


A meeting between Elon Musk, owner of X, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is slated for Monday.
Several anonymous sources confirmed the meeting to the Washington Post. It comes in light of Musk openly denying the Anti-Defamation League's accusations of antisemitism against himself and X, which he acquired late last year. The X owner first commented publicly on the ADL on Sept. 4, accusing it of "trying to kill this platform." Musk has since posted about the ADL over a dozen times, most recently Wednesday night, when he shared a video that outlined the league's own controversies.
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Since the acquisition, The @ADL has been trying to kill this platform by falsely accusing it & me of being anti-Semitic
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) September 4, 2023
"X opposes antisemitism in all its forms. Antisemitism is evil and X will always work to fight it on our platform," CEO Linda Yaccarino subsequently posted. "And X is also always open to proactively working together in that fight with all groups."
X opposes antisemitism in all its forms. Antisemitism is evil and X will always work to fight it on our platform. And X is also always open to proactively working together in that fight with all groups.????https://t.co/EoXEvrXbKx
— Linda Yaccarino (@lindayaX) September 9, 2023
Yaccarino would go on to clarify in a blog post that the platform has implemented a zero tolerance approach and continues to "add new slurs, harmful terms and phrases" to its watchlist.
Last month, the CEO claimed, "by all objective metrics, X is a much healthier and safer platform than it was a year ago." When any post is not necessarily illegal but is "awful," as Yaccarino says, it is labeled, de-amplified, and demonetized. In the cases of those labeled posts, 30% of the time the user will take down the post on their own.
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As a result, Coca-Cola and Visa returned to the platform as advertisers. Following Musk's takeover, the two companies had briefly stopped advertising on the site.
Musk has threatened to file a defamation lawsuit against the ADL. According to him, the platform's U.S. ad revenue remains at a 60% low.