
SpaceX Prototype AI Device Shown to Investors, Musk Denies Report
A Wall Street Journal report claims SpaceX demonstrated a slim AI handset to select investors ahead of its IPO, a claim Elon Musk called 'utterly false'.
SpaceX showed a prototype handheld artificial-intelligence device to a select group of shareholders and investors shortly before its record-breaking initial public offering, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing unnamed sources. Elon Musk responded on his social media platform X with a two-word denial: “Utterly false.” The conflicting accounts have drawn attention to the aerospace company’s deepening ties to AI and the possibility of a hardware venture that would bypass the dominant mobile operating systems.
The device, described as slimmer than an iPhone and running a proprietary operating system, would integrate xAI’s Grok chatbot and use a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, according to the report. Russian business outlets, citing the WSJ, noted that the concept draws on the “super-app” philosophy of China’s WeChat, aiming to offer an all-in-one platform with direct access to Starlink satellite internet. Indian and Arabic-language media highlighted the potential for a device that could operate entirely outside the Apple and Google ecosystems, freeing SpaceX from app-store fees and content restrictions.
The disclosure comes as SpaceX positions itself as an artificial-intelligence company following its IPO, which French financial circles described as one of the most anticipated market debuts. Musk has previously stated that building a smartphone is not a goal—“the idea makes me want to die”—but has left open the possibility if Apple or Google impose severe censorship. The competitive landscape is shifting: OpenAI is developing AI-centric hardware with former Apple designer Jony Ive, while earlier standalone AI gadgets such as Humane’s AI Pin and the Rabbit R1 failed to gain traction, a point underscored by Spanish-language and Persian reports.
SpaceX has cautioned investors that the project is at a very early stage, the design may change, and no decision on commercial production has been made. The company has not issued a formal statement beyond Musk’s social-media post. The next factual milestone will be any official confirmation of the project’s existence or a regulatory filing that sheds light on SpaceX’s hardware ambitions.
| Russian & CIS press | −0.30 | critical |
|---|---|---|
| Latin American press | +0.10 | neutral |
Russia frames Musk's denial as a maneuver to conceal sensitive technological developments, attributing a disinformation strategy to the entrepreneur.
It projects onto Musk an intention of narrative control, turning a denial into an implicit confirmation of the news.
Latin America reduces the episode to a character trait of Musk, turning a technological issue into a matter of lifestyle.
It personifies the news through the billionaire's figure, shifting focus from the technological content to personality.
Broaden your view
Khamenei funeral draws millions as absent successor fuels leadership questions
9 languages · 31 outlets
From Economy & MarketsEV Sales Surge in Latin America and Asia as Chinese Brands and Tesla Redraw Auto Rivalries
4 languages · 7 outlets
From Science & HealthModern life's invisible wear: how daily stress becomes physical illness
5 languages · 11 outlets