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Elon Musk says subscription prices for Full Self-Driving mode are going up as Tesla kills Autopilot
Elon Musk said FSD prices are going to rise.Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty ImagesElon Musk said Tesla's FSD subscription could soon cost more than $100.He said the subscription price, currently $99, will rise as the FSD's capabilities improve.He said the price would be worth it, since the driver can sleep or use their phone the whole ride.Elon Musk said Tesla will raise subscription prices for its Full Self-Driving software as it gets better, and it could cost more than $100.The Tesla CEO said in an early Friday X post, "I should also mention that the $99/month for supervised FSD will rise as FSD's capabilities improve.""The massive value jump is when you can be on your phone or sleeping for the entire ride (unsupervised FSD)," he said. Tesla's FSD is an advanced driver assistance system that aims to enable its cars to be fully self-driving.Currently, customers can buy the system for $8,000 on a one-time basis, per the vehicle's listing on Tesla's website. But this option will no longer be available from February 14.The executive was responding to a post about Tesla killing its Autopilot service in the US. Autopilot comes with safety features and tools, such as Traffic-Aware Cruise Control.Representatives for Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.Read the original article on Business Insider
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The TikTok deal is done. Here's what will change and what will stay the same.
TikTok app logo is seen in this illustration taken, August 22, 2022Dado Ruvic/REUTERSTikTok has closed a deal to spin off parts of its US business in a new joint venture.Oracle and two investment firms, MGX and Silver Lake, will serve as managing investors.ByteDance will hold a roughly 20% stake and keep control of business lines like e-commerce and ads.TikTok's US workers can finally breathe a sigh of relief.The company announced Thursday that it has closed a deal to spin off parts of its US business in a new joint venture with an investor group."The safeguards provided by the Joint Venture will also cover CapCut, and Lemon8, and a portfolio of other apps and websites in the US," the company said.Adam Presser is leading the new venture, according to the company's announcement. Presser has worked at TikTok for nearly four years, most recently leading operations and trust and safety. The venture's seven-man, majority-American board includes TikTok's CEO Shou Chew.The agreement should keep the US government off its back as TikTok's parent, ByteDance, now owns just under 20% of the new US venture. That ownership stake meets a divestment requirement set by a 2024 US sell-or-ban law targeting TikTok and other apps with owners based in countries like China, which the US has deemed a foreign adversary.TikTok's new US owners include tech company Oracle, private-equity firm Silver Lake, and Abu Dhabi investment firm MGX, each of which owns 15% of the new venture. ByteDance will own around 20% of the entity, and affiliates of existing ByteDance investors will own around 30%, according to a December memo from Chew. Other investors include Michael Dell's family office and a venture run by the partners of growth investor Dragoneer.What comes next is less clear.While Oracle, MGX, and Silver Lake will serve as managing investors in the new US joint venture, their focus will be on areas such as data security. Key commercial activities, including e-commerce, advertising, and marketing, will remain with ByteDance.The company began splitting up its US staff into different legal entities in January based on whether their work would remain under ByteDance's purview, Business Insider first reported.Following the announcement, President Donald Trump said in a Thursday night Truth Social post that he was "so happy to have helped in saving TikTok."He said the deal had reached a "very dramatic, final, and beautiful conclusion."The deal has been in the works for a year. At the start of Trump's presidency, TikTok went dark for its 170 million US users, but came back online soon after when Trump promised to delay a ban.Since then, he has been pushing back the divest-or-ban deadline, saying tech leaders like Elon Musk and Oracle's CTO, Larry Ellison, could buy the app. He also floated giving China a tariff reduction if it cut a deal on TikTok.Read the original article on Business Insider
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