.
 
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He's a chump using big words that mean nothing substantial. "Algorithmicist". For Pete's sake, is nobody an actual computer scientist anymore? I ask in all earnestness because everyone I've met in the last decade who's called themself a computer scientist was nothing of the sort. They didn't even know what assembly language is, but they were computer science majors. GTFO.

Using big, made-up, bullshit terms in order to feel important or special or "edgy"† is not the way... not if success at something worth the succeeding is on your agenda.

† The "edgy" thing gets my cruel up. "oooOOOOoooo... everybody look at meeeEEEeee... I'm so edgy... Stupid of that caliber deserves a backhand impulse strike into low earth orbit. Jeff Dahmer was edgy, so unless one is prepared to kidnap/lure, incapacitate, murder, butcher, cook, consume, and dispose of fellow humans, he is decidedly not edgy, but a mere punk.
 
He's a chump using big words that mean nothing substantial. "Algorithmicist". For Pete's sake, is nobody an actual computer scientist anymore? I ask in all earnestness because everyone I've met in the last decade who's called themself a computer scientist was nothing of the sort. They didn't even know what assembly language is, but they were computer science majors. GTFO.

Using big, made-up, bullshit terms in order to feel important or special or "edgy"† is not the way... not if success at something worth the succeeding is on your agenda.

† The "edgy" thing gets my cruel up. "oooOOOOoooo... everybody look at meeeEEEeee... I'm so edgy... Stupid of that caliber deserves a backhand impulse strike into low earth orbit. Jeff Dahmer was edgy, so unless one is prepared to kidnap/lure, incapacitate, murder, butcher, cook, consume, and dispose of fellow humans, he is decidedly not edgy, but a mere punk.

It's satire.
 
But as I've quipped elsewhere, our practical knowledge of energy systems leaves much to be desired.

Bullshit.. Fuel Cells were a Proven Reality in 1960.. with 97% Efficiency..

Battery Tech was suppressed,, until Cell Phones Laptops and other Devices Required it.

A Fuel Cell will charge on the Fly,, and an "engineer" should KNOW that.
 
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Nope, nothing has changed. After using hate speech against all Republicans, inciting political violence by making up things out of thin air, again.

Hillary Clinton was also the author of the russia russia disinformatuon campaign, and even the "vast right wing conspiracy" and other claims 25 years ago.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hillar...ht-wing-conspiracy-is-even-better-funded-now/

https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/20/politics/hillary-clinton-robby-mook-fbi/index.html
(note I'm referencing CNN).

https://nypost.com/2021/09/16/fresh...ndal-was-created-by-hillary-clinton-campaign/

You could say that Hillary's funding of media matters / shareblue and anti-free speech advocacy of the last 30 years is the direct cause of the current widespread censorship and media control. Thirty years of continued pushing, funding, and justification of it in democrat circles, both in the white house, and two times as a presidential candidate.
 
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Hmm.

BREAKING: Viva Frei locked out of Twitter after raising questions about Pelosi attack (?)
https://twitter.com/JackPosobiec/status/1586849720139407364?s=20&t=BIcMhOpNQ7yJua-BxujwiA

Looks like twitter's "we haven't changed any rules yet" May mean we still censor you, unless you're a...
Admittedly. most people who aren't bird brains have justified reasons to be skeptical that twitter has just changed- and they should be. There's no justification for any of the ways twitter is set up but to censor.
 
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Bullshit.. Fuel Cells were a Proven Reality in 1960.. with 97% Efficiency..

Don't know what you're reading, but talking about bull pellets...

Consider the EPA site, which talks vaguely about cell-fueled vehicles:

"Some FCVs can get over 300 miles on one tank of hydrogen fuel — greater than the distance from St. Louis to Chicago — and fuel economy close to 70 MPGe (miles per gasoline gallon equivalent)."

This is a mite vague, but the implication is a tank in the area of 4 gallons, a volume reflective of the inherent dangers of tootling down the highway at 70 mph with a rather unstable bomb strapped to your butt cheeks. Ever see the footage of Hindenburg going up? 4 gallons of H is a lot of violence.

Then there's the "70 MPGe". The hybrids in Europe (not available in America, of course, heaven forbid) that are diesel fueled are getting far better economy than 70 MPG. And do recall that vehicle VW designed: 240 MPG. Why did they not produce it for the market? Because it would cost $140K apiece, this going back maybe a decade - I don't quite recall at the moment, but I'm sure you can look it up. That high a tag is simply not economically viable for 99.9% of the market. Or would you support forced purchase? Didn't think so. So here we stand, same boat as before.

Battery Tech was suppressed,, until Cell Phones Laptops and other Devices Required it.

"Suppress[ion]" implies a positive will to keep something from the market. While it may be true, there are other possibilities. If there is no overt need for the tech, a company is not likely to invest countless millions (lots of money in the stone age before cell phones and laptops and other devices) on providing tech that people are not likely to buy. It would have been more costly for everyone, with no compelling need. When one can get D-cells for, say, a dime apiece or less, why am I paying $3 for a flashlight battery?

Even if rechargeable batteries would have been desirable, and I question the notion as valid in the 1960s, there are the associated cost of chargers, to produce and to purchase. One might have been able to market Lions and chargers, were the shelf lives of the components in question, say, twenty years or more. But they aren't. So if D-cells are a dime, and will last for one year on average, then $3 represents, cost-wise, 30 years worth of battery purchases. Add, say $5 for a charger (I'm thinking ca. 1960 just arbitrarily. Do register your complaint with this, if you have one). That is another 50 years worth of purchases for a total of 80 years. Now cut that by 75% just to be extra safe in our assumptions and in favor of Lions: still twenty years worth of batteries.

Personally, I'd want AT LEAST 10 years worth of good service life from rechargeable fare, considering the lost ten years of the twenty, above, as the premium I pay for convenience and for "green" (which isn't even really there, given the reality of mining lithium). I would also point out that in 1960 the tech apparently did not exist to charge a Lion battery such that it would have lasted very long... unless that, too, was suppressed., including all the digital tech we use now.

So your tone that seems to convey a sense of conspiracy, may be misplaced, or at least over-stated.

A Fuel Cell will charge on the Fly,, and an "engineer" should KNOW that.

What do you mean by "charge on the fly"? One has to fill a tank with hydrogen to fuel such a vehicles. Now, if you are speaking of regenerative braking action, then you would have to have a water tank filled with very pure water in order to take braking energy and use is to regen hydrogen fuel, which would then have to be recompressed into liquid phase and pumped into the cell. That capability requires more mechanism and therefore provides more potential failure points in the system. Where hydrogen is concerned, one wants as few failure nodes as possible because it is nothing like gasoline or diesel. Regen energy could be sent to a battery, but then you're back to batteries and the problems associated with them from production to disposal, albeit a reduced volume of such troubles.

As for hydrogen cells in general, they are about 60% efficient, overall. That is what the people who are in the biz are saying, anyhow. I'm not in the biz, so I am constrained to take the words of those who are.

The complexities of a "hydrogen economy" appear unappreciated by the average bear. Claiming 97% efficiency without context is not even remotely credible. Consider at least 20% loss in the process of electroysis. Breaking the bonds in H2O will not happen at break-even energies, or anything even remotely close. Consider this, from an article on physics.org:

"Water electrolysis has not yet established itself as a method for the production of hydrogen. Too much energy is lost in the process."​

To be fair, researchers are improving this efficiency, but it's still not sufficient for economic viability. Then there are several other considerations to be taken into account.

Consider the losses in compressing the gas into liquid, generally around 10%. Consider the costs of storage in refrigerated facilities, not to mention the same requirement for transport. Consider costs to design, produce, maintain, and retire such facilities. ALL pressure vessels have service lives. Consider the heat losses during combustion. Consider the costs of producing cells that don't blow up. Consider the costs of maintaining such cells so they don't degrade and blow up. Consider the risks of a cell blowing up, or far worse, a transport tanker with, say even just a mere 500 gallons of liquid hydrogen. And to be clear, 500 gallons isn't a whole lot of product. Viable transport probably calls for thousands of gallons at a time. in the case of hydrogen, that is a whole lot of potential danger - FAR more than that found with gasoline.

One needs sufficient circumspection when considering the proposition of hydrogen as a prime mover, because failure there spells very serious trouble. In comparison, gasoline and diesel are as nothing in safety terms.

And finally, what's up with what seems the attempted impugning of myself as an engineer? Putting the term in quotes as you have, implies a question of veracity, or quality. I see no need for such measures, certainly not yet since we've not quite yet exhausted discussions of truth WRT the actualities of living with hydrogen-fueled vehicles.

Can we please keep this friendly?
 

OK, let me make sure I have this right. Twitter, a mostly useless service wherein the vast and overwhelming majority of transactions amount to one raft of idiots doing what they might to insult and offend the other raft of idiots, is going to charge users to verify their identities on a platform where huge swaths of the user population prefer anonymity, or simply don't care about "verification"? Have I got that?

I am assuming that this "twitter blue" is some premium service? No thanks. Paying $20/month to invite into my life the torrents of soul-withering bullshit that screeches across the screen, polluting one's mind and world view? I must be missing something truly significant, because what I'm seeing leaves me wondering whether Musk has had a stroke.

Twitter is mostly cancer. I acknowledge its potential utility for the dissemination of good information, worldwide, but the general usage tendencies seem to drown it all out in vast and violent oceans of noise.
 
It's satire.

That may be so, but considering that the content there is effectively no different from the earnestly offered communications of billions of people, how is one to tell? Seriously, there is nothing in the words, as strung together here, that would indicate satire, or at another offered, a troll.

The Stupid sits upon the throne of humanity, and its subjects mostly kowtow with obsequious devotion. Those who don't, get banned.
 
Bullshit.. Fuel Cells were a Proven Reality in 1960.. with 97% Efficiency.

One other thought -

In 1960 the only use for such tech that I can see offhand would have been the space program. I can see the reaction area of such a unit built of Peltier devices, which would capture the heat of combustion and convert it, partially, into electrical energy. Used this way†, they are typically less than 10% efficient, but ten percent is better than nothing in an environment where every watt counts.

There are several factors that determine the performance of a thermoelectric device. I can imagine that studious design would result in optimal efficiencies, but they are still quite low, leaving your claim of 97% in some question.

†Thermoelectric devices can be used to produce heat, cool, or generate current.
 
Not My Claim.. It was the claim of Allis Chalmers 60 years ago.



and the only applications have been Military and Space.

Until Now. Hydrogen Fuel Cells will haul Freight.
 
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[MENTION=25257]osan[/MENTION]
Suppressed Tech could have kept us from a Few Wars.

but it has only been used for war,,
"Fuel Cell Drones" do a search.
 
OK, let me make sure I have this right. Twitter, a mostly useless service wherein the vast and overwhelming majority of transactions amount to one raft of idiots doing what they might to insult and offend the other raft of idiots, is going to charge users to verify their identities on a platform where huge swaths of the user population prefer anonymity, or simply don't care about "verification"? Have I got that?

I am assuming that this "twitter blue" is some premium service? No thanks. Paying $20/month to invite into my life the torrents of soul-withering bull$#@! that screeches across the screen, polluting one's mind and world view? I must be missing something truly significant, because what I'm seeing leaves me wondering whether Musk has had a stroke.

Twitter is mostly cancer. I acknowledge its potential utility for the dissemination of good information, worldwide, but the general usage tendencies seem to drown it all out in vast and violent oceans of noise.

You have it right.
With any luck the place will collapse and Msuk will not get his "everything app".
 
I don't want a Model 3.. but the entire production run was SOLD OUT
I like the Aptera,, designed on Efficiency

there are several options.. ans unknown possibilities..
 
As for Musk, I'm still out as to whether he's a good guy.

"Good and bad, don’t get distracted by that. It will just confuse you. Good men do bad things [...and] bad men do things believing it’s for the good of all mankind." -- Anderson Dawes, The Expanse

A fair point, though I was being somewhat rhetorical. I really don't care whether he's Hitler reborn; all that matters are the results of his labors. [...]

Just so.

There are things for which Elon Musk can (and should) be reasonably criticized.

There are likewise things for which he can (and should) be reasonably praised.

Deciding whether the balance of those things ultimately makes him a "good" guy or a "bad" guy is way above my pay grade.

There are others (such as the aforementioned Hitler) upon whose status as "good" or "bad" people I might dare presume to opine.

But whatever Elon's faults may be, I doubt they are sufficient to induce me to so audaciously consign him to the warmer side of the Pearly Gates.
 
Twitter Limits Content-Enforcement Work as US Election Looms
Musk’s social network freezes some access to moderation tools
Workers cite concerns about misinformation ahead of midterms
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ontent-enforcement-tools-as-us-election-looms
Kurt Wagner, et al. (01 November 2022)

Twitter Inc., the social network being overhauled by new owner Elon Musk, has frozen some employee access to internal tools used for content moderation and other policy enforcement, curbing the staff’s ability to clamp down on misinformation ahead of a major US election.

Most people who work in Twitter’s Trust and Safety organization are currently unable to alter or penalize accounts that break rules around misleading information, offensive posts and hate speech, except for the most high-impact violations that would involve real-world harm, according to people familiar with the matter. Those posts were prioritized for manual enforcement, they said.

People who were on call to enforce Twitter’s policies during Brazil’s presidential election did get access to the internal tools on Sunday, but in a limited capacity, according to two of the people. The company is still utilizing automated enforcement technology, and third-party contractors, according to one person, though the highest-profile violations are typically reviewed by Twitter employees.

San Francisco-based Twitter declined to comment on new limits placed on its content-moderation tools.

In response to this story, Yoel Roth, the head of safety and integrity at Twitter, tweeted: “This is exactly what we (or any company) should be doing in the midst of a corporate transition to reduce opportunities for insider risk. We’re still enforcing our Twitter rules at scale.”

Twitter staff use dashboards, known as agent tools, to carry out actions like banning or suspending an account that is deemed to have breached policy. Detection of policy breaches can either be flagged by other Twitter users or detected automatically, but taking action on them requires human input and access to the dashboard tools. Those tools have been suspended since last week, the people said.

This restriction is part of a broader plan to freeze Twitter’s software code to keep employees from pushing changes to the app during the transition to new ownership. Typically this level of access is given to a group of people numbering in the hundreds, and that was initially reduced to about 15 people last week, according to two of the people, who asked not to be named discussing internal decisions. Musk completed his $44 billion deal to take the company private on Oct. 27.

The scaled-back content moderation has raised concerns among employees on Twitter’s Trust and Safety team, who believe the company will be short-handed in enforcing policies in the run-up to the US midterm election on Nov. 8. Trust and Safety employees are often tasked with enforcing Twitter’s misinformation and civic integrity policies -- many of the same policies that former President Donald Trump routinely violated before and after the 2020 elections, the company said at the time.

Other employees said they were worried about Twitter rolling back its data access for researchers and academics, and about how it would deal with foreign influence operations under Musk’s leadership.

On Friday and Saturday, Bloomberg reported a surge in hate speech on Twitter. That included a 1,700% spike in the use of a racist slur on the platform, which at its peak appeared 215 times every five minutes, according to data from Dataminr, an official Twitter partner that has access to the entire platform. The Trust and Safety team did not have access to enforce Twitter’s moderation policies during this time, two people said.

Roth posted a series of Tweets on Monday addressing the increase in offensive posts, saying that very few people see the content in question. “Since Saturday, we’ve been focused on addressing the surge in hateful conduct on Twitter. We’ve made measurable progress, removing more than 1500 accounts and reducing impressions on this content to nearly zero,” Roth wrote. “We’re primarily dealing with a focused, short-term trolling campaign.”

Musk tweeted last week that he hadn’t made “any changes to Twitter’s content moderation policies” so far, though he has also said publicly that he believes the company’s rules are too restrictive, and has called himself a free-speech absolutist.

Internally, employees say, Musk has raised questions about a number of the policies, and has zeroed in on a few specific rules that he wants the team to review. The first is Twitter’s general misinformation policy, which penalizes posts that include falsehoods about topics like election outcomes and Covid-19. Musk wants the policy to be more specific, according to people familiar with the matter.

Musk has also asked the team to review Twitter’s hateful conduct policy, according to the people, specifically a section that says users can be penalized for “targeted misgendering or deadnaming of transgender individuals.”

In both cases it is unclear if Musk wants the policies to be rewritten or the restrictions removed entirely.
 
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