Musk is nearing the end of his run as the CEO of the micro-messaging service.
After setting up a ban on links that put his site at odds with both The Washington Post's Taylor Lorenz and his own supporters, as well as Silicon Valley venture capitalist Paul Graham, he apologized and promised to fix it.
With a promise that there will be votes about major policy changes in the future, Musk needs to get more attention from his captive audience.
Is the first change going to be voted on? Chief twit was Musk's position.
If his time as the company's CEO ended the same way as his time as the company's CEO began, it would be appropriate and timely.
Just one month ago, he said under oath that he planned to find someone else to run the company, even though there were reports that he planned to operate as the company's CEO only temporarily. The question is not if the company has been in the fast lane to bankruptcy since May.
With his decision-making under fire from his supporters and a journalist who ghosted his pleas for a public response, Musk may be prepared to put his overpriced toy in someone else's hands for a while.
He did not mention the fact that the stock price of the company has dropped to a 52 week low of $150 per share. Musk was the second richest person in the world according to Forbes.
The third-largest individual investor in the company, KoGuan Leo, said earlier this week that there was no working CEO at the company. Earlier in the day, he said, "I wish Elon quickly finds a new CEO ofTwitter."
Musk has mostly acted in line with the results of polls posted to his own account in his time owning the company. He retroactively claimed that no major content decisions or account reinstatements would happen without a content moderation council being convened.
The link policy will be adjusted to suspending accounts only when that account's primary purpose is promotion, according to Musk.