-
Five secretaries of state are urging Elon Musk to fix an AI chatbot on the social media platform X, saying in a letter sent this week that it spread election misinformation. election officials from Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Washington told Musk that X’s AI chatbot, Grok, produced about state ballot deadlines shortly after President Joe Biden dropped out of the 2024 presidential race. Alabama was also mentioned.
-
The San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs go head-to-head on the gridiron come Sunday, Feb. 11, but all eyes are on singer-songwriter Taylor Swift to see if she can make it to the football game in time to watch her Chiefs boyfriend Travis Kelce play.
-
It’s been about two weeks since Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announced he’s running for President. The event was hosted on the social media site Twitter Spaces. Here in Alabama, it appears DeSantis’ host Elon Musk is generating more buzz than the candidate.
-
Alabama’s Republican Party isn’t concerned about the technical issues that during Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ campaign announcement. The Republican lawmaker went on Twitter to say he’s running for President. DeSantis’ presentation included microphone feedback and outages that lasted about twenty minutes.
-
Most Democrats and Republicans agree that the federal government should better regulate the biggest technology companies, particularly social media platforms.
-
Alabama’s junior U.S. Senator is one of four senators who want to prohibit all children under the age of 13 from using social media.
-
National Public Radio is quitting Twitter over the social media company's recent actions under owner Elon Musk to stamp it with labels that NPR says undermine its credibility. NPR said its organizational accounts will no longer be active on Twitter because Twitter is falsely implying that it is not editorially independent.
-
A federal judge will decide if Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill can block people on his personal Twitter account or if doing so violates their free…
-
Alabama's attorney general says his office is reviewing whether allegedly deceptive social media tactics used in last year's special election for U.S.…