Thanks for being first out the gate with the info. I still wasn't sure if it was fact or fiction at the time. This has sort of peaked my interest and I may begin to do a little twitter scrolling to at least familiarise myself with some of the more worthwhile noteworthy twitterers.
But I think that some Bitcoiners are still unconstructively vindictive about the whole BTC vs. BCH thing. It was settled years ago, and I'm content to let them thrive or (more likely) fail on their own. Expending any effort on it now is a waste of time, and could alienate some of them who are not totally lost. If it was me who'd gotten control of @Bitcoin, I probably also wouldn't be able to resist trolling the BCHers a bit, but after a while I'd ignore them near-completely and try to use the position to elevate the overall Twitter dialogue on Bitcoin. I hope that this is the direction instagibbs takes it.
This really stood out to me. I've been expanding my views a little recently and have been taking in content from various platforms. I find myself gravitating to the creators that aren't overtly negative, or purists. Lighthearted trolling is nothing that's fun and interesting, not to mention great for exposure. Even if you disagree with he idea it creates a space to talk or discuss when you are likely to receive a civil response and not get flamed.
I am a big fan of bringing levity into as many situations as possible. I know nothing of Instagibbs but it appears that's their approach to this account and I'll probably keep an eye on it from time to time, not creating an account yet.
Regarding the bolded part, was this an option?
And there are posts in the BCH subreddit calling for legal action against twitter.
![Roll Eyes](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/rolleyes.gif)
Do we have any more information as to how instagibbs ended up in control of the account? Who controlled it before? Was it bought, sold, traded, given away?
I know nothing more than what theymos brought to the discussion about them. I am interested in this account though and how it changed or changes hands. I can't imagine what price someone would have sold it for that Ver or another BCH supporter wouldn't have paid to keep it towing the line. I did briefly wonder though if it isn't an account that a group of early coiners have agreed to swap off every few years. Maybe in the end whoever had it just didn't like how things went with BCH and it's own split and decided to hand over the reigns. Might never know, but it was good to at least get the "who" answered.
I feel like this is the second time I've seen him post/say something along these lines.