Former T-Mobile CEO Elon Musk Offers to Replace Him and Run Twitter

John Legere, former CEO of T-Mobile offered to run Twitter for Elon Musk. Sunday pleaded with him to let someone else manage the company.

“Hi @elonmusk, maybe I should run @twitter,” Legere Tweet. “You can stop managing daily business, and ‘content moderation’ and then support product/technology, let someone else “run” @Twitter. I’m expensive but so is what you paid for Twitter.”

Musk was also encouraged by the former executive. “please be [a] leadership example of how to tweet,” likely pointing to the new Twitter chief’s questionable behavior on the platform, including blocking a top marketer who questioned the platform’s retreat from content moderation.

Despite Support for Legere’s takeover from some users, Musk shot down the businessman’s offer with a swift “No,”Later, explain the company’s needs to a “technologist” to oversee the company’s growth.

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After seeing the Twitter boss’ rejection, Legere Frequently Asked QuestionsMusk “please consider the free advice included in my suggestion.” “I believe @twitter can be the marketplace for transparent free speech AND a profitable growth company,”He said. “That will require vision but also leadership and management.”

“I like both you and Mike!” Musk later, referring to Legere’s successor Mike Sievert, who took over as CEO after Sprint and T-Mobile merged. “It’s just that Twitter at its core is a software & servers company. The technology needs to evolve rapidly, which requires a technologist.”

Musk also advised users about a new feature that will allow brands to identify accounts they have associated with them, to lessen concerns of impersonation.

Legere’s offer comes days after the FTC said it is tracking Twitter with “deep concern,” as top security executives — including Yoel Roth, the company’s head of trust and safety — sent in their resignations.

“We are tracking recent developments at Twitter with deep concern,”FTC spokesperson TelledThe Hill. “No CEO or company is above the law, and companies must follow our consent decrees. Our revised consent order gives us new tools to ensure compliance, and we are prepared to use them.”

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