Musk blames himself for X Crash, promises a job without stopping


In this illustration there is a miniature model printed in 3D Musk and the X logo taken on January 23, 2025.-Reuters
In this illustration there is a miniature model printed in 3D Musk and the X logo taken on January 23, 2025.-Reuters

Washington: Elon Musk has assumed the fault of a great accident on its social media platform, X.

After the site fell for two hours on Saturday, he said that great changes are needed and promised to return to work throughout the day to solve problems and focus more on his companies.

The billionaire has an extraordinarily full plaque as owner/CEO of X, XAI (developer of the chatbot Grok of AI), the manufacturer of electric cars Tesla and the builder of Cohetes Spacex, not to mention its recent polarization efforts to help Donald Trump cut thousands of works of the United States government.

As the reaction of these employment cuts and the prices of Tesla’s actions fell, Musk began to move away from the role of the government and return to his original work.

On Saturday, after the interruption of X, he suggested that he could have been out too long.

“As demonstrated by the activity time problems of X this week, important operational improvements must be made,” he said.

“Wasteing 24/7 at work and sleeping in the conference/server/factory rooms,” published the businessman born in South Africa in X.

“I must be very focused on X/XAI and Tesla (plus the launch of the spacecraft next week), since we have critical technologies that implement.”

From X’s exit, he said: “The switching redundancy should have worked, but did not.”

X had largely returned to the normal service at 11:00 am on Saturday (1500 GMT).

Contacted by AFP to comment, the company did not respond immediately.

Spacex announced Friday that he plans to try a new launch of his Mega-Rocket Starship next week. Still in development, Starship exploded in flight during two previous releases.

Musk recognized earlier this month that his ambitious effort to cut the federal expenditure of the United States, led by his Government Efficiency Department (Doge), did not completely achieve his objectives despite tens of thousands of employment cuts and reduction of drastic budgets.



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