As a user, it's simple. I open the @X app. Here's what I hope to see — and I suspect many of you do too:
1. Great, informative, useful, or entertaining content (by humans, machines, or companies)
2. Real, authentic — even “boring” — posts from the people and networks I actually care about
3. No spam, bad bots, or reply farming
As an X employee who uses it every day, I believe we’re actively building toward exactly this.
Does this match what you want when you open X?
@JCChristopher The speed in the video says a lot. I'd love to see all the telemetry and videos...just out of curiosity...the internal cameras in particular...
@CryoFX That was another point of me wanting to do and see this. FSD does NOT having you going top speed at the wall, it begins slowing down while on the ramp.
I went to the exact same location of the Cybertruck accident shown in the Fox News video. This is the US-69/59 Eastex Freeway northbound HOV lane at the Y-split near the Eastex Park & Ride exit (approaching from downtown Houston toward Humble). In the Fox News video, the vehicle failed to follow the right curve, going straight into the barrier.
Well, I tested it twice today with Tesla FSD engaged the entire time with zero human intervention. And unless you think I am a hologram speaking to you from another dimension now, it worked out really well. Here is the video of me taking the exact same curve twice, with Tesla FSD v14.2.2.5.
@SanfordPolice Fairly "light" statement. Might want to refresh everyone on Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. 91.
Justice Rutledge said, "Ignorance of the law is no excuse for men in general. It is less an excuse for men whose special duty is to apply it, and therefore to know and observe it."
The Sanford Police Department is aware of a video being circulated online, which shows Sanford Police Officers trespassing a person from a farmer’s market. We recognize that a mistake was made in how that incident was handled. The officers involved are being addressed. We understand the significance of first amendment rights, and will work to ensure that future calls for service are handled in a way as to preserve that important right.
#Update#SanfordFlorida#SanfordPolice
If you notice ghost replies to your posts, then you likely have locked followers who are report-stalking you.
It's a tactic they use to tag other accounts in a reply that will alert their network to begin mass reporting you.
Go through your followers list and block them.
@amuse The prevailing consensus leans towards a Western intelligence operation. The current regime has zero known instances or success with anything even slightly resembling V32. Also, the prevailing consensus is that the regime has experienced a decline in effectiveness in the West.
🏝️ 🚗 😅
WTF! - Welcome to Florida!
Outsiders hit I-4, I-95, or I-275 in Florida thinking it’s just another highway.
Ten seconds later their soul leaves their body and starts floating above the traffic like this.
Three lanes suddenly turn into six.
Someone’s doing 95 in the left lane, someone else is doing 50 while texting in the middle, and a rental car with out-of-state plates just merged across four lanes because their exit appeared three feet ago.
Turn signals?
A rare Florida wildlife sighting.
Construction cones?
Permanent residents.
And somehow there’s always a tourist braking to take a photo of a palm tree.
Meanwhile every Florida driver is completely calm, sipping gas station coffee, dodging potholes, thunderstorms, and the occasional alligator crossing like they’ve been training for it their whole life.
The outsider just sits there, white-knuckling the steering wheel, realizing this isn’t a commute…
It’s a Florida driving survival test.
Dear Elon and Nikita,
Is there a way we can verify Veterans on X with a green checkmark?
ID.me could work. I have an active account there.
When world conflicts happen, it would be prudent for service members that have served, especially in the Middle East to have a higher voice and impact here on X.
.@elonmusk
.@nikitabier
🛠️ Attention, Raiders!
We've just rolled out a fresh hotfix to address some issues introduced in this week's update:
• Fixed different instances of client and server crashes.
• Fixed several server performance issues.
• Fixed certain instances where crouch was skipping the recovery time after a dodge roll, which will also impact the Il Toro.
• Fixed some Patchwork customization items displaying before they should, it may take some time for it to take effect.
Please note that the image of the Patchwork outfit for the second Expedition has an incorrect bandolier toggle, which will be introduced later as the third Expedition reward.
Restart your client to download, see you topside, Raiders!
@ArcRaidersNow The physics of this game are amazing...BUT...why doesn't the wind allow me to float off a rooftop? Why was there no windsuit offered? Inquiring minds want to know!
ARC Raiders players are frustrated over the Deadline and Wolfpack crafting NERF. Embark says they did it to balance the items without nerfing them to the ground, choosing to make crafting harder instead.
Do you support this decision, or should they revert it back to how it was?
@ChiefEngineerCE It's not just the jobs, though; it is far more important. It's exporting mass assumptions, including culture around safety and security. If we applied zero trust patterns to decisions like these, things would be way different.
TransUnion: 4,000 employees in India. No physical footprint. No consumer presence.
Yet this is one of America’s three credit bureaus - the companies that decide your credit score, mortgage eligibility, even job background checks.
In July 2025, over 4.4 million Americans had personal data exposed in a TransUnion breach tied to a third-party app used for offshore support.
Names, birth dates, Social Security numbers, and addresses were compromised.
TransUnion insists core credit files were untouched, but the breach shows how fragile the system becomes once U.S. financial data leaves U.S. soil.
But it’s bigger than that…
TransUnion offshored critical credit data operations to regions long associated with credential fraud, data leaks, and weak enforcement. Those aren’t cultural problems - they’re systemic risks. When you outsource your nation’s financial backbone to a market known for fake degrees, proxy hiring, and corruption, breaches aren’t accidents. They’re predictable.
They sent sensitive personal and financial data to the same region responsible for a wave of tech-support scams that rob elderly Americans of billions each year - all while turnover remains high and morale low. What could go wrong?
You can’t change your credit history or Social Security number like a password. Once it’s exposed, it’s permanent.
They exported the jobs, the data, and the risk, but not the accountability.
If you handle America’s credit backbone, the work should stay in America.