Cards Against Humanity sues Elon Musk's SpaceX for trespassing

Cards Against Humanity

Image Credits: Anne Farrar/The Washington Post / Getty Images

Cards Against Humanity (CAH) is suing Elon Musk’s space exploration company, SpaceX, for $15 million after it allegedly dumped construction equipment all over the game company’s private land in Texas. 

An email, posted on Threads, went out to around 150,000 Cards Against Humanity Saves America donors. Those donors each contributed $15 seven years ago to help the game company buy land on the U.S.-Mexico border in order to protect it from former President Donald Trump’s plan to build a wall blocking out illegal immigration. 

“Unfortunately, an even richer, more racist billionaire – Elon Musk – snuck up on us from behind and completely f—-d your land with gravel, tractors, and space garbage,” the email reads.

CAH’s complaint, filed against SpaceX on Thursday evening in Cameron County District Court, depicts photos of the property in 2017, which the company has maintained in its natural meadow-like state, a place where it says “wild horses galloped freely in the Texas moonlight.” Those photos were juxtaposed with images of the property today, with dug-up earth, piping, and construction equipment. 

CAH alleges that SpaceX treated the property as its own for at least six months, clearing the land of vegetation, compacting the soil with gravel, and generally creating an unsafe work site. 

The company said that when it confronted SpaceX about its alleged disregard for its property rights and trespassing, the space company responded with a 12-hour ultimatum “to accept a lowball offer for half the land’s value.”

“We said, ‘Go f— yourself, Elon Musk. We’ll see you in court.’”

In the complaint, CAH outlines its method of maintaining trust with its loyal fanbase that it hopes to encourage to stand up against injustice. CAH says it uses pranks and stunts to draw attention to particular issues or “people who ignore the rights and problems of regular people for their own personal enrichment or aggrandizement.” 

Trump and Musk have been two of CAH’s recurring targets. 

Neither CAH nor SpaceX immediately responded to requests for comment. 

CAH said in its email to campaign donors that if it wins this fight, the 150,000 people who donated $15 each in 2017 would get to split the net proceeds from the suit, “so $100 each.” The company also acknowledged that its chances are slim because “Musk has way more money and lawyers than we do, so you’ll probably get, like, $2 tops.”

The email also includes a call to action, asking campaign donors to “post on Twitter (the platform he wants you to call X for his own sexual gratification)” to spread awareness about the lawsuit, with a link to www.ElonOwesYou100Dollars.com.

More bad news for Elon Musk after X user's legal challenge to shadowban prevails

X logo impaling twitter bird logo

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

It’s shaping up to be a terrible, no good, really bad news month for the company formerly known as Twitter. Elon Musk’s X has just been hit with a first clutch of grievances by the European Union for suspected breaches of the bloc’s Digital Services Act — an online governance and content moderation rulebook that features penalties of up to 6% of global annual turnover for confirmed violations.

But that’s not the only high-level decision that hasn’t gone Musk’s way lately. TechCrunch has learned that earlier this month X was found to have violated a number of provisions of the DSA and the bloc’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a pan-EU privacy framework where fines can reach 4% of annual turnover, following legal challenges brought by an individual after X shadowbanned his account.

X has long been accused of arbitrary shadowbanning — a particular egregious charge for a platform that claims to champion free speech.

PhD student Danny Mekić took action after he discovered X had applied visibility restrictions to his account in October last year. The company applied restrictions after he had shared a news article about an area of law he was researching, related to the bloc’s proposal to scan citizens’ private messages for child sexual abuse material (CSAM). X did not notify it had shadowbanned his account — which is one of the issues the litigation focused on.

Mekić only noticed his account had been impacted with restrictions when third parties contacted him to say they could no longer see his replies or find his account in search suggestions.

After his attempts to contact X directly to rectify the issue proved fruitless, Mekić filed a series of legal claims against X in the Netherlands under the EU Small Claims process, alleging the company had infringed key elements of the DSA, including failing to provide him with a point of contact (Article 12) to deal with his complaints; and failing to provide a statement of reasons (Article 17) for the restrictions applied to his account.

Mekić is a premium subscriber to X so he also sued the company for breach of contract.

On top of all that, after realizing he had been shadowbanned Mekić sought information from X about how it had processed his personal data — relying on the GDPR to make these data access requests. The regulation gives people in the EU a right to request a copy of information held on them, so when X failed to provide the personal information requested he had grounds for his second case: filing claims for breach of the bloc’s data protection rules.

In the DSA case, in a ruling on July 5 the court found X’s Irish subsidiary (which is actually still called Twitter) to be in breach of contract and ordered it to pay compensation for the period Mekić was deprived of the service he had paid for (just $1.87 — but the principle is priceless).

The court also ordered X to provide Mekić with a point of contact so he could communicate his complaints to the company within two weeks or face a fine of €100 per day.

On the DSA Article 17 complaint, Mekić also prevailed as the court agreed X should have sent him a statement of reasons when it shadowbanned his account. Instead he had to take the company to court to learn that an automated system had restricted his account after he shared a news article.

“I’m happy about that,” Mekić told TechCrunch. “There was a huge debate in the courtroom. Twitter said the DSA is not proportional and that shadowbans of complete accounts do not fall under DSA obligations.”

As a further kicker, the court deemed X’s general terms and conditions to be in breach of the EU’s Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Directive.

In the GDPR case, which the court ruled on on July 4, Mekić chalked up another series of wins. This case concerned the aforementioned data access rights but also Article 22 (automated decision making) — which states data subjects should not be subject to decisions based solely on automated processing where they have legal or significant effect.

The court agreed that the impact of X’s shadowban on Mekić was significant, finding it affected his professional visibility and potentially his employment prospects. The court therefore ordered X to provide him with meaningful information about the automated decision-making as required by the law within one month, along with the other personal information X has so far withheld, which Mekić had requested under GDPR data access rights.

If X continues to violate these data protection rules, the company is on the hook for fines of up to €4,000 per day.

X was also ordered to pay Mekić’s costs for both cases.

While the pair of rulings only concern individual complaints, they could have wider implications for enforcement of the DSA and the GDPR against X. The former is — as we’ve seen today — only just gearing up, as X gets stung with a first step of preliminary breach findings. But privacy campaigners have spent years warning the GDPR is being under-enforced against major platforms. And the strategic role core data protections should play in driving platform accountability remains far weaker than it could and should be.

“Bringing the claims was a final attempt to clarify my unjustified shadowban and get it removed,” Mekić told TechCrunch. “And, of course, I hope Twitter’s compliance with legal transparency obligations and low-threshold contact will improve to make it even better.”

“The European Commission seems to be very busy with investigations under the DSA. So far, regarding Twitter, the Commission seems to focus mainly on stricter content moderation. My appeal to the Commission is also to be mindful of the flip side: platforms should not overreach in their non-transparent content moderation practices,” he also told us.

“If you ask me, there is a simpler solution, namely, to curb algorithms on social media such as on Twitter, which are designed to maximise engagement and revenue and to bring back the chronological timelines of the heyday of Twitter and other social media platforms as standard.”

While the EU itself has a key role in enforcing the DSA’s rules on X, as is designated as a very large online platform (VLOP), its compliance with the wider general rules falls to a European member state-level oversight body: Ireland’s media regulator, Coimisiún na Meán.

Enforcement of the EU’s flagship data protection regime on Twitter/X typically falls to another Irish body, the Data Protection Commission (DPC), which is routinely accused of dragging its feet on investigating complaints about Big Tech.

Asked for information about its enforcement of various long-standing GDPR complaints against X, a spokesperson for the DPC said it could not provide a response by the time of publication.

Individuals bringing small claims against major platforms to try to get them to abide by pan-EU law is clearly suboptimal; there’s supposed to be a whole system of regulatory supervision to ensure compliance.

“On a side note, I did experience how much time and effort it takes to litigate in court,” said Mekić. “Despite the fact that in principle it can be done without a lawyer. Even so, you spend almost a year on it while the other party can outsource it to a battery of lawyers with near-infinite budgets and just ignore it in the meantime: indeed, I have never had direct contact with anyone from Twitter, they only communicate with me through lawyers.”

Asked whether he’s hopeful the outcome of his two cases will bring an end to X’s arbitrary shadowbanning for all EU users, Mekić said he doesn’t think his own success will be enough — regulatory enforcement is going to be needed for that.

“I hope so, but I’m afraid not,” he said. “There is little focus on the commercial motives behind shadowbans. If a user breaks a rule, you could temporarily block their account. That is transparent. But that also removes that user’s ad revenue for the platform. Shadowbans are a solution for that: the user is unaware of anything and continues to engage with and generate advertising revenue for the platform.”

“It would be a brave decision by social media platforms to stop applying shadow bans and only impose transparent, contestable restrictions on users. But that will presumably lead to loss of revenue. I hope Twitter will set other platforms a good example and inform users transparently about account restrictions, as required by the DSA. To do so, platforms do need to put their commercial intentions second,” said Mekić.

“It does surprise me that the Commission has not identified anything about the large-scale shadowbanning practices that users do not receive notifications about,” he added. “It happens daily on a large scale and is easier to prove than what they are focusing on now.”

X has been contacted for a response to the rulings.

Elon Musk’s X faces first DSA probe in EU over illegal content risks, moderation, transparency and deceptive design

Elon Musk confirms Tesla 'robotaxi' event delayed due to design change

Elon Musk onstage at 'Exploring the New Frontiers of Innovation.

Image Credits: Marc Piasecki / Getty Images

Tesla CEO Elon Musk confirmed Monday earlier reports the company was delaying its robotaxi reveal, explaining it was because he requested an “important design change to the front.”

Bloomberg News reported last week Tesla was pushing the event to October. It had been aiming for an August 8 event. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Tesla shares fell more than 6% immediately following the report, but have since recovered.

Musk responded to a question posed in a post on X, the social media network he owns, explaining the reason for the delay.

“Requested what I think is an important design change to the front, and extra time allows us to show off a few other things,” he wrote.

Musk first teased the robotaxi event in April, on the same day that Reuters reported the company was shelving plans for a new vehicle built on a next-generation platform that would cost around $25,000. Musk denied that report on his social media platform X.

Tesla had internally planned to build the dedicated robotaxi and the $25,000 car — often referred to as the Model 2 by fans and watchers of the company — on the same platform. But Musk has waffled on the idea of building a new vehicle with a steering wheel and pedals and instead has favored going all-in on the robotaxi.

Just a few weeks after Musk announced the robotaxi event, he slashed more than 10% of Tesla’s global workforce and said the company was going “balls to the wall for autonomy.”

Musk has a history of announcing things to the public that many of his own employees aren’t aware of, forcing them to scramble. In February, he posted on X about how the long-delayed second generation Tesla Roadster is going to be capable of going even faster than originally promised — an announcement that surprised the Roadster development team, according to The Information.

Musk’s robotaxi event announcement similarly took employees by surprise, according to one person familiar with the matter, who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity.

Elon Musk and Donald Trump's X Spaces crashes

Former President Trump in front of an American flag

Image Credits: Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images

Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s joint X Spaces appears to have crashed Monday afternoon. The conversation between the owner of X and the former President was scheduled for 5 pm PT, but users received an error message when joining at that time.

“This Space is not available,” said a message on X when trying to join the Space.

The highly anticipated conversation — which has been promoted by Trump and Musk — was supposed to mark the former U.S. president’s return to X. The Spaces event, which Musk called a “conversation,” started at 5:42 pm PT. The live event was scheduled to begin at 5 pm PT.

Trump returned to the social media outlet Monday morning, where he posted for the first time since January 2021 when he was banned from the platform. Some of Trump’s Monday posts promoted the conversation with Musk, while others featured campaign ads and links to the former President’s website. For the last three years, Trump has switched to primarily posting on his own social media platform Truth Social. That said, Trump has been allowed to post on X for nearly two years; shortly after Musk took over Twitter, now X, he reinstated Trump’s Twitter account in November 2022.

Musk claimed “a massive DDOS attack on X” appeared to have occurred, supposedly the cause of the crashed X Space. The owner of X says the social media platform conducted extensive testing earlier today with 8 million concurrent listeners. Musk kicked off the Space interview connecting the DDOS attack with opposition to hearing the former President.

“As this massive attack illustrates, there’s a lot of opposition to people just hearing what president Trump has to say and so, but i’m honored to have this conversation,” Musk said as the Spaces it began.

This is not the first instance of an X Space crashing when a political campaign tries to use the platform. In May 2023, Twitter’s technical issues interrupted Ron DeSantis’s 2024 campaign announcement during a Twitter Space session with Elon Musk and venture capitalist David Sacks.

More bad news for Elon Musk after X user's legal challenge to shadowban prevails

X logo impaling twitter bird logo

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

It’s shaping up to be a terrible, no good, really bad news month for the company formerly known as Twitter. Elon Musk’s X has just been hit with a first clutch of grievances by the European Union for suspected breaches of the bloc’s Digital Services Act — an online governance and content moderation rulebook that features penalties of up to 6% of global annual turnover for confirmed violations.

But that’s not the only high-level decision that hasn’t gone Musk’s way lately. TechCrunch has learned that earlier this month X was found to have violated a number of provisions of the DSA and the bloc’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a pan-EU privacy framework where fines can reach 4% of annual turnover, following legal challenges brought by an individual after X shadowbanned his account.

X has long been accused of arbitrary shadowbanning — a particular egregious charge for a platform that claims to champion free speech.

PhD student Danny Mekić took action after he discovered X had applied visibility restrictions to his account in October last year. The company applied restrictions after he had shared a news article about an area of law he was researching, related to the bloc’s proposal to scan citizens’ private messages for child sexual abuse material (CSAM). X did not notify it had shadowbanned his account — which is one of the issues the litigation focused on.

Mekić only noticed his account had been impacted with restrictions when third parties contacted him to say they could no longer see his replies or find his account in search suggestions.

After his attempts to contact X directly to rectify the issue proved fruitless, Mekić filed a series of legal claims against X in the Netherlands under the EU Small Claims process, alleging the company had infringed key elements of the DSA, including failing to provide him with a point of contact (Article 12) to deal with his complaints; and failing to provide a statement of reasons (Article 17) for the restrictions applied to his account.

Mekić is a premium subscriber to X so he also sued the company for breach of contract.

On top of all that, after realizing he had been shadowbanned Mekić sought information from X about how it had processed his personal data — relying on the GDPR to make these data access requests. The regulation gives people in the EU a right to request a copy of information held on them, so when X failed to provide the personal information requested he had grounds for his second case: filing claims for breach of the bloc’s data protection rules.

In the DSA case, in a ruling on July 5 the court found X’s Irish subsidiary (which is actually still called Twitter) to be in breach of contract and ordered it to pay compensation for the period Mekić was deprived of the service he had paid for (just $1.87 — but the principle is priceless).

The court also ordered X to provide Mekić with a point of contact so he could communicate his complaints to the company within two weeks or face a fine of €100 per day.

On the DSA Article 17 complaint, Mekić also prevailed as the court agreed X should have sent him a statement of reasons when it shadowbanned his account. Instead he had to take the company to court to learn that an automated system had restricted his account after he shared a news article.

“I’m happy about that,” Mekić told TechCrunch. “There was a huge debate in the courtroom. Twitter said the DSA is not proportional and that shadowbans of complete accounts do not fall under DSA obligations.”

As a further kicker, the court deemed X’s general terms and conditions to be in breach of the EU’s Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Directive.

In the GDPR case, which the court ruled on on July 4, Mekić chalked up another series of wins. This case concerned the aforementioned data access rights but also Article 22 (automated decision making) — which states data subjects should not be subject to decisions based solely on automated processing where they have legal or significant effect.

The court agreed that the impact of X’s shadowban on Mekić was significant, finding it affected his professional visibility and potentially his employment prospects. The court therefore ordered X to provide him with meaningful information about the automated decision-making as required by the law within one month, along with the other personal information X has so far withheld, which Mekić had requested under GDPR data access rights.

If X continues to violate these data protection rules, the company is on the hook for fines of up to €4,000 per day.

X was also ordered to pay Mekić’s costs for both cases.

While the pair of rulings only concern individual complaints, they could have wider implications for enforcement of the DSA and the GDPR against X. The former is — as we’ve seen today — only just gearing up, as X gets stung with a first step of preliminary breach findings. But privacy campaigners have spent years warning the GDPR is being under-enforced against major platforms. And the strategic role core data protections should play in driving platform accountability remains far weaker than it could and should be.

“Bringing the claims was a final attempt to clarify my unjustified shadowban and get it removed,” Mekić told TechCrunch. “And, of course, I hope Twitter’s compliance with legal transparency obligations and low-threshold contact will improve to make it even better.”

“The European Commission seems to be very busy with investigations under the DSA. So far, regarding Twitter, the Commission seems to focus mainly on stricter content moderation. My appeal to the Commission is also to be mindful of the flip side: platforms should not overreach in their non-transparent content moderation practices,” he also told us.

“If you ask me, there is a simpler solution, namely, to curb algorithms on social media such as on Twitter, which are designed to maximise engagement and revenue and to bring back the chronological timelines of the heyday of Twitter and other social media platforms as standard.”

While the EU itself has a key role in enforcing the DSA’s rules on X, as is designated as a very large online platform (VLOP), its compliance with the wider general rules falls to a European member state-level oversight body: Ireland’s media regulator, Coimisiún na Meán.

Enforcement of the EU’s flagship data protection regime on Twitter/X typically falls to another Irish body, the Data Protection Commission (DPC), which is routinely accused of dragging its feet on investigating complaints about Big Tech.

Asked for information about its enforcement of various long-standing GDPR complaints against X, a spokesperson for the DPC said it could not provide a response by the time of publication.

Individuals bringing small claims against major platforms to try to get them to abide by pan-EU law is clearly suboptimal; there’s supposed to be a whole system of regulatory supervision to ensure compliance.

“On a side note, I did experience how much time and effort it takes to litigate in court,” said Mekić. “Despite the fact that in principle it can be done without a lawyer. Even so, you spend almost a year on it while the other party can outsource it to a battery of lawyers with near-infinite budgets and just ignore it in the meantime: indeed, I have never had direct contact with anyone from Twitter, they only communicate with me through lawyers.”

Asked whether he’s hopeful the outcome of his two cases will bring an end to X’s arbitrary shadowbanning for all EU users, Mekić said he doesn’t think his own success will be enough — regulatory enforcement is going to be needed for that.

“I hope so, but I’m afraid not,” he said. “There is little focus on the commercial motives behind shadowbans. If a user breaks a rule, you could temporarily block their account. That is transparent. But that also removes that user’s ad revenue for the platform. Shadowbans are a solution for that: the user is unaware of anything and continues to engage with and generate advertising revenue for the platform.”

“It would be a brave decision by social media platforms to stop applying shadow bans and only impose transparent, contestable restrictions on users. But that will presumably lead to loss of revenue. I hope Twitter will set other platforms a good example and inform users transparently about account restrictions, as required by the DSA. To do so, platforms do need to put their commercial intentions second,” said Mekić.

“It does surprise me that the Commission has not identified anything about the large-scale shadowbanning practices that users do not receive notifications about,” he added. “It happens daily on a large scale and is easier to prove than what they are focusing on now.”

X has been contacted for a response to the rulings.

Elon Musk’s X faces first DSA probe in EU over illegal content risks, moderation, transparency and deceptive design

Elon Musk confirms Tesla 'robotaxi' event delayed due to design change

Elon Musk onstage at 'Exploring the New Frontiers of Innovation.

Image Credits: Marc Piasecki / Getty Images

Tesla CEO Elon Musk confirmed Monday earlier reports the company was delaying its robotaxi reveal, explaining it was because he requested an “important design change to the front.”

Bloomberg News reported last week Tesla was pushing the event to October. It had been aiming for an August 8 event. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Tesla shares fell more than 6% immediately following the report, but have since recovered.

Musk responded to a question posed in a post on X, the social media network he owns, explaining the reason for the delay.

“Requested what I think is an important design change to the front, and extra time allows us to show off a few other things,” he wrote.

Musk first teased the robotaxi event in April, on the same day that Reuters reported the company was shelving plans for a new vehicle built on a next-generation platform that would cost around $25,000. Musk denied that report on his social media platform X.

Tesla had internally planned to build the dedicated robotaxi and the $25,000 car — often referred to as the Model 2 by fans and watchers of the company — on the same platform. But Musk has waffled on the idea of building a new vehicle with a steering wheel and pedals and instead has favored going all-in on the robotaxi.

Just a few weeks after Musk announced the robotaxi event, he slashed more than 10% of Tesla’s global workforce and said the company was going “balls to the wall for autonomy.”

Musk has a history of announcing things to the public that many of his own employees aren’t aware of, forcing them to scramble. In February, he posted on X about how the long-delayed second generation Tesla Roadster is going to be capable of going even faster than originally promised — an announcement that surprised the Roadster development team, according to The Information.

Musk’s robotaxi event announcement similarly took employees by surprise, according to one person familiar with the matter, who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity.

Elon Musk's xAI raises $6B from Valor, a16z, and Sequoia

South African businessman Elon Musk arrives at the Tenth Breakthrough Prize Ceremony at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, California, on April 13, 2024. (Photo by ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via Getty Images)

Image Credits: ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP / Getty Images

Elon Musk’s AI startup, xAI, has raised $6 billion in a new funding round, it said today, in one of the largest deals in the red-hot nascent space, as he shores up capital to aggressively compete with rivals including OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google.

Valor Equity Partners, Vy Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, Fidelity, Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal and Kingdom Holding are among the backers who have invested in xAI’s Series B funding, the startup wrote in a blog post.

The funding confirms TechCrunch‘s reporting from April that xAI was looking to raise $6 billion. xAI at the time was finalizing the round that would have given it a valuation of $18 billion, TechCrunch reported at the time. xAI, which started just last year and has spun out of social network X, and whether X had also invested.

Musk confirmed that the investment round was valued at $18 billion pre-money.

Musk is one of the earliest and most high-profile entrepreneurs in the AI space. Tesla, a car company he leads, is the top EV carmaker with self-driving technologies. He is also a co-founder of OpenAI, a startup in which he has invested tens of millions of dollars. Musk’s love for OpenAI has waned since: In March, he sued OpenAI and its co-founder Sam Altman for allegedly betraying its mission statement and becoming a “closed-source de facto subsidiary” of Microsoft. He has also accused Google of coding bias into its AI products.

After forming xAI year, Musk released its chatbot ChatGPT-rival Grok 1.0 model in November. Later, the company made the model available through a chatbot to Premium+ users — who pay $16 a month — on X. In April, the company released the new Grok 1.5 model and also allowed Premium users on X to access the chatbot. Additionally, the Musk-owned company previewed Grok’s multimodal capabilities in April. Earlier this year, the company open-sourced the Grok model but without any training code.

xAI plans to deploy the funds from the new financing round to take its first set of products to market, build advanced infrastructure, and accelerate the research and development of future technologies, it said in the blog post. The company is likely to look for partnerships to introduce Grok to users beyond X.

The company claims that it aims to develop “truthful” AI systems. Though, Grok’s news summary feature on X is reported to hallucianate and generate misleading information.