Elon Musk announces change of Twitter’s bird logo to X

Elon Musk, on Sunday, announced plans to change the microblogging site Twitter’s bird logo to X.

Mr Musk’s action would be the latest in a series of controversial shake-ups to the social media platform under his stewardship since he acquired the social media platform for $44 billion last October.

In a thread of tweets, Mr Musk said the change would be made on Monday to replace the blue bird logo with the X logo.

“And soon we shall bid adieu to the Twitter brand and, gradually, all the birds,” Mr Musk tweeted.Mr Musk had earlier changed the company’s official name in April to X Holdings Corp, after his venture X.com, to reflect his vision of creating ‘X’, the everything app performing social media and payment functions similar to China’s WeChat.

Linda Yaccarino, Twitter’s chief executive, confirmed the launch of the X brand on Sunday. Ms Yaccarino tweeted, “It is an exceptionally rare thing – in life or business – that you get a second chance to make another big impression.

Twitter made one massive impression and changed the way we communicate. Now, X will go further, transforming the global town square.”

She explained that the new logo would be “centred in audio, video, messaging, payments/banking” and would be a “global marketplace for ideas, goods, services, and opportunities.”

Despite laying off half of the company’s staff after the acquisition, Mr Musk recently revealed that the site remained cashflow-negative with a heavy debt burden after losing half of its advertising revenue.

Twitter removes New York Times verification for rejecting Blue subscription

Twitter CEO, Elon Musk, has stripped the New York Times account of its verification badge after the news platform opposed the mandatory $1,000 monthly subscription payment to keep the badge.

The New York Times, a popular newspaper based in the U.S. with correspondents across the world, had objected to paying the fee to retain the verification badge it had freely enjoyed for years.

In response to the objection, Mr Musk swiftly took down the badge but not before launching a barrage of insults at the newspaper.

“The real tragedy of @NYTimes is that their propaganda isn’t even interesting”, Mr Musk tweeted Sunday morning.

“Also, their feed is the Twitter equivalent of diarrhea. It’s unreadable.”As part of the sweeping changes Mr Musk introduced to Twitter since he purchased it last October, he has mandated organisations to henceforth pay a $1,000 monthly fee to keep their verification ticks and pay extra $50 monthly charge for affiliated staff members, a move The Times explicitly opposed.

The Times further said it would not pay or reimburse reporters who subscribe to Twitter Blue except in “rare instances where this status would be essential for reporting purposes,” according to the newspaper’s spokesperson.

The main Twitter account for The Times no longer has the blue tick, checks by Peoples Gazette showed on Sunday.

However, New York Times Opinion, New York Times Travel, offshoots of The Times, still retained their gold verification ticks.The removal of verification badges from popular organisations may make it easy for impostors to pose as the legitimate ones.

CNN, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times have also taken a similar stance on the matter, refusing to pay the fee which may soon lead to the removal of their verification badges.

Elon Musk reveals Twitter users will soon be able to bold and italicise words

Elon Musk says Twitter users will soon be able to bold and italicise words.

The billionaire has been bringing in several changes to Twitter following his $44-billion takeover last year.

While some changes, such as the monetisation of the blue tick, might not be appreciated by everyone, some changes are handy and demanded by users for years.

One of them is the ability to post texts in bold and italics. Musk confirmed that this feature could be introduced soon.

At the moment, users can post tweets in bold and italics, but only via a third-party tool.

Twitter Labels Norway Foreign Ministry, Nigerian Government Organisation

The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, has called on social media platform, Twitter, to change the description attached to its handle on the platform.

The handle Norway MFA (#NorwayMFA), had been described as a “Nigeria Government Organisation” by Twitter.Demanding for a change, the verified handle said!

“Dear #TwitterSupport, as much as we enjoy our excellent bilateral relations and close alphabetical vicinity with Nigeria we would much appreciate if you could label us as NorwayP.S.

That also goes for Prime Minister #jonasgahrstore and Foreign Minister #AHuitfeldt.”

Kanye West gets suspended as he trolls shirtless Elon Musk in his last tweet

American rapper, Kanye West, has been suspended on Twitter after launching a two way Twitter tirade on his ex-wife, Kim Kardashian, as well as the new owner of the social media platform, Elon Musk.

In tweets posted in the early hours of Friday, Kanye claimed that he caught basketballer, Chris Paul, with his ex-wife.

Although he shared Paul’s image, he didn’t indicate when the incident happened.

Trolling Musk, the rapper shared an image showing the billionaire shirtless while on water and said, “Let’s always remember this as my final tweet.” Musk in the comment section said, “That is fine.”

West account has been suspended.

Musk announces gold, grey, blue badges for Twitter

Twitter’s billionaire owner Elon Musk announced Friday that the platform would be launching differently colored badges to distinguish between accounts.

“Sorry for the delay, we’re tentatively launching Verified on Friday next week,” he tweeted.

“Gold check for companies, grey check for government, blue for individuals (celebrity or not) and all verified accounts will be manually authenticated before check activates.”

In another tweet, Musk said all verified individual accounts would have the same blue check, but some would eventually be able to display a “secondary tiny logo showing they belong to an organisation.

The Tesla and SpaceX boss’ proposal for users to be able to pay to be “verified” and obtain a blue badge on their profiles has caused confusion since he acquired the social media giant last month.

Musk proposed a subscription fee of $8 a month to allow users to obtain the blue check – which was previously free but reserved for organisations and public figures in an attempt to avoid impersonation and misinformation.

The first rollout of Musk’s subscription plan in early November quickly went south, with many accounts paying for the blue check and then impersonating world leaders, celebrities or companies.

Responding to the backlash, Musk initially postponed the launch date to November 29, before delaying it once more. It now appears the feature will launch on December 2.

Musk has said he wants to charge users for subscriptions to the social media platform to diversify its income stream.

Twitter currently depends on advertising for 90 per cent of its revenue.Several major brands have withdrawn from advertising on the platform since Musk bought it, fearing that his promised relaxation of content moderation could open their companies up to being associated with objectionable content.

According to the NGO Media Matters, half of Twitter’s top 100 advertisers have announced that they are suspending or “have apparently suspended” their spending on the social network.

Elon Musk considers reinstating all suspended Twitter accounts

The new owner of Twitter and the wealthiest man in the world, Elon Musk, on Wednesday revealed that he was considering lifting the ban on all suspended Twitter accounts and reinstating them back to the platform.

This comes days after Twitter reinstated former US President, Donald Trump, into the platform after Musk conducted a Twitter poll that saw 52 per cent of the 15 million participants vote for Trump’s comeback.

In another Twitter poll on Wednesday night, Musk asked people to vote for or against reinstating all suspended accounts provided that haven’t broken the law or engaged in egregious spam.

Musk tweeted,

“Should Twitter offer a general amnesty to suspended accounts, provided that they have not broken the law or engaged in egregious spam?”

The options in the poll are simply, ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.The results are not in yet as the poll still has about five hours left before it elapses.

If results come in positive, that could see all suspended accounts reinstated back to the platform as Musk has always advocated that the voice of the people should prevail above others

Twitter unblocks Kanye West’s account after it was locked following antisemitic posts

Kanye West is back on Twitter after his account was locked following a series of antisemitic posts.

On November 20, Sunday night, Ye posted a tweet to see if his account was working.

“Testing Testing Seeing if my Twitter is unblocked,” he wrote.

It comes after West vowed to go “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE.”

The rapper has repeatedly denied that his comments were racist, including saying that he doesn’t believe in the term “anti-semitism” because it’s “not factual”.

However, he later offered some sort of apology in an interview with Piers Morgan, saying:

“I’m sorry for the people that I hurt with the ‘death con’… I feel like I caused hurt and confusion”.

Instagram sheds a tear for Twitter as “RIP Twitter” trends amid mass resignations

Many Twitter users are saying their goodbyes to the platform, including Instagram, as “RIP Twitter” trends.

Due to the massive layoffs and other Twitter employees opting to resign rather than face the new working conditions, many fear Twitter is dying.

“Twitter is shutting down” and “RIP Twitter” are trending following reports the platform is running a skeletal crew after many employees quit.

Many fear this signifies the beginning of the end for the platform and they are already saying their goodbyes to friends they made on Twitter.

Even Instagram’s official Twitter account tweeted about the shut down.

Elon Musk warns of Twitter bankruptcy as more senior executives quit

Twitter’s new owner, Elon Musk has raised the possibility of the social media platform going bankrupt.

Bloomberg News reports that the world’s richest man on his first mass call with employees said that he could not rule out bankruptcy, two weeks after buying it for $44 billion – a deal that has left Twitter’s finances in a hard position.

In his first email to all Twitter staff, Musk warned that Twitter would not be able to “survive the upcoming economic downturn” if it fails to boost subscription revenue to offset falling advertising income.

The mail comes after Yoel Roth, who the head of Twitter’s response to combat hate speech, misinformation and spam, resigned on Thursday, whileTwitter’s Chief Information Security Officer Lea Kissner tweeted that she had quit.

Also, the company’s Chief Privacy Officer Damien Kieran and Chief Compliance Officer Marianne Fogarty also resigned, according to an internal message posted to Twitter’s Slack messaging system on Thursday by an attorney on its privacy team.

Following the mass resignations, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said it was watching Twitter with “deep concern” after the three privacy and compliance officers quit.

The resignations put Twitter at risk of violating regulatory orders.We are tracking recent developments at Twitter with deep concern,”

Douglas Farrar, the FTC’s director of public affairs, told Reuters.

“No CEO or company is above the law, and companies must follow our consent decrees. Our revised consent order gives us new tools to ensure compliance, and we are prepared to use them,” Farrar said.

Reacting to possibility of being fined by the US Federal Trade Commission Musk attorney Alex Spiro told some employees in an email late on Thursday that Twitter would remain in compliance.

“We spoke to the FTC today about our continuing obligations and have a constructive ongoing dialogue,” Spiro wrote.

He stated that only Twitter, not individual employees, could be held liable against the orders.

“I understand that there have been employees at Twitter who do not even work on the FTC matter commenting that they could (go) to jail if we were not in compliance – that is simply not how this works,” he wrote.

Musk ruthlessly moved layoff staff after taking over on Oct. 27 and has said the company was losing more than $4 million a day, largely because advertisers started fleeing once he took over.

Twitter has $13 billion in debt after the deal and faces interest payments totaling close to $1.2 billion in the next 12 months.

The payments exceed Twitter’s most recently disclosed cash flow, which amounted to $1.1 billion as of the end of June. Musk has also begun charging $8 a month for the Twitter Blue service.

Elon Musk sells $4 bilion worth of Tesla shares after Twitter takeover as his net worth plummets to $200 billion

Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Elon Musk has reportedly sold about 19.5 million shares of the company ever since he reached a deal to buy Twitter for $44 billion

According to The Verge, these shares are close to worth $4 billion as per the forms filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The report adds that Musk has offloaded almost $20 billion in the electric vehicle maker this year.

All this offloading has been reportedly done to mostly finance the Twitter deal which was worth $44 billion.

In April and August, Elon Musk has sold a combined $15.4 billion worth of Tesla shares, with $8.4 billion in April and around $6.9 billion in August.

However, after these sales, he said that there were no more sales planned. With regards to these sales, Musk also tweeted,

“No further TSLA sales planned after today.” His takeover of Twitter has also invited drastic measures like the sacking of almost 50 per cent of Twitter’s workforce, a verification fee.

According to a Reuters report, Musk’s net worth also dropped below $200 billion on Tuesday as investors dumped Tesla’s shares on fears of the Chief Twit being more preoccupied with Twitter.

The report reads,

“Now Wall Street fears that Musk has stretched himself too thin at a time when the EV maker is ramping up production and faces rising competition.”

Musk now has a net worth of $197.4 billion, according to Forbes, with a big share of that coming from his nearly 15 percent stake in Tesla, which has a market value of $622billion.

Twitter to ban accounts impersonating others but not labelled as parody – Elon Musk

Twitter CEO, Elon Musk has said that the social media company will permanently suspend users engaging in impersonation without clearly specifying it as a parody account.

According to Musk, Twitter previously issued a warning before suspending accounts, but henceforth there would now be no warning.

This comes after a number of accounts that changed their names to Elon Musk and mocked the billionaire (following his decision to place an $8 for verification icon on accounts), were suspended or placed behind a warning sign.

Musk took over Twitter late last month and last week laid off around half of the company’s workforce.

Detailing the new policy on parody accounts, Musk tweeted on Monday, November 7.

“Previously, we issued a warning before suspension, but now that we are rolling out widespread verification, there will be no warning.”

He added that “any name change at all will cause temporary loss of verified checkmark”. Going forward, any Twitter handle engaging in impersonation without clearly specifying “parody” will be permanently suspended Musk has previously said he opposed permanent bans on Twitter, including that of Trump’s official account.

Musk said last week that banned accounts would not be reinstated until there was “a clear process for doing so”.

Twitter suspends Kathy Griffin’s account for impersonating Elon Musk

Twitter has suspended Kathy Griffin for impersonating the company’s new owner, Elon Musk.

The American comedian and actress, 62, changed her profile name to Musk to mimic the Twitter owner after which she flaunted her account’s new look by urging users to #VoteBlue and check out Twitter competitor, Mastodon.

“After much-spirited discussion with the females in my life, I’ve decided that voting blue for their choice is only right. (They’re also sexy females, btw.) #VoteBlueToProtectWomen,” Griffin tweeted.

The suspension came after Musk indicated he was taking his “Chief Tweet” role seriously as he addressed fake accounts just weeks after officially acquiring Twitter for $44 billion.

“Going forward, any Twitter handles engaging in impersonation without clearly specifying ‘parody’ will be permanently suspended,” he wrote Sunday night.

“Previously, we issued a warning before suspension, but now that we are rolling out widespread verification, there will be no warning.

This will be clearly identified as a condition for signing up to Twitter Blue.”

Musk is launching an $8 monthly subscription service where any Twitter user may be able to easily attain a blue checkmark symbol.

Supermodel Gigi Hadid quits Twitter

27-year-old supermodel, Gigi Hadid has quit Twitter after billionaire Elon Musk’s takeover.

Hadid made the announcement on Instagram. She said she deactivated her Twitter account on Friday November 4, amid the mass layoffs, including the human rights team.

She wrote;

“For a long time, but especially with its new leadership, it’s becoming more and more of a cesspool of hate & bigotry, and its not a place I want to be a part of.”

Hadid also apologized to her fans on the platform, adding that she loved connecting with them.

She added;

“I can’t stay it’s a safe place for anyone, nor a social platform that will do more good than harm.”

Elon Musk to sack half of Twitter staff and end working from home in a bid to reduce costs

Elon Musk is planning to sack half of Twitter staff and end working from home in a bid to reduce costs following his tumultuous $44bn takeover.

The Tesla chief will reportedly announce the redundancies affecting 3,700 staff on Friday November 4, and force employees back into the office from Monday.

This is coming days after he sacked Twitter’s senior leadership team, including its chief executive, and a number of other high-profile executives have resigned since he took over the company.

Their most recent departures include their head of accounting, head of marketing, and advertising chief.

Musk will lay out plans to reduce the workforce by half this Friday, Bloomberg reported.

Laid-off workers will be offered 60 days’ worth of severance pay, Twitter sources told Bloomberg.

Musk previously denied reports that up to 75% of Twitter staff could be let go. The mogul will also end the social media company’s “work from anywhere policy,” brought in after the coronavirus pandemic, on Monday.

Bloomberg reported that Tesla engineers had been brought in to review Twitter’s code and that engineering lay-offs were being decided based on employees’ contributions.

Twitter’s top executives were reportedly sacked for “good cause,” meaning they could be denied a $100m payout. The news comes amid concerns from advertisers and civil liberties groups that Musk’s plan to promote free speech on the social network could lead to an increase in hate speech.

He is also considering removing permanent bans on hundreds of accounts, including former US President Donald Trump.

Twitter to start charging $20 per month for verification under Elon Musk’s ownership

Twitter plans to start charging nearly $20 a month for users to stay verified. This is part of a premium service that will be rolled out under Elon Musk’s leadership, according to a report.

“The whole verification process is being revamped right now,” Musk, who took over as the CEO of the social media platform Friday, October 28, tweeted Sunday, October 30.

The company also plans to raise its optional $4.99-a-month premium subscription called Twitter Blue to $19.99 a month.

However, that price is subject to change, The Verge reported, citing internal correspondence and people familiar with the matter.

Twitter will add more features, including verification, to bring its subscription up to par with the cost hike. Elon Musk plans to make verified users pay money to keep their verified status.

Existing verified users have 90 days to subscribe to the new Twitter Blue after its launch or they’ll lose their blue checkmarks, according to The Verge.

The current Twitter Blue launched about a year ago and offers subscribers a way to view ad-free articles from some publishers as well as additional customization settings.

Musk has been outspoken about his desire to grow subscription numbers to account for half of Twitter’s revenue as well as his eagerness to overhaul the platform’s verification process.

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