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Elon Musk in front of X sign
Elon Musk completed his $44bn takeover of Twitter in October 2022. Photograph: Marcio José Sánchez/AP
Elon Musk completed his $44bn takeover of Twitter in October 2022. Photograph: Marcio José Sánchez/AP

Twitter usage in US ‘fallen by a fifth’ since Elon Musk’s takeover

This article is more than 1 month old

App users for social media site, rebranded as X, down by 23% since November 2022 according to Sensor Tower

Use of Twitter in the US has slumped by more than a fifth since Elon Musk bought the site and rebranded it to X, according to data from app-monitoring company Sensor Tower.

As of February 2024, the social network’s daily app users in America had fallen by 23% since November 2022, just after Musk completed his takeover. Every other major social network experienced a reduction in the same period, but none by anywhere near X’s drop in user numbers.

The closest was TikTok, which fell by just short of 10%, while Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat all had user slumps of less than 5%, according to the data, first reported by NBC News.

Globally, X fared slightly better, dropping 15% of its users to hit 174 million daily active app users, according to Sensor Tower’s data. The analytics company does not track users who visit the social network through the web, nor those who use desktop apps, and relies on a number of sources to maintain an accurate panel of users to sample.

While X did not respond to a request for comment, the company implicitly rebuffed Sensor Tower’s claims in a public post. In an unsigned message, it said that “250 million people use X every day”, with 550 million visiting every month, and that “daily average time spent on platform” and “daily active user minutes” are both up year on year.

The fall in the value of the company has been reflected in assessments by the fund manager Fidelity, one of the investors in Musk’s buyout of the previously publicly traded company.

Fidelity’s blue chip growth fund, which holds its stake, has continuously marked down the value it attributes to the company, hitting its latest low of a 71.5% reduction in value from November 2022 to November 2023.

Since Musk paid $44bn for his stake, that brings Fidelity’s assessed value for the overall company to just over $12.5bn.

On Monday, a judge in California dismissed Musk’s lawsuit against the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a non-profit that has published reports chronicling the rise of racist, antisemitic and extremist content on the platform since Musk’s acquisition.

“Sometimes it is unclear what is driving a litigation, and only by reading between the lines of a complaint can one attempt to surmise a plaintiff’s true purpose,” wrote Charles Breyer, the US district judge, in the ruling. “Other times, a complaint is so unabashedly and vociferously about one thing that there can be no mistaking that purpose. This case represents the latter circumstance. This case is about punishing the defendants for their speech.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Dismay as X’s most-followed accounts given blue ticks for free

  • Judge dismisses ‘vapid’ Elon Musk lawsuit against group that cataloged racist content on X

  • Ex-Twitter executives sue Elon Musk for $128m in unpaid severance

  • Elon Musk’s X back online after global outage

  • X to be investigated for allegedly breaking EU laws on hate speech and fake news

  • Elon Musk says X will reinstate Alex Jones’s account after poll of users

  • Elon Musk says Disney boss should be ‘fired immediately’ amid X ad boycott

  • Can Elon Musk stop X going to the wall after tirade at advertisers?

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