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Last post 16 months ago by Mr. Jones. 132 replies replies.
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Elon Musk AKA "king midas" WILL TANK AFTER BUYING TWITTER
8trackdisco Offline
#101 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,076
Washington Post?
Stogie1020 Offline
#102 Posted:
Joined: 12-19-2019
Posts: 5,335
8trackdisco wrote:
Washington Post?

Same WAPO that just announced a 9% RIF...

Guess all those "Russia Collusion" writers aren't needed anymore. But the inflation is transitory.
HockeyDad Offline
#103 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,134
Stogie1020 wrote:
Same WAPO that just announced a 9% RIF...

Guess all those "Russia Collusion" writers aren't needed anymore. But the inflation is transitory.


At least it’s not a recession.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#104 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,431
So no Pulitzers?
Stogie1020 Offline
#105 Posted:
Joined: 12-19-2019
Posts: 5,335
HockeyDad wrote:
At least it’s not a recession.

Only for Women, but since no one can define them, it doesn't really exist.
ZRX1200 Offline
#106 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,604
Bezos has a divorce to pay off.
MACS Offline
#107 Posted:
Joined: 02-26-2004
Posts: 79,776
ZRX1200 wrote:
Bezos has a divorce to pay off.


Another Epstein client... along with Bill Gates.
JGKAMIN Offline
#108 Posted:
Joined: 05-08-2011
Posts: 1,403
Stogie1020 wrote:
Same WAPO that just announced a 9% RIF...

Guess all those "Russia Collusion" writers aren't needed anymore. But the inflation is transitory.

Yes, ironic her #2 point “2 Resistance at Twitter is becoming difficult to manage” on the same day the WAPO staffers became unruly at a town hall meeting with their CEO.

https://nypost.com/2022/12/14/washington-post-announces-layoffs-in-tense-town-hall-meeting/
ZRX1200 Offline
#109 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,604
There’s good people on both sides.

See what I did? Now they’re Nazis!!!!
HockeyDad Offline
#110 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,134
Everyone needs to calm down and have some avocado toast with Dave’s Killer Bread.
ZRX1200 Offline
#111 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,604
Do Nazis eat avocado toast?
rfenst Offline
#112 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,323
Musk is looking for a newTwitter CEO after losing poll


Bloomberg News
Elon Musk is looking for a new chief executive officer for Twitter Inc., according to a person familiar with the search, after the billionaire lost a straw poll he posted on the social media site that asked whether he should relinquish his role as head of the company.

More than 10 million votes, or 57.5%, were in favor of Musk stepping down, according to results that came in Monday morning. Musk committed to abide by the results when he launched the survey, but nearly a day later he had tweeted more than 10 times without directly addressing the outcome. The search for a new CEO could be drawn out and not yield results quickly, said the person, who asked for anonymity discussing a private matter.

Musk responded to a tweet suggesting the poll may have been manipulated by bots with a single word: “interesting.” Announcing a new policy move in one of his first tweets after the poll, Musk said Twitter will restrict voting on major policy decisions to paying Twitter Blue subscribers. Responding to a Blue member going by the name Unfiltered Boss, Musk agreed with the suggestion that only subscribers should have a voice in future policy and said, “Twitter will make that change.” Twitter Blue had attracted about 140,000 subscribers as of Nov. 15, the New York Times has reported.

Earlier, the billionaire pledged to submit all future policy decisions to a vote and offered Twitter users a choice on leadership, asking them if he should step down from the top position at the company he bought in October for $44 billion.
Musk’s dramatic offer came shortly after he attended the World Cup final match in Qatar, triggering a wave of trending topics such as “VOTE YES” and “CEO of Twitter.” He didn’t identify an alternative leader and went so far as to say anyone capable of doing the job wouldn’t want it.

CNBC’s David Faber reported earlier on Musk’s search for a new CEO. Faber reported that Musk’s search has been ongoing and started before the Twitter poll emerged.

Musk has warned that Twitter is at risk of bankruptcy and instituted a “hardcore” work environment for the remaining workers after a drastic cutback in staff. In his less than two months at the helm, he has spooked advertisers, alienated Twitter’s most ardent creators and turned the service from a reflection of the news of the day into the main topic.

After losing the initial poll, Musk, who’s also CEO of Tesla Inc., retweeted promotional material for the car company and for Twitter’s Blue for Business service. He also responded to an article about rival Toyota Motor Corp.’s criticism of electric vehicles with a simple “Wow.”

The stock of Tesla, by far Musk’s most valuable holding, has plummeted since the Twitter acquisition and critics have argued he’s spending too much time on the social media company. The shares were down 5.6% at 12:37 p.m. in New York.
MACS Offline
#113 Posted:
Joined: 02-26-2004
Posts: 79,776
HockeyDad wrote:
Everyone needs to calm down and have some avocado toast with Dave’s Killer Bread.


I already do that. That bread is really good. My favorite is the Good Seed and the Power Seed.

Just saying.
ZRX1200 Offline
#114 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,604
I prefer the EV seed
Mr. Jones Offline
#115 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,423
You have "E.D." z1200
DrMaddVibe Offline
#116 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,431
rfenst wrote:
Musk is looking for a newTwitter CEO after losing poll


Bloomberg News
Elon Musk is looking for a new chief executive officer for Twitter Inc., according to a person familiar with the search, after the billionaire lost a straw poll he posted on the social media site that asked whether he should relinquish his role as head of the company.

More than 10 million votes, or 57.5%, were in favor of Musk stepping down, according to results that came in Monday morning. Musk committed to abide by the results when he launched the survey, but nearly a day later he had tweeted more than 10 times without directly addressing the outcome. The search for a new CEO could be drawn out and not yield results quickly, said the person, who asked for anonymity discussing a private matter.

Musk responded to a tweet suggesting the poll may have been manipulated by bots with a single word: “interesting.” Announcing a new policy move in one of his first tweets after the poll, Musk said Twitter will restrict voting on major policy decisions to paying Twitter Blue subscribers. Responding to a Blue member going by the name Unfiltered Boss, Musk agreed with the suggestion that only subscribers should have a voice in future policy and said, “Twitter will make that change.” Twitter Blue had attracted about 140,000 subscribers as of Nov. 15, the New York Times has reported.

Earlier, the billionaire pledged to submit all future policy decisions to a vote and offered Twitter users a choice on leadership, asking them if he should step down from the top position at the company he bought in October for $44 billion.
Musk’s dramatic offer came shortly after he attended the World Cup final match in Qatar, triggering a wave of trending topics such as “VOTE YES” and “CEO of Twitter.” He didn’t identify an alternative leader and went so far as to say anyone capable of doing the job wouldn’t want it.

CNBC’s David Faber reported earlier on Musk’s search for a new CEO. Faber reported that Musk’s search has been ongoing and started before the Twitter poll emerged.

Musk has warned that Twitter is at risk of bankruptcy and instituted a “hardcore” work environment for the remaining workers after a drastic cutback in staff. In his less than two months at the helm, he has spooked advertisers, alienated Twitter’s most ardent creators and turned the service from a reflection of the news of the day into the main topic.

After losing the initial poll, Musk, who’s also CEO of Tesla Inc., retweeted promotional material for the car company and for Twitter’s Blue for Business service. He also responded to an article about rival Toyota Motor Corp.’s criticism of electric vehicles with a simple “Wow.”

The stock of Tesla, by far Musk’s most valuable holding, has plummeted since the Twitter acquisition and critics have argued he’s spending too much time on the social media company. The shares were down 5.6% at 12:37 p.m. in New York.


Trump is available!
rfenst Offline
#117 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,323
Tesla Shares Head for Worst Year Ever as Elon Musk Focuses on Twitter

Wall Street also bristles over weakening demand for Tesla’s electric vehicles


WSJ

Tesla Inc. TSLA -1.76%decrease; red down pointing triangle is on pace for its worst annual stock performance on record as investors bristle at Elon Musk’s Twitter Inc. ownership, as well as declining demand for the car company’s electric vehicles and slumps in the broader market in a higher interest rate environment.

Tesla’s share slide marks a sharp reversal for the world’s most valuable car company. The electric-vehicle maker had been one of the auto industry’s biggest winners during the early 2020s, a period plagued by chip shortages, snarled global supply chains and shutdowns related to Covid-19.

The company has lost roughly 70% of its value since the stock hit an all-time high in November 2021. Global economic uncertainty is deepening, and consumers have a growing array of other electric vehicles to choose from, prompting concern on Wall Street that Tesla might need to sacrifice its level of profitability to maintain its pace of growth.

Tesla’s stock-price decline has outpaced that of the broader market, as well as many of its rivals, though some electric-vehicle startups have fared worse.

Wall Street tempered its expectations for Tesla’s growth this year after an extended Covid-related shutdown of the company’s largest assembly plant, located in Shanghai.

Now rising interest rates and global economic uncertainty have stoked concern that demand for new vehicles might be weakening.

As recently as earlier this year, customers faced month slong waits for many Tesla models. No longer.

Tesla cut prices in China this fall and is offering various incentives to move cars off the lot and into customers’ driveways before the new year. In the U.S., Tesla is offering buyers of certain EVs a $7,500 credit and 10,000 miles of free fast-charging if they agree to take delivery this month.

Tesla, which didn’t respond to a request for comment, lowered its full-year growth expectations in October, with Chief Financial Officer Zach Kirkhorn saying the company expected to finish the year just shy of its original 2022 goal of increasing deliveries by 50%. The company delivered around 936,000 vehicles to customers in 2021. It would need to hand over more than 1.4 million this year to achieve its original target.

Mr. Musk said this month, “There is stormy weather ahead, but then there is going to be sunshine thereafter.”

Drivers shopping for an electric vehicle have more options to choose from. Tesla continues to dominate in the U.S., but rivals such as Ford Motor Co. and Rivian Automotive Inc. are gaining traction.

Mr. Musk has sold more than $39 billion of Tesla stock since the company’s market capitalization peaked. He has pointed to his Twitter involvement in explaining some of those sales. The billionaire bought the social-media company in a deal valued at $44 billion in October, with Twitter taking on roughly $13 billion in debt in the process. He said he wouldn’t sell more Tesla shares through next year.

Mr. Musk’s sales have rankled investors, some of whom have called on the company to repurchase its own shares for the first time. Mr. Musk said in October that a meaningful buyback was likely, floating the idea of repurchasing $5 billion to $10 billion of shares in 2023. He more recently cautioned that it would be unwise to buy back shares and then end up in a severe recession
ZRX1200 Offline
#118 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,604
Why do you hate slave labor in the Congo?
HockeyDad Offline
#119 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,134
That cobalt ain’t gonna mine itself!
Mr. Jones Offline
#120 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,423
Blue blue blue.... 🔵
rfenst Offline
#121 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,323
Forget Twitter’s problems. Can Musk’s Tesla last?

By Paul Krugman
NYT Opinion Columnist

If you’re one of those people who bought Bitcoin or another cryptocurrency near its peak last fall, you’ve lost a lot of money. Is it any consolation to know that you would have lost a similar amount if you had bought Tesla stock instead?
OK, probably not. Still, Tesla stock’s plunge is an opportunity to talk about what makes businesses successful in the information age. And in the end, Tesla and Bitcoin may have more in common than you think.

It’s natural to attribute Tesla’s recent decline — which is, to be sure, part of a general fall in tech stocks, but an exceptionally steep example — to Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter and the reputational self-immolation that followed. Indeed, given what we’ve seen of Musk’s behavior, I wouldn’t trust him to feed my cat, let alone run a major corporation. Furthermore, Tesla sales have surely depended at least in part on the perception that Musk himself is a cool guy. Who, aside from MAGA types who probably wouldn’t have bought Teslas anyway, sees him that way now?
On the other hand, as someone who has spent much of his professional life in academia, I’m familiar with the phenomenon of people who are genuinely brilliant in some areas but utter fools in other domains. For all I know, Musk is or was a highly effective leader at Tesla and SpaceX.

Even if that’s the case, though, it’s hard to explain the huge valuation the market put on Tesla before the drop, or even its current value. After all, to be that valuable Tesla would have to generate huge profits, not just for a few years but in a way that could be expected to continue for many years to come.
Now, some technology companies have indeed been long-term moneymaking machines. Apple and Microsoft still top the list of the most profitable U.S. corporations some four decades after the rise of personal computers.

But we more or less understand the durability of the dominance of Apple and Microsoft, and it’s hard to see how Tesla could ever achieve something similar, no matter how brilliant its leadership. Both Apple and Microsoft benefit from strong network externalities — loosely speaking, everyone uses their products because everyone else uses their products.
In the case of Microsoft, the traditional story has been that businesses continued to buy the company’s software, even when it was panned by many people in the tech world, because it was what they were already set up to use: Products like Word and Excel may not have been great, but everyone within a given company and in others it did business with was set up to use them, had I.T. departments that knew how to deal with them, and so on. These days Microsoft has a better reputation than it used to, but as far as I can tell its market strength still reflects comfort and corporate habit rather than a perception of excellence.

Apple’s story is different in the details — more about individual users than institutions, more about physical products than about software alone. And Apple was widely considered cool, which I don’t think Microsoft ever was. But at an economic level it’s similar. I can attest from personal experience that once you’re in the iPhone/iPad/MacBook ecosystem, you won’t give up on its convenience unless offered something a lot better.
Similar stories can be told about a few other companies, such as Amazon, with its distribution infrastructure.

The question is: Where are the powerful network externalities in the electric vehicle business?
Electric cars may well be the future of personal transportation. In fact, they had better be, since electrification of everything, powered by renewable energy, is the only plausible way to avoid climate catastrophe. But it’s hard to see what would give Tesla a long-term lock on the electric vehicle business.

I’m not talking about how great Teslas are or aren’t right now; I’m not a car enthusiast (I should have one of those bumper stickers that say, “My other car is also junk”), so I can’t judge. But the lesson from Apple and Microsoft is that to be extremely profitable in the long run a tech company needs to establish a market position that holds up even when the time comes, as it always does, that people aren’t all that excited about its products.
So what would make that happen for Tesla? You could imagine a world in which dedicated Tesla hookups were the only widely available charging stations, or in which Teslas were the only electric cars mechanics knew how to fix. But with major auto manufacturers moving into the electric vehicle business, the possibility of such a world has already vanished. In fact, I’d argue that the Inflation Reduction Act, with its strong incentives for electrification, will actually hurt Tesla. Why? Because it will quickly make electric cars so common that Teslas no longer seem special.

In short, electric vehicle production just doesn’t look like a network externality business. Actually, you know what does? Twitter, a platform many of us still use because so many other people use it. But Twitter usage is apparently hard to monetize, not to mention the fact that Musk appears set on finding out just how much degradation of the user experience it will take to break its network externalities and drive away the clientele.
Which brings us back to the question of why Tesla was ever worth so much. The answer, as best as I can tell, is that investors fell in love with a story line about a brilliant, cool innovator, despite the absence of a good argument about how this guy, even if he really was who he appeared to be, could found a long-lived money machine.

And as I said, there’s a parallel here with Bitcoin. Despite years of effort, nobody has yet managed to find any serious use for cryptocurrency other than money laundering. But prices nonetheless soared on the hype, and are still being sustained by a hard-core group of true believers. Something similar surely happened with Tesla, even though the company does actually make useful things.

I guess we’ll eventually see what happens. But I definitely won’t trust Elon Musk with my cat.


Mr. Jones Offline
#122 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,423
Elon Musk just fired the entire janitorial staff at Twitter HQ..
In Seattle? Or somewhere? California?
Forcing workers to bring in their own toilet paper...
He closed two floor of the four floor office to save money ...
Moldy take out food is rotting in trash cans because all the janitors were fired and no one has replaced their duties...

Like my O.P. SAID.....

THE AQUISITION OF TWITTER WILL BE KING MIDAS 'S
DOWNFALL....

HE WAS A STUPID F**K TO EVER EVEN THINK OF BUYING THAT WORTHLESS P.O.S. COMPANY....
HE WAS HORN SWAGGLED BY JACK DORSEY THE HIPPY AMISH BEARDED tie died weirdo F*K WHO DID TOO MANY HALLUCINAGINS ... alleDgeDleY 😎😎🤣😂
Mr. Jones Offline
#123 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,423
Twitter has lost over 50% of it's value in only two months.

King MIDAS 🤡🤡🤡🤡has turned into....

KING ****HEAD 🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴💩💩💩💩🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴💩💩💩💩💩🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴🤴💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️
frankj1 Online
#124 Posted:
Joined: 02-08-2007
Posts: 44,221
how's his free speech thing doing?
ZRX1200 Offline
#125 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,604
If only they got money from the government for cooperation….
HockeyDad Offline
#126 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,134
frankj1 wrote:
how's his free speech thing doing?


the Ministry of Truth reports that it is going fine.
rfenst Offline
#127 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,323
Don’t bite the Democrats who feed you


NYT By Paul Krugman
Opinion Columnist


True story: When I won the Nobel Prize in 2008, Princeton quickly set up a special event on campus and reserved a parking space for me in front of Robertson Hall. But when I drove up in my 2004 Jetta, the security people frantically tried to wave me away. They clearly didn’t find it plausible that a laureate would be driving such a modest car.
I’m still driving that car today.

The point is that I’m not one of those people who cares much about what he drives. (No doubt I act out my egotism in other ways.) But many people do, in fact, use their cars to symbolize their status — indeed, their identity.
There’s no point being censorious. Conspicuous consumption is a very human thing, going back as far as civilization itself. Over time, however, the form has changed. These days it’s relatively hard to tell how rich people are by the clothes they wear, which gives other status markers like cars a more important role. Also, in modern times people use consumer goods to display their values as well as their wealth. A fancy pickup truck sends one kind of message; a Tesla sends another.

And yes, speaking of Tesla, today’s newsletter is partly about Elon Musk.

As I wrote in my last newsletter, the main reason to believe that Tesla’s huge market value doesn’t make sense has little to do with Musk’s antics at Twitter. The problem instead is that Tesla’s dominance of the electric vehicle market is already fading as we speak, so the company is unlikely to generate the kind of extraordinary long-term profits that would justify its stock price.

That said, Musk has indeed been acting very oddly — and in ways that seem almost perfectly calculated to drive away his best customers.


After all, what does it mean to buy a Tesla? It’s a luxury car, but there are other luxury cars. What’s special about a Tesla is that it’s an electric, zero-emission luxury car — one that purports to be a glitzy ride to a sustainable future.

Also, until just the other day, Musk himself was widely seen as a cool guy. And cool in a futuristic sense: His company sends rockets into outer space; he was living with a popular musician who released an album inspired by the science-fiction novel “Dune” (a book that, by the way, was recently made into a terrific movie).

So what message was someone sending by driving a Tesla? Basically — I don’t think I’m being unfair — it was: “I’m rich but I’m woke.” Mock that stance all you like, but it really did increase Tesla sales. And it means that many Tesla buyers are probably also Democrats.

I’m not just guessing here. The other day a friend of mine who writes under the nom de internet Invictus used New York State data to compare county-level political leanings with Tesla registrations. Sure enough, in 2020, counties that voted overwhelmingly for Donald Trump — they do exist, even in New York — purchased far fewer Teslas per capita than those that voted overwhelmingly for Joe Biden.

Charles Gaba, known, among other things, for his documentation of the correlation between political leanings and vaccination status, has replicated these results for several states. Here, for example, is what it looks like in California:

(chart omitted)

So, yes, there are a lot of Teslas in Westchester, hardly any in Steuben. To some extent this may reflect the fact that people in Westchester have more income. But despite what you sometimes hear about the parties reversing class roles lately, Americans with incomes over $100,000 still vote Republican by a fairly large margin. What has reversed is the educational divide: College graduates have become a Democratic bloc, which supports the view that what we might call the Tesla divide is also linked to the culture war. And Westchester has far more college graduates than Steuben does.

Tesla, then, is a brand whose customer base largely consists of wealthy cultural liberals who were attracted in part by Elon Musk’s perceived with-it persona. Given all that, Musk’s public embrace of MAGA conspiracy theories is an almost inconceivably bad marketing move, practically designed to alienate his main buyers. What’s going on?
To a large extent Musk may simply be revealing who he always was — basically, a typical technology oligarch. In general, authoritarian instincts and contempt for the little people are a lot more prevalent among the Silicon Valley elite than people realized when information technology still felt cool.

Even among his class, however, Musk stands out for his lack of impulse control. This was obvious, if you paid attention, long before he bought Twitter. More than four years have passed since he called a cave rescuer who rejected Musk’s offer of a mini-submarine a “pedo guy.”

Furthermore, Musk’s behavior is becoming even more bizarre. (A favorite line of mine is that people get worse as they grow older because they become more like themselves.) Since when do captains of industry respond to random critics by mocking their imagined anatomies?

Now, as I wrote in my last newsletter, Tesla was probably headed for a fall eventually, even if Musk had been who his fans imagined him to be; the economics of the electric vehicle business just aren’t conducive to long-term market domination. But Musk might have been able to postpone the day of reckoning, at least for a while, if he had managed to hide who he was from his best customers a little longer.
HockeyDad Offline
#128 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,134
I’m trying to decide between the Tesla Cybertruck King Ranch edition or the 6666 Ranch edition.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#129 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,431
HockeyDad wrote:
I’m trying to decide between the Tesla Cybertruck King Ranch edition or the 6666 Ranch edition.



There's nothing wrong with the Ybor Fleur De Fleur Édition Spéciale!!!whip
JGKAMIN Offline
#130 Posted:
Joined: 05-08-2011
Posts: 1,403
rfenst wrote:
[b]Don’t bite the Democrats who feed you

Tesla, then, is a brand whose customer base largely consists of wealthy cultural liberals who were attracted in part by Elon Musk’s perceived with-it persona. Given all that, Musk’s public embrace of MAGA conspiracy theories is an almost inconceivably bad marketing move, practically designed to alienate his main buyers. What’s going on?
To a large extent Musk may simply be revealing who he always was — basically, a typical technology oligarch. In general, authoritarian instincts and contempt for the little people are a lot more prevalent among the Silicon Valley elite than people realized when information technology still felt cool.

Are they really “conspiracy theories” when they’re proven to be true?
DrMaddVibe Offline
#131 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,431
Called it back in #29!!!

"Flaming Dumpster": Musk May Need To 'Tear Down' Twitter Code And 'Start From Scratch'



Journalist Dave Rubin was allowed into Twitter's San Francisco headquarters recently, where owner Elon Musk opened the kimono and allowed him vast access to the company's operations.

When asked what he could share, Musk replied "anything that's true."

Below is Rubin's Twitter thread detailing his findings:

I met with several engineers who were doing a deep dive on why my account and so many others seem to be absolutely crushed after that two or three week return to normalcy when Elon first took over. They still have more questions than answers, but they did learn a bunch of stuff.
— Dave Rubin (@RubinReport) January 26, 2023

Continued...
Accounts aren’t just hit with labels that are obvious to insiders. They now found more “secret” labels which are causing shadowbans. My account was hit with all three; “Recent abuse strike,” “Recent misinformation strike”, “Recent suspension strike.”
 
It’s unclear so far what these strikes actually do, but for sure they suppress views and recommendations, they are trying to figure out to what extent. I also had many innocuous tweets labeled NSFW or NSFA (not safe for ads) which affect visibility in the timeline.
 
Also, there’s an entire KeyWord database so that machine learning makes sure not to promote violence, porn etc., but it’s a mess of overreaching words. Literally the word “gay” was on the KeyWord list which would make you not advertiser friendly and harm the tweet in the algo.
 
Backing up for a sec, they found the “recent suspension strike” on my account most interesting because it was fro July 2022, when I was suspended for calling out @jordanbpeterson’s unjust suspension. So though suspension was reversed the action on the account remained.

Elon was bringing people in and out constantly and seems to be aware of pretty much every issue. He thinks maybe the entire code has to be torn down and start from scratch. At the end last night he said that the whole situation is “a flaming dumpster rolling down the street.” pic.twitter.com/bTdNmbX5Ks
— Dave Rubin (@RubinReport) January 26, 2023

So I assure you they are aware of the problems and Elon and engineers are there all night trying to untie this crazy knot. Some changes they’ve made, like the “For You” tab, have confused people and hurt engagement for accounts who have gotten the NSFA label without knowing.

They also don’t know for sure why things got so much better once Elon made the acquisition and why it seems far worse now. Some is probably related to excitement around Elon himself, which also coincided with World Cup, but that doesn’t explain why it feels so off right now.

Will share more in bit but have to catch a flight.
Closing remarks

On a personal note Elon is funny as hell, laughs a ton and it’s just really obvious he cares about Twitter because he cares about free speech and the bigger problems facing the world. He doesn’t need this headache, he chose it.

Also huge shout out to @DavidSacks who is helping Elon clean up this mess because he believes in the fight for free speech as much as Elon does. And massive thanks to the engineers who opened up their computers, showed me literally everything I asked for, and were total pros.

Oh, one either thing for now…

Elon really lit up when we talked about the shifting political landscape and how anyone non-woke is now “far right.”

That notion is deeply connected to how screwy thing got at Twitter and he’s working to fix it despite the huge challenges ahead.
And frankly they gotta get that company out of SF…

And frankly they gotta get that company out of SF… https://t.co/5FbcSibQRe
— Dave Rubin (@RubinReport) January 26, 2023

What’s also really crazy now having seen under the hood is that Jack Dorsey repeatedly said they don’t shadowban. The entire machine behind Twitter is designed to shadowban. It’s almost as if that was the primary goal rather than the product itself.
 

Perfect illustration of how crazy things are. A friend just sent the to me, watch the RT’s go up and then suddenly go down. @elonmusk pic.twitter.com/3Q0T7AcEMs
— Dave Rubin (@RubinReport) January 26, 2023

Perfect illustration of how crazy things are. A friend just sent the to me, watch the RT’s go up and then suddenly go down.
 
And as Musk himself says, this is an:

Accurate thread
— Mr. Tweet (@elonmusk) January 26, 2023

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/flaming-dumpster-musk-may-need-tear-down-twitter-code-and-start-scratch



Frying pan Frying pan Frying pan
Mr. Jones Offline
#132 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,423
I sayyyyy

MUSK SHOULD APPEAL the sale of this company to the FCC
AND DOJ and ask for a "REVERSAL OF SALE" due to all the laws DORSEY AND HIS COHORTS were breaking, and government intrusion to free speech, Dorset lying about shadowbanning, and the 20? Other lies they sold musk IN THE PRESALE AGREEMENT...

I SAY MAKE JACK DORSEY PENNILESS AND SUE HIS TYE DYED SHIRT AND AMISH BEARD INTO THE ABYSSS....
MAKE THAT F**K DIVE iN DUMPSTERS to make a living like me.
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