From Twitter to X: Elon Musk Begins Erasing an
Iconic Internet Brand
The tech billionaire started removing the bird logo
that has been part of Twitter’s identity since 2006.
Ryan
MacTiffany Hsu
By Ryan Mac
and Tiffany Hsu
Ryan Mac
reports on Twitter, and Tiffany Hsu on misinformation.
Published
July 24, 2023
Updated
July 25, 2023, 1:55 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/24/technology/twitter-x-elon-musk.html
For more
than 10 years, Twitter has been recognizable for its blue and white bird logo,
which became a symbol of the social network’s unique culture and lexicon. To
“tweet” became a verb. A “tweet” referred to a post. “Tweeps” became the
moniker for Twitter employees.
Late on
Sunday, Elon Musk began getting rid of it all.
The tech
billionaire, who bought Twitter last year, renamed the social platform X.com on
its website and started replacing the bird logo with a stylized version of the
24th letter of the Latin alphabet.
Inside
Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco on Monday, X logos were projected in
the cafeteria, while conference rooms were renamed to words with X in them,
including “eXposure,” “eXult” and “s3Xy,” according to photos seen by The New
York Times. Workers also began removing bird-related paraphernalia, such as a
giant blue logo in the cafeteria. Outside the building, workers took off the
first six letters of Twitter’s name before the San Francisco Police Department
stopped them for performing “unauthorized work,” according to an alert sent by
the department.
Mr. Musk
had long said he might make the name change, but he hastened the process in a
tweet early Sunday when he declared that “soon we shall bid adieu to the
twitter brand and, gradually, all the birds.” He has said he hopes to turn
Twitter into an “everything app” called X, which would encompass not only
social networking but also banking and shopping.
Earlier on
Monday, Mr. Musk also shared a photo of a giant X projected on Twitter’s San
Francisco office building with the caption: “Our headquarters tonight.”
The moves —
which are continuing — are the most visible changes that Mr. Musk has made to
Twitter since he closed the deal to buy the company in October. Behind the
scenes, he has taken many steps to overhaul the firm, eliminating thousands of
employees and changing the platform’s features, including badges that were
meant to verify users, as well as the rules governing what can and can’t be
said on the service.
Yet the
name and logo changes were impossible to ignore. By starting to remove the
Twitter name, Mr. Musk tossed out an entrenched brand that had been around
since 2006 — when the company was founded — and that had delighted and
frustrated celebrities, politicians, athletes and other users in equal measure.
Twitter introduced its blue bird mascot in 2010 and updated it two years later.
Many
Twitter users, who have spent years tweeting and building up their presence on
the site, appeared alienated by the shift. “Has everybody seen the (eXecrable)
new logo?” the actor Mark Hamill tweeted on Monday, with the hashtag
#ByeByeBirdie. Others saw the move as Mr. Musk’s latest blow to the site, with
some stubbornly saying they will still call the site Twitter and will continue
to “tweet.”
When brands
become verbs, it’s the “holy grail,” said Mike Proulx, a vice president and
research director at Forrester, because it means they have become part of
popular culture.
“The app
itself has become a cultural phenomenon in all sorts of ways,” he said. “In one
fell sweep, Elon Musk has essentially wiped out 15 years of brand value from
Twitter and is now essentially starting from scratch.”
Mr. Musk
risked the wrath of Twitter’s users even as he can ill afford to upset them.
His company faces financial difficulties and increased competition, with rival
Meta releasing an app this month for real-time, public conversations called
Threads. The new app quickly racked up 100 million downloads in less than a
week, though use of the app is under scrutiny.
Mike Carr,
a co-founder of the branding company NameStormers, said Mr. Musk’s X logo could
be interpreted as having an ominous “Big Brother” tech overlord vibe. Unlike
the blue bird, which he described as warm and cuddly but perhaps a bit dated
and weighed down by bad press, the new logo is “very harsh,” he said.
Still, it
conjured phrases like “X marks the spot” and could help Mr. Musk differentiate
the platform from its Twitter baggage, Mr. Carr said.
“If they do
this wrong and it was anybody other than Elon Musk, he’d be running a higher
risk because people could start making fun of it,” said Mr. Carr, who has
helped come up with names for thousands of clients, including CarMax, the used
car company.
Mr. Musk
has long been interested in the X name. In 1999, he helped found X.com, an
online bank. The company changed its name after it merged with another start-up
to form what would become PayPal.
In 2017,
Mr. Musk said he had repurchased the X.com domain from PayPal. “No plans right
now, but it has great sentimental value to me,” he tweeted at the time.
Tesla, Mr.
Musk’s electric automaker, also has a sport utility vehicle called the Model X.
One of Mr. Musk’s sons, X Æ A-12 Musk, is often called X for short. The holding
companies created to close the acquisition of Twitter were named X Holdings.
Mr. Musk also leads an artificial intelligence company called xAI.
“I like the
letter X,” he posted on Sunday.
Mr. Musk
has shown a disdain toward Twitter’s previous corporate culture. He has
quibbled with the number of bird references in the company’s internal team
names and products. At one point, he changed the name of a crowdsourced
fact-checking feature to “Community Notes” from “Birdwatch.” He recently also
had someone cover the w in Twitter’s name at its San Francisco headquarters.
Among those
who didn’t seem bothered by the change was Jack Dorsey, a Twitter founder and
former chief executive. He said in a tweet on Monday that while a rebrand was
not “essential” to achieving Mr. Musk’s vision, there was an argument for it.
“The
Twitter brand carries a lot of baggage,” Mr. Dorsey wrote. “But all that
matters is the utility it provides, not the name.”
Martin
Grasser, a San Francisco artist who was part of a team in 2011 that helped
design the most recent Twitter bird logo, said it was meant to convey
“simplicity, brevity and clarity.” The goal was to have a logo that was as
memorable as Apple’s or Nike’s, he said.
Mr. Grasser
said Mr. Musk could do whatever he wanted with the brand, but “I hope the bird
occupies a space in culture that is a happy memory or becomes one of those
logos that belongs to culture rather than a company.”
Ryan Mac is
a technology reporter focused on corporate accountability across the global
tech industry. He won a 2020 George Polk award for his coverage of Facebook and
is based in Los Angeles. More about Ryan Mac
Tiffany Hsu
is a tech reporter covering misinformation and disinformation. More
about Tiffany Hsu



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