Hello, everyone; thank goodness we've finally reached the last week of January because it's been A LOT. The world is chaotic, but this week's Black Twitter moments at least made me crack a smile: My L
LinkedIn has emerged as a go-to platform for VCs, with investors leveraging it for networking, brand building, and investment opportunities.
Tech founder Marc Andreessen explained how the U.S. government's social media censorship scheme came to an end during an appearance on the Lex Fridman podcast. You can watch the full interview below this selected transcript: LEX FRIDMAN: You are a good person to speak about the history of this because you were there on the ground floor.
Robert Smith announced he was leaving X (formerly Twitter) for now this past Sunday. The Cure’s frontman/guitarist tweeted on Sunday afternoon: “19TH JANUARY 2025. TIME TO GO. ANY OTHER ACCOUNT ON TWITTER CLAIMING TO BE ME IS A LIE. I MAY FROM TIME TO TIME BE HERE.”
In reaction to hand gestures Elon Musk made at a post-inauguration rally that many said resembled a Nazi salute, Reddit moderators took swift action.
See what Twitter had to say when Adam Schefter doubled down on a bizarre conspiracy about the NFL’s referees and the Kansas City #Chiefs.
Musk tried a similar scheme after his takeover of Twitter. What could go wrong with applying it to millions of federal workers?
In November 2022, days after Elon Musk took control of the company then called Twitter, employees received an email with the subject line: “A fork in the road.” Now he’s turned his attention to the US government,
US President Donald Trump has initiated a federal workforce overhaul reminiscent of Elon Musk's Twitter strategy. Federal employees face a choice: meet new performance standards or accept a buyout. With mandated in-office work and the expectation of potential savings of up to $100 billion,
You can also use Git to clone the repository from GitHub to install the latest development version: git clone https://github.com/tweepy/tweepy.git cd tweepy pip ...
The Philadelphia Phillies' loss is the Kansas City Royals' gain, as an All-Star free agent closer reached an agreement on a new contract Wednesday.