Elon Musk let Twitter users decide the company’s policies. He asked his fans if he should grant a “general amnesty” for accounts suspended by the company. The overwhelming majority supported the new initiative of the billionaire.
Elon Musk is again asking the Twitter community what to do with the platform. This time, the billionaire wanted to know if the company should be amnesty for accounts blocked before the takeover.
Elon Musk - Vox Populi, Vox Dei
In a poll released earlier this week, Musk asked his fans for their opinion on a rather important issue. Should Twitter offer a general amnesty for suspended accounts, as long as the users concerned didn’t break the law or engage in spam campaigns, the world’s richest man asked.
Nearly 3.2 million internet users answered the new owner’s question. 72.4 percent confirmed their readiness to introduce an amnesty. Opponents of the initiative amounted to 27.6 percent. all.
“The people have spoken. The amnesty will begin next week. Vox Populi, Vox Dei [łac. głos ludu (to) głos Boga]- Elon Musk announced after the end of the collection of votes.
Banned accounts will return to Twitter
As Tech Crunch journalists recall, before Elon Musk took over Twitter, the platform often resorted to suspending accounts for their posts. This was, among other things, o messages inciting violence or spreading misinformation that could harm others.
The list of high-profile Twitter account bans is long. In the U.S., the banning of MyPillow head Mike Lindell, who has repeatedly claimed that former President Donald Trump won the 2020 election, was widely reported.
Steve Bannon, a Trump adviser and former Breitbart chairman, said goodbye to his Twitter account, writing that the president’s top medical adviser Anthony Fauci and FBI chief Christopher Wray “should be beheaded.”
Source: Wprost

