On Monday,Ā X filed an objectionĀ in The Onionās bid to buy InfoWars out of bankruptcy. In the objection, Elon Muskās lawyers argued that X has āsuperior ownershipā of all accounts on X, that it objects to the inclusion of InfoWars and related Twitter accounts in the bankruptcy auction, and that the court should therefore prevent the transfer of them to The Onion.
The legal basis that X asserts in the filing is not terribly interesting. But what is interesting is that X has decided to involve itself at all, and it highlights thatĀ you do not own your followers or your account or anything at all on corporate social media, and it also highlights the fact that Elon Muskās X is primarily a political project he is using to boost, or stifle, specific viewpoints and help his friends. In the filing, Xās lawyers essentially sayālike many other software companies, and, increasingly, device manufacturers as wellāthat the companyās terms of service grant Xās users a ālicenseā to use the platform but that, ultimately, X owns all accounts on the social network and can do anything that it wants with them.
āFew bankruptcy courts have addressed the issue of ownership of social media accounts, and those courts that have were focused on whether an individual or the individualās employer owned an account used for business purposesānot whether the social media company had a superior right of ownership over either the individual or the corporation,ā Muskās lawyers write.
The case Muskās lawyers areĀ referencing here isĀ Vital Pharmās bankruptcy case, in which a supplement company filed for bankruptcy and the court decided that the Twitter and Instagram accounts @BangEnergyCEO, which were primarily used by its CEO Jack Owoc to promote the brand, were owned by the company, not Owoc. The court determined that the accounts were therefore part of the bankruptcy and could not be kept by Owoc.
Except in exceedingly rare circumstances like theĀ Vital PharmĀ case, the transfer of social media accounts in bankruptcy from one company to another has been routine. When VICE was sold out of bankruptcy, its new owners, Fortress Investment Group, got all of VICEās social media accounts and YouTube pages. X, Google, Meta, etc did not object to this transfer because this sort of thing happens constantly and is not controversial. (It should be noted that social media companies regularlyĀ doĀ try to prevent the sale of social media accounts on the black market. But they do not usually attempt to block the sale of them as part of the sale of companies or in bankruptcy.)
But in this InfoWars case, X has decided to inject itself into the bankruptcy proceedings. Jones has signaled thatĀ Musk has done this in order to help him, and his tweet about it has gone incredibly viral. On a stream of his show after the filing, Jones called this āa major breaking Monday evening news alert that deals with the First Amendment and the peopleās fight to reclaim our country from the clutches of the globalists.ā
"Elon Musk X Corp entered the case with a lawsuit within it to defend the right of X to not have private handles of people like Alex Jones stripped away. It violates the 13th Amendment against slavery, there are many issues. Today they filed a major brief in the case,ā Jones said. āElon Muskās X comes to Alex Jonesā defense against democrat attempts to steal Jonesā X identity.ā
Musk famously unbanned Jones, then appeared on the same Twitter Spaces broadcast with him. Musk has also tweeted occasionally that he believes The Onion is not funny. Jones, meanwhile, has been ranting and raving about some sort of conspiracy that he believes led a judge via the Deep State to sell InfoWars to The Onion at auction.
X calls itself āthe sole ownerā of X accounts, and states that it ādoes not consentā to the sale of the InfoWars accounts, as doing so would āundermine X Corp.ās rightful ownership of the property it licenses to Free Speech Systems [InfoWars], Jones, or any other account holder on the X platform.ā Again, X accounts are transferred in bankruptcy all the time with no drama and with no objection from X.
āLooming over the framework [in theĀ Vital PharmĀ case] was the undeniable reality that social media companies, like X Corp., are the only parties that have truly exclusive control over usersā accounts,ā the lawyers write. āX CORP. OWNS THE X ACCOUNTS.ā
That a corporate social media company says it owns the social media accounts on its service is probably not surprising. Meta, Twitter, Google, LinkedIn, and ByteDance have run up astronomical valuations by more or getting people to fill their platforms with content for free, and have created and destroyed countless businesses, business models, and industries with their constantly-shifting algorithms and monetization strategies. But to see this fact outlined in such stark terms in a court document makes clear that, for human beings to seize any sort of control over their online lives, we mustĀ move toward decentralized, portableĀ forms of social mediaĀ and must move back toward creating and owning our own platforms and websites.



Wow, Alex Jones looks like he aged 15 years in the past few months.
Good.
Heās probably experiencing the unimaginable levels of stress he himself once imposed on many people with his platform in the past. Good riddance.
Maybe he will age really fast up to the end of life period where he enters into immense pain and suffering but then just gets stuck their excruciatingly for years while everyone around him abandons him because he is a hateful piece of trash.
Probably not but one can hope, especially when it brings a smile to your face :)