The project also uncovered that the company provided verification badges to accounts linked with Hezbollah members while charging the standard fee of $8 per month.
In his comments, Musk said X could have deterred the Nazis by making their mass murder “impossible to hide” and allowing “freedom of speech” against them.
Musk made the visit with EJA Chairman Rabbi Menachem Margolin, conservative US journalist Ben Shapiro and Holocaust survivor Gidon Lev.
The CEO of X engaged in a public Twitter thread with controversial user Jackson Hinkle regarding the ban.
Israeli psychic and mystifier Uri Geller shared a photo of a UFO in Israel he says was sent to him by a senior IDF officer, but social media users dubbed it a streetlight.
Over 47,000 US users faced access issues with X and X Pro, according to Downdetector data. The site appeared to be back online in Israel by 9:00 AM local time.