Elon Musk buys Twitter for $44 billion

https://twitter.com/LPMisesCaucus/status/1610032749439782912
5Tnsn6U.png


Tech's highly paid versions of Homer Simpson won't be missed
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...paid-versions-of-homer-simpson-wont-be-missed
Inez Feltscher Stepman (29 December 2022)

Elon Musk is conducting a public, real-time experiment as head of Twitter. Attracting the most fury and attention are his attempts to make the social media platform, which has more influence on media and the national political conversation than any of its competitors, into a freer, more transparent forum. By releasing reams of internal files to a series of journalists, he has also exposed the cozy interaction between pre-Musk Twitter and government censors, including the FBI.

Yet the debate over censorship is arguably of secondary importance to the long-term impact of the Musk experiment. Musk's willingness to clean house — by some accounts, he has fired over two-thirds of Twitter’s former staff — could have a domino effect throughout Silicon Valley, putting a dagger in the heart of the Left’s ideological control over America’s powerful tech sector.

That’s because the simple functioning of the app itself hasn’t deteriorated. The arguments have mostly been over who gets to tweet, taking for granted it represents the only barrier to use. This raises an extremely dangerous question many would like very much to avoid: Exactly what, other than answering the emails of FBI agents and enforcing woke diktats, did two out of three Twitter employees, with an estimated median salary of $150,000 a year, do? Musk’s tenure and his decisions as CEO pose a direct challenge to an entire class of well-paid managerial types, whose six-figure (sometimes seven-figure) jobs increasingly look like fat to cut as the tech sector moves toward leaner times.

The Achilles heel of our ruling class may not be its lack of wisdom or erudition or even its dedication to embracing the religion of wokeism but that many of them are, at the end of the day, highly paid versions of Homer Simpson. The slide of universities into ideological credentialing enterprises has had an enormous cultural cost, yes, but also a very rubber-meets-the-road impact on meritocracy and productivity, glossed over by politics. By the numbers, an Ivy League degree still generates “the good life” for those who earn it, but it’s a much more open question what many of them are actually generating for the bottom line.

Yoel Roth, Twitter’s former head of trust and safety and frequent pen pal of the FBI, is a near-perfect representation of a class that could be described, with a straight face, as a very successful capitalist version of Soviet commissars. That is, well-rewarded glorified hall monitors.

Roth is, again, Twitter’s best example of a very common phenomenon. His LinkedIn profile gives little suggestion of work qualifications beyond the ideological: His “research and teaching [are] focused on understanding how policy, governance, and code influence the types of communities that are able to safely and securely form online” and how “the choices of developers, designers, and policymakers can systematically push certain types of identities and communities to the digital margins.” In short, his resume reads as that of a woke academic or activist, not an engineer.

Roth is just among the most successful of his breed, but there are hundreds of thousands of Yoel Roths entrenched firmly in middle management throughout the Fortune 500, making six figures instead of seven. And their salaries add up to quite an expense on balance sheets.

Likely for much the same reason that has made James Burnham into the prophet of our times, our modern managerial economy seems unmatched in generating what anthropologist David Graeber calls “bulls*** jobs.” And increasingly, the justification for those jobs, especially overstaffed human resources and diversity departments, is not economic but political. Just as in the case of the environmental, social, and governance scam, there’s a tenuous economic explanation of ostensible benefits designed to keep the dollars-and-cents guys happy. CEOs, perhaps even more than the rest of us, probably hear constantly about the alleged productivity benefits of diversity, inclusiveness, and social responsibility — and why they need to hire the graduates of Wharton’s new degree program in diversity, equity, and inclusion.

But Musk’s tenure at Twitter could disprove those platitudinal explanations with a cold, hard, contrary example: You can cut most of your payroll, stick a finger in the eye of the Harvard-credentialed diversicrats, and run the company at a fraction of the cost with a core staff of competent, dedicated (and in the tech industry, mostly male) hump-busters. Your personnel expenses will plummet, and your company will become profitable.

Charles Haywood, the head of The Worthy House magazine with a law and business background, did some back-of-the-envelope calculations based on Twitter’s public finances and the estimated reduction in staff. “Musk has overnight changed Twitter’s net [profit] margin from negative 20% to approximately plus 28%, more than Apple or Google,” he tweeted. Haywood’s analysis assumes advertisers can’t be kept away forever, but even if a drop in ad sales changes the bottom line due to external pressure (i.e. leftist activist pressure) it still shows that the legions of well-paid hall monitors were irrelevant to the functioning of the actual product. Plus, Haywood’s calculation doesn’t factor in hundreds or perhaps thousands of dollars in TikTok-famous perks that tech companies have been told they must offer in order to attract the right “profile” of employee — Musk famously canceled Twitter HQ’s $400 lunches.

Even as Musk fulfills his Twitter poll promise to step back from the day-to-day operations and Terms of Service battles, if Twitter does not return to its previous staff levels, the example of a major tech company running relatively smoothly, at least on the technical side, with a third of the payroll expense will remain.

And it will only get more attractive as the tech bonanza of the last few years appears poised for a slide and as the country teeters on the edge of recession. In the last several months, there has been a slew of large layoffs by some of the industry’s giants, such as Amazon and Meta. By some estimates, over 120,000 employees have been laid off in the sector in just the past three months. Even Musk’s belt-tightening on perks is piquing the curiosity of other CEOs looking to cut costs. Meta (nee Facebook) just canceled its employees’ long-standing $200 Lyft stipend.

Elites have gotten away with their woke ideological turn largely because we are a fabulously wealthy country, but that wealth has given a class of power brokers the false impression that there are no consequences for their actions and that the gravy train will go on forever. They treat this extraordinary prosperity, in no small part generated by the truly productive departments of tech companies, as the baseline setting for the world and assume that they can continue to command big bucks in perpetuity merely for being among the properly ideologically credentialed.

But divining the hierarchy of the oppressed and punishing people for using the second-to-last update of politically correct language doesn’t add a dime to the real wealth of nations. Some significant, though difficult to estimate, portion of GDP is ideological dead weight — a fake economy generating real billions for the degree-studded keepers of its temple keys.

If, and it’s a big if considering the forces arrayed against him, Twitter 2.0 can prove it, Musk’s experiment may have lasting consequences not just for free speech in the digital public square but for the structural road map to success and the power that comes with it.
 
Coca-Cola accused of paying NAACP to call soda taxes ‘racist’
"I say Coke's policies are evil because I saw inside the room. The first step in playbook was paying the NAACP + other civil rights groups to call opponents racist," said Calley Means.
https://thepostmillennial.com/coca-cola-accused-of-paying-naacp-to-call-soda-taxes-racist
Roberto Wakerell-Cruxz (03 January 2022)

TrueMedicine Care co-founder Calley Means published a thread to Twitter on Monday, where he broke down the grip that soda companies have over food regulation. Means claimed that his Twitter Blue access and his account is now under review, suggesting that this was due to Coca-Cola being a major advertiser for Twitter.

[...]

"You can't have a free market if that market is rigged," Means concluded.

Means would then post that his Twitter account is under review and had his check suspended. "This is not the free speech ethos [Elon Musk], childhood obesity and diabetes is urgent issue. It is a simple question. Has Coca-Cola ever had a direct line to Twitter to suspend critics. Do they still?

//
 
Is Elon Lying Again?

We know from first-hand experience that Elon Musk lied about permitting banned individuals to return to Twitter. So it wouldn’t be too terribly surprising if CDAN is correct and he is also failing to tell the truth about eradicating child porn from the platform.

Shortly after the celebrity CEO took over the bird site, the CEO enlisted many online influencers to boost lies about purported success at removing child porn from the site, most notably top hashtags used to advertise the stuff. I told you the celebrity CEO was lying, and that a major news organization was conducting a significant investigation exposing all of this. It was just recently published, and you should go and read it. Child porn has gotten worse on the bird site, not better, since the celebrity CEO took over.

The story is at NBC News. And while it’s worth noting that NBC doesn’t appear to have had any problem with the market in what it calls “child sexual abuse material” on Twitter until Musk bought it, that doesn’t change the fact that what he says is no longer on the platform is still on the platform.

Twitter accounts that offer to trade or sell child sexual abuse material under thinly veiled terms and hashtags have remained online for months, even after CEO Elon Musk said he would combat child exploitation on the platform.

“Priority #1,” Musk called it in a Nov. 20 tweet. He’s also criticized Twitter’s former leadership, claiming that they did little to address child sexual exploitation, and that he intended to change things.

But since that declaration, at least dozens of accounts have continued to post hundreds of tweets in aggregate using terms, abbreviations and hashtags indicating the sale of what Twitter calls child sexual exploitation material, according to a count of just a single day’s tweets. The signs and signals are well known among experts and law enforcement agencies that work to stop the spread of such material.

The tweets reviewed by NBC News offer to sell or trade content that is commonly known as child pornography or child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The tweets do not show CSAM, and NBC News did not view any CSAM in the course of reporting this article.

Some tweets and accounts have been up for months and predate Musk’s takeover. They remained live on the platform as of Friday morning.

Then again, it’s possible that this is just a whack-a-mole problem that is in the process of being resolved. The question is whether Musk has actually given meaningful orders to his employees to get the job done and they’re dragging their feet or if he’s merely acting as his own PR and marketing departments. But given our success in establishing and implementing SG’s Clean Speech policy, and the ease with which spam bots can be detected and eradicated, there really isn’t any excuse for not eliminating the garbage from the platform.

https://voxday.net/2023/01/09/is-elon-lying-again/
 
Elon Musk fired the ENTIRE TEAM of Twitter in Brazil, including those responsible for moderating content, after discovering that employees benefited leftist politicians in the Brazilian elections.

There is also no more press office for the company in the country. The social network is without a communication area, extinguished after the conclusion of the acquisition of Twitter by Musk, in October.

Only the Twitter sales team is active, and with that, in Brazil, only 0.5% of the total number of employees remain now.

https://t.me/PaulSerranchannel/14031
 
Back
Top