New Delhi:- Renaming Twitter to X didn't work. In addition to the random deployment asking you to refer to "X" on one part of the site and continue to "search Twitter" or hit the blue button to "tweet" on others, the company has no intellectual property rights related to its brand. could not be secured. X reported to Reuters. Additionally, Twitter failed to obtain permission to remove the Twitter sign from its San Francisco headquarters, requiring police intervention to stop the work. And according to TechCrunch, the company didn't even try to secure the Twitter handle @x, which is owned by Gene X Hwang of corporate photo and video studio Orange Photography. The @x account is currently set to private but is referenced by the San Francisco-based @orangephoto account, whose Twitter handles "@x & @jackhuynh" and his Gene X Hwang and Jack Huynh respectively. is credited to the founder of Huang said no one from the company formerly known as Twitter has yet contacted him about the @x account he runs, but said he would be happy to chat with them if they did. Also Read:- The First Recorded Use of the Hashtag Symbol: From the 14th Century Book of Hours to the Social Media Era "We're looking forward to seeing what happens," Huang told TechCrunch. "If they make a reasonable offer, I'd be happy to relinquish the wheel," he added. Huang said he has no clear idea what a reasonable price should be for account name separation. For comparison, coveted Instagram handles typically cost thousands of dollars. By all accounts, Twitter's renaming to X seems to have been rushed, given how events unfolded in the hours since Elon Musk's announcement. His website and app on Twitter have not completely removed all references to his Twitter, and the main @Twitter handle has been renamed to 'X', although the handle itself is still @twitter. and users immediately noticed it. "They didn't even get a grip before moving on," noted Twitter user @Nash076. "Ready, shoot the target." Also Read:- Twitter Unveils a Bold New Logo, Leaving Users Divided Whereas Hwang holds up to listen back to see in the event that X or Musk will make him an offer — or maybe fair secure his handle without assent (you never know these days!), others are burrowing into the mental property rights fights that X may presently confront. As Reuters and others detailed, Microsoft has claimed an X trademark since 2003 related to Xbox and Meta has claimed a government trademark since 2019 covering a blue-and-white letter “X.” Whereas its symbol looks distinctive from Twitter’s unused X branding, Meta’s trademark incorporates utilize with online social organizing administrations, which may posture a issue. In spite of the fact that Meta may not choose to seek after legitimate activity, trademark lawyer Josh Gerben told Reuters there’s a “100% chance” Twitter will be sued by someone over the X rebranding, as he’s checked about 900 dynamic U.S. trademark enlistments that cover X over different businesses. Past the slips with the rebranding itself, others are indicating out that Musk’s move to rename Twitter “X” may include a monetary hit to the brand’s esteem itself. Citing investigators and organizations, Fortune reports Musk may have wiped out $4 billion to $20 billion in Twitter’s esteem — a brand that took 15-plus a long time to construct. Also Read:- TikTok Introduces Text Posts, Taking on Twitter's Character Limit After Elon Musk announced about the change of the Logo of the Twitter brand there are many things pending still like the property rights are still to be handed over to Musk and also the re-branding of the San Francisco Headquarters of the Police were called there.