After a tumultuous start to his tenure, which included thousands of staff sackedand warnings from regulators, Musk appeared to commit to quitting as CEO.
He set a Twitter poll in motion last December, writing: “Should I step down as head of Twitter? I will abide by the results of this poll.”
Reminded of the pledge during an impromptu live BBC interview on Tuesday, Musk said: “I did stand down. I keep telling you I’m not the CEO of Twitter, my dog is the CEO of Twitter.”
Musk, 51, has regularly made light of the controversy surrounding his stewardship of Twitter, and recently replaced its recognisable bird logo with the icon of cryptocurrency Dogecoin – a Shiba Inu like his dog Floki.
The “w” in Twitter was also removed from signage outside the company’s San Francisco headquarters.
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The BBC said it was arranged at short notice and took place at the firm’s HQ.
Musk is regularly critical of media outlets, and recently removed The New York Times’ verification tick after the newspaper said it would not pay to keep it.
Accounts will soon have to be signed up to subscription service Twitter Blue to have a blue checkmark.
After numerous false starts, Musk has said legacy checkmarks will finally be removed on 20 April. Journalists are among the accounts set to be impacted.
Running Twitter ‘a rollercoaster’
Having remained CEO, Musk admitted running Twitter had been “quite a rollercoaster” – and suggested he only went through with the takeover because a judge would have forced him to.
He said he has around 1,500 employees left after last year’s mass lay-offs. Among those let go were engineers responsible for preventing service outages, sources told Reuters news agency.
Twitter has suffered several bugs and outages since the turn of the year, according to internet watchdog group NetBlocks, but Musk said any problems had not lasted long.
The vague idea has been compared China’s WeChat, which combines features such as messaging, a marketplace, and public Twitter-style posts into one place.