A day after Twitter suspended several journalists covering Elon Musk, the company appears to have reversed course and restored accounts.
This move comes after holding Musk Twitter poll It asks if accounts should be restored “now” or “within 7 days”.
‘People have spoken,’ the tech company’s controversial billionaire wrote. Tweet Friday night. Accounts that extracted my location will now be suspended.
Back and forth this week started on wednesday when Twitter ban account Keep track of the publicly available locations of Musk’s private jet.
That account, called @ElonJet, was suspended as of Friday night.
Among the journalists arrested on Thursday were The New York Times’ Ryan Mack, CNN’s Donnie O’Sullivan, Mashable’s Matt Bender, The Washington Post’s Drew Harwell, political analyst Keith Olbermann and Steve Hermann of the government-funded Voice of America. Musk had proposed Thursday night that the suspension last seven days.
Harwell’s last post before she was suspended was about Twitter removing the account of one of its competitors, Mastodon, for posting a link to its own version of the @ElonJet account that tracked Musk’s plane, According to the tweet From NBC News correspondent Ben Collins. (The Mastodon Twitter account was also suspended Thursday.)
Olbermann last tweet He asked people to recreate and link to Harwell’s word-for-word post article By freelance journalist Arun Ropar, whose account was also suspended, who criticized Musk for his “populist influence” while he was one of the richest men in the world.
While most of the accounts suspended the night before appeared to have been restored by Friday night, Olbermann’s account did not come up during the search.
Twitter announced on Wednesday Policy update Prohibit sharing of “live location information, including information shared to Twitter directly or links to third-party URLs for travel itineraries.”
Suspended accounts appeared to still be able to participate in Twitter Spaces, as several of the banned journalists discussed the news in a live voice chat room Thursday night.
Musk joined in briefly to stress that posting a link to a real-time location tracking availability page, like ElonJet, was “evasion prevention” and no different from posting live sites live.
“You show a link to real-time information, block evasion,” Musk said. “You goblin, you get suspended, end of story, that’s it.”
Musk’s apparent link to stopping reporters from the survey prompted criticism as people pointed out that the reporters didn’t share any location data or provide real-time tracking.
Times staff writer Jamie Ding contributed to this report.