Elon Musk said he will provide "general amnesty" to suspended accounts on Twitter starting next week after running a poll on whether to do so for users that had not broken the law or engaged in egregious spam, Reuters reports.
Out of the roughly 3.2K votes Musk polled, 72.4% were in favor of bringing back users who had been suspended by the platform.
Musk has been pushing for content moderation on the platform, specifically by asking Twitter about the total number of spam accounts even before he had made the deal to acquire it.
Last week, Musk reinstated some previously suspended accounts, including former U.S. President Donald Trump, satirical website Babylon Bee and comedian Kathy Griffin.
Change and chaos that have marked Musk's first few weeks as Twitter's owner. He has fired top management including former CEO Parag Agarwal and senior officials in charge of security and privacy, drawing scrutiny from a regulator.
This move comes after Musk’s previous declaration in a tweet that users on Twitter might notice small, sometimes major improvements in the speed of the platform, which would be significant in countries far away from USA.