In a free-wheeling meeting with
New York Times feature writer Maureen Dowd,
Tesla CEO
Elon Musk said his
Twitter direct messages are generally comprised of images, and he isn't excessively stressed over them being hacked.
Musk's was one of in excess of 100 prominent
Twitter accounts bargained as a major aspect of a July fifteenth
Bitcoin trick. The organization has said the assailants may have downloaded the private direct messages and individual data of certain individuals all the while, despite the fact that
Twitter said none of those were "confirmed" accounts, as
Musk's seems to be.
"I'm not that worried about my DMs being made open,"
Musk told Dowd. "That is to say, we can presumably single out some area of my DMs that sound awful outside of any relevant connection to the subject at hand however by and large my DMs for the most part comprise of trading images."
During the discussion with Dowd,
Musk said he has a "mystery"
Instagram account "to see connections of things that individuals send me" (paging
Ashley Feinberg...) and that he figures he may have had
COVID-19 in January.
"I think the truth of
Covid is that it is perilous in case you're old and have previous conditions," he said in the meeting. "It completely bodes well to have a lockdown in case you're defenseless, however I don't think it bodes well to have a lockdown in case no doubt about it."
Musk went head to head with authorities in Fremont,
California, reviving his organization's vehicle plant there in May disregarding a neighborhood cover set up request. He revealed to Dowd he wears a cover on the production line floor.
One of the additionally bewildering parts of the meeting is the way Dowd paints
Musk's own connections: "Absolutely, the titan can be a sentimental." She records a few of his all the more prominent connections, including his present sweetheart Grimes, and entertainers Talulah Riley and Amber Heard, yet makes no notice of
Musk's first spouse Justine — mother of five of his children—whom he separated in 2008.
Musk doesn't concede numerous meetings, so it's fascinating to see him answer inquiries regarding
SpaceX,
Tesla,
Facebook, AI,
Twitter, and that duplicate feline tweet he sent to
Amazon and Blue Origin CEO
Jeff Bezos. What's more, on the off chance that you were pondering: He's OK with
President Trump calling him "one of our extraordinary prodigies" following the May dispatch of
SpaceX's Crew Dragon.
"I'll take the commendation,"
Musk said.
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