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Twitter owner Musk signals new ‘war’ against Apple

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Twitter owner Elon Musk on Monday opened fire against Apple over its tight control of what is allowed on the App Store, saying the iPhone maker has threatened to oust his recently acquired social media platform.

Musk also joined the chorus crying foul over a 30 per cent fee Apple collects on transactions via its App Store – the sole gateway for applications to get onto its billion plus mobile devices.

A series of tweets fired off by Musk included a meme of a car with his first name on it veering onto a highway off-ramp labelled “Go to War,” instead of continuing onwards towards “Pay 30 per cent.”

The billionaire CEO also tweeted that Apple has “threatened to withhold Twitter from its App Store, but won’t tell us why.”

Apple did not immediately reply to an AFP request for comment.

Both Apple and Google require social networking services on their app stores to have effective systems for moderating harmful or abusive content.

A prompt is seen to remove the Twitter app from an Apple iPhone 13 Pro in Washington, DC. PHOTO: AFP

But since taking over Twitter last month, Musk has cut around half of Twitter’s workforce, including many employees tasked with fighting disinformation, while an unknown number of others have voluntarily quit.

He has also reinstated previously banned accounts, including that of former president Donald Trump.

Former head of trust and safety at Twitter Yoel Roth who left after Musk took over, wrote in a New York Times op-ed that “failure to adhere to Apple’s and Google’s guidelines would be catastrophic”, and risk “expulsion from their app stores”.

Describing himself as a “free speech absolutist,” Musk believes that all content permitted by law should be allowed on Twitter, and on Monday described his actions as a “revolution against online censorship in America”.

He also tweeted that he planned to publish “Twitter Files on free speech suppression”, but without clarifying what data he had in mind to share with the public.

Though Musk says Twitter is seeing record high engagement with him at the helm, his approach has startled the company’s major moneymaker – advertisers.

In recent weeks, half of Twitter’s top 100 advertisers have announced they are suspending or have otherwise “seemingly stopped advertising on Twitter”, an analysis conducted by non-profit watchdog group Media Matters found. Musk on Monday accused Apple of also having “mostly stopped advertising on Twitter”.

“Do they hate free speech in America?” he asked, before replying with a tweet tagging Apple CEO Tim Cook.

In the first three months of 2022, Apple was the top advertiser on Twitter, spending some USD48 million on ads which accounted for more than four per cent of the social media platform’s revenue, according to a Washington Post report citing an internal Twitter document.

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