Twitter Rebranded As ‘X’

Twitter has rebranded as “X” worldwide, under the direction of owner Elon Musk. An “interim” logo featuring a white X on a black background has replaced the original blue bird logo on the platform, signaling the billionaire’s intention to transform the social media network into an “everything app”.

Twitter headquarters on July 23, 2023

Musk on Sunday changed his profile picture to the new logo and added to his bio “X.com,” which redirects to a brief “X” splash screen on Twitter’s homepage. In a tweet on Monday morning, Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino said “X is here! Let’s do this.” Musk later shared an image of the new X branding projected onto the side of Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco.

Twitter’s official legal entity name was registered as X Corp when the company was acquired in October 2022 by Musk, who has since been referring to it as “X” or “an accelerant to creating X,” but the customer-facing avian branding had hitherto survived.

The social media platform has been called Twitter since its launch in March 2006, and its About page still says the blue bird logo is “our most recognizable asset” and “That’s why we’re so protective of it.”

Regardless, Musk believes the replacement “should have been done a long time ago.” His penchant for the letter X is evident elsewhere, for example in his SpaceX and X.Ai company names. X.com was also the name of the online bank Musk co-founded, before it merged with Confinity to eventually become PayPal.

Musk sent an email last night to Twitter employees telling them the company would publicly become known as X, and that it was the last time he would email from a Twitter address.

“Tweets” are to be replaced, according to Musk, and posts will be called “x’s”. 

Published by Larry Fire

I write an eclectic pop culture blog called THE FIRE WIRE that features articles about books, comics, music, movies, television, gadgets, posters, toys & more!

Leave a Reply

Discover more from

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading