Current:Home > InvestHow likely is a complete Twitter meltdown? -PureWealth Academy
How likely is a complete Twitter meltdown?
View
Date:2025-04-24 19:10:45
People are singing their last birdsongs on Twitter, as some brace for what they fear will be a final farewell to the platform whose workforce has shrunk dramatically in the few weeks it's been owned by billionaire Elon Musk.
While it's unlikely that Twitter will shut down entirely, departing employees are warning of service outages, glitches and safety risks.
Plus, there are concerns about the platform's capacity to handle traffic during big events, such as the World Cup kicking off this weekend.
On Thursday, more employees quit after Musk gave them an ultimatum: Either they sign on to a new "hardcore" era or leave with three months severance. The fresh departures came just two weeks after Musk laid off half of the company. He's also eliminated thousands of contractor jobs and fired some employees who criticized him publicly. Without cost cuts and increased revenue, he says, bankruptcy is possible.
Some former employees who chose not to sign onto Musk's new vision took to Twitter to explain their decisions.
"I left because I no longer knew what I was staying for," Peter Clowes, a senior software engineer who resigned on Thursday, wrote in a thread. "Previously I was staying for the people, the vision, and of course the money (lets all be honest). All of those were radically changed or uncertain."
Clowes noted any employee who chose to remain would have had to sign away their option to take severance before seeing their offer, and without a clear picture of the future Musk has planned. He said of his team of 75 engineers, only three chose to stay.
Employees who were laid off in early November still have not received any communication from Twitter, aside from one note to their personal email addresses saying severance packages were going to take longer to arrive, according to a former employee who, like others, spoke to NPR on the condition of anonymity because they feared the loss of promised severance and retaliation from the company.
While the platform is still functioning, many warn features may deteriorate as the site is run by a threadbare team.
Users are preparing for a Twitter shutdown
Many users are encouraging each other to protect against an outage or breach by downloading their archives of data — including their tweets and follower lists. Yet the load that creates on Twitter's systems could become a tipping point, the former employee said.
They also worried about what might happen to Twitter's data centers without the workforce to monitor them sufficiently.
"If a network cable gets disconnected, or if a hard drive gets filled up or if there's some minor power switch failure somewhere, there aren't enough people to deal with these situations," they said.
Plus, there are safety and security concerns. Twitter saw a surge in racist and antisemitic tweets following Musk's takeover. Many of the staff and contractors who were laid off or resigned worked on teams curbing toxic and illegal content.
Musk framed his interest in buying Twitter in the first place as being about increasing free speech. He has previously criticized its policies against hate speech, harassment and misleading claims.
But he's hit a steep learning curve as Twitter's self-declared "Chief Twit." Hours after closing the deal in late October, he tweeted, "Comedy is now legal on Twitter." Then, when some users changed their names and photos to mimic his own, he changed his tune and declared, "Going forward, any Twitter handles engaging in impersonation without clearly specifying 'parody' will be permanently suspended."
Musk's habit of abruptly announcing changes and features, and just as quickly reversing them, has left staff feeling whiplashed — and in some cases, redundant.
"A Twitter whose policies are defined by unilateral edict has little need for a trust and safety function dedicated to its principled development," Yoel Roth, the former head of trust and safety at Twitter who resigned earlier this month, wrote in a New York Times op-ed.
With security, engineering and content moderation teams gutted, the platform is also more vulnerable to hacks and abuse.
Twitter is a platform that is "so complicated that truly nobody understands how it all works," another former employee said. "The loss of the security organization is bad, the loss of all that institutional knowledge is worse."
NPR's Camila Domonoske contributed to this report.
veryGood! (6842)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Jenn Tran Named Star of The Bachelorette Season 21
- Milk from sick dairy cattle in 2 states test positive for bird flu: What to know
- Maxwell announces concert tour with Jazmine Sullivan. Here's how to get tickets
- Olympic women's basketball bracket: Schedule, results, Team USA's path to gold
- Small business hiring woes show signs of easing as economy stays strong
- $1.1 billion Mega Millions drawing nears, followed by $865 million Powerball prize
- Vanderbilt basketball to hire James Madison coach Mark Byington
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Man convicted of killing 6-year-old Tucson girl to be sentenced in April
Ranking
- From bitter rivals to Olympic teammates, how Lebron and Steph Curry became friends
- TEA Business College: Top predictive artificial intelligence software AI ProfitProphet
- Trump's Truth Social platform soars in first day of trading on Nasdaq
- Carnival cruise ship catches fire for the second time in 2 years
- Immigration issues sorted, Guatemala runner Luis Grijalva can now focus solely on sports
- Trump is selling ‘God Bless the USA’ Bibles for $59.99 as he faces mounting legal bills
- Subject of 'Are We Dating the Same Guy' posts sues women, claims they've defamed him
- Jenn Tran Named Star of The Bachelorette Season 21
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
The 10 Best Ballet Flats of 2024 That Are Chic, Comfy, and Will Never Go Out of Style
Girl Scout troop resolved to support migrants despite backlash
Oliver Hudson says he sometimes 'felt unprotected' growing up with mother Goldie Hawn
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
NYC subway rider is pushed onto tracks and killed, latest in a series of attacks underground
The Bachelor Season 28 Finale: Find Out If Joey Graziadei Got Engaged
TEA Business College leads cutting-edge research on cryptocurrency market
Like
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- YouTuber Ruby Franke's Chilling Journal Entries Revealed After Prison Sentence for Child Abuse
- This Month’s Superfund Listing of Abandoned Uranium Mines in the Navajo Nation’s Lukachukai Mountains Is a First Step Toward Cleaning Them Up