Parag Agrawal, who took over Monday as the new head of Twitter, shot from
relative obscurity as the platform’s technology expert to becoming the latest
India-born talent to lead a US tech giant. Unlike his predecessor, co-founder
Jack Dorsey, Agrawal enjoyed until Monday a much more low-profile role at the
company, with only about 24,000 followers on the platform, compared to Dorsey’s
almost six million. But with a tweeted statement that began, “Thank you, Jack,
I’m honoured and humbled,” Agrawal took the reins of a company aiming to steer
away from free speech battles and toward growth. Agrawal is also the latest
India-born star tapped to head a major US-based tech company, following the
likes of Google-parent Alphabet’s CEO Sundar Pichai and Microsoft CEO Satya
Nadella. “He’s been behind every critical decision that helped turn this company
around,” Dorsey wrote of Agrawal in a message to Twitter staff. “He leads with
heart and soul and is someone I learn from daily. My trust in him as our CEO is
bone-deep.” Educated in computer science and engineering at the Indian Institute
of Technology Bombay and holding a PhD from Stanford University in California,
Agrawal joined Twitter in 2011 and rose to become its CTO by 2017. As the head
of technology at the firm, he oversaw machine learning and artificial
intelligence, as well as the company’s broad technical strategy. These
specialities make him a natural choice to replace Dorsey, Creative Strategies
analyst Carolina Milanesi told AFP. “Going forward AI (artificial intelligence)
and ML (machine learning) will be more and more critical in making the platform
healthier and more engaging for users and more profitable for the company,” she
said. “We might also see some more rigour and rational in the decision-making
process,” Milanesi added. Agrawal was also head of the company’s “Bluesky” push
to create a more open and decentralized standard for social media. “I recognize
that some of you know me well, some just a little, and some not at all,” Agrawal
said in an email to some 5,500 employees at San Francisco-based Twitter. The
platform has grown far less exponentially than its Silicon Valley neighbours and
has very meagre net profits compared to the two giants of digital advertising,
Google and Facebook’s parent Meta. Profitable for the first time in 2017,
Twitter has slipped back into the red several times since. Dorsey is perhaps
best know to the public as the man who kicked Donald Trump off Twitter, the
former president’s preferred megaphone to rally his fans and assail his critics.
But Agrawal has given indications that he does not view the platform as a venue
for working out boundaries of free speech. In an interview with MIT Technology
Review in 2020, Agrawal said the company, which became a focus of conservative
rage in the US after banning Trump, should “focus less” on free speech. “Our
role is to serve a healthy public conversation and our moves are reflective of
things that we believe lead to a healthier public conversation,” he said. In
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