In a swift response to owner Elon Musk’s endorsement of an antisemitic post on X (formerly Twitter), tech and media giants, including Apple, Disney, IBM, and more, have announced a temporary pause in their advertising on the social media platform.
Apple, a significant advertiser on X, made the decision two days after Musk’s controversial tweet, where he expressed enthusiastic agreement with content accused of promoting hate speech. The tweets in question included praise for Adolf Hitler and the Nazis, as revealed in a recent report.
Film studios Lionsgate, Warner Bros, Paramount, Sony Pictures, and Comcast/NBCUniversal, alongside tech giant IBM, also declared their intention to halt ads on X. The New York Times reported that Disney would join the growing list of companies pausing spending on the platform.
The Tesla and SpaceX CEO’s endorsement of a tweet accusing Jews of harboring animosity toward white people triggered a strong condemnation from the White House, labeling Musk’s statements as “abhorrent.” A coalition of over 150 rabbis urged companies, including Apple, Disney, Amazon, and Oracle, to cease advertising on the platform in response to Musk’s tweets.
Apple, known as one of X’s prominent advertisers, had reportedly spent up to $100 million annually on the platform before Musk’s acquisition in November 2022. Despite claims that Apple had “mostly stopped” advertising on X in December 2022, ad analytics data suggested a different financial reality. Musk’s ownership has seen a decline in Twitter’s business, marked by fleeing advertisers, regulatory scrutiny, dwindling user numbers, and reduced staff levels.
The contentious relationship between Musk and Apple emerged in December 2022 when Apple reduced its advertising on X. Musk questioned whether Apple’s CEO Tim Cook and employees “hate free speech in America” in an online exchange. Subsequently, Musk deleted a tweet about “going to war” with Apple, and the two leaders seemingly reached a truce after Cook invited Musk to Apple’s headquarters.
IBM, another major advertiser on X, announced its decision to suspend advertising on the platform in response to a report by Media Matters, which highlighted IBM and Apple’s ads running alongside hate speech. Musk dismissed Media Matters as an “evil organization.”
In an attempt at damage control, X CEO Linda Yaccarino, a former advertising sales chief at NBC Universal, emphasized X’s commitment to ending discrimination but avoided directly addressing Musk’s tweets.
As the fallout continues, the pause in advertising by these corporate giants underscores the broader implications of Musk’s controversial statements on the platform’s credibility and financial standing.