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An AI company with an arsenal of spacecraft: what exactly is SpaceX?

about 7 hours ago
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Hello, and welcome to TechScape.I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, US tech editor at the Guardian, writing to you as I listen to George Handel’s Messiah for Easter.SpaceX filed confidentially for an initial public offering on the US stock market last week at a reportedly astronomical valuation.My colleague Nick Robins-Early reports:Elon Musk’s company, which has become a dominant power in both space travel and satellite communications, could seek a valuation upwards of $1.75tn.

The confidential filing will give regulators a period to review and discuss the company’s financial disclosures before investors and the public are able to view them.The IPO could take place as early as June, Bloomberg reported, in what is expected to be a banner year for high-value public offerings.Musk’s rival OpenAI is also planning to go public later this year at an immense valuation, announcing on Tuesday that it had closed a funding round of $122bn, in addition to fellow AI firm Anthropic preparing its own IPO.SpaceX is the parent company of Musk’s own artificial intelligence company, xAI.With the IPO filing, Musk has paved a second path to becoming the world’s first trillionaire.

His estimated 43% stake in SpaceX has become his largest asset, according to Forbes.His struggling car company Tesla, which he says is moving on from automobiles to become a robotics company that will automate all labor, agreed to pay him $1tn last year.Shareholders in Tesla voted in November to approve a pay package that would amount to $1tn if Musk guides the company to major success in the coming 10 years.SpaceX is a bizarre agglomeration.It is the aerospace company SpaceX, the US space agency’s largest contractor for interstellar launches and the maker of some of the most advanced rockets on the planet.

It is also the satellite internet company Starlink, which owns and operates just over half of all satellites orbiting earth and which sells internet service that has become a vital product on passenger flights, in rural areas, and in war.It is also the artificial intelligence company xAI, which makes the Grok chatbot, most famous for removing the clothes of real women and girls in images by the thousands, neo-Nazily declaring itself “MechaHitler,” and winning a $200m contract with the US military.xAI, meanwhile, owns X, formerly Twitter, one of the world’s best-known and least-profitable social networks, notable for brevity, political influence, harassment and hate speech, and overheated discourse.If you were to describe SpaceX to an alien that crashed into one of its satellites, you could say that SpaceX is an online advertising company that launches rockets and might one day make datacenters in space.You could say it is an AI company with an arsenal of spacecraft, led by the richest man in the world, or that it is a satellite company with a psychotic chatbot, helmed by a founder who fired hundreds of thousands of US government workers in six months.

You could say that the US president used SpaceX’s website to incite an insurrection and announce he had Covid.Somehow that jumble of things makes sense to investors and bankers, who have valued SpaceX at $1.75tn.SpaceX will be obligated to file paperwork in the coming months that details how all these pieces fit together, forms meant to convince regulators and investors alike that there are no Jenga blocks missing.This filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, known as an S-1, will include a prospectus, audited financial statements, and forecasts of business risks.

In their S-1 filings, companies describe their business models and strategies in detail.SpaceX will give details on the wild stack of businesses that comprise it and will need to explain how they fit together.The rationale for its recent acquisition of xAI may provide a clue.Via Nick: SpaceX acquired Musk’s xAI in February – citing plans to build solar-powered datacenters in space that could help meet the computer and energy demands of the AI boom.Companies must also hand over their balance sheets to accountants to complete audited financial statements.

We will soon learn just much money SpaceX earns, and from what pillars of its bizarre business.The two largest are likely to be its launch contracts with Nasa and subscriptions to Starlink’s internet service, which are themselves facilitated by the rocket business.Outer space is a promising, but untested, frontier in the global – perhaps soon interstellar – rollout of datacenters.They are theoretically possible, and in active development, but a guaranteed business opportunity they are not.Apple at 50 quiz: top sellers, turkeys and turtlenecksFifty years of sexing up tech: Apple’s epic hits – and missesMacBook Neo review: the budget Apple laptop powered by an iPhone chipI wrote a novel using AI.

Writers must accept artificial intelligence – but we are as valuable as everI have always seen myself as ‘progressive’ – but with AI it’s time to hit the brakesDon’t blame AI for the Iran school bombingOn the opposite end of the spectrum of AI use from Silicon Valley are artistic professions, where accusations of using AI as a shortcut can ruin a career,Audiences expect authenticity, originality, and accuracy — three qualities generative AI tools have great difficulty replicating,Readers of novels and newspapers see using a chatbot’s words as severing a bond of trust,Two writers faced major backlash in recent weeks for their use of AI; one lost a book deal, another a plum job,The publisher Hachette scuttled the release of a horror novel, Shy Girl, after speculation of AI use prompted an internal review that confirmed it.

The book, Shy Girl by Mia Ballard, had been scheduled for release in the US this spring under Hachette’s Orbit imprint,However, the publisher confirmed it had halted publication after an internal review,The decision comes after weeks of online speculation about the novel’s origins, during which readers on platforms such as Goodreads and Reddit had questioned whether sections of the text bore hallmarks of AI-generated prose,Ballard has denied personally using AI to write the novel,In comments to the New York Times, she said an acquaintance she had hired to work on an earlier self-published version incorporated AI tools.

“This controversy has changed my life in many ways and my mental health is at an all time low and my name is ruined for something I didn’t even personally do,” she wrote in an email to the New York Times.Read more: Hachette pulls horror novel Shy Girl after suspected AI useA European journalist failed to fact-check the quotes a chatbot had retrieved for him, a mistake he had publicly advised others not to make.The publisher of the Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf and the Irish Independent has suspended one of its senior journalists after he admitted using AI to “wrongly put words into people’s mouths”.The experienced journalist said he had summarised reports using AI tools such as ChatGPT, Perplexity and Google’s NotebookLM, and not checked whether the quotes from those summaries were accurate.He subsequently published them in his Substack newsletter.

The errors were highlighted by an investigation by one of Mediahuis’s own titles, NRC, where [Peter] Vandermeersch had been editor-in-chief in the 2010s.NRC alleged Vandermeersch had published “dozens” of quotes that were false and that seven quoted individuals in his posts said they had not made the statements attributed to them.Read more: Senior European journalist suspended over AI-generated quotesIs the UK falling out of love with social media?‘System malfunction’ causes robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in ChinaOpenAI, parent firm of ChatGPT, closes $122bn funding round amid AI boom
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Reform cold calling public in bid to find ‘paper’ candidates for local elections

Reform UK has been cold calling people asking them to become “paper” candidates for the party at the local elections, as parties dash to sign up enough names before Thursday’s deadline.Nigel Farage’s party has been ringing members of the public asking them to stand despite apparently knowing very little about them except that they have signed up for Reform’s email updates.Those who have been asked to stand include members of other parties and even a Guardian journalist, who was asked in a call last week: “Will you come in to become a paper candidate today and help us to win the election?” The caller added: “Just have your name on the ballot and maybe you will actually win the election.”Prospective paper candidates are told they would not need to do anything apart from provide their name and address. They are then asked if they are bankrupt and if they have any criminal convictions, before being offered a candidate application pack

about 6 hours ago
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British Medical Association accused of hypocrisy as its own staff strike over pay

The British Medical Association has been accused of the “height of hypocrisy” for offering its own staff below-inflation pay rises while demanding a 26% increase for resident doctors.Tens of thousands of medics walked out of the NHS in England on Tuesday, the 15th time they have staged industrial action since March 2023 in their campaign for “full pay restoration”.At the same time, hundreds of BMA staff staged strike action themselves after the doctors’ union offered them a below-inflation pay rise of 2.75%.The BMA rejected an offer from Wes Streeting, the health secretary, that would have given resident doctors a pay rise averaging 4

about 7 hours ago
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Reform UK would stop visas for people from countries seeking slavery reparations

Reform UK would stop issuing visas to people from any country that continues to demand compensation from the UK for its role in the transatlantic trade in enslaved people, the party has said.Zia Yusuf, the party’s home affairs spokesperson, told the Daily Telegraph that the call for reparations was “insulting”.He claimed 3.8m visas had been issued over the last two decades to people from countries calling for reparations.For four centuries, seven European countries, including the UK, enslaved and trafficked more than 15 million Africans across the Atlantic

about 12 hours ago
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‘Seismic change’: how election wins for nationalists in Celtic nations could reshape UK

In four weeks, the shape of British politics is likely to change dramatically. For the first time, nationalists who aspire to break up the UK are expected to be in control of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland simultaneously. “The change will be seismic,” said Angus Robertson, a senior minister in the Scottish government.Opinion polls consistently suggest that after the elections on 7 May, England will be flanked by countries run by restless centre-left nationalist parties – Plaid Cymru in Cardiff, the Scottish National party in Edinburgh and, in Belfast, Sinn Féin, which shares power with the Democratic Unionists.That raises the prospect of significant constitutional disputes that would thrust Keir Starmer’s Labour government in London – or, if he is ousted after May’s elections, that of his successor as prime minister – into very difficult waters

about 17 hours ago
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Labour should hold a referendum on whether Britain should rejoin the EU | Letter

The prime minister’s comments about seeking closer relations with the EU are to be welcomed as a step in the right direction (Starmer calls for ‘ambitious’ new UK-EU ties as Trump threatens to quit Nato, 1 April). Yet a piecemeal approach to repairing the damage done by Brexit is unlikely to succeed.A genuinely “ambitious” plan would be for Labour to announce a referendum on whether the UK should open negotiations on re-entry to the EU, promising a general election to secure a mandate to implement the proposal should the British public vote in favour. It would allow the government to seize the initiative, providing it with an issue around which to rally a broad base of electoral support.This would also expose the increasing reluctance of Reform UK and the Conservatives to defend Brexit and silence accusations of the betrayal of British voters

1 day ago
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Starmer attacks Greens, saying vote for Labour rivals puts new workers’ rights at risk

Keir Starmer has used a series of new workers rights that come into force on Monday to attack the Green party, saying a vote for Labour’s rivals puts such progress on sick pay, parental leave and zero-hours contracts at risk.The prime minister also took a swipe at business figures and opponents of what he described as the biggest strengthening of workers’ rights in a generation, dismissing “vested interests” who had warned against them.However, in a sign of how he views the threat from the populism of Zack Polanski’s Greens and Nigel Farage’s Reform UK in the run-up to local elections in May, Starmer said that having “a serious, credible economic strategy” set Labour apart from others.“No other party offers both the economic credibility and the political will to do this,” he wrote in an article for the Guardian.“A vote for any other party puts that progress at risk – whether through choices that would take us backwards, or approaches that simply don’t stand up to the realities of governing

2 days ago
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Universal Music, home to Taylor Swift and Drake, receives €55bn takeover offer

about 6 hours ago
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Oil back above $110 in volatile markets as Trump deadline looms for Iran to reopen strait – as it happened

about 7 hours ago
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An AI company with an arsenal of spacecraft: what exactly is SpaceX?

about 7 hours ago
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Porn, dog poo and social media snaps: the ‘taskers’ scraping the internet for Meta-owned AI firm

about 10 hours ago
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Sale believe Courtney Lawes can regain England place after veteran signs one-year deal

about 7 hours ago
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Drone racing to drone strikes: have war and sport become indistinguishable?

about 11 hours ago