Tesla CEO Elon Musk, whose takeover bid for Twitter was accepted Monday, has been regularly tweeting out ideas pertaining to “free speech” over the past few days.
These lofty tweets, interspersed between jokes and memes on his chaotic timeline, now carry significant weight: They’re likely signals of how the megabillionaire plans to try to reform the social media site should he close the deal.
And they are … not promising.
Musk is essentially now in the position of a philosopher king whose aphorisms and stated principles could have the power to single-handedly reshape one of the most influential public squares on the internet. The picture emerging from these tweets is that he hasn’t really thought through the complex dilemmas that he will have to tackle while overseeing the company. And he’s going about it in a way that’s likely to demoralize the very people who would help him enact any vision he has.
Here are a few thoughts on some of his most notable recent tweets.
By “free speech”, I simply mean that which matches the law.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 26, 2022
I am against censorship that goes far beyond the law.
If people want less free speech, they will ask government to pass laws to that effect.
Therefore, going beyond the law is contrary to the will of the people.
Tweet #1: Musk’s first stab at defining what he means by free speech raises many more questions than it answers, starting with the question of matching the law.
Twitter is a corporation that has users all over the world, many of whom reside in countries which have vastly different and, at times, diametrically opposed, rules on speech. Does Musk intend to comply with the different rules of authoritarian governments that sharply limit free speech, and the European Union’s newly passed policy requirements for social media platforms, including moderation and open algorithms? If so, how? Would complying with some authoritarian state rules not conflict with his earlier position of refusing to block Russian news sources through his Starlink satellite broadband service because he’s a “free speech absolutist”?
This is to say nothing of the obvious fallacy that laws on speech in a country reflect “the will of the people.” Twitter operates in non-democracies and semi-democracies where the public has little to no input on the law; and the most robust democracies in the world are currently struggling to play catch-up with new speech challenges posed by the internet. This is not the clarifying principle Musk seems to think it is.
Then there is the issue of Musk introducing a principle that could render Twitter entirely unusable. Twitter already “matches” U.S. law in that its content moderation is protected by the First Amendment. What Musk seems to be implying, based on his other comments that Twitter’s content moderation is overly suppressive, is that he envisions Twitter as a place where anything that isn’t currently illegal under U.S. law flies. But does Musk, a tech executive who seems to care a great deal about products that work well, appreciate what that might mean for the usability of Twitter?
As NBC News’ Ben Collins, a reporter who covers disinformation and extremism, has pointed out, social media platforms and online forums that have sought to be entirely unregulated have often been swamped by bot networks, spammers, extremist harassers, purveyors of child pornography (which is illegal, but bound to surface in spaces that are unregulated) and all kinds of vicious bigots who aim to intimidate users. “Moderation is different than free speech. Moderation is hard — it’s extremely hard,” Collins explained in a segment on Rachel Maddow’s show recently. “In fact it’s an art, not a science.” Using the example of Tik Tok taking down a video in which a kid trying to make slime accidentally made napalm, he explained how social media sites constantly have to make unexpected judgment calls on taking down material that isn’t necessarily illegal but does cross a red line for safety of users or to make a space functional. There’s a good chance Musk has his own red lines too.
Additionally, algorithms, which social media sites use to prioritize information on user feeds and maximize engagement to boost their bottom lines, have huge implications for what kinds of speech a platform considers worthy of public attention. Unless Musk wants to drop any algorithm and keep Twitter purely chronological, he should be prepared for critiques of what his algorithms mean for speech in the public sphere. Speech isn’t just about what you can say, but who gets to hear it.








