Elon Musk Paints Over the ‘W’ on Twitter Headquarters Sign
Video Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories - Duration: 01:30s - Published
Elon Musk Paints Over the ‘W’ on Twitter Headquarters Sign
Elon Musk Paints Over the ‘W’ , on Twitter Headquarters Sign.
Gizmodo reports that a few
days ago, a white tarp was
seen covering up the "w" on
Twitter's headquarters sign
so that it read "Titter.".
According to Musk, the building
landlord took issue with the adjustment.
Musk took to Twitter on April 9 to
reveal that he'd found a workaround.
Musk then took the joke one step further.
Gizmodo reports that last year, Musk
polled his followers to ask if he should
remove the "w" in Twitter permanently.
However, angering the landlord, SRI Nine Market Square LLC, might not be the best move right now, considering the company sued Twitter for unpaid rent in January.
Gizmodo reports that Twitter has become infamous for not paying its bills since Musk took over the company last October
Elon Musk found himself in the crosshairs of controversy once again as he clashed with Australian authorities over content censorship on his platform, X. The dispute stemmed from a court order instructing X to remove video posts depicting a violent incident involving an Assyrian bishop. Musk, known for his outspoken nature, accused Australian leaders of attempting to stifle internet freedom, drawing condemnation from lawmakers.
#ElonMusk #AnthonyAlbanese #ElonMuskVsAustralia #XStabbingPosts #PostCensorship #Australia #SenatorTargeted #XDispute #SydneyChurchStabbing #CensorshipBattle #GunLawsDebate #InternetFreedom #ContentRegulation #LegalChallenge
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Australia's prime minister said Elon Musk is an "arrogant billionaire who thinks he is above the law" over his reluctance to remove footage of last week's Church.. Sky News
Astronomers Say , Neutron Jet Emissions , Travel at Relativistic Speeds.
Gizmodo reports that new research suggests that
the dense remains of massive stars propel jets of gas and
dust at speeds of hundreds of millions of miles per hour.
Neutron stars are the stellar remains of
some of the densest objects in the universe. .
According to new research, neutron star jets
can travel up to 70,836 miles per hour,
just over one-third the speed of light. .
Relativistic effects like time dilation and length
contraction are believed to occur at speeds
exceeding just one-tenth the speed of light. .
James Miller Jones, , an astrophysicist at Curtin University in
Australia and co-author of the research, .
notes that neutron stars are, "so dense that they can pull material off
the surface of a nearby companion star.".
That gas spirals down onto the surface
of that neutron star where it gets very,
very hot and dense. Once enough of it
builds up nuclear fusion reactions
start to happen on the surface, James Miller Jones, astrophysicist at Curtin University
in Australia and co-author, via 'Gizmodo'.
Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array and the
International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory, researchers found that thermonuclear explosions on
distant stars kickstart these high-speed jet emissions. .
When these explosions occurred, they generated
high-speed jets and bright X-rays which made
it possible for researchers to measure speeds. .
The findings suggest that the staggering
speed of these emissions is close to escape
speed, or the needed velocity for material to
escape the neutron star's gravitational speed. .
Gizmodo reports that the team's results will inform
future models of jet formation and could help reveal
some of the most extreme physics in the universe.
Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories Duration: 01:30Published
AT&T Confirms Data Breach , Affected 73 Million Customers.
73 million current and former
AT&T customers have had their sensitive
data compromised in a hack that some outlets
say dates back to 2021, Gizmodo reports.
The data, which includes social security numbers, email addresses, birthdates, phone numbers and AT&T account information, .
was located two weeks ago in a data
set released on the dark web.
It's not clear if it was AT&T's systems that were breached or if the information was stolen from one of the company's vendors.
Currently, AT&T does not have evidence
of unauthorized access to its systems
resulting in exfiltration of the data set, AT&T, via statement.
The company is communicating
proactively with those impacted and
will be offering credit monitoring at
our expense where applicable, AT&T, via statement.
As a precaution, AT&T has reset the
passcodes of its current customers. .
The company will be reaching out to customers whose information has been compromised. .
AT&T advises those who are worried about their accounts to monitor activity and credit reports.
Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories Duration: 01:30Published
The Reason Why, Insects Are Attracted , to Artificial Light.
Gizmodo reports that
researchers believe they finally know
why insects seem to be drawn to lights.
New data suggests that bugs
are not attracted to the light,
as is commonly believed.
Rather, researchers now believe that
based on insects' use of light sources to
orient flight, artificial lights disorient bugs.
The team's findings were published
in the journal 'Nature Communications.'.
This has been a prehistorical
question. In the earliest writings,
people were noticing this around fire. , Jamie Theobald, Biologist at Florida International
University and co-author of the study, via Gizmodo.
It turns out all our
speculations about why it
happens have been wrong, Jamie Theobald, Biologist at Florida International
University and co-author of the study, via Gizmodo.
Researchers note that insects'
"seemingly erratic" flying patterns
are really their failed attempts
to understand the artificial light. .
Rather than steering toward the light, bugs were
seen turning their dorsum, or their backs,
toward the light, attempting to steer by it.
Under natural sky light, tilting
the dorsum towards the brightest
visual hemisphere helps maintain
proper flight attitude and control, Study authors, via Gizmodo.
Near artificial sources,
however, this highly conserved
dorsal-light-response can produce
continuous steering around
the light and trap an insect, Study authors, via Gizmodo
Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories Duration: 01:31Published
Space X and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said that running Twitter, which he bought for $44 billion in October last year, has been "quite painful" and "a rollercoaster". Musk also said that he would sell..
The Twitter sign on the company's San Francisco headquarters was slightly revamped. The social media giant's head honcho, Elon Musk, had the "W" in the Twitter sign..