- X algorithm update draws crypto concern over feed ranking and visibility clarity.
- Musk’s monthly update pledge faces closer review after the May 15 GitHub release.
- Public code leaves review gaps as weights and production differences remain unclear.
Elon Musk’s X algorithm pledge is facing fresh criticism from crypto users. X’s May 15 update has not fully resolved crypto users’ concerns over feed ranking clarity.
Months after Musk promised monthly refreshes to the X algorithm, the official xai-org repository still shows only one commit. Crypto users now argue that the release has not delivered the transparency promised in January.
X Algorithm Update Faces Crypto Reach Concerns
The pledge came on January 10. Musk said the code would be published within seven days and refreshed every four weeks with detailed developer notes.
Musk previously said criticism of the X algorithm was welcome. He also promised monthly GitHub updates with release notes and pointed users to the Following tab for a non-algorithmic feed.
The repository went live on January 17. Since then, the xai-org/x-algorithm page has not received any further commits.
Repository details show four components. The code is written in 62.9% Rust and 37.1% Python, according to the source material. The promised developer notes have not appeared either. That absence has increased complaints from users who expected regular explanations about ranking changes.
A similar issue followed the older Twitter/the-algorithm release in 2023. That repository also faced criticism before activity later slowed.
The latest silence comes as crypto users continue to report weaker reach on X. Several crypto users have reported that crypto-related posts appear less often in their feeds.
Market watcher, Ethan, said the feed now shows more politics, rage bait, and engagement bait. He also said crypto content appears far less often than before.
Ethan added that X is losing the topic-based community structure that once made the platform useful. His remarks reflected wider frustration among crypto users over reduced visibility.
X Algorithm Code Leaves Transparency Gaps
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin had questioned the transparency standard before the repository was released. His concern focused on whether X could provide enough detail for public review.
The published code shows the final score formula. However, it does not show the weights attached to each predicted action.
That missing detail limits outside analysis of the X Algorithm. Without those weights, reviewers cannot fully assess how posts are ranked or why some content gains reach.
The Phoenix module README also says its transformer is representative of the internal model, except for specific scaling optimizations. Critics highlighted that this shows the public code differs from the deployed system.
Crypto users have also raised concerns about negative signals. The model could learn from reports and blocks, which critics say could make coordinated bot activity a possible suppression tool. However, Farcaster has been cited because it publishes forkable protocols instead of limited sample code.
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