
We must break up the tech platforms that threaten our democracy
We are prisoners of a global online panopticon that knows more about us than we do.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Elon Musk is a businessman, chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, owner of Twitter, and has been estimated to be the world’s richest man. He was born in 1971 in Pretoria, South Africa, and after studying at University of Pennsylvania embarked on a career as an entrepreneur, co-founding Zip2, a software company that was bought for $300m in 1999.
We are prisoners of a global online panopticon that knows more about us than we do.
ByHis obsequious interview with Donald Trump is only the tech billionaire’s latest incursion into politics.
ByThe rancour of X’s digital square has spilled on to the English high street.
ByIs demography the new front line of the culture wars?
ByThe billionaire is leading corporate America’s latest assault on working people.
ByWhat could his Neuralink brain implant mean for politics and individual experience?
ByFor stroke victims and those who are paralysed, devices that can interpret thoughts are a lifeline. But should Big Tech…
ByThe self-styled bad-boy of tech recently told advertisers to “go f*** themselves”. Should we really be surprised?
ByThe tech billionaire built a world that he could rule – then allowed it to destroy him.
ByAs far-right agitators Katie Hopkins and Tommy Robinson return to the platform, many users are seeking a new social media…
ByThe Prime Minister acted almost as if he was interviewing for a job with the billionaire.
ByThe former president has returned to a platform that is little more than a circus.
ByElon Musk’s number-one goal is to make “X” the home of “free speech”, a concept he wrongly equates to harmful…
ByClass prejudice is the last weapon we have against tech titans.
ByX is threatening to sue an anti-hate group – the consequences could be catastrophic.
ByElon Musk tried to rebrand a company “X” before – and lost his job.
ByThe tech billionaire wants “X” to become the centre of the internet.
ByTo become a permanent alternative to Twitter, Threads will need to embrace politics.
ByThe launch of Twitter rivals should feel exciting – but it no longer does.
ByWith Meta’s Twitter rival Threads comes yet another online profile to maintain. Exhaustion will ensue.
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