Amazon plans to resume advertising on Twitter in the near future, spending $100 million a year on the platform, according to Saturday’s report.
Amazon is one of many companies to remove advertising from Twitter after being acquired by billionaire Elon Musk. The tech outlet platformer said a number of companies are returning in the weeks after their tumultuous acquisition, and Amazon will be among them once certain security measures are in place.
“Amazon plans to resume advertising on Twitter for about $100 million a year, pending security tweaks to its advertising platform,” said platform editor Zoe Schiffer. There is.”
News of Amazon’s plans came a day after Musk announced that Apple had “completely resumed” advertising on Twitter.
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Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos.
(AP image)
He said Apple is now Twitter’s largest advertiser. Musk’s relationship with the company appeared to be in jeopardy last week after he claimed that Apple was not only withholding advertising dollars, but was also threatening to remove Twitter from its app store.
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Musk eventually met with Apple CEO Tim Cook at the company’s California headquarters to smooth things over. Cook told Musk that he never considered removing Twitter from the app store.
The Cook-Musk meeting came just a day before he flew to Washington, D.C. to meet with several Republicans who will soon rule the House of Representatives.

Apple CEO Tim Cook arrives at the White House to attend the state banquet honoring French President Emmanuel Macron in Washington, DC, December 1, 2022.
(Robert Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images)

Ranking members Jim Jordan (R., Ohio) and Rep. Ken Buck (R., Colorado) attend the House Judiciary Committee entitled Oversight of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Cyber Division in the Rayburn Building on Tuesday, March 3. You can see it at the public hearing. 29, 2022. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
(Tom Williams/Getty Images)
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Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan was among them. He and other members of his party have pledged that giant tech companies, especially social media platforms, will face greater scrutiny in the new Congress.
Last month, Jordan and 34 fellow House Republicans said: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg It warned him of an impending investigation into how Facebook handled information that could harm President Biden’s 2020 campaign, specifically Hunter Biden’s laptop.