Tech billionaire Elon Musk’s recent renaming of the social network to ‘X’ has brought potential legal challenges as rival tech giants Meta and Microsoft both possess intellectual property rights for the letter.
The name change, a part of Musk’s grand plan to transform the platform into an all-encompassing “everything app” similar to China’s WeChat and India’s PayTM, occurred on Monday, nine months after his acquisition of the company in a $44 billion deal.
X’s executive, Linda Yaccarino, expressed their vision to create a “global marketplace for ideas, goods, services, and opportunities,” aiming to revolutionize the “global town square” by integrating payments and banking services.
However, IP lawyers anticipate potential hurdles for Musk’s company, particularly due to Meta’s ownership of a federal trademark for a blue-and-white letter ‘X’ linked to “social networking services in the fields of entertainment, gaming, and application development.” Meanwhile, Microsoft holds registered trademarks for the letter ‘X’ pertaining to its Xbox video game console, and neither company has responded to inquiries.
Adding to the challenges, Apple’s App Store cannot accept the new name for Twitter’s iOS app due to minimum character requirements, which mandate app names to be at least 2 characters long.
Mr. Musk’s history with the ‘X’ domain dates back to 1999 when he founded a financial services company that evolved into PayPal. He regained ownership of the domain in 2017 following an agreement with his former company, and in October 2022, he tweeted that acquiring Twitter was a catalyst for creating “X, the everything app.”
While it remains uncertain whether Mr. Musk has applied for a trademark for ‘X,’ even if he succeeds, protecting the registered rights against other brands using the letter might prove challenging.