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You've probably seen it by now - that wild claim about Elon Musk launching a Tesla phone to take on the iPhone 17. The internet went absolutely crazy over this one. But here's the thing: it's completely made up.
I started digging into where this actually came from, and it's textbook social media misinformation. The whole thing traces back to a concept video that ADR Studio created way back in 2021. It was a cool design exercise, a 'what if Tesla made a phone' kind of thing. But then YouTube channels and TikTok accounts started using it with clickbait titles like it was some leaked insider information. People shared it everywhere, and suddenly everyone thought Tesla was actually building an Elon Musk phone.
The fake images of Musk holding this device? All fan-made. The 'specific launch dates' floating around? Pulled from nowhere. What really amplified this was the timing - right after iPhone 17 dropped, all these sketchy tech blogs started publishing articles with headlines like 'Tesla About to Launch Smartphone'. They cited random social media accounts as sources, no verification whatsoever.
Here's what actually happened: I checked with legitimate tech outlets like Tech Advisor and fact-checking services like VERA Files. Both confirmed the same thing - Tesla has never announced any smartphone project. Elon Musk hasn't made any official statement about creating a phone to compete with Apple. The whole Elon Musk phone narrative is pure speculation dressed up as news.
What's really interesting is how fast misinformation spreads now. One concept video, a few render images, a catchy headline, and suddenly it's 'hot news' across dozens of unverified websites. People share it without checking, algorithms amplify it, and boom - everyone thinks it's real.
If you want to avoid getting caught by this stuff, the strategy is simple: verify the source. Look for official statements from the company's website or direct comments from leadership. Don't just go off clips, images, or what people are saying online. The Elon Musk phone isn't happening. It's a rumor, nothing more. Stay skeptical about 'breaking' tech product news unless it's coming straight from the source.