Did Elon Musk Regret Buying Twitter? | Walter Isaacson Interview
Subtitles
  • Off
  • English

Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs

Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs

This week saw the return of the gpt2-chatbot, and the wild Drake and Kendrick Lamar rap beef.

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Start Slideshow
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Screenshot: YouTube / JoeFay, Apple, Photo: Arnd Wiegmann (Reuters), Steve Jennings (Getty Images), Justin Sullivan (Getty Images), Pierre Suu (Getty Images), Carmen Mandato (Getty Images), Angus Mordant/Bloomberg (Getty Images), Joe Raedle (Getty Images), Graphic: Gizmodo, Image: Ghost Tesla YouTube

The Cybertruck continues to make us laugh with how bad it is, and now it’s literally breaking people’s fingers and slicing their legs. The strange, secretive AI model referred to as “gpt2-chatbot” has resurfaced. Check out the rest of the big tech news for the week.

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Screenshot from a new YouTube video just before the most predictable thing in the world happens.
Screenshot from a new YouTube video just before the most predictable thing in the world happens.
Screenshot: YouTube / JoeFay

What happens when you stick your finger in the closing trunk—or, in this case, the “frunk”—of a Tesla Cybertruck? It’s a question that way too many Cybertruck owners are asking themselves these days. And a new video posted to YouTube appears to show the most grotesque answer to date. - Matt Novak Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
A worker sticks a picture of a Swiss army knife on a window of a Victorinox store in Zurich, Switzerland
A worker sticks a picture of a Swiss army knife on a window of a Victorinox store in Zurich, Switzerland
Photo: Arnd Wiegmann (Reuters)

The Swiss Army Knife has become such a shorthand for multifunctionality that companies producing does-a-lot-of-stuff wares will often say that their goods are the “Swiss Army Knife” of whatever category they’re a part of. You can use the tool to cut stuff, snip stuff, uncork stuff, file stuff, in some cases download stuff. - Melvin Backman, Quartz Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Photo: Steve Jennings (Getty Images)

The mysterious AI chatbot, “gpt2-chatbot,” returned to the major large language model benchmarking site, LMSYS Org, on Monday night roughly a week after it abruptly disappeared. But now, there are two: “im-a-good-gpt2-chatbot” and “im-also-a-good-gpt2-chatbot.” These models exhibited the same GPT-4 level capabilities, with some saying they’re even better than the original. - Maxwell Zeff Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Tesla’s sprawling gigafactory in Fremont, California.
Tesla’s sprawling gigafactory in Fremont, California.
Photo: Justin Sullivan (Getty Images)

Tesla is a massive company, employing 140,000 people as of late last year. But over the past month, layoffs have torn through the electric vehicle maker — and now a hiring freeze appears to be in effect in North America. - William Gavin, Quartz Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Photo: Pierre Suu (Getty Images), Carmen Mandato (Getty Images)

Kendrick Lamar fans have renamed Aubrey “Drake” Graham’s famed mansion in the Bridle Path region of Ontario to “2024 Kendrick’s House” on Google Maps, as the rappers enter their fourth consecutive week of lyrical combat. DJ Akademiks, a live streamer closely following the rap beef, first noticed the Google Maps change in a tweet on Sunday afternoon. - Maxwell Zeff Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Photo: Angus Mordant/Bloomberg (Getty Images)

In the latest disturbing twist to the Boeing saga, the company admitted to falsifying records related to the inspection of its 787 Dreamliner plane. The company publicly disclosed this after news broke of yet another federal investigation into the company. - Lucas Ropek Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Graphic: Gizmodo

In March, a software bug threatened to derail large swaths of the web. XZ utils, an open-source compression tool embedded in myriad software products and operating systems, was found to have been implanted with a backdoor. - Lucas Ropek Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Image: Ghost Tesla YouTube

After a social media video circulated showing the Tesla Cybertruck’s frunk chopping veggies, we went through a week of idiots posting videos online to prove that the frunk was actually safe. Only then we saw that it wasn’t after one owner damn near got his finger broken trying to prove a point. Now, just over a day after that same man was willing to put his toes in danger to prove…something. Now, there’s word that another part of the Cybertruck may be just as dangerous. - Lawrence Hodge, Jalopnik Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Photo: Joe Raedle (Getty Images)

Bluesky confirmed Jack Dorsey’s departure from the decentralized social media company’s board of directors on Sunday. Earlier this weekend, Twitter’s founder and former CEO tweeted a simple “no” in response to a user’s questions to announce his exit from Bluesky, a platform he helped create. - Maxwell Zeff Read More

Advertisement
Previous Slide
Next Slide
Image for article titled Cybertrucks Come With Special Tricks: Breaking Fingers and Slicing Legs
Screenshot: Apple

Apple apologized on Thursday for a new iPad Pro commercial that featured several creative objects—including a piano, video cameras, and cans of paint—being destroyed by an industrial crusher, telling Ad Age that it “missed the mark.” The ad was met with fierce backlash from people who thought Apple’s ad was at odds with what Steve Jobs, and the company at large, claimed to stand for. - Maxwell Zeff Read More

Advertisement