Elon Musk has taken to Twitter for the first time to address a poll he conducted on the platform that found users voted overwhelmingly in favor of him stepping down as Twitterโs chief executive.
The billionaire businessman had promised to โabide byโ the results of the poll, which closed at about 6:20 a.m. ET time on Dec. 19, with final results showing that 57.5 percent voted in favor of Musk departing the role.
Replying to one Twitter user who questioned whether the result of the poll may have been shaped by fake accounts or bots on the platform, Muskย responded:ย โInteresting.โ
Very interesting when you compared the number of votes versus the number of likes on the tweets.
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) December 19, 2022
Did bots brigade the Elon poll yesterday? @elonmusk https://t.co/kLnm540itw
In another tweet by a user who suggested that โBlue subscribers should be the only ones that can vote in policy-related polls,โ Musk replied: โGood point. Twitter will make that change.โ
Musk stopped short of directly speaking about the results of the poll and what his next actions will be. As the majority owner of the privately held company, Musk cannot be forced out of Twitter.
The businessman launched the Twitter poll asking whether he should โstep down as head of Twitterโ on Dec. 18, shortly after Twitter announced another new update to its policy; the latest since Musk took over in October.
Twitter Makes U-turn on New Policy
Under the new policy, Twitter said it wouldย no longer allow for โfree promotionโ of certain social media platforms on the site via URL links. The third-party social media platforms includedย Facebook, Instagram, Mastodon, Truth Social, Tribel, Nostr, and Post.
However, Musk later relaxed the new policy amid public outcry.
During a discussion with Box CEO Aaron Levie and news and content organization The Quartering, who had denounced the new policy, Musk said it was โreasonableโ that some Twitter users might want to link to their Instagram profiles to promote their own businesses and as such, the policy would be adjusted to suspending accounts only when that accountโs primary purpose is to promote social media competitors of Twitter instead.