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Elon Musk and Tesla’s board keep repeating the threat that the CEO will leave if shareholders don’t approve his ridiculous new compensation package.

This is not happening and amounts to nothing more than blackmail.

Musk is not new to blackmailing Tesla shareholders.

It started in 2024, when Musk threatened to stop building AI products at Tesla unless he gained control of 25% of the company’s shares.

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That’s even though he had claimed Tesla was now an “AI company” and that AI products were “critical to Tesla’s future”. Furthermore, the fact that he didn’t have close to 25% control was due to his own doing: selling Tesla shares to buy Twitter.

The CEO insists that his request for more shares is not about the money that comes with them but to have “control” over the AI products, especially the robots, that Tesla may eventually produce.

The problem with this narrative is that Musk consistently ignores other ways to increase his stake in Tesla without issuing more stock options, such as stock buybacks.

Lately, and amid an upcoming shareholders’ vote on a new CEO compensation package proposed by Tesla’s board, Musk has updated his threat from “not building AI products at Tesla” to “leaving Tesla”.

The CEO has both made the threat directly and through the company’s board over the last week.

Elon Musk already has full control over Tesla

The board is framing the compensation package, which is worth up to $1 trillion, as a way to keep Musk motivated to work at Tesla.

Meanwhile, Musk says he wants the extra shares to boost his stake and gain more control over what he claims will be a “robot army” Tesla will soon build.

There are issues with both claims.

First off, Musk is already the largest individual shareholder in Tesla and therefore, he benefits the most from Tesla’s share price increase. He should already have plenty of motivations.

Other CEOs, such as Jeff Bezos, notoriously didn’t give themselves any stock options to run their companies for that specific reason.

Others, such as Musk’s close friend Larry Ellison, did stock buybacks at Oracle rather than granting himself stock options to increase his stake in the company, benefiting all shareholders.

Secondly, Musk already has full control over Tesla.

Can anyone name a single instance over the last 20 years of Tesla’s existence where Musk didn’t get his way?

He was even caught lying to shareholders by the SEC, yet instead of being banned from running Tesla, he was allowed to retain his role as CEO and had to step down only as Tesla’s chairman for three years.

Musk installed a puppet chairperson who has been doing precisely what he wants for the last 7 years, including proposing increasingly more ridiculous CEO compensation plans.

Furthermore, Tesla has a strong retail shareholder base that believes everything he says and approves of these ridiculous CEO compensation plans.

There’s literally no evidence that Musk is lacking control over Tesla.

Why Elon Musk won’t leave Tesla

Musk and the board are trying to frame this as a confidence vote because that’s a lot easier to pass than giving up to $1 trillion to the CEO, but I don’t think Musk has any intention of leaving Tesla.

As I wrote in the last section, he already effectively controls Tesla.

If he were to leave, he would likely sell his shares, as he is not known to invest in companies that he is not actively involved in. For example, he invested in Twitter only a few months before he went for a full takeover.

As we have previously highlighted in the Tesla dilemma report, Musk’s leaving would likely result in a short-term crash in Tesla’s share price, as most of the company’s market capitalization currently hinges on Musk’s claims that Tesla is on the verge of solving self-driving and that its humanoid robot program is worth trillions of dollars.

There’s little to no evidence to support either of those claims. Shareholders believe it because of Musk. If Musk leaves, he will leave behind the belief in those programs.

Therefore, Musk’s stake in Tesla would be worth much less if he left.

Furthermore, the sale of his Tesla shares is likely to put tremendous pressure on the share price, resulting in him getting a lot less for them.

All of these things are self-defeating for Musk.

Electrek’s Take

Musk is bluffing. Plain and simple.

There are a few things that are incredibly wrong about this stock compensation package, and these blackmailing threats are forcing shareholders to ignore them.

First off, shareholders like to focus on Musk only getting paid if Tesla’s stock continues to increase, which is technically true, but not the proper way to look at it.

The way the plan is structured, Musk could get the first few tranches of the compensation plans over the next 10 years, while Tesla returns below the S&P average returns. That makes no sense.

Why give the CEO up to $40 billion, the biggest CEO pay ever, for returning below average returns?

The go-to argument from Elon fans is: you don’t want him to get paid?

The problem with that is Musk is the one who is forcing this all-or-nothing compensation plan. It’s like the board is also having shareholders vote on a more reasonable compensation package.

If you are to believe Musk and the board, you give him the most ridiculous compensation package of all time, or he leaves.

You should be extremely wary of anyone giving you such a choice.

Lastly, I want to highlight that the compensation package’s milestones are poorly designed. Why is delivering unsupervised self-driving as promised and sold to customers for almost a decade not in the milestones?

Instead, there are things like “10 million active Full Self-Driving”, which could be achieved without delivering the promised unsupervised self-driving, and “1 million Robotaxis in commercial operation”, which has the same issue, considering Tesla counts its ride-hailing service on FSD as “robotaxis”.

The compensation package is designed to be abused and benefit Musk way more than the shareholders.

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Elon Musk admits other automakers don’t want to license Tesla’s ‘Full Self-Driving’

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Elon Musk admits other automakers don't want to license Tesla's 'Full Self-Driving'

After years of teasing that other automakers would license Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) system, Elon Musk has now admitted that no other automakers want to license it.

“They don’t want it!” He says.

For years, the bull case for Tesla (TSLA) has relied heavily on the idea that the company isn’t just an automaker, but an “AI and robotics company”, with its first robot product being an autonomous car.

CEO Elon Musk pushed the theory further, arguing that Tesla’s lead in autonomy was so great that legacy automakers would eventually have no choice but to license Full Self-Driving (FSD) to survive.

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Back in early 2021, during the Q4 2020 earnings call, Musk first claimed that Tesla had “preliminary discussions” with other automakers about licensing the software. He reiterated this “openness” frequently, famously tweeting in June 2023 that Tesla was “happy to license Autopilot/FSD or other Tesla technology” to competitors.  

The speculation peaked in April 2024, when Musk explicitly stated that Tesla was “in talks with one major automaker” and that there was a “good chance” a deal would be signed that year.  

We now know that deal never happened. And thanks to comments from Ford CEO Jim Farley earlier this year, we have a good idea why. Farley, who was likely the other party in those “major automaker” talks, publicly shut down the idea of using FSD, stating clearly that “Waymo is better”.

Now, Musk appears to have given up on the idea of licensing Tesla FSD. In a post on X late last night, Musk acknowledged that discussions with other automakers have stalled, claiming that they asked for “unworkable requirements” for Tesla.

The CEO wrote:

“I’ve tried to warn them and even offered to license Tesla FSD, but they don’t want it! Crazy …

When legacy auto does occasionally reach out, they tepidly discuss implementing FSD for a tiny program in 5 years with unworkable requirements for Tesla, so pointless.”

Suppose you translate “unworkable requirements” from Musk-speak to automotive industry standard. In that case, it becomes clear what happened: automakers demanded a system that does what it says: drive autonomously, which means something different for Tesla.

Legacy automakers generally follow a “V-model” of validation. They define requirements, test rigorously, and validate safety before release. When Mercedes-Benz released its Drive Pilot system, a true Level 3 system, they accepted full legal liability for the car when the system is engaged.

In contrast, Tesla’s “aggressive deployment” strategy relies on releasing “beta” (now “Supervised”) software to customers and using them to validate the system. This approach has led to a litany of federal investigations and lawsuits.

Just this month, Tesla settled the James Tran vs. Tesla lawsuit just days before trial. The case involved a Model Y on Autopilot crashing into a stationary police vehicle, a known issue with Tesla’s system for years. By settling, Tesla avoided a jury verdict, but the message to the industry was clear: even Tesla knows it risks losing these cases in court.

Meanwhile, major automakers, such as Toyota, have partnered with Waymo to integrate its autonomous driving techonology into its consumer vehicles.

Electrek’s Take

The “unworkable requirements for Tesla” is an instant Musk classic. What were those requirements that were unachievable for Tesla? That it wouldn’t crash into stationary objects on the highway, such as emergency vehicles?

How dare they request something that crazy?

No Ford or GM executive is going to license a software stack that brings that kind of liability into their house. If they license FSD, they want Tesla to indemnify them against crashes. Tesla, knowing the current limitations of its vision-only system, likely refused.

To Musk, asking him to pay for FSD’s mistakes is an “unworkable requirement.” It’s always a driver error, and the fact that he always uses hyperbole to describe the level of safety being higher than that of humans has no impact on user abuse of the poorly named driver assistance systems in his view.

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CPSC warns Rad Power Bikes owners to stop using select batteries immediately due to fire risk

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CPSC warns Rad Power Bikes owners to stop using select batteries immediately due to fire risk

In an unprecedented move, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has issued a public safety warning urging owners of certain Rad Power Bikes e-bike batteries to immediately stop using them, citing a risk of fire, explosion, and potentially serious injury or death.

The warning, published today, targets Rad’s lithium-ion battery models RP-1304 and HL-RP-S1304, which were sold with some of the company’s most popular e-bikes, including the RadWagon 4, RadRunner 1 and 2, RadRunner Plus, RadExpand 5, RadRover 5 series, and RadCity 3 and 4 models. Replacement batteries sold separately are also included.

According to the CPSC, the batteries “can unexpectedly ignite and explode,” particularly when exposed to water or debris. The agency says it has documented 31 fires linked to the batteries so far, including 12 incidents of property damage totaling over $734,000. Alarmingly, several fires occurred when the battery wasn’t charging or when the bike wasn’t even in use.

Complicating the situation further, Rad Power Bikes – already facing significant financial turmoil – has “refused to agree to an acceptable recall,” according to the CPSC. The company reportedly told regulators it cannot afford to replace or refund the large number of affected batteries. Rad previously informed employees that it could be forced to shut down permanently in January if it cannot secure new funding, barely two weeks before this safety notice was issued by the CPSC.

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radrunner 2

For its part, Rad pushed back strongly on the CPSC’s characterization. A Rad Power Bikes Spokesperson explained in a statement to Electrek that the company “stands behind our batteries and our reputation as leaders in the ebike industry, and strongly disagrees with the CPSC’s characterization of certain Rad batteries as defective or unsafe.”

The company explained that its products meet or exceed stringent international safety standards, including UL-2271 and UL-2849, which are standards that the CPSC has proposed as a requirement but not yet implemented. Rad says its batteries have been repeatedly tested by reputable third-party labs, including during the CPSC investigation, and that those tests confirmed full compliance. Rad also claims the CPSC did not independently test the batteries using industry-accepted standards, and stresses that the incident rate cited by the agency represents a tiny fraction of a percent. While acknowledging that any fire report is serious, Rad maintains that lithium-ion batteries across all industries can be hazardous if damaged, improperly used, or exposed to significant water intrusion, and that these universal risks do not indicate a defect specific to Rad’s products.

The company says it entered the process hoping to collaborate with federal regulators to improve safety guidance and rider education, and that it offered multiple compromise solutions – including discounted upgrades to its newer Safe Shield batteries that were a legitimate leap forward in safety in the industry – but the CPSC rejected them. Rad argues that the agency instead demanded a full replacement program that would immediately bankrupt the company, leaving customers without support. It also warns that equating new technology with older products being “unsafe” undermines innovation, noting that the introduction of safer systems, such as anti-lock brakes, doesn’t retroactively deem previous generations faulty. Ultimately, Rad says clear, consistent national standards are needed so manufacturers can operate with confidence while continuing to advance battery safety.

Lithium-ion battery fires have become a growing concern across the US and internationally, with poorly made packs implicated in a rising number of deadly incidents.

While Rad Power Bikes states that no injuries or fatalities have been tied to these specific models, the federal warning marks one of the most serious e-bike battery advisories issued to date – and arrives at a moment when the once-dominant US e-bike brand is already fighting for survival.

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Rivian’s e-bike brand launches $250 smart helmet with breakthrough safety tech and lights

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Rivian's e-bike brand launches 0 smart helmet with breakthrough safety tech and lights

ALSO, the new micromobility brand spun out of Rivian, just announced official pricing for its long-awaited Alpha Wave helmet. The smart helmet, which introduces a brand-new safety tech called the Release Layer System (RLS), is now listed at $250, with “notify for pre-order” now open on ALSO’s site. Deliveries are expected to begin in spring 2026.

The $250 price point might sound steep, but ALSO is positioning the Alpha Wave as a top-tier lid that undercuts other premium smart helmets with similar tech – some of which push into the $400–500 range. That’s because the Alpha Wave is promising more than just upgraded comfort and design. The company claims the helmet will also deliver a significant leap in rotational impact protection.

The RLS system is made up of four internal panels that are engineered to release on impact, helping dissipate rotational energy – a major factor in many concussions. It’s being marketed as a next-gen alternative to MIPS and similar technologies, and could signal a broader shift in helmet safety standards if adopted widely.

Beyond protection, the Alpha Wave also packs a surprising amount of tech. Four wind-shielded speakers and two noise-canceling microphones are built in for taking calls, playing music, or following navigation prompts. And when paired with ALSO’s own TM-B electric bike, the helmet integrates with the bike’s onboard lighting system for synchronized rear lights and 200-lumen forward visibility.

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The helmet is IPX6-rated for water resistance and charges via USB-C, making it easy to keep powered up alongside other modern gear.

Electrek’s Take

This helmet pushes the smart gear envelope. $250 isn’t nothing, but for integrated lighting, audio, and what might be a true leap forward in crash protection, it’s priced to shake things up in the high-end helmet space.

One area I’m not a huge fan of is the paired front and rear lights. Cruiser motorcycles have this same issue, with paired tail lights mounted close together sometimes being mistaken for a conventional four-wheeled vehicle farther away. I worry that the paired “headlights” and “taillights” of this helmet could be mistaken for a car farther down the road instead of the reality of a much closer cyclist. But hey, we’ll have to see.

The tech is pretty cool though, and if the RLS system holds up to its promise, we might be looking at the new bar for premium e-bike head protection.

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