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Fact-Check: Did Elon Musk Announce Bitcoin and Ethereum Giveaway? Nope!

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A video of billionaire and Tesla Motors CEO talking about a cryptocurrency giveaway is being shared on his social media platform (formerly Twitter), in which he can be heard saying that he will giveaway 5,000 Bitcoin and 100,000 Ethereum.

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An archived version of this post can be seen .

(Archived versions of more posts sharing this clip can be seen and .)

Did he do that?: No, the clip has been tampered with.

  • We found no evidence of any such announcement by Musk, nor does the original video show him talking about .

How did we find out the truth?: To begin with, we ran a keyword search with the term 'Elon Musk cryptocurrency giveaway' on Google, but did not find any credible reports or announcements.

  • Next, we ran a reverse image search on the video using Google Lens, to look for the full clip.

  • This led us to a YouTube short by news organisation India Today, which showed the same, futuristic vehicle, and Musk in the same outfit.

  • The report mentioned Musk launching new products during a Tesla Motors event called 'We, Robot'.

  • Taking a cue from this, we looked for the video on

  • Here, we found a livestream of the launch event, which was titled 'We, Robot | Tesla Cybercab Unveil' and streamed on 11 October 2024.

  • We went through this video where Musk launched robots, a van, and a taxi, but did not find any mention of cryptocurrency.

  • However, around the , while Musk spoke about Tesla's new self driving taxi called 'Cybercab' , we noticed that his hand movements matched the first part of the viral video.

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Musk's hand movements match the viral video when he starts talking about the cost efficiency of the Cybercab.

  • Further, at the , one can see Musk with his hand to his head on the stage with Tesla's bus, 'Robovan' in frame, just like in the viral video.

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Both visuals show the van and Musk in the same positions.

Is it AI?: To learn whether the video had been altered using Artificial Intelligence (AI), we submitted it to .

  • Its found "substantial evidence" of Musk's face being manipulated, while a semantic (language) analysis of the speech's content also pointed towards it being inauthentic.

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The tool detected substantial evidence of the clip being manipulated.

However, it wasn't entirely certain if the video was a deepfake.

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It was confident that Musk's face was manipulated.

We also ran the video through 's tool, created by the Bengaluru-based AI startup working on detecting AI-generated content.

Their report said that the audio appeared to be "AI cloned."

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Their tool was highly confident that the Musk's voice cloned using AI.

Analysing the visual element of the clip, the report mentioned that the frames in the clip "appear to be manipulated using lip-sync AI."

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Musk's face had been manipulated in order to make his mouth match the words said by the AI-cloned audio.

The domain: In the altered video, Musk appears to promote the website 'elon-crypto.org'.

  • We looked for details about this website on , which showed that '' was registered as recently as 1 November 2024.

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The domain was registered a little over a week ago.

  • We also noticed that the domain was registered in Slovakia.

  • This is unusual for Musk-run companies, such as , , , and , whose domains were all registered in or before 2014 and in the United States of America.

    (Swipe to view domain details.)

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Tesla's domain was registered in 1992.

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SpaceX's domain was registered in 2002.

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X's domain was registered in 1993.

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The Boring Company's domain was registered in 2014.

Is it a scam?: We entered the URL into scam detector websites like and , both of which showed low trust scores for it, indicating that the website was likely a fraudulent one.

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The website has a low trust score.

Conclusion: This video about Elon Musk talking about giving away cryptocurrency is a deepfake scam.

(Not convinced of a post or information you came across online and want it verified? Send us the details on , or e-mail it to us at  and we'll fact-check it for you. You can also read all our fact-checked stories .)

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