I don't believe either of those explanations either.
- If Twitter's anyonymous viewing restriction broke the site, it would have been rolled back, right?
- Twitter not paying the cloud bill on time for a migration also seems irrational and contradicts Musk's statements and evidence that the site is more-or-less working for Twitter Blue users, and everyone else before the rate limiting kicks in.
I find this opinion piece of low quality. But if there's one thing we can learn from it and the overall media response and public response is that the world is starting to disbelieve Elon Musk, because they've seen too many instances of him lying or bending truth out of shape.
Which is healthy, because he's taken advantage of spin and outright falsehood too often in his career. It has helped him gather capital and talent to push multiple industries in new directions, but it's becoming an increasingly toxic relationship with his investors, customers and fans.
- If Twitter's anyonymous viewing restriction broke the site, it would have been rolled back, right?
- Twitter not paying the cloud bill on time for a migration also seems irrational and contradicts Musk's statements and evidence that the site is more-or-less working for Twitter Blue users, and everyone else before the rate limiting kicks in.