There is a neighborhood.
On Monday, Musk secured an agreement to purchase the micro-messaging service. After weeks of public back-and-forth between the social media company and the world's richest person, news that a deal was in the final stages of discussion broke late Sunday.
A press release states that the company has entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by an entity wholly owned by Musk for $54.20 per share in cash.
The news of the impending sale caught the attention of users on the social network. Alex Stamos, the former Chief Security Officer at Facebook, called for a feature that would allow people to mass deletion their direct messages.
He wrote as rumors of a possible sale swirled that it would be a great week to add a "Delete all" button.
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Direct messages are not end-to-end secure, meaning that they can be read by employees of the company.
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Musk has a history of questionable posts on the platform he now controls.
Nothing can possibly go wrong.