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Tech billionaire Elon Musk has shared his ambitious plan of turning Twitter into the world’s biggest financial institution. His vision has left the crypto community disappointed, however, as he has not mentioned anything related to the integration of digital assets into the platform.
Musk believes that this evolution could pave the way for the platform to become the biggest financial institution in the world, through which people can send money with just a click and earn interest at the same time.
Unfortunately, Musk did not mention if Twitter’s payments feature would involve cryptocurrency or if crypto assets would soon be integrated into the social media platform. And because of this, the crypto community is dismayed.
The idea of cryptocurrency being integrated into the platform emerged last year, amid the legal battle in which Musk mentioned some of his plans for Twitter via text.
The changes Musk wanted to happen to Twitter at the time included the addition of the highly requested edit button, the removal of bots and the inclusion of crypto purchases.
These details were seemingly reaffirmed by Musk himself when he shared some of his plans for the social media platform during the all-hands virtual meeting with Twitter employees in June 2022.
The tech billionaire floated the idea of including crypto payment on Twitter and said it “would make sense to integrate payments into Twitter so that it’s easy to send money back and forth,” adding that it could feature support for “currency as well as crypto.”
In September of last year, leaked messages revealed that Musk briefly considered deeper blockchain integration with microtransactions and on-chain message storage.
However, in the days leading to his historical acquisition of Twitter, the tech billionaire seemingly abandoned his plans to integrate cryptocurrency into the platform and noted that blockchain-based Twitter is just not possible.
Last week, the crypto community was surprised when Musk tweeted, “I used to be in crypto, but now I got interested in AI.”
Link from www.ibtimes.com