The New Zealand Herald

One man to rule them all: tech, tweets, the future?

- Liam Dann comment

Last week I wrote that I hoped Elon Musk didn’t get control of Twitter. But he’s got it.

Musk, who’s worth about $400 billion, appears to have done a deal which gives him total control over the social media company at a value of $66b. So now what?

I was worried about the social risk of one man having control of such a powerful global media organisati­on.

It’s not Musk’s politics that especially worries me. Musk transcends traditiona­l left/right definition­s in a way that is relatively heartening.

He’s no socialist. He’s a capitalist obviously, all the world’s great business people are. Most of them, thankfully, stick to a fairly narrow goal of making loads of money.

Once wealthy beyond their capacity to spend it all in a lifetime e many of the world’s richest turn their minds to philanthro­py and pet projects. Bill Gates wants to rid d the world of malaria for example. Good luck to him.

Where Musk differs is in his singular vision for the future.

He’s hell-bent on accelerati­ng the pace of technologi­cal change. He wants to play a large role in shaping our future, one he nodoubt hopes will be a better place for us all.

It’s hard to argue with his efforts s on green technology. He’s revolution­ised the electric car industry and has ambitions to do the same with solar power.

But his high-powered visions for cryptocurr­encies, artificial intelligen­ce, space travel, (now) social media seem more indulgent.

,, History suggests it’s seldom a good idea to let one man control everything, even if they are good. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

I don’t think the pace of these things needs accelerati­ng.

Musk is starting to exert a worrying amount of power in all these areas.

History suggests it’s seldom a good idea to let one man control everything, even if they are good. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Or, as Jim Morrison once sang: people are strange.

Musk is stranger than most and the prospect of this unusual character shaping my future and my children’s future doesn’t fill with joy.

We try to avoid the undue influence of individual personalit­y quirks in a democracy. We have checks and balances on power.

It’s also why most companies have a board of directors, a broad shareholde­r base and a democratic process with regard to making big changes to corporate direction. Sometimes companies are started by an entreprene­ur with a singular vision — but mostly they evolve away from a concentrat­ion of individual power. Musk has reversed this flow with Tesla and now Twitter.

Twitter influence in the world is hard to quantify. In pure financial terms it’s nowhere near the scale of Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta (owner of Facebook and Instagram).

Even after its big crash early this year Meta has a market capitalisa­tion in excess of US$500b.

In terms of direct editorial influence Twitter can’t rival Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, with control of Fox News and hundreds of popular newspapers and websites. But News Corp has a trifling market cap of just US$13b — a stark reminder of where investors see the world’s media profits heading.

The potential to use Twitter for political purposes is huge even if Musk’s intentions around free speech and open discourse are good.

At face value I really quite like Musk. He looks like he’d be fun to hang out with and talk to in a way Murdoch never has.

He seems cool and it’s good fun to hang out with the cool kids at a party. But the cool kids are also the ones who decide it’s fun to throw the furniture in the pool, or car surf to the beach. I don’t necessaril­y want them in charge of the major institutio­ns which shape my world.

So now what?

My first thought is that he has a lot of work to do. Changing a large organisati­on is not easy. Radically changing it very quickly risks ruining it. There is a risk that Twitter under Musk moves too fast and alienates its hardcore user-base.

His passion for unfettered freedom of expression risks turning it into to a nasty rabbit hole of angrier and more abusive discourse. If he’s smarter, moves in an incrementa­l fashion and listens to his audience, then he may yet provide the injection of energy the 15-year-old platform needs to reinvent itself, grow and stay relevant.

I’m reserving judgement for now. I don’t think even Musk knows quite what he’s thinking from one day to the next.

His vision for Twitter is just a one part of a much bigger vision we all seem destined to have to deal with in the next decade or so.

I just know it won’t be boring.

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 ?? Photo / AP ?? Elon Musk is starting to exert a worrying amount of power.
Photo / AP Elon Musk is starting to exert a worrying amount of power.

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