When people make fun of him, he seems to be pro-censorship.

Just over a week after taking the reins of the social network and declaring that " comedy is now legal on Twitter", Musk about-faced and announced, like the assistant principal in "The Breakfast Club."

The move comes after several newly-legal comedy tweeters changed their display names and photos to Musk's and subsequently got the kibosh put on them.

Small-time accounts were not the only ones. Sarah Silverman has her account back after she was suspended for pretending to be the new emperor of the social networking site.

No Warning

In his thread on the new rule, Musk gave a vague plan for what impersonation suspensions would look like, but it doesn't make sense, like the rest of the half-baked ideas he's put forth since taking ownership of the hell site.

There was a warning before the suspension but now there will be no warning. This will be a condition for signing up to the social network.

"Any name change will cause temporary loss of verified checkmark, as evidenced by the loss of comedian Jaboukie Young-White's checkmark after he impersonated one too many times," Musk said.

It seems that Musk's bark is just as bad as his bite when it comes to pretending to be him.

Musk just fired the team responsible for doing just that after he said he wanted an open algorithmic.