Last month, Twitter owner Elon Musk and CEO Linda Yaccarino rebranded the social media platform as X. While it is unclear what they ultimately envision for this “everything app,” Yaccarino has made it clear that the platform's changes under Musk — which have caused chaos and allowed misinformation, extremism, and other harmful content to thrive — have been supposedly purposeful, even as they led to cratering revenue and fleeing advertisers.
Musk, who bought Twitter with a company called X Corp. as “an accelerant to creating X, the everything app,” has now changed the platform’s logo from a blue bird to a black and white “X,” claimed tweets should instead be called “x’s,” and redirected X.com to Twitter’s domain. Yaccarino confirmed the rebranding, posting on July 23 that “we’ve already started to see X take shape over the past 8 months through our rapid feature launches, but we’re just getting started.”
To further attract advertisers, the rebranded company has reportedly reduced pricing of new bookings through the end of the month — while simultaneously threatening ad buyers with losing verification “if they haven’t spent at least $1,000 on ads in the previous 30 days or $6,000 on ads in the previous 180 days.”
But advertisers shouldn’t be fooled by these desperate tactics: Musk’s chaotic leadership and continued behavior on the platform, as well as the failed rebranding attempts of other tech companies, suggest Twitter’s rebranding is destined to fail.
Even after the rebranding as X, Media Matters identified ads for brands including Honeywell, Discovery, National Women’s Soccer League, the Pittsburgh Steelers, USA Today, and Manchester City on the verified account of the National Socialist Network, a leading neo-Nazi group that engages in violence and has connections to terrorism.
Two weeks after Musk rebranded the platform, we also found advertisements next to previously suspended far-right accounts and conspiracy theorists that Musk had reinstated, despite their propensity for posting misinformation and extremism. In just over 10 minutes, we found an ad for Comcast next to election denier Roger Stone and QAnon influencer “intheMatrixxx”; an ad from Disney next to QAnon-promoting figure “CannCon”; a Samsung ad next to anti-Muslim extremist Laura Loomer; an ad from Apple next to a tweet from right-wing blogger David Vance that amplified Tucker Carlson’s interview with misogynist Tristan Tate; and ads for Mondelez International’s Ritz Crackers and Chips Ahoy next to right-wing psychologist and budding climate denier Jordan Peterson.