There's no love lost between Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg.
The CEOs have been feuding since 2016, when a SpaceX explosion destroyed a Facebook satellite.
Here's a history of their feud.
For nearly eight years, two of tech's biggest names — Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg — have been caught up in a feud, clashing over topics like artificial intelligence and rockets.
The two men have been griping about each other behind closed doors for years, according to The Wall Street Journal. But the tech moguls haven't exactly kept their rivalry a secret from the public, either.
When a rocket from Musk's SpaceX exploded and destroyed a satellite from Zuckerberg's Facebook in 2016, Zuckerberg issued a heated statement, saying he was "deeply disappointed" about SpaceX's failure. And when Facebook became embroiled in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Musk publicly deleted his companies' Facebook pages, tweeting that the company gave him "the willies."
The two billionaires are among the richest people on the planet, placing them in an elite circle, even by Silicon Valley standards. Even though both work in artificial intelligence and social media, and their companies have partnered in the past, it seems there's no love lost between Musk and Zuckerberg.
Here's where their feud began and everything that's happened since.
The Musk-Zuckerberg feud dates back to at least 2016, when a SpaceX rocket explosion destroyed a Facebook satellite.
In September 2016, SpaceX was testing its Falcon 9 rocket at a launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Shortly after 9 a.m. the rocket exploded, destroying Facebook's AMOS-6 satellite, which was supposed to ride the rocket into space.
The satellite was part of Facebook's Internet.org project to deliver internet connectivity to the developing world, and it would have been Facebook's first satellite in orbit.
Zuckerberg seemed openly frustrated that the launch failed, writing on Facebook that he was "deeply disappointed to hear that SpaceX's launch failure destroyed our satellite that would have provided connectivity to so many entrepreneurs and everyone else across the continent."
"Yeah, my fault for being an idiot," Musk said. "We did give them a free launch to make up for it, and I think they had some insurance."
In 2017, Zuckerberg criticized Musk's attitude toward artificial intelligence, which seemed to get a rise out of Musk.
During a Facebook Live broadcast, a viewer asked Zuckerberg for his thoughts on Musk's anxieties around AI.
"I have pretty strong opinions on this," Zuckerberg said. "With AI especially, I'm really optimistic, and I think that people who are naysayers and try to drum up these doomsday scenarios ... I don't understand it. It's really negative, and in some ways, I actually think it's pretty irresponsible."
Musk, who has repeatedly called for regulation and caution when it comes to new AI technology, shot back on Twitter.
"I've talked to Mark about this," he said in response to a tweet about Zuckerberg's comments. "His understanding of the subject is limited."
In 2018, following Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal, Musk made a public show of deleting SpaceX and Tesla's Facebook pages.
After the WhatsApp cofounder Brian Acton tweeted, "It is time. #deletefacebook," Musk responded, "What's Facebook?"
A fan responded to Musk's tweet asking whether he'd delete the SpaceX Facebook page, to which Musk responded, "I didn't realize there was one. Will do."
After another fan pointed out that Tesla had a Facebook page too, Musk tweeted that it "looks lame anyway."
Soon after, both the SpaceX and Tesla pages disappeared from Facebook. Musk said it wasn't a "political statement" and that he just found Facebook unsettling.
Following the riot at the US Capitol in 2021, Musk used Twitter to share memes linking the riots to Facebook.
On the evening of the rampage in Washington, Musk tweeted, "This is called the domino effect," along with an image of dominoes, with the first one labeled "a website to rate women on campus," a reference to Facebook's inception at Harvard University. The last domino referenced the rioters.
Musk also criticized Facebook's data-sharing practices, tweeting another meme about Facebook that mentioned the company "spying" on users following the announcement by Facebook-owned WhatsApp that it would start forcing users to share their personal data with the platform.
Musk tweeted that people should "use Signal," an encrypted messaging app. His tweet was retweeted by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, another tech executive who has sparred with Zuckerberg.
Last year, Musk criticized Zuckerberg's ironclad control of Meta.
The Tesla CEO compared Zuckerberg's control of Meta to a monarchy during an interview at the TED conference in Vancouver, British Columbia. (Facebook's parent company changed its name to Meta in October 2021.)
The interviewer, Chris Anderson, asked Musk whether his status as the richest man and one of Twitter's top influencers could pose a conflict of interest if he bought the platform. Musk used the opportunity to take a swipe at his rival.
"As for media sort of ownership, I mean, you've got Mark Zuckerberg owning Facebook and Instagram and WhatsApp, and with a share ownership structure that will have Mark Zuckerberg the 14th still controlling those entities," Musk said.
He went on to say that he "won't have that at Twitter."
Tensions appeared to get even higher between the two CEOs after Musk bought Twitter.
Earlier this month, Meta's chief product officer, Chris Cox, appeared to mock Musk and Twitter by saying in an all-hands meeting that it the site will be "a platform that is sanely run."
Musk hasn't taken kindly to the news that Zuckerberg is creating an X competitor.
The billionaire taunted Zuckerberg on X, formerly Twitter, about his rival text-based social media platform.
"I'm sure Earth can't wait to be exclusively under Zuck's thumb with no other options," Musk posted in June.
The two men have reportedly been grumbling about each other in private for years.
People who have heard each man's private comments about the feud told The Wall Street Journal in a report published last June that Zuckerberg had long yearned for the public recognition Musk has received over the years as a tech pioneer and that Musk has fretted over Zuckerberg's early success with Facebook.
The two men appeared to agree to settle some of their differences in a cage match last June.
The X owner brought up the idea after X users cautioned him to be careful dissing Zuckerberg since he knows jiu-jitsu.
It's unclear whether Musk was joking about the offer to fight the Meta CEO in a cage match. He said via X, "If this is real, I will do it," but later appeared to poke fun at his own fighting skills.
Zuckerberg appears to be taking the idea of a match seriously. After Musk first posted on X that he would be "up for a cage fight," the Meta CEO posted a screenshot of the post on Instagram with the words "Send me location," and a Meta spokesperson later told The Verge that Zuckerberg is not joking about the offer.
Only time will tell if the two CEOs will duke it out in person.
Zuckerberg said he was ready to fight since the day Musk challenged him.
Zuckerberg said in a Threads post in August 2023 that he was "ready to fight since the day Elon challenged" him.
"If he ever agrees on an actual date, you'll hear it from me," Zuckerberg said in the post. "Until then, please assume anything he says has not been agreed on."
"If only Zuckerberg were as tough (sigh). I've offered to fight him any place, any time, any rules, but all I hear is crickets," Musk said in an X post on May 15.
Musk's post was in response to a satirical news story about a face-off between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.