The CategoriesSEC wanted a judge to hold him in contempt.
Elon Musk quietly accepted their judgement and ... just kidding. In a court filing, on the day of the deadline for his response, the Tesla CEO accused the SEC of "unprecedented overreach," warned that his First Amendment rights were at risk of being violated, and patted himself on the back for "dramatically" reducing "his volume of tweets."
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk tweets dumb meme as SEC asks judge to hold him in contemptSo, let's break this down. After the infamous "funding secured" tweet, Musk reached a settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that required him to get pre-approval from Tesla before sending out tweets "that contain, or reasonably could contain, information material" to the company or its shareholders.
He then proceeded to tweet this:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The SEC argued that disclosing those production numbers violated their agreement, which is probably why Musk later clarified in a tweet that Tesla wouldn't make 500,000 cars by the end of 2019. Instead, he explained, it was making 10,000 cars a week — which would put it on pace for more than 500,000, but, seeing as they were making fewer cars earlier in the year, Tesla would only deliver 400,000 cars in 2019.
In the court filing, Musk's legal team argues the tweet was "celebratory, aspirational, and forward-looking" on numbers already disclosed to investors.
Also, Musk didn't have to get Tesla's approval for his tweet, because he's allowed to "exercise his reasonable discretion" on whether "his communications contain information requiring pre-approval." So, you see, because he didn't think the tweet needed to be approved, it didn't need to be.
Also, he's tweeting so much less! In the three months after the SEC order, he "cut his average monthly Tesla-related tweets nearly in half." That "self-censorship" — that's right, Musk has been censoring himself — shows how "committed" he is to the agreement.
And if the SEC forced Musk to "seek pre-approval of any tweet that relates to Tesla, regardless of its significance, prior dissemination, or nature," it would "violate the First Amendment."
The court filing continued: "This contempt action, following Musk’s sincerely-held criticism of the SEC on 60 Minutes, also reflects concerning and unprecedented overreach on the part of the SEC."
Seems like a lot of trouble compared to, you know, not tweeting or having someone look at your tweets beforehand, but hey, I never launched a rocket into space so what do I know.
Topics Tesla X/Twitter Elon Musk
Staff Picks: Pop, Rock, and Bear Hock by The Paris ReviewAl Roker has a message for people worrying as he covers Hurricane IdaHow literary fiction is grappling with modern tech10 TikTok accounts to follow if you love to cookRecognition10 TikTok accounts to follow if you love to cookWhere Are Don DeLillo and Emily Dickinson Now?“Why Read?”The Morning News Roundup for August 27, 2014“Why Read?”'Did it hurt' memes are hilarious, painful, and taking over the internet'Did it hurt' memes are hilarious, painful, and taking over the internetThe Morning News Roundup for August 29, 2014Mars spacecraft takes new images of biggest volcano in solar systemWhat We See When We ReadDeborah S. Pease, 1943–2014Stephen King shares his thoughts on AI writing fictionWildlife officials say SpaceX launch left behind significant damageTech billionaires are buying up land near San Francisco to build their own utopiaWildlife officials say SpaceX launch left behind significant damage This man is apparently the world's most convincing Van Gogh lookalike You can now get glove skins in 'Counter How to watch the $1.1 million ELeague 'CS:GO' Season 2 playoffs 5 Facebook privacy settings you should check right now These alternative Christmas cards will stop you in your tracks Facebook says Zuckerberg's controversial election posts deleted by 'mistake' Hey people, it's time to vote for wildlife photographer of the year The National Lottery hack is why you shouldn't reuse your password India's Supreme Court asks all theaters to play the national anthem before movies Hey Australia: Kazakhstan is better than you at a whole bunch of things Trump's victory is driving the youth of America to fight back George R.R. Martin heads to Mexico before buckling down on 'Winds of Winter' No, 'Keeping Up With Kardashians' is not on hold following Kanye's hospitalization Darren Criss tapped as behind America's 8 most wanted household pets and barnyard animals Amazon reportedly working on new Echo with 7 'Girl on the Train' author Paula Hawkins announces next book This Is Us recap: Season 1, Episode 9 Police tried to capture a mountain lion on camera, but it got real weird instead Instagram isn't alerting people when you screenshot, you creep