Elon Musk’s Twitter utopia can never be realised – The New Statesman

Posted: May 1, 2022 at 11:33 am

Its confirmed:Elon Musk is buying Twitter. The richest man in the world has struck a deal with the platform worth $44bn. This is bad news on multiple levels. Its bad for the distribution of power in the world, its bad for the power of Big Tech and its bad for free speech. (While Musk says that he wants to securefree speech, that sometimes comesat the cost of people less powerful than him.)

But what does all of this actually mean for Twitter as a platform?

Many of those outraged by Musks acquisition are specifically concerned about how he might change the way that Twitter functions. Will he introduce an edit button? Dangerously lax moderation? Or worst of all, reinstate the account of Donald Trump? They fear Twitter will get much worse, even unusable; that theyll open their apps next week to find a completely different platform, full of violent imagery, abuse and an endless stream of unchecked pro-Trump content. While all of this is technically possible and if the last decade has taught us anything, its to not discount the most far-fetched outcome it seems far more plausible that the changes we will see under Musk will be much less dramatic.

From what we know so far, it seems Musk has bought Twitter on a gut feeling rather than with a clear vision to overhaul the platform in mind. So far the changes hes mentioned are relatively light, and are far from original, such as getting rid of full bans andintroducing temporary timeoutsor turningTwitters San Francisco headquarters into a homeless shelter(it seems unlikely the latter will actually come to pass). Many of the changes people fear Musk might introduce were already on Twitters agenda for this year and next: the edit button has, apparently,been in the works for several months;andthe company was already intending to address letting Trump back on to the platform, especially given his apparent plans to run as a candidate in the 2024 US presidential election. And when it comes to moderation, it may prove to be more of a headache than a liberation to reduce it significantly,with content such as child abuse proliferating even under current levels of moderation.

It also seems likely that Musk hasnt consideredthe boring logistics of running Twitter, a platform that has struggled to keep up with its contemporaries and which is about to come up against new rules in the UK and EU that may make it more demanding to run. Moderation changesalso risk losing advertisersand breaking laws, which again may impede Musks mission.

[See also: If only freedom of speech was as simple as Elon Musk thinks]

But the outcry over Musks ownership reveals a more fundamental issue: the ideal of what Twitter should be can never exist. Theres a contingent of Twitter users who believe the platform should be purely a fun, harmonious space where the content you believe is bad doesnt exist. At the other end of the spectrum are those who believe that even most hideous things should be allowed to be shared ad nauseam, with no repercussions. Its impossible to create a social media utopia where everyone is happy because it will always be at odds with someone elses vision. Its easy to act as though Musk is the problem, but he merely represents a divide that runs much deeper.

Of course, even in a matter of a few weeks, I could be proved wrong about all of this. Twitter could become an unmoderated cesspit of scams, hate speech and violent imagery that makes it effectively unusable, and Musk could simply shrug off fines and legal issues with his endless cash. However, it feels likely that the reality will be much more dull: a Twitter thats ever so slightly worse, but not bad enough to force the majority of users to leave.

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Elon Musk's Twitter utopia can never be realised - The New Statesman

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