Skip to main content

Elon Musk reportedly tweaked algorithm to boost his tweets

What can you do if Twitter fails to prioritize your tweets as much as you’d like it to?

Well, if you happen to own the social media platform, you could simply get someone to make a few phone calls to Twitter engineers and tell them to tweak the relevant algorithm.

This is pretty much what Twitter owner Elon Musk reportedly did after discovering that a tweet he posted in support of the Philadelphia Eagles during Sunday’s Super Bowl received much less exposure than one tweeted by President Joe Biden on the same matter.

Biden’s tweet reportedly generated around 29 million impressions while Musk’s picked up about 9 million impressions before he deleted it.

According to Platformer, James Musk — Elon’s cousin and a Twitter employee — hopped onto Slack in the early hours of Monday morning to post a message to all staff that said they needed to debug “an issue with engagement across the platform.”

“Any people who can make dashboards and write software please can you help solve this problem,” Musk said in his message, adding: “This is high urgency. If you are willing to help out please thumbs up this post.”

Platformer said that Twitter’s CEO flew his private jet back to the Bay Area on Sunday night “to demand answers from his team,” about why his tweets weren’t performing as well as he expected.

As engineers worked to tweak the algorithm earlier this week, Twitter users found that Musk’s tweets began taking a more prominent position in the algorithm-generated For You feed.

The publication said: “This was no accident, Platformer can confirm: after Musk threatened to fire his remaining engineers, they built a system designed to ensure that Musk — and Musk alone — benefits from previously unheard-of promotion of his tweets to the entire user base.”

Apparently acknowledging that the algorithm had suddenly gone to the other extreme, Musk tweeted on Tuesday: “Please stay tuned while we make adjustments to the uh .… ‘algorithm.’”

Similar reports a few weeks ago suggested that Musk wasn’t happy with the number of impressions his tweets were getting, especially as a new feature shows such data beneath each post and therefore makes the figures public. The Twitter CEO reportedly fired a principal Twitter engineer after the engineer told him that impressions on his tweets were dropping partly because interest in Musk himself had declined.

App researcher Jane Manchun Wong offered up the perfect solution — simply add another tab called “Elon Musk.”

feature suggestion: pic.twitter.com/fpmrEoHqD7

— Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) February 14, 2023

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Reddit could kill my favorite app — and that’s a problem for everyone
The Reddit app icon on an iOS Home screen.

I read Reddit every day, but I haven’t opened the official Reddit app in years. How? I use a third-party app called Apollo, and it’s so good that it doesn’t just make Reddit readable -- it makes it wonderful.

But yesterday, Apollo’s developer announced the shocking news that Reddit now wants to charge him $20 million a year to keep using its data -- yes, that’s $20 million for a single developer. If that isn’t changed, Apollo will almost certainly have to shut down.

Read more
Twitter ‘melts’ as it becomes first social app to launch a presidential bid
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Elon Musk’s plan to make Twitter the first social media platform to host the launch of a U.S. presidential bid didn’t get off to the best start.

The idea was to launch a Twitter Spaces session with Republican hopeful Ron DeSantis at a scheduled time on Wednesday evening, but when the event was supposed to start, the online audience waiting patiently in the audio-only Space was met with a sudden screeching sound.

Read more
Elon Musk says if his tweets lose his firms money, then so be it
A digital image of Elon Musk in front of a stylized background with the Twitter logo repeating.

Elon Musk spoke to CNBC’s David Faber in a wide-ranging interview that was shared by the media outlet on Tuesday, May 16.

Toward the end of the lengthy exchange, Faber asked Musk why he bothers tweeting stuff to his 140 million followers that he knows will be controversial -- the most recent of which he posted on Monday accusing the billionaire financier and philanthropist George Soros of hating humanity and comparing him to Magneto, Marvel’s Jewish supervillain from the X-Men series -- especially as such opinions have the potential to impact the three companies that he leads: Tesla, Twitter, and SpaceX.

Read more