Business
Maye Musk’s AI-Tagged Birthday Tribute to Elon Musk Sparks Fresh Online Speculation and Mixed Reactions
A birthday tribute posted by Elon Musk’s mother to mark his 55th birthday has drawn online scrutiny after a label briefly appeared on the images suggesting they had been generated or edited with artificial intelligence, reigniting longstanding speculation among some social media users about who actually runs the account.
Musk turned 55 on June 28, an occasion he celebrated with family and friends around a space-themed gathering featuring a towering cake styled after SpaceX’s Starship rocket. The dessert, finished in silver and black, stood upright on a launch-pad-style base rather than following a traditional layered design, with candles arranged near the bottom to create the appearance of engines igniting as Musk leaned in to blow them out. A second display featured a small-scale lunar base built from Lego blocks, rounding out the space-exploration theme.
Maye Musk, Elon Musk’s mother, shared images from the celebration on her account on X over the weekend.
“Happy birthday to my wonderful son. Elon Musk has given me 55 years of joy,” Maye Musk wrote.
She added that it had been fun celebrating with family and friends, describing her son’s cake as a rocket and a moon base. According to social media users who reviewed the post, a “Made With AI” label was visible on the images for a period before being removed, prompting questions about whether the photos had been generated outright using artificial intelligence tools or simply edited with AI-assisted features after being taken. No definitive explanation for the label’s appearance or removal has been confirmed publicly.
The uncertainty fueled a range of reactions online. Some users expressed discomfort at the idea that artificial intelligence might have been used to commemorate a personal family milestone, with several replies questioning why anyone would choose to create or alter a birthday photo using AI tools rather than sharing an unedited image. Others used the moment to revive a recurring, unverified theory that has circulated periodically among some online communities: the suggestion that Musk himself operates or has influence over his mother’s social media account, rather than Maye Musk managing it independently. That theory has surfaced before, including after an earlier post from the same account that referenced personal biographical details in unusual third-person phrasing, which some interpreted, without confirmation, as a sign the account might not be solely controlled by Maye Musk. Others have suggested that instance could just as easily reflect a simple typo or a reference to an earlier generation of the family rather than evidence of any deeper pattern.
Despite the online back-and-forth over the AI label, the broader birthday celebration drew warm and largely conventional tributes from across Musk’s personal and professional circles. His sister, Tosca Musk, posted a brief message expressing love and well wishes for her brother. ARK Invest Chief Executive Cathie Wood, a longtime Tesla investor, extended birthday greetings to both mother and son. Boom Supersonic Chief Executive Blake Scholl prompted Musk to share a wish for the occasion, to which Musk offered a characteristically expansive response.
“I wished for a bright future for all mankind,” Musk said.
Other public figures who marked the occasion included rapper Nicki Minaj, who credited Musk with his stewardship of the social media platform X, and Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who referenced Musk’s work across several of his ventures, including Neuralink, Starlink and reusable rocket technology.
The birthday arrived at a notable moment in Musk’s business career. The milestone came just weeks after SpaceX’s record-setting initial public offering, a listing that helped push Musk’s overall net worth to a level that has led some financial trackers to describe him as the world’s first trillionaire. Musk has continued to speak publicly about long-term, civilization-scale concerns in recent months, including repeated warnings about declining global birth rates, framing many of his public and political engagements around the stakes he associates with those demographic trends.
The episode surrounding Maye Musk’s birthday post is not the first time questions have arisen online about the authenticity or origin of social media content tied to the Musk family. As artificial intelligence tools for generating and editing images have become more widely accessible and increasingly difficult to distinguish from unedited photography, platforms including X have introduced labeling systems intended to flag AI-assisted or AI-generated content to viewers. The temporary appearance and subsequent removal of such a label on a high-profile, personal post like Maye Musk’s birthday tribute illustrates the kind of confusion that can follow even when the underlying intent behind the post, marking a family birthday, is relatively benign.
For now, neither Maye Musk nor Elon Musk has issued a public statement clarifying whether the birthday images were AI-generated, AI-edited or unaltered photographs from the family gathering, nor has either addressed the renewed speculation about who manages the elder Musk’s social media presence. The episode is likely to remain a passing point of online discussion rather than a substantive controversy, though it underscores a broader pattern in which even ordinary family moments shared by prominent public figures can become entangled in questions about authenticity once artificial intelligence tools enter the picture, however briefly.
As is often the case with viral social media speculation involving public figures and their families, much of the conversation around the post has unfolded without any confirmation from those directly involved, leaving observers to draw their own conclusions about a birthday celebration that, label controversy aside, appeared by most accounts to be a fairly straightforward family gathering built around one of Musk’s most consistent personal and professional preoccupations: rockets, and humanity’s future among the stars.
Business
Franklin Corporate Ladder 1-10 Year SMA Q1 2026 Commentary
Franklin Resources, Inc. [NYSE:BEN] is a global investment management organization with subsidiaries operating as Franklin Templeton and serving clients in over 150 countries. Franklin Templeton’s mission is to help clients achieve better outcomes through investment management expertise, wealth management and technology solutions. Through its specialist investment managers, the company offers specialization on a global scale, bringing extensive capabilities in fixed income, equity, alternatives and multi-asset solutions. With more than 1,300 investment professionals, and offices in major financial markets around the world, the California-based company has over 75 years of investment experience and over $1.4 trillion in assets under management as of June 30, 2023. For more information, please visit franklintempleton.com and follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook.
Business
CoStar Group: Better Multiples After The Fall (Rating Upgrade)
CoStar Group: Better Multiples After The Fall (Rating Upgrade)
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Amber International Holding Limited 2025 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NASDAQ:AMBR) 2026-06-29
Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team
Business
LARRY KUDLOW: Acceptance is the answer to all my prayers
FOX Business host Larry Kudlow discusses the Supreme Court backing President Donald Trump’s firing of an FTC member while blocking the firing of Fed governor Lisa Cook on ‘Kudlow.’
There are always things in life that I don’t understand. I bet you a lot of people feel that way. How did that happen? Why did that happen? Or it makes no sense. Somehow we have to accept these decisions, even if we don’t like them or understand them. So here’s a couple.
The Supreme Court ruled that President Biden’s appointee to the Federal Trade Commission could be fired by President Trump. Justice Neil Gorsuch, concurring in the court’s decision, said “independent agencies are not so independent after all.”
Well that I like. Makes perfect sense. As Mr. Trump put it, it reverses a bad decision made by the Supremes 91 years ago back in 1935. It gives the chief executive true executive authority. He defines quote “cause.” Yet what I don’t understand is how the Supremes let Governor Lisa Cook off the hook regarding the Federal Reserve. They decided that at least one so-called independent agency was truly independent and cited a way-long-ago, more or less 200 years ago precedent for the First and Second Bank of the United States. A long time ago.
By the way President Jackson didn’t think the Second Bank of the United States was so independent because he stopped their charter from being extended. Anyway, today’s court also cited the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. That’s a long time ago. Yet many people believe that central bank charter was highly ambiguous. And if presidents have the authority to appoint chairs and governors, they should have the same authority to fire them.
And then Justice Brett Kavanaugh, in a concurring opinion, writes quote “today’s interim ruling does not decide whether the President may lawfully remove Governor Cook for cause.” And he goes on to say “the ultimate decision about why the President may remove Governor Cook for cause will largely depend on the facts regarding the governor’s actions. And those facts have yet to be determined.”
Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett and FOX Business correspondent Lydia Hu discuss the Supreme Court’s decision rejecting President Donald Trump’s bid to remove Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook on ‘Kudlow.’
Justice Clarence Thomas called the ruling “incorrect” in his dissenting opinion. “Although the Court expresses concern that the President removed a Board member for ‘the first time in the Federal Reserve’s 111-year history,’” he wrote, “it expresses no such concern that it today upholds an injunction against the President’s removal of an executive officer for the first time in the Constitution’s 237-year history.”
Well Ms. Cook has been accused of mortgage fraud because she apparently or allegedly took out mortgages in three different states, Michigan, Georgia, and Massachusetts. And then she labeled each one her primary residence.
So if she can’t count or if she can’t read, why are we entrusting her with the monetary power of our currency? Her case was referred to the Justice Department, which I guess opened a criminal investigation into mortgage fraud back in August 2025. Almost a year ago.
Yet nothing’s happened since then. So far as we know, no charges have been brought, no grand jury has been convened, or maybe stuff is going on that we don’t know about. Justice Kavanaugh’s comment suggests Ms. Cook may yet get busted, tossed off the court.
The president wrote on Truth Social that the Supremes just sent it back on a strictly procedural basis, but the issue of firing her for cause was not settled. Sounds like he’s right. Yet here you have an independent agency that’s not so independent, and then you have an independent agency that may be independent, but we don’t actually know. So for now, acceptance is the answer to all my prayers, but I don’t really understand any of it.
Business
Jobseekers in limbo amid Esperance housing crunch
Businesses in Esperance are losing new hires due to an inability to find housing in the south coast town.
Business
Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to fire Fed’s Cook but expands presidential powers

Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to fire Fed’s Cook but expands presidential powers
Business
Dallas Fed Manufacturing: Stable Business Conditions In June
bluebay2014/iStock via Getty Images

By Jennifer Nash
The Dallas Fed released its Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey (TMOS) for June. The general business activity index fell 0.4 points to 0.0, indicating slower growth of manufacturing activity and stable business conditions perceptions.
Business
Is the Nancy Guthrie Abductor Using a New Ransom Note to Try to Dodge Death Penalty?
TUCSON, Ariz. — A former FBI agent says the latest anonymous ransom note in the Nancy Guthrie case may be less about money and more about self-preservation, suggesting whoever sent it understands they could be facing a capital murder charge in Arizona if caught.
Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of “Today” show co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, has been missing since the early hours of Feb. 1, after being dropped off at her Tucson home by her son-in-law the previous night around 9:50 p.m. The new note, sent to TMZ last week, claims Guthrie is dead and was “buried with nature,” language consistent with a second note investigators received earlier in the case.
Former FBI agent Jennifer Coffindaffer addressed the latest correspondence during a Sunday appearance on “NewsNation Prime,” telling host Hena Doba that she believes the note’s author understands the legal stakes have shifted dramatically now that Guthrie is presumed dead.
“They have a murder on their hands as opposed to a kidnapping,” Coffindaffer said.
Coffindaffer characterized the note as functioning less like a genuine ransom demand and more like an attempt by the sender to get ahead of the consequences before any arrest, framing it as a kind of preemptive apology aimed at softening how the person might eventually be perceived if identified. She suggested the writer is motivated by a desire for attention and a need to control the public narrative around the case, while still holding out hope of receiving a cryptocurrency payment if possible. Coffindaffer also said she suspects the timing of this latest note may have been driven by renewed media coverage following the disclosure of an earlier, previously undisclosed note’s contents earlier in the week.
As for whether Guthrie is still alive, Coffindaffer was unequivocal in her own assessment, saying she believes the notes sent so far are authentic and that the sequence of events described, in which the people responsible apparently did not intend for Guthrie to die before they could establish proof of life and collect a ransom, points to a plan that went catastrophically wrong for those involved. She said she believes Guthrie is no longer alive, while cautioning that no suspects have been arrested and that she believes investigators are working the case intensively behind the scenes, even if the public cannot see most of that activity.
The note Coffindaffer was discussing is the latest in a string of ransom communications that have surrounded the case since Guthrie’s disappearance. According to investigators who have reviewed the correspondence, two notes sent in early February are believed to have come from the same person or group, likely from the same computer IP address. The first, sent Feb. 2 to two local Tucson television stations and to TMZ, demanded a payment in bitcoin and contained unusually specific details about Guthrie’s home, including the location of an Apple Watch with a white band on her bedroom floor and a broken light on her back porch. The second note, sent four days later, was similar in tone and style but made no financial demand, instead indicating that Guthrie had died and that her abductors had not intended for that to happen.
Savannah Guthrie addressed the broader landscape of ransom claims in a March interview, distinguishing between the notes her family considers credible and the many other claims that have surfaced since her mother’s disappearance.
“There are a lot of different notes, I think, that came,” Savannah Guthrie said.
That distinction has become increasingly important as additional claims have continued to surface in the months since. Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos addressed one such claim directly during a radio interview on a Tucson station’s Buckmaster Show last Friday, responding to a newer message sent to TMZ from someone claiming to possess video footage showing “the main guy” with Guthrie on what the sender described as the day she likely died, along with photographs, names and addresses tied to two alleged kidnappers. Nanos voiced clear skepticism about the claim’s authenticity, drawing on the case’s history of false reports.
“I think the FBI has done a number of arrests for false or fake ransom notes,” Nanos said.
The sender of that particular video claim also denied being responsible for an earlier tip that pointed to a possible burial site near Nogales, Mexico, and disputed reports that the previously revealed second ransom note had been written by a woman. That Mexico-related tip, which came through a Mexican volunteer search group called Buscando Corazones Nogales, prompted an unsuccessful local search effort earlier this month after it suggested Guthrie’s remains might be located near the U.S.-Mexico border.
Throughout the investigation, authorities have said they have ruled out Guthrie’s children and their spouses as suspects in her disappearance. Investigators have previously disclosed finding drops of Guthrie’s blood on the front stoop of her home, evidence that has reinforced the working theory that she was taken against her will rather than having left voluntarily. A reward of up to $100,000 from the FBI remains in place, supplemented by an additional $1 million reward offered by the Guthrie family, and the FBI’s tip line, 1-800-CALL-FBI, remains open for anyone with information.
Guthrie, born in Fort Wright, Kentucky, had lived in the Tucson area for more than five decades before her disappearance. She failed to log on to a scheduled online church service the morning after she went missing, prompting a church member to alert her family. Relatives went to check on her home around 11 a.m. that day, found no sign of her, and called police around noon after discovering her phone and other personal belongings still inside the house.
Savannah Guthrie has since returned to her duties on “Today,” though producers have reportedly put strict internal procedures in place for handling any breaking developments related to the case that might surface during the broadcast. She has repeatedly pleaded publicly for anyone with knowledge of her mother’s whereabouts or what happened to her to come forward, expressing hope that her family might finally find closure after nearly five months of uncertainty.
As the investigation continues without a confirmed suspect, authorities have not publicly verified the authenticity of any of the ransom notes received by media outlets, leaving the case in a familiar pattern: a steady stream of unconfirmed claims, competing theories from outside experts, and a family still waiting for the kind of definitive answer that, five months in, remains frustratingly out of reach.
Business
Form 4 Village Farms International Inc For: 29 June

Form 4 Village Farms International Inc For: 29 June
Business
The people living hyper frugally so they can retire early
Alan and Katie are part of a small but growing global movement called Fire, which stands for “Financially Independent, Retire Early”.
From a little-known concept 15 years ago, there are now almost a million members of the main Fire discussion board on social media site Reddit, and mainstream financial institutions now publish numerous guides on the topic.
The central tenet is that you live extremely frugally during your working life, so that you can retire as soon as possible.
For most of us, being able to quit working life early is just a dream. From the current high cost of living, to elevated property prices and student debt, we will be working longer not less. The statistics back this up.
Last year, average retirement ages in the UK hit record highs of 65.8 years for men and 64.7 for women, official data showed., external
It is a similar situation in the US, where the average retirement age for men and women has increased steadily since the 1990s, to 64.8 and 63.3 respectively in 2025, according to one long-term study., external
Yet Fire devotees such as 49-year-old Amy Minkley are committed to their goal. The American middle-school teacher was able to retire when she was just 44.
To help achieve this she worked abroad at international, private schools in Japan, Singapore, India and Thailand, where Minkley says she was able to earn more money and enjoy much lower living expenses than back home in Texas.
She also spent as little as possible. “I wasn’t interested in keeping up with a certain expat lifestyle,” says Minkley.
“I rarely bought expensive clothing, kept electronics until they gave out, cooked most of my meals at home, and paused before any significant purchase.
“Having a housemate while living in Singapore and India allowed me to save even more, and in several countries I didn’t need a car, which kept my expenses low,” she says.
Minkley now lives in Bali where her retirement income goes further than if she had moved back to the US.
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