Elon Musk‘s rocket manufacturing company SpaceX is seemingly limiting live broadcasting solely to its CEO’s social media platform X (formerly Twitter).
What Happened: On Sunday night, SpaceX launched 21 Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit from Florida and later returned crew-6 to Earth after almost 186 days in space. Neither the launch nor the splashdown were broadcast on SpaceX’s channel on YouTube. However, they were live-streamed on X.
The last activity that was streamed on SpaceX’s YouTube channel was that of the Dragon spacecraft carrying Crew-6 autonomously undocking from the station. The prescheduled live stream for the subsequent splashdown was later removed.
Why It Matters: Late last month, Musk livestreamed the test drive of version 12 of Tesla Inc‘s full self-driving software on X. The 45-minute-long livestream gathered 11.7 million viewers.
The limiting of SpaceX’s broadcasts to X hints at a consolidation of Musk’s companies on X, including SpaceX and Tesla. The billionaire’s The Boring Company and Neuralink are also active on X.
Photo by Dimitris Barletis on Shutterstock
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