This is interesting found this in a news article, but that tweet is just gone now. This seems like the strongest evidence you are correct. The cybertruck steering is completely new and not like other Teslas, there's no physical connectiong between the steering wheel and the tires.
"Love Tesla and my Cybertruck but 'catastrophe [sic] failure' with steering and brakes while on a road trip with wife and toddler," he tweeted, sharing a picture of his truck being loaded onto a flatbed truck.
"Pretty pretty pretty not good," he added. "Oh and service center not open today."
The video creator doesn't have to file a claim. If there are elements of copyrighted material in the video, such as Tesla's cybertruck, the owners of that copyright can file the claim. This happens all the time on YouTube.
So the copyright owner would be the guy who made the video.
This seems to someone else sharing his video.
So this could be NOT twitter.
Searching on Twitter Here's are steering issue posts https://x.com/LamarMK/status/1774207552911249895 https://x.com/RichardM529/status/1775975436851290511
Here's are references to the original video which is now up on Youtube, maybe the guy decided to monetize it there and asked people to take it down.
https://x.com/ElectricNews3/status/1775845160183582911 https://x.com/RoadandTrack/status/1774919686813106336 https://x.com/JOSEPHSAKOWSKI/status/1775572636707299482 https://x.com/WashTimes/status/1776014284184576068
This is interesting found this in a news article, but that tweet is just gone now. This seems like the strongest evidence you are correct. The cybertruck steering is completely new and not like other Teslas, there's no physical connectiong between the steering wheel and the tires.
"Love Tesla and my Cybertruck but 'catastrophe [sic] failure' with steering and brakes while on a road trip with wife and toddler," he tweeted, sharing a picture of his truck being loaded onto a flatbed truck.
"Pretty pretty pretty not good," he added. "Oh and service center not open today."
https://twitter.com/ChiarelloERISA/status/1764357938070626653
The video creator doesn't have to file a claim. If there are elements of copyrighted material in the video, such as Tesla's cybertruck, the owners of that copyright can file the claim. This happens all the time on YouTube.
Tesla's cybertruck would have a copyright?
What parts? The software UI? I have heard this happen with music before, but not a truck.