Musk disputes WSJ report on SpaceX AI phone demo

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Musk called a Wall Street Journal report on a SpaceX AI handset prototype shown before its IPO "Utterly false."

Why this matters

The report and Musk's denial highlight investor interest in whether SpaceX plans to expand beyond rockets and satellite internet into consumer AI devices. The issue also reflects broader competition among tech companies to combine AI software with new hardware.

Elon Musk on Wednesday denied a Wall Street Journal report that SpaceX showed investors and other stakeholders a prototype of an artificial intelligence-focused device ahead of its initial public offering.

“Utterly false,” Musk said in a post on X, without elaborating.

The Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that the handset-like prototype was designed to run on a proprietary operating system, included artificial intelligence technology from xAI, and would use Qualcomm Snapdragon chips.

The report said SpaceX told some investors the project was still in its early stages, the design was evolving, and there was no certainty the device would be built.

SpaceX has invested billions of dollars beyond its launch and satellite internet businesses, including in AI infrastructure, xAI’s Grok large language model, and plans for space-based computing.

Several media outlets reported in February that SpaceX planned to develop a mobile device connected to its Starlink satellite internet constellation that could compete with smartphones.

Musk said in January that a Starlink phone was “not out of the question at some point,” adding that such a device would be very different from current phones.

Last month, Microsoft unveiled a prototype AI-powered badge device for workers featuring Qualcomm wearable chips. The company said it would use AI agents, voice, a touchscreen, and a camera to help users complete tasks.

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