New Delhi: Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s 1995 business card has gone viral on social media, with many users calling for the physical card to be auctioned. The business card was shared on the microblogging platform by a Twitter user named DogeDesigner. So far, the tweet has received more than 8,675 likes and 394 retweets.
Even Musk, the CEO of several companies including Starlink, Neuralink, and Boring, among others, responded to the post. “Old times,” Musk said. His cheeky reply has garnered over 11,000 likes and almost 400 retweets. (ALSO READ: New India-Australia Trade Deal Coming Soon, Duty-Free Access for Traders: Piyush Goyal)
Elon Musk’s business card from 1995 @elonmusk pic.twitter.com/Uix0TMTgiS— DogeDesigner (@cb_doge) July 13, 2022
Several Twitter users are now calling for the physical map or an NFT version of the document to be auctioned. “Can you make a physical NFT claim on this name card?” said one user. (ALSO READ: Rs 4389 crore duty evasion by Oppo India unearthed by DRI)
Can you make a physical NFT claim on this name card? — Łucas/Łitoshilite (@LitoshiLite) July 13, 2022
Also, some users even wanted to know if the email ID mentioned on the “old” business card still works or not. “Do you think it still works. I’d be happy to email him. Is that weird?” asked a Twitter user.
Here are more funny replies to the post:
This could be in a museum on Mars one day. @elonmusk— Philip 702 (@702Philip) July 13, 2022
Do you think it still works? I’d be happy to email him.
is that weird — Jonathan Squires (@jsquires625) July 13, 2022
Meanwhile, Musk has also been grappling with Twitter’s lawsuit against him for pulling out of the takeover deal, thereby breaking the $44 billion deal.
For those who don’t know, “Chief Technology Officer” means Technoking!
— technoking.eth (@vahramovich) July 13, 2022
Minutes after news broke online that Twitter was suing him, Musk took to the microblogging site and simply tweeted, “Oh the irony lol.” Without mentioning anything about the lawsuit, it’s kind of clear that Musk himself to the ongoing controversy, especially considering that Twitter reportedly didn’t even want to go through with the deal in April.