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What now after Elon Musk, ‘chief twit’, takes over Twitter?

After publicly deriding Twitter for months, Elon Musk might need to throw everything but his infamous kitchen sink at the social media platform to justify paying 10 times its worth to acquire it.

The world collectively groaned on Wednesday when Mr Musk posted a video of himself carrying a sink into Twitter HQ. The caption to the video read: “Entering Twitter HQ – let that sink in!”.

Mr Musk also changed his Twitter profile to refer to himself as “Chief Twit”.

The moves were very on-brand for the outspoken billionaire.

Earlier this month he said: “Myself and the other investors are obviously overpaying for Twitter right now. The long-term potential for Twitter in my view is an order of magnitude greater than its current value.”

It seems to be Mr Musk who has been doing all the overpaying, spending $US44 billion ($A68 billion) to acquire Twitter Inc.

Mr Musk has been cagey about his plans for the social media platform, and what he has shared appears far-fetched or contradictory.

Here’s everything we know about the Chief Twit’s plans for Twitter.

X Super App

Mr Musk’s biggest bet borrows from China’s greatest hits of the 2010s. “Buying Twitter is an accelerant to creating X, the everything app,” Mr Musk tweeted earlier this month.

The idea of an everything app, also referred to as a super app, originated in Asia with companies like WeChat, which lets users not only send messages but also make payments, shop online or hail a taxi. The all-in-one service appealed to users who had fewer choices in a region where Google, Facebook and others were blocked.

Mr Musk has told investors he plans to build one that will sell premium subscriptions to reduce reliance on ads, allow content creators to make money and enable payments, according to a source briefed on the matter.

There are no super-apps in the United States because the barrier is high and there are app choices aplenty, said Scott Galloway, co-host of tech podcast Pivot and a professor of marketing at New York University.

Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc’s Google, which control the app stores on iPhones and Android phones, see themselves as super apps and would be unlikely to allow other super apps to develop, Galloway said. Consider Apple’s recent rejection of Spotify’s plan to sell audiobooks as one example of barriers to entry.

“It’s not possible at this point in the evolution of the mobile internet,” said Jason Goldman, a former board member at Twitter.

Cutting content moderation

Current and former employees who spoke with Reuters said Mr Musk’s plans to lower the guard rails that are common across all social media platforms would lead to a deluge of hateful, harmful and potentially illegal content on Twitter. Already, it has struggled with identifying and removing child porn.

Members of Twitter’s trust and safety team, which includes content moderators, are expected to be among Mr Musk’s deepest job cuts, employees fear.

“Imagine a world where all those people are gone,” one employee said. “It’s going to be a hellscape.”

Prevent advertisers from fleeing

In 2019, Mr Musk tweeted: “I hate advertising.”

On the eve of the deal’s expected closing, he appealed directly to advertisers in an open-letter tweet: “Twitter obviously cannot become a free-for-all hellscape, where anything can be said with no consequences! Twitter aspires to be the most respected advertising platform in the world that strengthens your brand and grows your enterprise.”

Advertisers are not buying it.

They point to Mr Musk’s plan to reinstate the account of former US president Donald Trump as a major impediment to spending money on Twitter. It permanently suspended Mr Trump for risk of further incitement of violence after the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

Welcoming back Mr Trump could alienate moderate and liberal-leaning users, and as a result push away major household brands who aim to market products and appeal to people across the political spectrum, said Mark DiMassimo, founder of ad agency DiMassimo Goldstein.

Twitter suspended the account of former US president Donald Trump. Photo: AAP

Obeying the laws

Mr Musk has promised to preserve free speech of all kinds, but has also struck a more conciliatory tone with global leaders who aim to rein in Big Tech.

In May, Mr Musk said in a Twitter video that he agreed with the European Union’s new digital media regulation, which will force Big Tech to do more to tackle illegal content or risk fines of up to 6 per cent of global revenue, in one of the world’s most severe approaches to regulating content online.

Regulators across Asia are also toughening laws against social media platforms and ordering the removal of content they deem illegal, which includes speech by political dissidents.

In India, Twitter has waged a “sophisticated battle” with the government to protect free speech online, and this battle would be at risk with Mr Musk in charge, Mr Goldman said.

Tesla’s expanding business in China, where it generated $US14 billion ($A22 billion) last year, could also put Twitter at risk, Mr Goldman, the former Twitter board member, said.

“The idea that he’s going to be the one liaising with the Chinese government and potentially turning over information on users, that’s very scary,” Mr Goldman said.

Twitter is staffed with experts who review data requests from governments, but Mr Musk has shown his contempt of these experts, he said.

“Whether or not Mr Trump is going to come back on, I think that’s a parlour game,” Mr Goldman said.

“But what’s actually going to happen is a dissident’s IP address will be dropped on the floor.”

– with agencies

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