Elon Musk Admits His Posts Probably Bad For Site He Spent $44B On

In a recently released deposition for an October 2023 defamation lawsuit, businessman and eternally online divorcĆ©e Elon Musk spoke about the impact his posts on X (formerly Twitter) have had on the business side of the social media site, which he purchased for $44 billion in October 2022. The deposition, which was recently made public and published in full by HuffPost is full of exactly what youā€™d expect from a man who wore a Dead Space t-shirt to livestream the Mexican border, who brought a gun to to a Cyberpunk 2077 recording session, and who was booed at a Valorant tournament last year.

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The defamation lawsuit took place last fall, after Musk falsely identified a man named Ben Brody as a protestor at a neo-Nazi rally on X/Twitter. As HuffPost reports, the lawsuit alleges that Musk used his massive reach (he has nearly 180M followers on the site) to ā€œamplify a false far-right conspiracy theory linking 22-year-old Ben Brody to a brawl in Oregon between the neo-Nazi group Rose City Nationalists and the Proud Boys, a neo-fascist fight club.ā€ Brody was not even in the same state in which the June 24, 2023 brawl occurred.

According to HuffPost, Musk was present at a two-hour-long deposition on March 27, shortly after which his lawyer, Alex Spiro, allegedly ā€œfiled multiple emergency motions in an attempt to keep the deposition sealed.ā€ I can understand why. During the deposition (which you can read in full here), Musk admitted he had a ā€œlimited understandingā€ of the lawsuit he was being deposed for, and appeared to be confused over who was actually suing himā€”among other things.

At one point in the deposition transcript, Brodyā€™s attorney (Mark Banskton) referenced the September 2023 biography of Elon Musk written by Walter Isaacson, in which Musk is quoted as jokingly saying, ā€œIā€™ve shot myself in the foot so often, I ought to buy some Kevlar boots.ā€ Bankston then asked Musk if, ā€œas of last summer, that you knew that you had some difficulties restraining your impulses on Twitter?ā€ Musk replied with ā€œI wouldnā€™t say thatā€ before saying he believed that the ā€œbedrock of democracy is freedom of speech.ā€

After much back-and-forth, Bankston eventually asked Musk whether his purchasing of X affected the way he posts on the site, to which Musk replied that what he shares has ā€œreally remained unchanged before and after the acquisition.ā€ He continued:

And going back to the sort of self-inflicted wounds, the Kevlar shoes, I think thereā€™sā€”Iā€™ve probably doneā€”I may have done more to financially impair the company than to help it, but certainly Iā€”I do not guide my posts by what is financially beneficial but by what I believe is interesting or important or entertaining to the public.

Musk also admitted to running an alternative account (@ermnmusk) on which he has pretended to be his own son, who is a toddler. The account was the focus of an April 2023 Motherboard article titled ā€œIs This Elon Muskā€™s Burner Twitter Account?ā€ Several of the posts, which have since been removed from X/Twitter, appeared to have been written from the perspective of Muskā€™s child with musician Grimes. One read, ā€œI wish I was old enough to go to nightclubs. They sound so fun.ā€ The account, which still exists and has the username ā€œElon Test,ā€ still regularly shares posts on the site, but does not appear to be from the perspective of a toddler anymore (though the profile picture depicts a young child).

In the deposition, Musk also stated that he didnā€™t believe Brody was ā€œmeaningfully harmedā€ by his false accusation.

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