𝕏 / Twitter / X, the Social Media Platform Formerly Known as Twitter / "MUSK OWNS TWITTER"

So....who do we trust?
trustno1

Also make that your password on all your accounts.

Do you think any of these weirdos have had the self reflection that....simply not reading things you don't like/leaving has always been an option?
This is why I hate these scumbags. They could easily just ignore the shit they're whining about, but instead, they want to claim their feels mean that nobody else should even be allowed to express their opinions or even view the opinions of other people they hate.

I'm not joking, this bullshit needs to be eliminated or freedom is doomed. The concept that your feels override other people's basic rights is absolutely insane and evil garbage and the people promoting it either need to knock it off or get killed.
 
trustno1

Also make that your password on all your accounts.


This is why I hate these scumbags. They could easily just ignore the shit they're whining about, but instead, they want to claim their feels mean that nobody else should even be allowed to express their opinions or even view the opinions of other people they hate.

I'm not joking, this bullshit needs to be eliminated or freedom is doomed. The concept that your feels override other people's basic rights is absolutely insane and evil garbage and the people promoting it either need to knock it off or get killed.

It is a power tactic to silence speech. If you don't let them join thats discrimination if you let them join your offending them and need to tone it down. The idea of dangerous locker room talk is a threat to their continued existence and can not be allowed to continue.

I am not even slightly joking. Feminism sees men talking alone among themselves as a dangerous activity.

 
Source: https://www.wired.com/story/twitter-employee-arbitration/
Archive: https://archive.ph/2GKhK

Ex-Twitter Employees Plan to ‘Bombard’ Company With Legal Claims​

Disgruntled former staff allege they were not given the severance packages they were promised. The mountain of litigation could cost Twitter millions.

By Vittoria Elliott
Updated Dec. 06, 2022 11:32 AM

Just a month after Twitter’s new CEO, Elon Musk, oversaw massive staff layoffs, former Twitter employees have announced that they’re filing suit over the company’s severance policies. In a press conference with their lawyer Lisa Bloom, former employees Helen-Sage Lee, Adrian Trejo Nuñez, and Amir Shevat alleged that the company’s handling of their termination constituted a breach of contract, and a violation of California’s Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act.

It might only be a handful former employees now, but Twitter could soon be inundated with similar cases and be forced to pay legal fees running into millions of dollars. Rafael Nendel‑Flores, a California-based employment lawyer, says the legal strategy of filing multiple arbitration suits, which is likely a way to get around the constraints of a dispute resolution agreement, will pile pressure on Twitter. “Just the arbitration fees alone could be massive,” he says.

That’s because employers, in this case Twitter, are required to shoulder the cost of the arbitration process. And having hundreds or thousands of cases to contend with all at once could be a significant financial and administrative burden for a company already struggling with a massive loss in advertiser revenue. Each individual arbitration case can easily cost between $50,000 and $100,000, says Nendel-Flores. “That is, in my view, a significant pressure point—that Ms. Bloom and probably other plaintiffs’ lawyers are going to try and push these individual arbitration cases.”

Like most Twitter employees, Lee and the others had signed away their right to be part of a class action suit when they took the job via a dispute resolution agreement that routes all legal complaints to arbitration. This meant that if they had a problem with the company, each person would have to negotiate on their own. For an employer, such a legal mechanism blocks huge class action suits. But for Twitter, faced with scores of disgruntled former employees, it could lead to death by a thousand cuts.

And Bloom’s clients are not alone. Last week, Akiva Cohen, a lawyer representing another group of Twitter employees, notified the company that his clients, too, would be filing arbitration suits if the company did not “unequivocally confirm” that former employees would be given the full severance they say Twitter promised them.

“Nobody really expects to go into a workplace setting, especially a new job that you’re really excited about, thinking you’re going to end up suing your employer one day or your employer is going to treat you in a way that deserves legal action,” says Lee.

When Musk first announced the layoffs, another group of employees filed a preemptive lawsuit against Twitter for potential violations of the WARN Act, which requires that companies provide employees with 60 days notice of layoffs. In response, Twitter agreed to keep the fired employees on its payroll as non-working employees until January 4, but the severance for fired employees as yet remains unclear. Lee, Nuñez, and Shevat allege that the severance they were offered by the company after it was purchased differed from what they had been promised before the takeover.
 

Elon Musk says PayPal is moving in the “direction of social credit”

Archive
PayPal seems to be moving in the direction of social credit and restricting transactions – that’s concerning,” PayPal co-founder, and now Tesla and Twitter CEO, Elon Musk, said in a recent Spaces.

Last month, Twitter filed registration paperwork to pave the way for it to process payments, according to a filing with the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, which was obtained by The New York Times.

Following that, Musk said that he envisioned users connecting their online bank accounts to the social media service, with the company moving later into “debit cards, checks, and whatnot.”

Following public backlash, PayPal recently abandoned a proposed update to its Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) that would have led to penalties of $2,500 for spreading “misinformation.” However, the company still maintains a policy carrying similar penalties for “intolerance.”

The AUP prohibits the “promotion of hate, violence, racial or other forms of intolerance.” Free speech advocates feel that the policy is vague and is left to the interpretation of PayPal staff.

Aaron Terr, a senior program officer of the rights group Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said at the time that the policy “suffers from the same defect as a lot of the other proposed prohibitions on speech, in that it’s vague.”

Terr added: “And it’s left open to interpretation by PayPal employees, and because of its vagueness, that gives them a lot of discretion to essentially just enforce that provision against disfavored speakers, and to do so in a viewpoint-discriminatory manner.”

The revoked misinformation policy update was condemned by PayPal founders. Co-founder Elon Musk said the update “goes against everything I believe in.”
 
These "Twitter Spaces" things suck, I'm constantly scratching my head trying to find out where I can watch the replay and:
Spaces are accessible while they are live; once ended, they will no longer be available publicly on Twitter. Twitter retains copies of audio from Spaces and available captions for 30 days after a Space ends to review for violations of the Twitter Rules. If a Space is found to contain a violation, we extend the time we maintain a copy for an additional 90 days (a total of 120 days after a Space ends) to allow people to appeal if they believe there was a mistake. Twitter also uses Spaces content and data for analytics and research to improve the service.
https://help.twitter.com/en/using-twitter/spaces#download
Here's an idea, since people are already recording them, why don't you just add them to the hosts twitter profile, that way it can drive more traffic to them, rather than me having to go hunt them down elsewhere in third part hosting sites. "So-and-so said X on Twitter Spaces last night" How do I verify they actually said it, if they delete them when they are over. I don't trust the journoswine not to bend the wording/context. This is dumb.
 
Elon Musk says PayPal is moving in the “direction of social credit”
I knew all of the insane hatred heaped on Elon Musk was meant to distract from all the dark shit Peter Thiel is planning.
I really think Elon Musk and Peter Thiel are on a collision course, ideologically.
They might seem aligned but they're really not.
 
Do you think any of these weirdos have had the self reflection that....simply not reading things you don't like/leaving has always been an option?

Like it's hilarious seeing all these pink haired fag/got crybabies screaming about leaving twitter (on twitter, which they won't) or all these new alternatives, because they're upset all these evil nazis are going to be on twitter.

...after literally spending 10 years having meltdowns, crying, calling the police, trying to make it illegal, etc. to see or hear words they don't like. They literally completely breakdown and stop functioning with "muh anxiety" if someone uses the wrong pronoun, leave work to make a tiktok gasping for air in their car, go HARD to get said people removed from everywhere.

When literally the whole time they could just...leave. Or close the tab. "Welp there's a nazi saying nigger here, I'm going somewhere with people who won't say that" like, yes? That's what functioning adults do? The truth is you know none of them see the irony of this and instead see them as being chased away by evil monsters who should be banished, even when the weirdos are the ones who go where they are to scream at them to leave...
I think, at least part of it, is less that they see it happen but that it happens at all. I've seen plenty of these retards rage about the language people use on websites they clearly don't go to, like 4chan. It's not that they see someone say nigger, but that someone, somewhere, is saying it online without being censored or punished for it. And they just can't stand that.
 
These "Twitter Spaces" things suck, I'm constantly scratching my head trying to find out where I can watch the replay and:

https://help.twitter.com/en/using-twitter/spaces#download
Here's an idea, since people are already recording them, why don't you just add them to the hosts twitter profile, that way it can drive more traffic to them, rather than me having to go hunt them down elsewhere in third part hosting sites. "So-and-so said X on Twitter Spaces last night" How do I verify they actually said it, if they delete them when they are over. I don't trust the journoswine not to bend the wording/context. This is dumb.
Storage costs. They probably don't have the database space for it....YET
 
I knew all of the insane hatred heaped on Elon Musk was meant to distract from all the dark shit Peter Thiel is planning.
I really think Elon Musk and Peter Thiel are on a collision course, ideologically.
They might seem aligned but they're really not.
In the battle between the autistic man-child with a space exploration and baby-making fixiation and the creepy blood-drinking faggot who seems to secretly fund every glowing grifter on the right, I know who I support.
 
Musk has fired an FBI Glow Nigger from Twitter for covering up the Hunter Biden laptop story:

musk2.png


Twitter CEO Elon Musk fired the company’s general counsel over his role in the company’s handling of the Hunter Biden laptop story.

James A. Baker, who had been the FBI’s general counsel previously, had played a role in spreading the discredited Steele Dossier, which made his efforts to suppress potential dirt on Democrat Joe Biden look especially galling to conservatives and free-speech advocates.

“In light of concerns about Baker’s possible role in suppression of information important to the public dialogue, he was exited from Twitter today,” Mr. Musk wrote in a tweet on Tuesday.

musk3.png
 
Musk has fired an FBI Glow Nigger from Twitter for covering up the Hunter Biden laptop story:
View attachment 4015488




View attachment 4015584
Unless your business is private glownigger contractor, never hire an "ex"-glownigger. Their loyalty is not to you, it is to their fellow glowniggers who still get a paycheck from the taxpayers
 
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