One year ago, billionaire and new owner Elon Musk walked into Twitter’s San Francisco headquarters with a white bathroom sink and a grin, fired its CEO and other top executives and began transforming the social media platform into what is now known as X.
X looks and feels something like Twitter, but the more time
you spend on it the clearer it becomes that it’s merely an approximation. Musk
has dismantled core features of what made Twitter, Twitter — its name and blue
bird logo, its verification system, its Trust and Safety advisory group. Not to
mention content moderation and hate speech enforcement.
He also fired, laid off or lost the majority of its
workforce — engineers who keep the site running, moderators who keep it from
being overrun with hate, executives in charge of making rules and enforcing
them.
The result, long-term Twitter watchers say, has been the end
of the platform’s role as an imperfect but useful place to find out what’s
going on in the world. What X will become, and whether Musk can achieve his
ambition of turning it into an “everything app” that everyone uses, remains as
unclear as it was a year ago.
“Musk hasn’t managed to make a single meaningful improvement
to the platform and is no closer to his vision of an ‘everything app,’ than he
was a year ago,” said Insider Intelligence analyst Jasmine Enberg. “Instead, X
has driven away users, advertisers, and now it has lost its primary value
proposition in the social media world: Being a central hub for news.”
As one of the platform’s most popular and prolific users
even before he bought the company, Musk had a unique experience on Twitter that
is markedly different from how regular users experience it. But many of the
changes he’s introduced to X has been based on his own impressions of the site
— in fact, he even polled his millions of followers for advice on how to run it
(they said he should step down).
“Musk’s treatment of the platform as a technology company
that he could remake in his vision rather than a social network fueled by
people and ad dollars has been the single largest cause of the demise of
Twitter,” Enberg said.
The blue checkmarks that once signified that the person or
institution behind an account was who they said they are — a celebrity,
athlete, journalist from global or local publication, a nonprofit agency — now
merely shows that someone pays $8 a month for a subscription service that
boosts their posts above un-checked users. It’s these paying accounts that have
been found to spread misinformation on the platform that is often amplified by
its algorithms.
On Thursday, for instance, a new report from the
left-leaning nonprofit Media Matters found that numerous blue-checked X
accounts with tens of thousands of followers claimed that the mass shooting in
Maine was a “false flag,” planned by the government. Researchers also found
such accounts spreading misinformation and propaganda about the Israel-Hamas
war — so much so that the European Commission made a formal, legally binding
request for information to X over its handling of hate speech, misinformation and
violent terrorist content related to the war.
Ian Bremmer, a prominent foreign policy expert, posted on X
this month that the level of disinformation on the Israel-Hamas war “being
algorithmically promoted” on the platform “is unlike anything I’ve ever been
exposed to in my career as a political scientist.”
It’s not just the platform’s identity that’s on shaky
grounds. Twitter was already struggling financially when Musk purchased it for
$44 billion in a deal that closed Oct. 27, 2022, and the situation appears more
precarious today. Musk took the company private, so its books are no longer
public — but in July, the Tesla CEO said the company had lost about half of its
advertising revenue and continues to face a large debt load.
“We’re still negative cash flow,” he posted on the site on
July 14, due to about a “50% drop in advertising revenue plus heavy debt load.”
“Need to reach positive cash flow before we have the luxury
of anything else,” he said.
In May, Musk hired Linda Yaccarino, a former NBC executive
with deep ties to the advertising industry in an attempt to lure back top
brands, but the effort has been slow to pay off. While some advertisers have
returned to X, they are not spending as much as they did in the past — despite
a rebound in the online advertising market that boosted the most recent
quarterly profits for Facebook parent company, Meta, and Google parent company,
Alphabet.
Insider Intelligence estimates that X will bring in $1.89
billion in advertising revenue this year, down 54% from 2022. The last time its
ad revenue was near this level was in 2015, when it came in at $1.99 billion.
In 2022, it was $4.12 billion according to the research firm’s estimates.
Outside research also shows that people are using X less.
According to research firm Similarweb, global web traffic to
Twitter.com was down 14%, year-over-year, and traffic to the ads.twitter.com
portal for advertisers was down 16.5%. Performance on mobile was no better,
down 17.8% year-over-year based on combined monthly active users for Apple’s
iOS and Android.
“Even though the cultural relevance of Twitter was already
starting to decline,” before Musk took it over, “it’s as if the platform no
longer exists. And it’s been a death by a thousand cuts,” Enberg said.
“What’s really fascinating is that almost all of the wounds
have been self-inflicted. Usually when a social platform, starts to lose its
relevance there are at least some external factors at play, but that’s not the
case here.” -AP