Bill Gates Warns Elon Musk Could Make Twitter 'Worse' — as Binance Invests $500M in Takeover
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Bill Gates Warns Elon Musk Could Make Twitter 'Worse' — as Binance Invests $500M in Takeover

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Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, who has been doing a slew of media interviews for a new book, has given his two cents on Elon Musk's takeover.

Bill Gates Warns Elon Musk Could Make Twitter 'Worse' — as Binance Invests $500M in Takeover

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Elon Musk has secured $7 billion in financing from a group of high-net-worth individuals, investment firms and companies as part of his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter.

The world's richest man has been seeking to use less of his personal wealth — which is mostly tied up in stocks — to fund the acquisition.

A filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reveals that Binance, the owner of CoinMarketCap, is among the 18 co-investors — and will invest $500 million.

Other big backers include Fidelity Management and Research, Sequoia Capital and VyCapital — as well as Oracle co-founder and Tesla board member Larry Ellison, who's committing $1 billion in funding.

Saudi Arabia's Prince Alwaleed bin Talal — who was initially against Musk's takeover — has also confirmed he will roll his $1.89 billion stake into the deal instead of cashing out.

Binance's founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao confirmed the exchange's involvement on Twitter, writing:

"A small contribution to the cause."

What Bill Gates Thinks of Twitter Deal

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, who has been doing a slew of media interviews for a new book, has also given his two cents on Elon Musk's takeover.

Speaking at the WSJ CEO Council, he warned that Musk could actually make Twitter worse than it is today — but conceded that the entrepreneur has an exceptional track record when it comes to his leadership of Tesla and SpaceX. He added:

"We should have an open mind and never underestimate Elon."

Gates also questioned Musk's desire for greater openness on Twitter — and pondered whether a greater push for freedom of speech would mean users would be free to post things like "vaccines kill people" and "Bill Gates is tracking people" without being challenged.

There's been a bit of animosity between the billionaires in recent weeks.

Last month, screenshots emerged that revealed Gates had approached Musk about philanthropy possibilities — but Musk ended up confronting him about why he was shorting Tesla stock. A text exchange between the pair shows Musk said:

"Sorry, I cannot take your philanthropy on climate change seriously when you have a massive short position against Tesla, the company doing the most to solve climate change."

Musk confirmed the substance of the texts on Twitter, and he's also insulted Gates in a number of tweets. One of them appeared to mock his weight.

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