In other words, is Musk just throwing a tantrum and making empty threats? Or is he serious about pursuing what could end up being an expensive and drawn-out legal battle?that starting on April 25, its advertising campaign platform "will no longer support Twitter."
That means companies are no longer able to use the platform to manage their tweets, leaving a potentially sizable hole in Twitter's already-ravaged bottom line.enterprises considerable sums for accessing its API, a decision that came to the dismay of developers. An enterprise-level subscription to the API can cost as much as $42,000 a month.
Microsoft's move has clearly enraged Musk, who's already struggling to turn a money-hemorrhaging social media company around.for training their models on any content submitted to the company's platform, a decision that may have inspired Musk's vague threat. Whether a lawsuit that accuses an AI company of training its data on content it didn't seek express permission for can actually stand up in court remains to be seen.to buzzy startups using other people's data to train AI systems.