Elon Musk is now leading Twitter, according to CNBC.
Two top Twitter executives, CEO Parag Agrawal and chief financial officer Ned Segal, were also out, CNBC reported.
The tech titan first made his $44 billion offer to acquire the social media platform in April, then sought to pull out of the deal weeks later over concerns about its volume of fake and spam accounts. Twitter ultimately sued Musk for breaching the original agreement, while Musk countersued, alleging fraud.
The two sides were scheduled to meet in a Delaware courtroom earlier this month to settle the dispute before Musk resubmitted his original, $44 billion offer, without explanation. Musk could not be reached for comment. In a statement, Twitter said it planned to close the deal with Musk at the original agreed-upon price.
What happens after Musk gets the keys
The deal promises to reshape a major forum for speech online just before the Nov. 8 midterm election. Musk, from the start of his takeover bid, sketched out a vision for Twitter that includes looser rules for what people can say.
“We want to have the perception and the reality that speech is as free as possible,” he told a conference in April.
The following month, Musk said he would reverse Donald Trump’s permanent ban from the platform. The former president had earlier stated he would not return to the platform and would instead remain on his Truth Social network.
Beyond those statements, Musk has not provided much detail on how he might rewrite Twitter’s rulebook, which prohibits posts that threaten violence, engage in targeted harassment or use hateful images or symbols. Looser rules could scare away some users and advertisers.
In a post on Twitter on Thursday, Musk vowed to prevent the platform from becoming a “free-for-all hellscape,” and “adhere to the laws of the land,” while striving to make it “warm and welcoming to all.”
Users, he said, should be able to choose “your desired experience according to your preferences, just as you can choose, for example, to see movies or play video games ranging from all ages to mature.”
Musk said he personally reached out to one high-profile celebrity, Ye, formerly Kanye West, this month to express concern about his comments attacking Jewish people.
But Musk has also said he wants to see more tweets from celebrities and other people with large followings on Twitter, some of whom have scaled back their use or switched to rival platforms such as Instagram or TikTok. Reuters reported Tuesday that Twitter continues to lose its most active users.
Twitter shares rallied ahead of the deal announcement, reaching their highest level of the year Wednesday at nearly $53, or a nearly $41 billion market cap. Twitter shareholders overwhelmingly voted in September to approve the deal with Musk.
Even as the agreement becomes official, it is raising concerns among Twitter employees about the future of the company. After a Washington Post report that Musk plans to lay off as much as 75% of Twitter’s staff, a group of workers at the social media platform signed a letter saying the layoffs would “hurt Twitter’s ability to serve the public conversation.”
“A threat of this magnitude is reckless, undermines our users’ and customers’ trust in our platform, and is a transparent act of worker intimidation,” they said. The company’s general counsel sought to reassure employees by calling the alleged plan for layoffs “rumors.”
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com