The first step for American billionaire Elon Musk after acquiring Twitter on Thursday, October 28, was the dismissal of CEO Parag Agrawal.

As reported in the news, chief financial officer Ned Segal and corporate policy chief Vijaya Jade, whom Musk publicly criticized, have been asked to leave, consultant Sean Edgett has left the company, and chief customer officer Sarah Personnet has been fired.

But why would Musk start his Twitter era with dismissals?

What is the background of the contradictions between him and the blue bird?

Elon Musk and Twitter.. love and disagreement

The beginning was after Twitter deleted some of Elon Musk's tweets, claiming that they contradicted the platform's publishing policy, which did not like the billionaire, who has a large fan base of up to 8 million followers.

Musk bought enough Twitter shares after this incident to suddenly become the largest single shareholder in the platform, and the company announced that Musk would take a seat on its board of directors, but within a week that plan collapsed, and Musk told the board that he would not accept the position.

Elon Musk tried to cancel the deal, citing fake accounts, or what are known as bots (French)

Elon's next move came in the form of an unsolicited offer to buy 100% of Twitter's shares for $54.20 each, or about $44 billion.

Of course, the deal did not go smoothly, as Elon Musk tried to cancel the deal, citing fake accounts, or what are known as bots.

Twitter sued Musk, trying to force him to terminate the deal, and it appeared that the battle was headed for trial, and what followed were months of legal wrangling over evidence, fraud accusations and even some of the statements.

Finally, Musk decided to buy Twitter again, as a judge gave a deadline of October 28 to close the deal, and with the time approaching the evening of the 27th of the same month, the deal was completed.

Musk believes that Twitter can have a billion users in just a few years (Reuters)

What will the mask of the blue bird do?

In the first weeks after agreeing to buy the company last April and before he moved to salvage the deal, Musk repeatedly stressed that his goal was to advance freedom of expression on the platform, work to unlock Twitter's extraordinary potential, and indicated that he would rethink Twitter's approach to Etidal. Content and a permanent ban on the platform, with potential impacts on civil discourse and the political landscape.

In private and public statements over the past six months, Musk has mentioned a wide range of other potential changes to the platform, such as enabling end-to-end encryption and Twitter's direct messaging feature.

There were more outlandish suggestions, too. In one text message with his brother Kimbal Musk, which was revealed in court documents, the two appeared to discuss the possibility of requiring users to pay for each tweet they post with small amounts of DogeCoin.

Perhaps the most noticeable immediate effect is Musk's reference to former President Donald Trump's recalculation on the podium, which could be a huge advantage if Trump decides to run again for the White House in 2024.

Ultimately, as for the future of Twitter, says Elon Musk - who already leads Tesla, SpaceX, The Boring Company and Neuralink and is one of the most Twitter users are visible, he has a large audience of loyal followers who spontaneously shares the company's unapproved and strange plans - he plans to turn the platform into something akin to WeChat and TikTok, and believes Twitter could be It has a billion users in just a few years, and this raises the question about the future of Twitter is it as bright as we are used to it or something will happen.