Elon Musk’s $44 billion purchase of Twitter last month has put the company in danger of failing. The billionaire has been working diligently to enact his vision on the microblogging site, firing critics, laying off nearly half of the personnel, launching a new subscription plan, tweeting humor, and issuing severe warnings to the workforce that the company must reform or risk going out of business.
The future of Twitter is still uncertain
The future of the company is still uncertain. Many think Musk won’t be able to control the company and the upheaval he brought about. It appears that there are still changes to be made. What should Twitter do next, Musk recently posed the question to users on Twitter.
The new Twitter CEO and the richest man in the world wrote a string of emails to the company’s workforce on Friday, November 18. The software engineers were originally asked to report to the 10th floor at 2 PM by email.
He sent another email concerning the “tech stack”—a phrase for the company’s software and related systems—after waiting for thirty minutes. According to Reuters, Musk also requested that the engineers send 10 screenshots of the most important lines of code and their records from the last six months.
Musk gave his staff a deadline to determine whether they wanted to stay or quit
According to some inside sources, on November 17, a day earlier, approximately 1,200 workers submitted their resignations. Following the recent round of mass layoffs, the company’s workforce fell from 7,500 to 3,700. After Musk gave his staff a deadline to determine whether they wanted to stay or quit, this took place. (https://thereader.com) As a result, many people quit the organization, tweeting their goodbyes under the hashtag #Twittertakeover.
The site’s content policy moderating is one thing, though, about which he is certain. Musk tweeted on Friday about the company’s updated content policy. He asserted that hateful content won’t be algorithmically eliminated, but it also won’t be pushed into users’ feeds.
Even more, he unbanned some accounts, including those of Jordan Peterson, Kathy Griffin, and others. The decision to reinstall former US president Trump has not yet been made.