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Elon Musk quips at critics who predicted Twitter won’t survive

Soon after Elon Musk, took over the microblogging site he had been making headlines for his ideologies to modify it.

Elon Musk quips at critics who predicted Twitter won’t survive

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Twitter CEO, Elon Musk, on Tuesday, took a dig at the trolls who predicted the end of Twitter, soon after his controversial takeover.

Taking to the micro-blogging site, Elon wrote, “Wasn’t Twitter supposed to die by now or something … ?.”

 

Meanwhile, it’s quite real that soon after Elon Musk, took over the microblogging site he had been making headlines for his ideologies about wanting to modify the microblogging platform.

Musk recently faced a lot of critic on social media for mass layoffs and over his decision to charge USD 8 from Twitter users to get verified accounts.

Earlier, Musk firmly believing on his decision tweeted, “Trash me all day, but it’ll cost $8.”

Defending his decision to fire employees, Musk said that it was needed as Twitter was losing more than USD 4 million per day.

“Regarding Twitter’s reduction in force, unfortunately, there is no choice when the company is losing over USD 4M/day. Everyone exited was offered 3 months of severance, which is 50% more than legally required,” Musk had tweeted.

It was in April, Twitter accepted Musk’s proposal to buy and make the social media service private. However, Musk soon began sowing doubt about his intentions to follow through with the agreement, quoting that the company failed to adequately disclose the number of spam and fake accounts on the service.

In July, in a surprising turn of events, Musk who had long been showing his interest to buy Twitter terminated the deal. The Tesla CEO did so by accusing Twitter of violating their mutual purchase agreement by misrepresenting the number of spam and fake bot accounts on its platform.

After Musk put out the deal termination announcement, the market witnessed a sharp decline. Later, Twitter sued Musk accusing him of using bots as a pretext to exit a deal. Again, last week, Musk confirmed that he would move forward with the Twitter buyout at the originally agreed price of USD 54.20 per share.

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