#RIPTwitter Floods Platform As Users Fear Site's Breakdown
05:50 GMT 18.11.2022 (Updated: 07:56 GMT 18.11.2022)
© OLIVIER DOULIERY(FILES) In this file photo illustration taken on April 14, 2022 a phone screen displays the Twitter account of Elon Musk with a photo of him shown in the background, in Washington, DC.
© OLIVIER DOULIERY
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From tossing overboard half Twitter's employees - including top management - to introducing sweeping changes to the platform such as the $8-a-month subscription-based verification service, billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk has been on a ruthless roll since finalizing his purchase of the social media giant late last month.
Twitter has erupted into a frenzy of memes and “eulogies” ostensibly bidding goodbye to the platform in the wake of Elon Musk’s recent hardcore ultimatum to employees to knuckle under and be prepared to work "long hours at high intensity, or quit".
The deadline that the SpaceX and Tesla chief executive issued to flabbergasted staff as part of his relentless slew of changes to the microblogging site he bought last month is believed to have triggered a mass exodus, leaving users agog. In an email, reportedly sent on 16 November, Musk opened up on his vision for “Twitter 2.0,” warning staff that they would have to “be extremely hardcore,” adding:
“This will mean working long hours at high intensity… Only exceptional performance will constitute a passing grade.”
Since the tech guru started off his first days as 'Chief Twit' by firing staff, management included, the number of employees is believed to have shrunk from around 7,500 to just under 4,000. With hundreds more prepared to look at Twitter soon "in the rear-view mirror", some appear to be concerned that Musk might be left with a skeleton crew.
As #RIPTwitter started trending, people on social media had a field day.
#RIPTwitter #Twitter #ElonIsDestroyingTwitter pic.twitter.com/IF5uFBNp51
— WinkProgress.com 🐈🐾😺 (@WinkProgress) November 10, 2022
Gentlemen, it has been a privilege tweeting with you tonight.#RIPTwitter pic.twitter.com/wDRHyWhwf3
— Mitchell Nagy (@mryannagy) November 18, 2022
So long & goodnight my friends... https://t.co/4OMvg0OALw
— SpectreSaunders (@SpectreSaunders) November 18, 2022
Ex-Twitter employees pitching investors next week. #RIPTwitter pic.twitter.com/aQe1Zpl2GT
— Pete Haas (@dimeford) November 18, 2022
It Was Fun While It Lasted #RIPTwitter pic.twitter.com/8YUV4N1wQ0
— Web3 Lunch (@web3lunch) November 18, 2022
Goodbye twitter, been a good run. #RIPTwitter pic.twitter.com/fkkUZWz2oQ
— Bish 🗽 (@thebishundercov) November 18, 2022
Me looking back at my three followers one last time since Twitter about to shut down #RIPTwitter #TwitterDown
— JC (@JuanCafecito) November 18, 2022
pic.twitter.com/1MITBwhlZB
With little clarity regarding the scale of the exodus, in a private chat on Signal nearly 40 Twitter staffers out of about 50 revealed they were ready to claim severance pay and leave, according to one ex-employee cited by media. Amid the reported turmoil, Musk was said to be meeting with some of the top staff members in a bid to persuade them to stay. He appears to have exuded optimism in his recent tweets, insisting that Twitter had "just hit another all-time high" in usage.
And … we just hit another all-time high in Twitter usage lol
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 18, 2022
Trolling those who were quick to predict the platform's demise, Elon Musk wryly joked that "there’s a chance we can keep Twitter alive."
Don’t wanna jinx it, but there’s a chance we can keep Twitter alive … pic.twitter.com/mk3aCq0dEB
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 18, 2022
Elon Musk, who also owns electric carmaker Tesla and spacecraft manufacturer SpaceX, bought Twitter as part of a $44Bln deal in which he vowed to rescue the company from debt and restore its profitability. Yet the slew of changes he brought in, along with mass lay-offs, have not gone down well.
On Tuesday, Musk announced that one of his proposed changes, ending the verification of accounts not paying for a Twitter Blue subscription, would soon resume after being put on hold earlier this month. After the verification was announced, it originally triggered a wave of fake accounts that wreaked havoc on the stock market.