Elon Musk's AI chatbot Grok often takes jokes and displays them as real news headlines for paying X users.
The bots continue to beat Elon Musk in the war for X domination.
Catch up on the biggest tech stories from this week.
The once-desired Twitter blue checkmark turned into a symbol of embarrassment on X.
Companies need to keep their social media managers in check.
As a result, "NetfliTwitter.com" appeared to many users as "Netflix.com," even though it wasn't Netflix's real site.
The owner of X revealed some of his strange, alternate accounts where he cosplays a child and dunks on his enemies.
The new AI even invented a fake missile attack on Israel by Iran last week.
Musk is very principled about free speech, except when he's making money from authoritarians.
X gave out thousands of free blue checkmarks to influential users, again, but it's not the status symbol it was two years ago.
The billionaire is completely obsessed with immigration, often spreading far-right conspiracy theories.
“Is it useful? no not as such. is it fun? kinda?” Palmsy’s developer said in a post announcing the app.
"It’s been a bit of a nightmare," one of the actors told Gizmodo.
A court ruled Musk's lawsuit aimed to "punish" researchers for reporting a rise in hate speech on X.
An early look at the app, which will reportedly be available on Amazon and Samsung smart TVs, shows a very familiar layout.
Fake tweets about Shapiro became common after he recited the lyrics of Cardi B's song 'WAP' in 2020.
Elon Musk's social media platform is sending users to different websites than what they were expecting.
After a year in digital exile, the controversial social media platform is launching a comeback.
Zuck beat Musk to the punch on a new feature the owner of X has been "dying" to implement.
Vine has been eliminated and YouTube goes to the next round.