PM PT Elon Musk and Stagwell Chairman and CEO Mark Penn engage in a freewheeling live Q&A on 'X.' Innovation, AI, technology - and so much more. Nothing is off limits. CHECK X tonight - you won't want to miss out.
Elon Musk is reneging on his biggest DOGE promise. In a live interview on X Wednesday evening with political strategist Mark Penn, the billionaire conceded that his initial goal of cutting the federal budget by “at least $2 trillion” was a taller task than he first believed.
During a livestremed talk with Stagwell Inc. CEO Mark Penn, tech billionaire Elon Musk admits that the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency may not reach its goal.
Elon Musk has admitted that his latest gig as the leader of Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency—a project humorously titled D.O.G.E—might not deliver on its ambitious promises. Elon, who initially said he could slash $2 trillion from the federal budget,
"I guess it will be a bit like being retired," Elon Musk told Stagwell's Mark Penn during a freewheeling conversation on X @Live during CES Wednesday night.
In a Wednesday interview on X, Elon Musk said cuts of $2 trillion to the federal budget might not be possible and was a "best-case outcome."
Indeed, Musk suggested that synthetic data — data generated by AI models themselves — is the path forward. “The only way to supplement [real-world data] is with synthetic data, where the AI creates [training data],” he said. “With synthetic data … [AI] will sort of grade itself and go through this process of self-learning.”
Tesla CEO Elon Musk said Wednesday that the best-case scenario would be to make $2 trillion in cuts to federal spending through the “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) he is
Those who aren't deployed will be stationed at the US Digital Service, a White House branch that provides IT consulting services to federal agencies.
The North Carolina Tar Heels aren't particularly known for their success on the football field, but one offseason move has immense potential to change that. Weeks after firing Mack Brown, UNC made a massive splash and hired Bill Belichick as its next
Tech billionaire Elon Musk said Wednesday that his budget-cutting effort on behalf of President-elect Donald Trump would most likely not find $2 trillion in savings, backtracking on a goal he set earlier as co-head of a new advisory body,
Elon Musk told the political strategist Mark Penn that if DOGE tried to cut $2 trillion, it'd have a "good shot" of ending up at $1 trillion.