Twitter layoffs raise questions about future of
infrastructure and moderation
Kari Paul
in San
Francisco
With advertisers cutting ties and pressure to pay back
loans worth $13bn, the new direction for revenue has come under questioning
Fri 4 Nov 2022
23.32 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/nov/04/twitter-layoffs-misinformation-moderation
Layoffs of
hundreds of Twitter employees have raised alarm about the future of the
platform as it continues to restructure under the ownership of Elon Musk, who
purchased the company for $44bn last week.
Musk, upon
taking the helm of Twitter has made sweeping changes to the company, on Friday
beginning mass layoffs across a number of sections – including marketing,
product, engineering, legal and trust and safety.
The layoffs
come as the company’s new billionaire owner scrambles to turn a profit at
Twitter after purchasing the company at a far higher cost than it was valued,
facing immediate pressure to pay back approximately $13bn in loans.
On Friday
afternoon, Twitter’s head of safety appeared to confirm that roughly half of
the company’s workforce has been cut, which would amount to an estimated 3,700
jobs.
The company
has confirmed few details about the layoffs, including which teams had been
affected. News reports and announcements from terminated employees suggested
that among the teams that had been impacted were the curation team, the
communications department, the human rights team, the machine learning ethics,
transparency and accountability team, the internet technology team and the
accessibility engineering team.
Combined
with news earlier this week that Musk had directed Twitter teams this week to
find up to $1bn in annual infrastructure cost savings, the cuts signaled new
directions for Twitter in terms of revenue streams and raised questions about
the future of critical infrastructure and content moderation on the platform.
With
possible cuts to spending on critical resources such as cloud storage and
servers, experts are particularly concerned as the US midterm elections
approach, when larger numbers of users than usual go to the platform to follow
breaking news and share information.
An internal
source at the company told Reuters the infrastructure cuts were “delusional”,
adding that when user traffic kicks up, the service can fail “in spectacular
ways”.
The layoffs
are also calling into question Twitter’s ability to keep the platform safe and
secure, and come after a whistleblower accused the company of “egregious”
failings in security and safety.
“Elon
Musk’s layoffs to Twitter’s policy enforcement teams will destroy the
platform’s capacity to stop the spread of hate speech, misinformation and
disinformation at a time when the American public and voters need access to
facts and civil discourse more than ever,” said Jim Steyer, founder and CEO of
digital rights group Common Sense Media.
The reports
of drastic cuts to the communications staff raised concerns Twitter may follow
in the path of other Musk companies like Tesla, which do not communicate with
the press. Musk, who has historically had an adversarial relationship with
media, dissolved the electric car company’s public relations department in 2020
in an unprecedented move.
In response
to Musk’s changes at the platform, advocates are calling for advertisers to
pull out. The large number of employees being laid off at Twitter will make it
“impossible for the company to uphold critical brand safeguards and content
moderation standards”, said the #StopToxicTwitter Coalition, a group of more
than 60 civil rights groups formed to sound the alarm about the direction of
the company.
“Elon Musk
has demonstrated that it’s not possible for him to keep the brand safeguards
that have existed on Twitter in place,” said Angelo Carusone, president of
Media Matters for America, part of the coalition. “There’s no more time for
trust but verify, it’s time for escalation.”
The group
had publicly urged Twitter’s top 20 advertisers to leave the platform if Musk
followed through on plans to undermine content moderation practices. After
Friday’s layoffs, it is encouraging those companies to follow through and pull
advertising from Twitter.
Several
companies have already done so, with Volkswagen AG’s Audi, General Mills and
General Motors all pausing advertising spend at Twitter indefinitely. Musk
responded to the effort in a tweet on Friday morning, saying: “Twitter has had
a massive drop in revenue, due to activist groups pressuring advertisers.”
Advertising
made up 90% of Twitter revenue last year, making the ongoing battle over brand
perception of the platform critical to Musk’s business plan. He assured
advertisers in an earlier meeting that Twitter would not become a “free-for-all
hellscape” and said he would not reinstate any accounts or make major content
decisions before convening a new “content moderation council”.
The
billionaire has also floated a number of ideas for other streams of revenue,
including a plan to charge for “verified” badges, and creating an “everything
app” that would combine several platforms into one, but has not taken concrete
action on either of those ventures.

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