Elon Musk tweeted on Sunday that he was considering changing Twitter's logo, saying, "Very soon we will say goodbye to the Twitter brand and gradually say goodbye to all the birds."

Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino tweeted that artificial intelligence will run the company. She didn't go into details.

12:06 am in a post on the site. ET (4:06 GMT), the social media site billionaire added, "If a good X logo is released tonight, it will be released worldwide tomorrow."

After posting an image of a glowing "X," Musk said "yes" to a Twitter Space voice chat when asked if Twitter's logo would change, adding, "It should have changed a long time ago."

"It's rare to get a second chance to make a big impact in life or business. Twitter once had a big impact and changed the way we communicate. Now X will go even further and change the world's urban squares," Yaccarino said in the post.

"X is the future of unlimited interaction for audio, video, messaging, and payments/banking, creating a global marketplace for ideas, goods, services, and opportunities. Powered by AI, X will connect everyone in ways we have only begun to imagine," he added.

Since buying Twitter in October, Mr. Under Musk's tumultuous tenure, the company changed its name to X Corporation, reflecting the billionaire's vision of creating a "super app" like China's WeChat.

The company did not respond to a request for comment.

Twitter's website lists a logo depicting a blue bird as "the company's most famous asset." "That's why we keep it so secure," he added.

The bird was temporarily replaced by Dogecoin's Shiba Inu in April, which helped boost Memecoin's market value.

Mr. When Musk announced it earlier this month, the company came under widespread criticism from users and marketing pundits.

This daily limit spurred the growth of a competing service called Meta-owned Threads, which surpassed 100 million subscribers within five days of its launch.

Twitter's latest thorny issue is a lawsuit filed Tuesday alleging the company failed to pay at least $500 million in severance payments to former employees. Since Musk's acquisition, the company has laid off more than half of its workforce to cut costs.