Tech
Elon Musk at Bloomberg Qatar conference
Bloomberg

Elon Musk says Tesla’s sales have “already turned around” without providing any evidence except the share price

Data shows declining sales in Europe and China, two of its biggest markets besides the US. Musk also said the stock was trading “near all-time highs” when Tesla is down 30% from its peak.

In a video conversation with Bloomberg at its Qatar Economic Forum, Tesla CEO Elon Musk disputed the fact that the EV company’s sales are falling.

When Bloomberg Weekend Editor-at-Large Mishal Husain asked how the CEO is trying to reverse the company’s declining sales, Musk replied, “It’s already turned around.”

When Husain asked for evidence and pointed out declining European sales in April, Musk responded, “ Europe is our weakest market. We’re strong everywhere else.”

Sales, of course, are also down in China, Tesla’s second-biggest market so far in Q2, as well. We don’t yet have any Q2 sales data for the US.

“Weve lost some sales perhaps on the left, but weve gained them on the right. The sales numbers at this point are strong and we see no problem with demand,” Musk said. “There are also people who are buying it because Elons crazy.”

Instead of providing any contrary sales numbers, Musk pointed to the company’s share price as evidence of the turnaround.

 “Our stock wouldnt be trading near all-time highs if things werent in good shape,” Musk told the editor regarding sales. “Theyre fine. Dont worry about it.”

In reality, Tesla is off nearly 30% from its all-time high in December and down 14% year to date.

When Musk was asked if he was committed to being CEO five years from now, he said he was — with one condition:

“I can’t be CEO if I’m dead.”

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White House releases AI legislative framework

The White House has released its policy wish list for AI legislation — and what it wants excluded.

Still, the odds of any actual AI regulation getting passed in Congress right now are very slim.

The “National Policy Framework” for AI lays out seven issues that the Trump administration wants to see reflected in any congressional action around AI.

The items listed in the framework include:

  • Child safety protections, age verification, and parental controls for AI.

  • Data center projects voluntarily pay their own way when it comes to power, but incentives should still be encouraged.

  • Copyright laws should allow for training models on copyrighted works, while protecting individuals’ voice and likeness.

  • Free speech should be defended for AI systems, preventing the government from pressuring companies to ban or alter content based on partisan agendas.

  • A light touch to regulation to encourage innovation, and no federal agency to regulate AI.

  • American workers vulnerable to AI job replacement should be retrained and supported.

  • Federal AI rules should preempt any state AI legislation to prevent a patchwork of laws that companies would hate.

The policy list is the latest in a series of proposals from the AI-friendly Trump administration.

The items listed in the framework include:

  • Child safety protections, age verification, and parental controls for AI.

  • Data center projects voluntarily pay their own way when it comes to power, but incentives should still be encouraged.

  • Copyright laws should allow for training models on copyrighted works, while protecting individuals’ voice and likeness.

  • Free speech should be defended for AI systems, preventing the government from pressuring companies to ban or alter content based on partisan agendas.

  • A light touch to regulation to encourage innovation, and no federal agency to regulate AI.

  • American workers vulnerable to AI job replacement should be retrained and supported.

  • Federal AI rules should preempt any state AI legislation to prevent a patchwork of laws that companies would hate.

The policy list is the latest in a series of proposals from the AI-friendly Trump administration.

tech

WSJ: OpenAI rolling everything into one desktop “superapp”

OpenAI is trying to eliminate distractions and focus on building AI that helps with enterprise productivity tasks like coding and organizing spreadsheets.

As part of that effort, the startup is consolidating some of its side quests into one superapp, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

The plan is to merge ChatGPT, Codex, and the Atlas browser together, as it seeks to focus its efforts as it competes with Anthropic and Google for lucrative enterprise customers.

OpenAI Head of Apps Fidji Simo told staffers in an internal memo that “we realized we were spreading our efforts across too many apps and stacks, and that we need to simplify our efforts. That fragmentation has been slowing us down and making it harder to hit the quality bar we want,” per the report.

The plan is to merge ChatGPT, Codex, and the Atlas browser together, as it seeks to focus its efforts as it competes with Anthropic and Google for lucrative enterprise customers.

OpenAI Head of Apps Fidji Simo told staffers in an internal memo that “we realized we were spreading our efforts across too many apps and stacks, and that we need to simplify our efforts. That fragmentation has been slowing us down and making it harder to hit the quality bar we want,” per the report.

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