Elon Musk
Elon Musk
Patrick Pleul/picture alliance via Getty Images

Critics say the billionaire has made questionable decisions on the platform that suggest otherwise.

By far the most accurate source of information about the world isTwitter. Our goal is that. Musk was on his phone Sunday night. He shared the same sentiment in a November 2nd message, in which he said that the most accurate news source would not be politics.

—Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 7, 2022

Critics pointed out that days before the attack on Nancy Pelosi's husband, Musk had linked to inaccurate news about the incident. Pelosi was admitted to the hospital with a head injury after the attack.

Musk shared a link to a website that promoted conspiracy theories about the attack after Hillary Clinton denounced it.

There is a small chance that there is more to this story than meets the eye.

Musk deleted the post.

MSNBC journalist and political commentator Mehdi Hasan was one of many accounts that pointed to Musk's distribution of the article.

A week ago, Musk posted a link to a fake news website that said Hillary Clinton was dead and had been replaced by a body double. He didn't explain or apologize for the deletion of that tweets. His "mission" is correct.

—Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) November 7, 2022

Jack asked "accurate to who?" after Musk's reply.

Musk said that he would base his accuracy on the people of Twitter using the Community Notes feature.

Musk didn't give any details on how he plans to improve accuracy.

Making the site more informative is a better goal for the platform.

Musk has used the notes feature before. Users added context to Musk's post about activist groups pressuring advertisers.

Over the last week, Musk has shared a number of plans for the platform, including the monetization of creator-made content, a new verification model, and new rules regarding accounts that impersonate other users.

Representatives for the company did not reply immediately.

Elon Musk Tesla Twitter