Tag: Elon Musk

  • Musk Brands USAID ‘Criminal’, Trump Calls Its Leaders ‘Radical Lunatics’

    Musk Brands USAID ‘Criminal’, Trump Calls Its Leaders ‘Radical Lunatics’

    Elon Musk attacked the US Agency for International Development, calling it a “criminal organization” on Sunday, as Donald Trump said the agency was “run by radical lunatics” and said he was considering its future.

    The assault on the agency tasked with humanitarian relief overseas marks a significant new front in Trump’s move to give unprecedented power to Musk to upend government departments and counter what the pair consider wasteful official spending and overreach.

    “USAID is a criminal organization,” Musk, the billionaire owner of Tesla and SpaceX who has become the president’s most powerful backer, wrote on his X platform, replying to a video alleging USAID involvement in “rogue CIA work” and “internet censorship.”

    In a subsequent post, Musk doubled down and, without giving evidence, asked his 215 million X followers, “Did you know that USAID, using YOUR tax dollars, funded bioweapon research, including Covid-19, that killed millions of people?”

    He did not elaborate on the allegations, which officials in the previous administration linked to a Russian disinformation campaign.

    The United States Agency for International Development has “been run by a bunch of radical lunatics, and we’re getting them out… and then we’ll make a decision (on its future),” Trump said on Sunday without elaborating.

    He underscored his support for Musk, telling reporters Sunday night he felt the billionaire was “doing a good job” even if they did not agree on every point.

    “He’s a big cost-cutter. Sometimes we won’t agree with it or we’ll not go where he wants to go…he’s a smart guy. Very smart. And he’s very much into cutting the budget of our federal government,” Trump said.

    Trump initially froze all aid spending for three months, and though he subsequently issued waivers for food and other humanitarian aid to continue, aid workers say uncertainty reigns with the future of the organization as an independent agency far from assured.

    USAID, an independent agency established by an act of Congress, manages a budget of $42.8 billion meant for humanitarian relief and development assistance around the world.

    A senior official from a US-based organization feared that the prioritization of “emergency” assistance was part of a broader plan in which Washington would discontinue funds for anything else.

    There have been reports Trump wants to roll USAID into the State Department. His team did not respond to AFP calls for comment.

    ‘Total destruction’

    Musk has indicated he will give an update on the work of his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in a talk broadcast on his X platform at midnight Washington time (0500 GMT).

    It is unclear what will be covered in the event, but it could give further insight into the unchecked effort by Musk to map out government expenditure and operations.

    Since Trump’s inauguration Musk has addressed far-right groups in Europe, given an infamous raised-arm gesture compared to a Nazi salute, and attacked the Treasury for making authorized payments on the government’s behalf.

    DOGE was founded as part of the so-called “executive office of the president,” as a temporary 18-month organization under the repurposed United States Digital Service.

    It does not enjoy full status as a government department, which would require the approval of Congress, and Musk is neither federal employee nor a government official. It is unclear to whom DOGE is accountable.

    CNN reported that two senior security officials at USAID were put on forced leave after they barred staff from Musk’s DOGE from accessing classified documents as part of their sprawling effort to inspect the government’s books.

    The two DOGE representatives also wanted to access staff files and security systems at USAID’s headquarters, the broadcaster reported, citing multiple sources.

    PBS also reported that DOGE staff attempted to gain access to “secure spaces.”

    Steven Cheung, a senior aide to Trump, posted on X that the PBS report was “legitimately FAKE NEWS. Not even remotely true at all. This is how unserious and untrustworthy the media is.”

    USAID’s account on X had been disabled, AFP confirmed, and the agency’s website was still offline.

    Democratic Senator Chris Murphy has criticized the “total destruction” of the agency.

    “The people elected Donald Trump to be President — not Elon Musk,” Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote on X.

    “Having an unelected billionaire, with his own foreign debts and motives, raiding US classified information is a grave threat to national security,” she said.

    (AFP)

  • Trump To Cut Off Funding For South Africa

    Trump To Cut Off Funding For South Africa

    U.S. President Donald Trump said on Sunday, without citing evidence, that “certain classes of people” in South Africa were being treated “very badly” and that he would cut off funding for the country until the matter is investigated.

    “South Africa is confiscating land, and treating certain classes of people VERY BADLY,” Trump said in a Truth Social post.

    “The United States won’t stand for it, we will act. Also, I will be cutting off all future funding to South Africa until a full investigation of this situation has been completed!” he said.

    It is unclear what led to Trump’s post.

    The South African embassy in Washington D.C. did not respond to a request for comment outside of regular business hours.

    The United States obligated nearly $440 million in assistance to South Africa in 2023, the most recent U.S. government data showed.

    South Africa currently holds the G20 presidency, after which the U.S. takes over.

    Last month, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said he was not worried about the country’s relationship with Trump. He said he had spoken to Trump after the latter’s election victory and looked forward to working with his administration.
    During his first administration, Trump said the U.S. would investigate unproven large-scale killings of white farmers in South Africa and violent takeovers of land. Pretoria at the time said Trump was misinformed. It is unclear whether the Trump administration carried out an investigation.

    Trump’s close ally Elon Musk was born in South Africa. In 2023, Musk replied on X to a video of a far-left South African political party singing an old anti-apartheid song, “Kill the Boer”, by stating: “They are openly pushing for genocide of white people in South Africa.”

    “@CyrilRamaphosa, why do you say nothing?” Musk asked.

  • ‪Safaricom To Build Its Own Subsea Cable To Counter Starlink’s Growing Competition ‬

    ‪Safaricom To Build Its Own Subsea Cable To Counter Starlink’s Growing Competition ‬

    Safaricom is planning to build its own subsea cable to compete with Elon Musk’s Starlink.

    This move comes as Safaricom seeks to enhance its internet services and maintain its market lead amid growing competition.

    The subsea cable will provide high-speed internet and improve connectivity, reducing reliance on third-party providers.

    These cables are the backbone of the global internet, carrying the bulk of international communications, including email, webpages and video calls Safaricom is seeking more bandwidth as it expands in the fast-growing data segment in the face of slower growth from the voice business.

    According to reports, Safaricom is seeking approval from the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) to build its own undersea cable as part of its strategy to expand and improve internet connectivity in the region.

    Starlink has become an enormous competitor to Safaricom in the Kenyan market. Starlink, owned by Elon Musk, uses low-earth orbit satellites to deliver high-speed internet, making it an appealing solution for areas with limited access to traditional broadband infrastructure. Its ability to reach remote and underserved regions has created a niche market.

    Currently, Safaricom relies on third parties for connections to the undersea cables.

    This includes privately owned SEACOM and Telkom Kenya, which operates and maintains five of the six submarine cables that have landed in the country.

    The five include the East African Marine Cable (TEAMS) cable, which is owned 32 percent by Safaricom, Telkom Kenya, 23 percent and the Kenyan government, 20 percent. It links Kenya to the outside world through the United Arab Emirates.

    Others are EASSy, Lion 2, DARE 1 and PEACE subsea cable systems that are under Telkom Kenya.

    Safaricom’s agreement with SEACOM is set to end in June 2028.

    Analysts reckon that Safaricom is racing to diversify its sources of high-speed internet and cut reliance on Telkom Kenya in its quest for more bandwidth.

    Starlink, which is riding on the back of one of the world’s richest persons with a net worth of $237 billion (Sh30.6 trillion), is betting on lowering internet costs in a segment dominated by Safaricom, Jamii Telecommunications Limited (JTL) and Zuku.

    It has unsettled local telecoms players, with Safaricom, Airtel Kenya and Jamii Telecom having sent protest letters to the CA. The antitrust authority—Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK)—has also been dragged in court over Starlink’s operation.

    The number of Kenyans using satellite internet has increased since Starlink entered the Kenyan market in July 2023.

  • Musk, MrBeast, Larry Ellison – Who Might Buy TikTok?

    Musk, MrBeast, Larry Ellison – Who Might Buy TikTok?

    Jimmy Donaldson – aka MrBeast – was jubilant as he told his tens of millions of TikTok followers about his bid to buy the platform.

    “I might become you guys’ new CEO! I’m super excited!” Donaldson said from a private jet. He then proceeded to promise $10,000 to five random new followers.

    The internet creator’s post has been viewed more than 73 million times since Monday. Donaldson said he could not share details about his bid, but promised: “Just know, it’s gonna be crazy.”

    Donaldson is one of multiple suitors who have expressed interest in purchasing TikTok, the wildly popular social media platform that’s become the subject of a fast-moving political drama in the United States.

    Last year, then-President Joe Biden signed a law that gave TikTok’s China-based parent company ByteDance until 19 January to sell the platform or face a ban in the United States.

    The legislation addressed concerns about TikTok’s links to the Chinese government and worries about the app being a national security risk.

    President Donald Trump has floated the possibility of a joint venture.

    “I would like the United States to have a 50% ownership position,” he said in a Truth Social post on Sunday. “By doing this, we save TikTok, keep it in good hands and allow it to [stay up].”

    Trump has since signed an executive order that allows the app to stay operational for another 75 days.

    Earlier this month, Bloomberg reported that China was considering a TikTok sale to Elon Musk, the world’s richest man and a close ally of President Trump, who already owns the social media platform X.

    Musk himself wrote on X this week that while he has long been against a TikTok ban, “the current situation where TikTok is allowed to operate in America, but X is not allowed to operate in China is unbalanced. Something needs to change”.

    At a news conference Tuesday, Trump was asked by a reporter if he would be open to Musk buying the platform.

    “I would be if he wanted to buy it, yes,” the president replied.

    “I’d like Larry to buy it, too,” Trump added, referring to Oracle chairman Larry Ellison, a long-time Trump supporter who was on stage with him for a separate announcement.

    Oracle is one of TikTok’s main server providers, managing many of the data centres where billions of the platform’s videos are stored.

    Last year, Oracle warned that a TikTok ban could hurt its business. The cloud computing giant was also a leading contender to buy the social media platform in 2020, back when Trump was trying to ban it.

    Billionaire investor Frank McCourt has also expressed interest in TikTok, and has been doing media interviews about the prospect for several months.

    McCourt has said he wants TikTok to run on technology overseen by the Project Liberty Institute, which he founded. He has been critical of data collection practices of social media companies.

    Project Liberty is bidding for TikTok without its proprietary algorithm. McCourt told CNBC this week that Project Liberty is “not interested in the algorithm or the Chinese technology” even as he acknowledged that the platform is “worth less” without it.

    Ultimately, President Trump is likely to have a major role in selecting a US buyer of TikTok.

    “It’s going to be a winner that’s likely to be politically sympathetic to President Donald Trump,” said Anupam Chander, a law professor at Georgetown University.

    Prof Chander said the 50-50 joint ownership model does not comport with the law’s requirements, which might prompt Trump to pressure Congress into revising the law.

    For now, the platform’s future remains in limbo.

    Prof Chander said the Biden administration made an “unforced error” by allowing the law to give the president outsized control over who owns TikTok.

    “It was a terrible idea to put the future of a massive information platform into this political maelstrom,” Prof Chander said.

  • China Considers Selling TikTok U.S. Operations To Musk, Bloomberg Reports

    China Considers Selling TikTok U.S. Operations To Musk, Bloomberg Reports

    The Chinese government is considering a plan that would have Elon Musk acquire TikTok’s U.S. operations to keep the app from being effectively banned, Bloomberg News reportedon Monday.

    The contingency plan is one of several options China is exploring as the U.S. Supreme Court determines whether to uphold a law that calls for China-based ByteDance to divest TikTok’s U.S. business by Jan. 19, the report said, citing anonymous sources.

    After that deadline, third-party Internet service providers would be penalized for supporting TikTok’s operations in the country.

    Under the plan, Musk would oversee both X, which he currently owns, and TikTok’s U.S. business, Bloomberg said. However, Chinese government officials haven’t yet decided on whether it would proceed, the report said, noting that the plan is still preliminary.

    It’s unclear whether ByteDance knows about the Chinese government’s plans and TikTok and Musk’s involvement in the discussions, the report said. Senior Chinese officials are debating contingency plans involving TikTok’s future in the U.S. as part of larger discussions about working with President-elect Donald Trump, the report added.

    Last week, the Supreme Court held oral arguments about the law potentially banning TikTok, which President Joe Biden signed in April. TikTok’s legal team argued that the law violates the free-speech rights of the millions of users in the U.S. while the U.S. government said that ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok poses a national security risk.

    With the Supreme Court appearing to side with the government, TikTok could turn to Trump, when his second term begins on Jan. 20. Trump, who favored a TikTok ban during his first administration, has since flip-flopped on the matter. Late last month, he urged the Supreme Court to intervene and forcibly delay implementation of Biden’s ban to give him time to find a “political resolution.”

    Trump’s rhetoric on TikTok began to turn after he met in February with billionaire Jeff Yass, a Republican megadonor and a major investor in ByteDance who also owns a stake in the owner of Truth Social, Trump’s social media company.

  • Trump and Musk’s Interference In European Politics Threatens Liberal Democratic Order: Expert

    Trump and Musk’s Interference In European Politics Threatens Liberal Democratic Order: Expert

    • ‘I would agree that Musk and Trump pose the greatest example of a threat of foreign interference,’ academic tells Anadolu
    • ‘If the liberal democratic order does not take it seriously, then we will see the death of the rules-based liberal democratic order,’ says Hadfield

    LONDON 

    US President-elect Donald Trump and his close ally billionaire Elon Musk are the “greatest example of a threat” of foreign interference, said a British expert, who warned that the rules-based liberal democratic order is under a huge risk of “death.”

    The Tesla and SpaceX CEO, who is set to serve as an advisor to Trump, has come under harsh criticism for his meddling in European politics through his X platform.

    He has made controversial remarks about the political matters of European countries including Italy, Germany and the UK and has also come under strong criticism from Germany’s political establishment over his support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party ahead of a snap election in February.

    Amelia Hadfield, head of the politics department at the University of Surrey, described the issue as a “social media rampage,” saying Musk has taken aim at governments and has a targeted focus on usually a particular individual.

    “It’s sort of a forensic attack when you drill down into it, but it’s also very widespread. It’s very spread across in terms of who his approaches seem to be targeted on.”

    She noted that it feels as if these “taunts are really quite deliberate” and sort of “manipulative” on the one hand and designed to “provoke,” while on the other hand, he’s well aware that he’s not merely involving himself but interfering.

    “I feel there is going to be a ramp-up between now and the presidential inauguration on the 20th of January. So I feel it is a strategy designed to compound nervousness in allies and perhaps jangle even more nerves in countries who are not sure whether they’re an ally or not,” she added.

    ‘Complicated times for EU’

    Hadfield said that on Jan. 20, Musk will no longer be just a multi-billionaire and huge tech entrepreneur but also part of Trump’s presidential cavalcade, meaning it will complicate even further how the West is going to be able to deal with him.

    Asked about the possible state of US-Europe relations with Trump’s inauguration as the 47th president later this month, Hadfield said she believes ties could be strained.

    “I think not only because Musk has taken aim at a number of European countries — France and Germany are the best examples, but also, more broadly, the United Kingdom — but I think the European Commission is feeling that he has been deliberately not just interfering but inflammatory.”

    She noted that Musk expressing support for the AfD on X and his recent discussion with the party’s leader, Alice Weidel, put pressure on the European Commission as well as European governments “because the commission is in charge of enforcing Europe’s Digital Services Act, the digital rule book, if you like, and the point of that act is to police and to enforce social media platforms.”

    Pointing out that for breaches of those platforms, including interference, there are huge fines, she added that the European Commission is in a position to consider whether it can take on a platform as large as X on the basis of having given a party like the AfD an unfair public advantage over its rivals before a vote.

    However, she noted that political willingness as well as technical evidence is needed to be able to prosecute Musk, saying these are complicated times for the European Union, especially once he is part of the Trump administration.

    ‘Greatest example of a threat of foreign interference’

    Turning to Trump’s “repeated threats” of a trade war with Europe, she noted it would be particularly damaging for Germany and German exports if a tariff as high as 20% is imposed.

    “So I think there’s real worry, and that can only be countered by very real pushback as well.”

    She said the question in this case is whether Musk is being “goaded by Trump” to undermine centrist parties across Europe as a whole.

    Hadfield added that Germany is a very good example of that as a case study of “attempting to normalize” far-right parties like the AfD and playing down their radicalism.

    She noted that there have been spats with France, but it hasn’t “quite evolved or dissolved.”

    For her, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has played “very canny games” thus far, as indeed, she has with a lot of the EU by trying to onboard aspects of Musk “but not encouraging him to explicitly align himself with elements that would make him appear even more difficult to deal with.”

    “I would agree that Musk and Trump pose the greatest example of a threat of foreign interference. At the same time, I do feel that much of it is taunt based, bullying based. It’s distinctly performative.”

    She said that more broadly, it is aimed at the liberal democratic order.

    “If the liberal democratic order does not take it seriously, then we will see the death of the rules-based liberal democratic order. So the stakes, frankly, could not be higher,” she added.

  • Elon Musk Becomes First Person To Surpass $400 Billion Net Worth

    Elon Musk Becomes First Person To Surpass $400 Billion Net Worth

    Elon Musk’s estimated net worth has now surpassed $400 billion, according to an estimate from Bloomberg News — the first person ever to reach such a milestone.

    While the value of shares in Musk’s Tesla electric car company and robotics group have soared in recent months, it is Musk’s privately held stake in SpaceX, the rocket company he helped found, that has catapulted his wealth beyond the latest threshold.

    This week, Bloomberg reported that a private sale of SpaceX shares increased the market cap of the firm to approximately $350 billion, making it the most valuable private startup in the world. Musk is said to own 42% of the firm.

    As Tesla shares hit a new all-time high Wednesday, Musk’s wealth leapt to some $440 billion, according to Bloomberg.

    Musk’s position as world’s wealthiest person has seen some volatility in recent years amid turbulence in Tesla’s share price, but he’s most recently held the No. 1 slot since May. A separate billionaire index tracked by Forbes pegs Musk’s net worth at about $369 billion, with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos at No. 2 and Oracle founder Larry Ellison at No. 3.

    Earlier this month, a Delaware judge reaffirmed an earlier ruling that rejected a pay package for Musk that had already been approved by Tesla shareholders, citing a conflict of interest in their vote.

    Yet Musk’s net worth has climbed even without that compensation deal, which is now worth $100 billion. Musk expressed his disagreement with Judge Kathleen McCormick’s ruling on the compensation arrangement, stating on his X social media platform: “Shareholders should control company votes, not judges.”

    Musk spent much of the year focused on the 2024 election: Federal Election Commission filings show he spent nearly a quarter of $1 billion on helping elect Donald Trump to a second term as president.

  • Australia Passes Social Media Ban For Children Under 16

    Australia Passes Social Media Ban For Children Under 16

    Australia passed a law on Thursday to ban social media for children aged under 16 after days of heated debate, setting a standard for other countries to follow in a global push to curb the power of Big Tech.

    The law, expected to take effect in November 2025, sets some of the toughest social media controls in the world and will force platforms to take reasonable steps to ensure age-verification protections are in place.

    After a parliamentary session that went into the night, the country’s Senate, or upper house of parliament, voted to pass the law after the centre-left Labor government of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese won support from the conservative opposition.

    The Senate’s approval for the law is the final legislative hurdle after the lower house, or House of Representatives, passed the bill on Wednesday.

    Albanese, trying to lift his approval ratings ahead of an election expected in May, had argued that social media posed risks to the physical and mental health of children and is looking for support from parents.

    Australia plans to trial an age-verification system that may include biometrics or government identification to enforce the ban. The trial will run for several months and its findings would be reviewed by mid-2025.

    Under the law, companies could be fined up to A$49.5 million ($32 million) for breaches.

    In submissions to parliament, Alphabet’s Google and Meta said the ban should be delayed until the age-verification trial finishes, expected in mid-2025. Bytedance’s TikTok said the bill needed more consultation, while Elon Musk’s X argued the proposed law might hurt children’s human rights.

    A Senate committee backed the bill this week, but also inserted a condition that social media platforms should not force users to submit personal data such as passport and other digital identification to prove their age.

  • What Elon Musk Could Gain From A Trump Presidency

    What Elon Musk Could Gain From A Trump Presidency

    Donald Trump’s return to the White House might also prove to be a win for one of his most visible supporters: Elon Musk.

    The world’s richest man spent election night in Florida with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort as returns came in.

    “The people of America gave Donald Trump a crystal-clear mandate for change tonight,” Musk wrote on the social media platform X as Trump’s victory began to appear all but certain.

    At his victory speech at the Palm Beach Convention Center, Trump spent several minutes praising Musk and recounting the successful landing of a rocket manufactured by one of Musk’s companies, SpaceX.

    Musk threw his support behind the Republican almost immediately after the assassination attempt on Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania in July.

    As one of the president-elect’s most important backers, the tech billionaire donated more than Ksh15.3 billion to fund a Super PAC aimed at re-electing Trump.

    He also spent the last weeks before election day running a get-out-the-vote effort in the battleground states, which included a daily giveaway of Ksh129 million to voters in those states. The giveaway became the subject of a legal challenge, though a judge later ruled they could go ahead.

    After throwing his name, money, and platform behind Trump, Musk has plenty to gain from Trump’s re-election.

    The president-elect has said that in a second term, he would invite Musk into his administration to eliminate government waste.

    Musk has referred to the potential effort as the “Department of Government Efficiency,” or DOGE, the name of a meme and cryptocurrency that he has popularized.

    Space X

    The businessman could also benefit from Trump’s presidency through his ownership of SpaceX, which already dominates the business of sending government satellites to space.

    With a close ally in the White House, Musk could seek to further capitalise on those government ties.

    Musk has criticised rivals including Boeing for the structure of their government contracts, which he says disincentive to finishing projects on budget and on time.

    SpaceX has also moved into building spy satellites just as the Pentagon and American spy agencies appear poised to invest billions of dollars into them.

    Musk’s electric vehicle maker Tesla could meanwhile reap gains from an administration that Trump has said would be defined by “the lowest regulatory burden.”

    Just last month, the US agency in charge of regulating road safety revealed it was probing Tesla’s self-driving software systems.

    Musk has also come under fire for allegedly seeking to block Tesla workers from unionising. The United Auto Workers filed unfair labour practice charges against both Trump and Musk after the two talked about Musk supposedly firing striking workers during a conversation on X.

    Trump has also pledged to lower taxes on corporations and the wealthy.

    That’s another promise Musk is likely hoping he will keep.

  • ‪Starlink Temporarily Halts New Sign-Ups In Nairobi Due To Soaring Demand‬

    ‪Starlink Temporarily Halts New Sign-Ups In Nairobi Due To Soaring Demand‬

    American satellite internet firm Starlink has suspended new subscriptions within Kenya’s capital and the neighbouring counties of Kajiado, Machakos, Kiambu and Murang’a, citing a network overload due to soaring demand that has stretched its service capacity.

    A spot check on the Elon Musk-owned company’s official website on Monday showed that neither business nor residential packages were available for purchase when one identified any of the counties as the intended residence.

    Further, an availability map visible on the site shows that the five locations are whitelisted and marked with a ‘sold out’ tag, meaning that the supply is currently at capacity.

    “Starlink residential/business is not available in your area. Enter your email below to be notified about future availability and product updates,” reads a message displayed on purchase attempts.

    Since its entry into the local market in late July last year, Starlink has seen its subscriber base grow rapidly in a trend that has seen the multinational enter the top ten list of dominant internet service providers (ISPs) in the country.

    As of June this year, official data shows that Starlink had captured a 0.5 percent share of the country’s internet market in its first full year of operation, amassing a subscriber base that totalled 8,063 users during the period.

    The disclosures by the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) pointed to a growing appetite among users for more personalised attention and quality services.

    A key advantage Starlink has over its rivals in Kenya is its ability to deliver high-speed, low-latency internet to remote and previously underserved areas, making it an ideal product for Kenya’s rural settings where traditional internet services are limited or unreliable.

    Since its entry into Kenya, Starlink has seen its operational model undergo a raft of changes as part of its strategy to net a wider base of subscribers.

    Initially, the cost of the service put it out of reach for many people after it emerged that  at least Sh100,000 was required for installation, much of which was the purchase price of the hardware kit at Sh89,000.

    The cost of the kit has since been slashed to Sh45,500.

    In June this year, the multinational introduced a 50 gigabyte (GB) monthly data package at a rate of Sh1,300, which is less than half the price of Airtel, which charges Sh3,000 for a similar package.

    Safaricom, on the other hand, sells a 47GB data package that’s includes 2,500 talk minutes and 5,000 SMS for Sh5,000.

    In August, Starlink introduced a rental plan for the installation hardware kit, where users pay a monthly rate of Sh1,950 as opposed to the one-off purchase of Sh45,500, on top of the Sh1,300 charge for the 50GB data plan or Sh6,500 monthly service fee for unlimited internet package.

    The firm has also lined up plans to launch new satellites with capabilities to connect and deliver internet directly to subscribers’ mobile gadgets without the need for the hardware kit starting next year.

  • Musk in regular contact with Russian president since 2022: Report

    Musk in regular contact with Russian president since 2022: Report

    American tech billionaire Elon Musk has been in regular contact with Russian President Vladimir Putin since late 2022, a report said Thursday.

    According to The Wall Street Journal, the talks cover personal matters, business interests and geopolitical tensions.

    The discussions were reportedly confirmed by multiple current and former officials from the US, Europe and Russia.

    The report, citing two people familiar with the matter, said that at one point, Putin requested that Musk refrain from activating his Starlink satellite internet service over Taiwan as a favor to Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    This year, Musk has become a key supporter of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s election campaign and could potentially play a role in a future Trump administration if he is reelected.

    While the US and its allies have worked to isolate Putin in recent years, Musk’s ongoing dialogue with the Russian leader could signal a possible re-engagement, aligning with Trump’s stated interest in negotiating solutions on critical issues like the Ukraine war, said the report.

    The Journal said the contacts are also raising potential national security concerns among some in the Biden administration, given Putin’s position as a primary US adversary.

    The SpaceX owner has also established strong business connections with US military and intelligence agencies, which gives him visibility into some of the US’s most sensitive space programs, said the report.

    Musk’s contacts with the Kremlin seem to be a closely guarded secret within the government, with several White House officials stating they were unaware of them.

    According to the report, Musk did not respond to requests for comment.

  • Elon Musk Pumps $75 Million Into Donald Trump’s Presidential Run

    Elon Musk Pumps $75 Million Into Donald Trump’s Presidential Run

    Reuters– Elon Musk gave around $75 million to his pro-Donald Trump spending group in the span of three months, federal disclosures showed on Tuesday, underscoring how the billionaire has become crucial to the Republican candidate’s efforts to win the Nov. 5 presidential election.

    America PAC, which is focused on turning out voters in closely contested states that could decide the election, spent around $72 million of that in the July-September period, according to disclosures filed to the Federal Election Commission.

    That is more than any other pro-Trump super PAC focused on turning out voters. The Trump campaign is broadly reliant on outside groups for canvassing voters, meaning the super PAC founded by Musk – the world’s richest man – plays an outsized role in the razor-thin election between Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris.

    Musk, the CEO of electric car manufacturer Tesla, was the sole donor to the group in that period.

    Musk, who has said he has voted for Democratic presidential candidates in the past, has taken a sharp turn to the right this election. He endorsed Trump in July and appeared with him at a rally in Pennsylvania earlier this month. Musk’s donations to America PAC propel him into the exclusive club of Republican mega donors, a list that also includes banking heir Timothy Mellon and casino billionaire Miriam Adelson.
    However, Reuters reported earlier this month that Musk has secretly funded a conservative political group for years, well before his public embrace of Trump.

    America PAC declined to comment on the Musk donations. Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    America PAC is focused on encouraging Americans who like Trump but don’t always vote to cast ballots this cycle, a high-risk, labor-intensive strategy by the Trump campaign.

    The group, which started its work later in the election than other PACs, has encountered some problems with hiring and its contractors. Since July, it has fired two major contractors it has hired to knock on doors.

    It has also struggled to hire door knockers in several battleground states in part because by the time the PAC became operational many other canvassing groups had already staffed up, a half-dozen sources briefed on the issues told Reuters.

    The group had around $4 million left on hand by the end of September, the filings show.

    Separate filings earlier on Tuesday showed that Miriam Adelson, the casino magnate, donated $95 million to another pro-Trump super PAC, Preserve America PAC, in the same period.
  • Musk’s X Pays Millions In Brazil Fines To Wrong Account

    Musk’s X Pays Millions In Brazil Fines To Wrong Account

    Elon Musk’s X has paid millions of dollars in fines in Brazil to settle a row with a judge who banned the platform in its biggest Latin American market over disinformation.

    But the platform transferred the money into the wrong account, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who ordered the shutdown of X in August, said Friday.

    The platform racked up $5.2 million (Sh670 million) in fines for failing to comply with a series of court orders.

    Moraes confirmed that the social network had paid the full amount but into a different account from the one on the court order and said it had ordered that the funds be immediately redirected.

    Moraes blocked X on August 31 after Musk refused to remove dozens of right-wing accounts accused of spreading disinformation and failed to name a new legal representative in the country as ordered.

    X, which had 22 million users in Brazil before Moraes blocked it, hopes that payment of the penalties will settle the dispute.

    The clash between Musk and Moraes morphed into a high-stakes battle which was closely followed around the globe as a test of both freedom of expression and the fight against disinformation.

    A furious Musk hit out at Moraes over the ban calling him an “evil dictator” and dubbing him “Voldemort” after the villain from the “Harry Potter” series.

    But in recent days he had been notably more muted on the subject and X has appeared eager to do whatever necessary to have the ban lifted.

    The platform had briefly resumed service in Brazil in mid-September after a technical workaround which it claimed was “inadvertent.” But it went back offline again after Moraes threatened it with further fines.

    X’s fight with Moraes began during Brazil’s 2022 presidential election campaign, when Moraes ordered the company to deactivate accounts of followers of failed far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro.

  • Trump Returns To Site Of Assassination Attempt In Pennsylvania, Vows To Win Presidential Election

    Trump Returns To Site Of Assassination Attempt In Pennsylvania, Vows To Win Presidential Election

    Former US President Donald Trump returned to the site of an assassination attempt in July, where he was wounded in his right ear during a rally.

    “Tonight, I return to Butler in the aftermath of tragedy and heartache to deliver a simple message to the people of Pennsylvania and to the people of America,” Trump told supporters in Butler County nearly three months after the attempt on his life.

    “Our movement to make America great again stands stronger, prouder, more united, more determined and nearer to victory than ever before,” he said. “We’re going to make America great again, going to win the election and win the election.”

    Supporters gathered at the showgrounds hours before Trump’s arrival, with Pennsylvania State Police estimating the crowd at 21,000, according to the New York Post.

    Donald Trump’s return to Butler, Pennsylvania, was as much a moment of personal triumph for him and his supporters as it was a tactical move by the former president. | Evan Vucci/AP

    Trump called the shooter, who was killed by the Secret Service at the scene, a “vicious monster” who he said wanted to silence him

    “For 16 harrowing seconds during the gunfire, time stopped as this vicious monster unleashed pure evil from his sniper’s perch,” said Trump. “By the hand of Providence and the grace of God, that villain did not succeed in his goal. Did not come close. He did not stop our movement. He did not break out our spirit. He did not shake our unyielding resolve to save America from evils of poverty, hatred and destruction.”

    Thomas Matthew Crooks, a lone 20-year-old gunman, opened fire on Trump during a campaign rally, striking him in his right ear. The gunman also took the life of Corey Comperatore and seriously injured two others.

    Trump called Comperatore a “brave guy” and praised him for his “tremendous courage” and asked the crowd to pay tribute by holding a minute of silence.

    “To Helen (Comperatore’s widow) and the entire family. I can only begin to imagine the depths of your brief but I want you to know that we will carry his memory and our hearts for as long as we live,” he said.

    Trump’s address was attended by his vice presidential nominee JD Vance and tech billionaire Elon Musk, who endorsed Trump shortly after the assassination attempt, among others.

    Musk later took the stage to rally support for Trump in the November election.

    Musk claimed Democrats want to take away Americans’ freedom of speech, right to bear arms and the right to vote effectively.

    He said Trump must win the presidency to preserve democracy in America. “It’s very important — register to vote,” he said.

    “Get everyone you know and everyone you don’t, drag them go to vote … make sure they actually vote. If they don’t, this will be the last election. That’s my prediction. Nothing’s more important,” he said.

  • Elon Musk Says Trump ‘Must Win To Preserve Democracy’ As He Makes First Appearance At The Former President’s Rally

    Elon Musk Says Trump ‘Must Win To Preserve Democracy’ As He Makes First Appearance At The Former President’s Rally

    Billionaire tech executive Elon Musk cast the upcoming presidential election in dire terms during a Saturday appearance with Donald Trump, calling the Republican presidential nominee the only candidate “to preserve democracy in America.”

    The CEO of SpaceX and Tesla who also purchased X, Musk joined Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, where the former president survived an assassination attempt in July. He warned “this will be the last election” if Trump doesn’t win and, clad in a black-on-black cap bearing the “Make America Great Again” slogan of Trump’s campaign, appeared to acknowledge the foreboding nature of his remarks.

    “As you can see I am not just MAGA — I am Dark MAGA,” he said.

    The appearance marked the first time Musk joined one of Trump’s trademark rallies and represented the growing alliance between the two men in the final stretch of a competitive presidential election. Musk created a super PAC supporting the Republican nominee that has been spending heavily on get-out-the-vote efforts in the final months of the campaign. Trump has said he would tap Musk to lead a government efficiency commission if he regains the White House.

    Trump joined Musk in August for a rare public conversation on X, an overwhelmingly friendly chat that spanned more than two hours. In it, the former president largely focused on the July assassination attempt, illegal immigration and his plans to cut government regulations.

    Before a massive crowd on Saturday, Musk sought to portray Trump as a champion of free speech, arguing that Democrats want “to take away your freedom of speech, they want to take away your right to bear arms, they want to take away your fight to vote, effectively.” Musk went on to criticize a California effort to ban voter ID requirements.

    Saturday’s rally took place at the same property where a gunman’s bullets grazed Trump’s right ear and killed his supporter, Corey Comperatore. The shooting left multiple others injured.

    Several members of Comperatore’s family, as well as other attendees and first responders from the July rally, returned to the site on Saturday. Also appearing with the former president were his running mate Republican Ohio Sen. JD Vance, son Eric Trump, daughter-in-law and RNC co-chair Lara Trump, along with Pennsylvania lawmakers and sheriffs.

  • Musk Introduces Cheaper Starlink Mini In Kenya

    Musk Introduces Cheaper Starlink Mini In Kenya

    Kenyans nationwide can now access Starlink Mini for cheaper internet connectivity.

    In a statement on X, Starlink said that Kenyans nationwide can access the mini Starlink.

    “Starlink Mini is now available in Kenya! Stay connected with high-speed internet at home or on the go,” the statement read.

    The price of the Starlink Mini kit in Kenya is set at Sh27,000 with a monthly payment starting from Sh1,300.

    The standard kit is currently priced at Sh45,000.

    Currently, Starlink offers a competitive 50-gigabyte data package in Kenya priced at Sh1,300 at fixed residential locations across the country.

    This translates to Sh26 per GB with a speed of up to 220 Mbps, way lower than the country’s average price of Sh76.20 and over 20 times faster than the average internet speed of 9.78 Mbps, according to the Communication Authority.

    Compared to the existing competitors such as Safaricom, Telkom, Faiba, and Zuku who rely on fibre-optic technology, Starlink relies on satellites in space that orbit around the earth and then transmit signals to internet modems at home or offices.

    This gives Starlink an edge over its competitors, as satellite internet comes in handy in rural areas where penetration of cable or fibre optic is either limited or completely unavailable.

    Starlink was introduced into the Kenyan market in July 2023. It offers high speed and coverage to remote areas where local internet service providers may not reach. 

    President William Ruto defended his move to allow Elon Musk’s satellite internet firm—Starlink to enter the Kenyan market.

    The President said that the entrance of Starlink to the market has created competition in the country.

    “I have my CEO for Safaricom here, sometimes he is not happy with me for bringing in some other characters like Elon Musk and others in the space,” the President said.

    “But you see, I keep encouraging Peter that competition helps you keep ahead, and he has been doing good; I must say he has upped his game, so we want to keep that space competitive.”

    The president was speaking at the Kenya Business and Investment Roundtable in New York.

    Safaricom has over the years been Kenya’s leading telecommunications provider.

    Safaricom and Starlink are set to face off in Kenya’s competitive internet market as both companies expand their services to cater to the growing demand for high-speed connectivity.

    Safaricom has for the second time increased its data speeds in the wake of increasing competition.

    In its latest move, Safaricom has increased internet speeds for its home and business customers to meet the growing needs of individual and enterprise customers.

    For Home Fibre, Safaricom has also introduced a new ultra-fast 1000 Mbps (gigabit per second) Platinum plan that will now see businesses part with Sh20,000 monthly.

  • Kituo Cha Sheria Accused Of Being A Proxy Of Safaricom In Suit Against Starlink To Advance Its Monopoly

    Kituo Cha Sheria Accused Of Being A Proxy Of Safaricom In Suit Against Starlink To Advance Its Monopoly

    A company associated with a wealthy city lawyer has sought to join a case seeking to stop Safaricom and industry regulator from blocking Starlink from entering the Kenyan market by providing satellite internet services.

    Goodweek Inter-Services limited want to be enjoined in the case filed by Kituo Cha Sheria as an interested party.

    The company argues arguing that the case has been instituted by Kituo Cha Sheria as a proxy of Safaricom.

    According to the dealer, the case has been filed with the sole and impermissible purpose of corrupting the commercial and regulatory landscape and to retain and sustain an altogether impermissible monopolistic control of the telecommunication market in Kenya by Safaricom.

    “It is just and fair that the Applicant is allowed to be joined as an interested party in this Petition,” Goodweek Inter-Services ltd urged the court.

    The company said there has been a consistent pattern that any threat to the dominance of Safaricom triggers a perverse scheme in which Kituo is co-opted to block the threat.

    “This is what happened to Equity Bank’s thin-sim-card revolutionary technology that was going to obliterate Mpesa. Kituo was conscripted by Safaricom to lodge a surrogate suit to block the introduction of Equity Bank’s revolutionary technology with Kituo deploying Stalingrad tactics to delay the implementation of the said technology for more than year for the benefit of Safaricom,” says Goodweek Inter-Services ltd in court documents.

    The company adds that Safaricom’s lawyers managed, advised, monitored and supervised Kituo’s ‘surrogate’ suit in that particular instance including extracting and collecting the court orders issued against Equity Bank.

    “The details of this unholy alliance between Safaricom and Kituo are detailed in a prior suit before this Court being Constitutional Human Rights Division Petition No. E299 of 2024 Goodweek Inter-Services Limited vs Safaricom PLC & 3 Others which was filed on 21st June 2024, way before the current suit,” the firm said.

    The company said the fact that Safaricom deployed Kituo Cha Sheria in the case whilst it was fighting the said prior suit speaks to the consistency and the deployment of Kituo as the go to surrogate of Safaricom.

    “These Safaricom surrogate suits are never intended to succeed (and ultimately never succeed) but are designed to deflect, forestall and frustrate market disruptions to Safaricom’s dominance, as the outcomes of the surrogates suits eventually and eminently confirm,” company stated in it court documents.

    The company said Kituo invariably only litigates on matters related and beneficial to Safaricom in the telecommunication sector and not otherwise.

    “In this current surrogate suit, it is intended for the matter to be referred to the 2nd and 3rd Respondent, which are under the total and complete control of Safaricom’s pervasive influence capture of Safaricom and which are guaranteed to produce a result favourable to Safaricom, without Safaricom appearing to be the prime mover of the process. This is the case made out in the prior said suit of HCCHR Petition No. E299 of 2024-Goodweek Inter-Services Limited vs Safaricom PLC & 3 Others,” state Goodweek Inter-Services ltd.

    It is the firm’s argument that fearing the possibility of antagonising Starlink Limited and its owner Elon Musk, Safaricom has created a pretended “plausible deniability” defence through the surrogate petition.

    “This surrogate suit is certain to explode a major conflict between the government of the United States of America and the Government of Kenya in the subsisting trade negotiations between the two countries, to the prejudice of the people of Kenya. Safaricom does not care about this consequence,” the company further state in the court documents.

    According to Goodweek Inter-Services ltd, the conduct of Safaricom will attract the attention of the United States Securities Exchange Commission [“SEC”] and sanctions will flow from this racketeering scheme which is an offence under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

    The conduct of Safaricom in the perpetuation of its monopolistic practices is the subject matter of the aforesaid HCCHR Petition No. E299 of 2024 Goodweek Inter-Services Limited vs Safaricom PLC & 3 Others.

    “The illegal, corrupt, and anti-Kenya conduct of Safaricom ought to be investigated in the same suit as opposed to having several processes investigating the pervasive influence of Safaricom,” adds the company.

    It further state that the bastardisation of Kituo is against the constitutive instruments of this erstwhile advocacy organisation, a betrayal of the founding fathers of the organisation amongst whom are prominent jurists.

    The company application is supported with affidavit sworn by Head of Administration Salmon Ogwel who adds that Kituo invariably only litigates on matters related to and advantageous to Safaricom in the telecommunication sector and not otherwise.

    “In this current surrogate suit, it is intended for the matter to be referred to Communication Authority of Kenya and Competition Authority of Kenya, which are under the total and complete control of Safaricom’s pervasive influence and “regulatory capture” and which are guaranteed to produce a result favourable to Safaricom, without Safaricom appearing to be the prime mover of the process. This is the case made out in our earlier Petition which was filed prior to the Petition herein,”says Ogwel company head administrator.

    Ogwel further adds that the pretended posture of the current petition positing the view that it has been brought in order to protect the Kenyan public against Safaricom’s attempt to block the continued provision of services by Starlink is but a known strategic ruse. A stay (pending regulatory hearings and determination) is the clear intent of the Petitioner and its master, Safaricom.

  • X Requests It Be Reinstated In Brazil After Complying With Judge’s Orders

    X Requests It Be Reinstated In Brazil After Complying With Judge’s Orders

    (AP) — Billionaire Elon Musk’s social media site X has complied with Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes’ orders and requested its service be reestablished in the country, a source said Thursday.

    X complied with de Moraes’ orders to block certain accounts from the platform, name an official legal representative in the country, and pay fines imposed for not complying with court orders, his lawyers said in a petition filed Thursday, according to a source familiar with the document. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.

    On Saturday, de Moraes ordered the platform to submit additional documentation about its legal representative for court review, which the source said has been done.

    X was blocked in the highly online country of 213 million people on Aug. 30. De Moraes ordered the shutdown after sparring with Musk for months over free speech, far-right accounts and misinformation.

    In a twist, X’s representative is the same person who held the position before X shuttered its office in Brazil. That happened after de Moraes threatened to arrest the person, Rachel de Oliveira Villa Nova Conceição, if X did not comply with orders to block accounts.

    Brazil is not the first country to ban X, but such a drastic step has generally been limited to authoritarian regimes.

    The platform and its former incarnation, Twitter, have been banned in Russia, China, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Venezuela and Turkmenistan, for instance. Other countries, such as Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt, have also temporarily suspended X before, usually to quell dissent and unrest.

  • Ruto Is Right On Starlink Causing Stir In Kenya, Elon Musk Reacts

    Ruto Is Right On Starlink Causing Stir In Kenya, Elon Musk Reacts

    Billionaire businessman Elon Musk has taken pride in the crucial role his satellite internet service provider Starlink has sparked in Kenya.

    His remarks followed the recognition of the satellite internet as a game changer by President William Ruto for creating competition in the country and causing existing players like Safaricom to provide better services.

    The President made the mention during the US-Kenya Business and Investment Roundtable in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA).

    Present was Safaricom CEO Peter Ndegwa.

    “I have my CEO for Safaricom; sometimes he’s not very happy with me for bringing other characters like Elon Musk and others into the space. I keep encouraging Peter that competition makes you keep ahead, and he’s been doing pretty well, I must admit, he’s really upped his game,” Ruto said.

    Starlink is a satellite internet constellation operated by Starlink Services, a subsidiary of American aerospace company SpaceX co-founded by South African-born American billionaire, Musk.

    The tech titan was in attendance at the UNGA, where he mingled with several leaders, including Africa’s heads of state.

    “As the President of Kenya says, Starlink causes local competitors to provide better services,” he concurred with Ruto’s sentiments.

    Musk launched Starlink in Kenya in July 2023 and almost immediately disrupted the network market by providing cheaper internet services with better speeds.

    Its arrival caused jitters among traditional internet service providers who called for state intervention as Starlink boosted satellite internet subscriber numbers more than tenfold in the nine months to March 2024.

    Currently, Starlink offers a competitive 50-gigabyte data package in Kenya priced at Sh1,300 at fixed residential locations across the country.

    This translates to Sh26 per GB with a speed of up to 220 Mbps, way lower than the country’s average price of Sh76.20 and over 20 times faster than the average internet speed of 9.78 Mbps, according to the Communication Authority (CA).

    Compared to the existing competitors such as Safaricom, Telkom, Faiba, and Zuku who rely on fibre-optic technology, Starlink relies on satellites in space that orbit around the earth and then transmit signals to internet modems at home or offices.

    This gives Starlink an edge over its competitors, as satellite internet comes in handy in rural areas where penetration of cable or fibre optic is either limited or completely unavailable.

    As of Tuesday night, Musk had yet to meet with Ruto, but he met various other world leaders on Monday and Tuesday on the sidelines of the UN assembly.

    He said they discussed matters of investment, including exploring the possibility of introducing Starlink in some of the countries.

    They include President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Argentine President Javier Gerardo Milei, Lesotho’s Prime Minister Sam Matekane and the President of Namibia, Nangolo Mbumba, whose country is the latest in Africa to embrace Starlink.

  • Elon Musk Is Removing The Block Feature On X / Twitter

    Elon Musk Is Removing The Block Feature On X / Twitter

    Elon Musk confirms that X will now allow users to see posts from people who have blocked them on X.

    Updated during a recent reply, Musk stated that the “block function will block that account from engaging with, but not block seeing, public posts.”

    This feature change further opens up the X platform to more visibility with what users can consume even from blocked accounts.

    Previously, when a user was blocked on X by another user, they were met with the “You’re blocked” message.

    This message meant that the user in question was restricted from viewing any of the other user’s posts, replies, media, or profile details.

    The block feature took away access to everything from the user blocked online. However, this will no longer be the case.

    X Blocked users will still see content on your page

    However, the new change on how blocking someone on X means, that blocked users will still be able to see the public content of the accounts that blocked them.

    The twist with the new adjustment is that, although blocked users will view publicly shared content from the blocking account, they won’t be able to engage with it.

    Nevertheless, according to an unverified source at X, the change is based on the idea that blocked users could still view posts using another account.

    Alternatively, one could also access content from a blocked account while logged off the platform.

    According to the source, the best way to work around this loophole was to allow users to still view content from an account a user is blocked from.

    Musk has always hated the block feature

    It is not news that Elon Musk is not a huge fan of the block feature which he viewed as making less to no sense.

    Musk has gone on to express his opposition to the block feature in the past, stating that it “makes no sense.

    Nevertheless, he has suggested that the block feature should be replaced by a “stronger form of mute.”

    However, it is unclear as to what option meets his criteria of a “stronger form of mute” other than the block feature.