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by jqpabc123 1064 days ago
Twitter is very different from Musk's other businesses. Technology is involved ... but only as an enabler, not as the primary objective.

In order to become profitable, the primary objective of Twitter should be to create a medium that is attractive to advertisers.

This is not inherently a technical problem. You can't solve this by firing a bunch of people and threatening the rest. Inviting extremists and goof balls to the stage for some politically oriented "free speech" won't do it either.

For the first time in his business career, "success" is not about doing what Musk wants and stroking his ego. And he is not handling it well.

Bottom line: Advertising is not the ideal business for a "free speech absolutist". Watching Musk with all his wealth slowly and painfully come to this simple realization is actually kinda entertaining ... or maybe I'm just as disturbed and egotistical as he is.

3 comments

A free speech absolutist wouldn't ban his opponents, journalists.

A free speech absolutist would not ban links to Mastodon, Instagram, Substack, Linktree, and most recently hide Threads from search and trends.

A free speech absolutist would not say things like "saying cis is a bannable offense."

So can we please stop giving credibility to this claim, because it's complete BS. Musk's idea of "free speech" is that "you can say anything you want, as long as I like it."

Yes. I put "free speech" in quotes in an effort to signify Musk's adulterated definition of it.
> Twitter should be to create a medium that is attractive to advertisers.

The problem for Musk is that a Twitter that is attractive to advertisers isn’t attractive to Musk.

Let that sink in, because advertisers are turned into public sentiment moreso than most, because their dollars are on the line. And where is public sentiment? Pro LGBTQ, pro abortion, pro BLM, anti MAGA, anti white supremacy, pro democracy. Essentially the antithesis of Musk. Musk is very un-American.

This is why Twitter must fail as a business for as long as Musk owns it. He wants it to be his personal playpen, but his ideal world is a white ethnostate where he is the boss.

And that’s why Twitter ads are now crypto scams and waifus pushing anime porn games. Because Musk’s Twitter audience is now Nazis, white supremacists, MAGAs, and Kremlin apologists.

The problem for Musk is that a Twitter that is attractive to advertisers isn’t attractive to Musk.

Exactly!

Buying Twitter wasn't about making a sound business decision --- it was mainly about Musk's ego. His ego built the trap that he now finds himself locked in.

It was capricious. He offered to buy Twitter on a lark. If you believe some accounts, because an ex girlfriend complained that the Babylon Bee was being excluded for some other reason than being religious bigots.

Then someone at Twitter had the presence of mind to hire lawyers that could write an airtight contract.

Then, fully expecting to prevail, Elon threw a public tantrum for months, with the goal of being told to go away. Instead he got taken to court to force him to follow through.

THEN, with insufficient planning due to a court date approaching, he decided to write the check, and he dragged along the banks that earlier thought they were on a cool adventure with Elon, not a spiteful tantrum episode. Maybe he thought he could "flip" Twitter and either make money or at least lose less than a settlement would have cost.

He was totally unprepared and got his ass handed to him.

Now it is just amusing to watch.

It's about as amusing as watching an occupied building on fire. You can't isolate your shadenfreude over Musk's comeuppance from the real world damage that he is doing.
> the primary objective of Twitter should be to create a medium that is attractive to advertisers.

which is what is really missing in every HN discussion of how you could rebuild twitter in a weekend.

that's only if all you see is the front end which is users talking to each other.

the backend problem of making advertisers happy is a whole different issue, which is a large data warehousing / analytics / reporting / billing problem.

and then there's content moderation, which is both demanded by a large subsection of users and advertisers and by political regimes that you operate under that you can't opt-out of.

and the content moderation task is made harder by the technological war with the 'bots' which requires backend tooling.