Elon Musk's social media platform X has removed the Bitcoin emoji from the hashtag "#Bitcoin," causing a stir in the crypto community.
Friday saw a major update from Elon Musk's social media platform X, as the Bitcoin hashtag emoji was removed. The Bitcoin emoji that used to be associated with the hashtag "#Bitcoin" has been removed.
Market Speculation Surrounds Decision
The wider market is abuzz with speculation about this decision, which came at the BTC conference in Nashville. In contrast, prominent digital asset institution Nexo moved forward with plans to globally restore the emoji feature.
Notable figures from around the world have lately taken to X to express their disappointment with the phrase in question by posting images that include the missing emoji. There is still no clear explanation for why the social media company decided to eliminate this "special hashtag" feature.
Elon Musk's move has sparked conflicting market reactions, even though the Bitcoin Conference is still providing significant support for the flagship cryptocurrency.
Ambiguity of Special Hashtags
The Trump and American flag emojis that were posted on the site with the hashtags "#MAGA and #Trump2024" were removed earlier this month by X. The American businessman stated that he had requested the termination of "special hashtags anyway" because of the ambiguity with which they conveyed sentiment.
Coingape elaborates that this seems to be in agreement with the previously stated decision to stop the Bitcoin emoji. The massive user base of Elon Musk's company is also waiting for an official declaration regarding this decision.
In response to X's move to deprecate the emoji, a well-known digital assets institution took a different stance.
Nexo's Proposal for Bitcoin Emoji
In sharp contrast to X's choice, Nexo seems to be advocating for the Bitcoin emoji's worldwide acceptance. Today, July 26, the cryptocurrency business said on X that it had approached the Unicode Consortium with a proposal to add a Bitcoin emoji to digital keyboards around the world. The deadline for this year's verdict is November 30.
Worldwide software internationalization standards are created, maintained, and promoted by the non-profit Unicode Consortium. Prominent figures in the industry, such as Bitget, Polygon, Chainalysis, OKX, and many more, rallied behind the Bitcoin emoji petition that Nexo submitted.
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