Elon Musk owning Twitter is a terrible idea - and he probably knows it

Elon Musk offers $41.3B for Twitter

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Why does Elon Musk want to buy Twitter?

It’s the question everyone is asking Thursday morning after the billionaire entrepreneur, Tesla CEO, and serial pot-stirrer madea $41.3 billion take it or leave it offerto the Twitter board.

“If it is not accepted, I would need to reconsider my position as a shareholder,” Musk said, according to the Wall Street Journal. That’s tantamount to, Let me play as captain or I take my ball and go home.

In typical cheeky fashion, Musk tweeted about the potential deal with echos of The Godfather:“I made an offer”

But why is he doing this?

To understand, we need to rewind a bit. A few weeks ago, Musk started complaining about Twitter as not being a bastion of free speech and ran a poll.

Free speech is essential to a functioning democracy.Do you believe Twitter rigorously adheres to this principle?March 25, 2022

Musk was airing a common frustration among some Twitter users who complain they’re shadow-banned for speaking their minds on the platform. While 70% of his respondents said, “No,” I saw the poll asa flawed exercise in self-selection. Musk’s 84 million Twitter followers are often devotees to his particular brand of libertarian maverickism.

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Twitter, which is not a government body but in fact a private company, has no compunction to follow the rules of free or balanced speech. Instead, as a private company, it has to protect its users from harm to both themselves and others. It has, as a private company, the right to remove people and their posts as they see fit (if they go outside the platform’s published terms of use).

This is somewhat beside the point because I think Musk knows this but just lives to stir the pot and get people thinking - or maybe thinking like him.

He later pressed the point and insisted that Twitter’s role as a public town square meant it had to adhere to free speech principles, lest it undermines democracy.

Again, Twitter is not just a US platform. It operates around the world, even in places that do not support democracy. Musk knows this, but he has pressed on.

Eventually,Musk bought 9.4% of Twitter’s shares, joined the board, and thenunjoined itbefore he could, but basically won the right to have outsized influence and hinted he might go further.

Now we know his true intentions. Musk seeks to own and control Twitter outright.

But for what purpose?

What’s next?

What’s next?

If Twitter’s board accepts this Faustian bargain, it will see a significant portion of Twitter’s workforce leave. Musk must know this, as well. Does he hope to replace a depleted knowledge workforce with like-minded Muskians?

Let’s say he gets his way and takes ownership. How quickly will Musk acknowledge that Twitter is not in fact just a US-based town square and that using the Constitution as a template for a TOS cannot work for a private, globalized company?

Elon Musk runs Telsa around the world. He sells electric cars to people around the world. A huge chunk of his Twitter followers probably live outside the United States and may dream of living in a democracy where private companies are not beholden to state interests as they are in China.

What is Musk’s game here?

I know what he’s said in public, but Elon Musk is no dummy and he must know how this plays out. It does not end well for Twitter, but perhaps that’s the point. This is just another feint in the game where Musk treats his billions like Monopoly money, sliding orange $500 notes from out under the board, throwing them on the table, and demanding Park Place when he really wants Boardwalk. Or maybe he does want them both… then what?

By the time you read this, Twitter may have already rejected Musks' offer, and Musk, as he is wont to do, may have sold off his shares and walked away.

Will he also walk away from Twitter? Probably, but expect him back in six months.

A 38-year industry veteran andaward-winning journalist, Lance has covered technology since PCs were the size of suitcases and “on line” meant “waiting.” He’s a former Lifewire Editor-in-Chief, Mashable Editor-in-Chief, and, before that, Editor in Chief of PCMag.com and Senior Vice President of Content for Ziff Davis, Inc. He also wrote a popular, weekly tech column for Medium called The Upgrade.

Lance Ulanoffmakes frequent appearances on national, international, and local news programs including Live with Kelly and Mark, theToday Show, Good Morning America, CNBC, CNN, and the BBC.

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