Tech entrepreneur Elon Musk on Aug. 10 referred to his own website as a potential rival to Twitter if his $44 billion deal to purchase the social media platform ultimately doesn’t go through.
The reference came in response to a question from one of his followers.
“Have you thought about creating your own social platform? If [the] Twitter deal doesn’t come through,” asked a Twitter user.
Musk, the world’s richest person, didn’t disclose specifics.
X.com
X.com, one of the few single-letter website addresses, was named after an online financial service startup co-founded by Musk in 1999. The company was merged with its competitor Confinity Inc., which was eventually rebranded as PayPal before it was bought by eBay in 2002.He added that Twitter would “help accelerate” the “pretty grand vision” that he’d been thinking about by “three to five years.”
Twitter Legal Battle
The indication that his X.com could be a potential Twitter competitor came amid Musk’s legal battle with Twitter.In a separate post on Aug. 10, the chief executive of the electric vehicle maker said the latest selloffs were done in the “hopefully unlikely” event that he was eventually forced to buy the social media firm.
“In the (hopefully unlikely) event that Twitter forces this deal to close *and* some equity partners don’t come through, it is important to avoid an emergency sale of Tesla stock,” Musk said on Twitter.
Musk filed to withdraw from his multibillion-dollar acquisition agreement with Twitter in July after claiming that the San Francisco-based company had failed to provide the information needed to establish how many automated bots and fake accounts are on the platform.
Lawyers for the Tesla CEO claimed that for nearly two months he had sought data and information necessary to “make an independent assessment of the prevalence of fake or spam accounts on Twitter’s platform” which was “fundamental to Twitter’s business and financial performance” but that Twitter had failed to provide such information.
Twitter sued Musk shortly after to force him to follow through with the deal and hold him “accountable to his contractual obligations,” according to Taylor.
Musk then countersued Twitter on July 29, although a public version of that lawsuit is not yet available.
A five-day trial has been set for Oct. 17, 2022, in the Delaware Chancery Court.