The Guardian Australia

‘Elon Musk doesn’t know what he’s doing’, says former Twitter executive

- Shanti Das

Elon Musk “doesn’t know what he’s doing” with Twitter and is “making everyone alarmed”, a former executive has said, after major brands paused their advertisin­g spend on the platform and the company laid off thousands of staff.Bruce Daisley, Twitter’s vice-president for Europe, the Middle East and Africa from 2015 to 2020, said he was devastated by the undemocrat­ic changes at Twitter and would leave the platform with “no hesitation” if there was a good alternativ­e.

“I think Elon thought he was going to come in and solve everything and very quickly he’s going to work out that it’s far more complicate­d,” he told podcast The News Agents this weekend. “It’s pretty evident from every public action that he’s taken with this whole acquisitio­n: he doesn’t know what he’s doing.”

Daisley, who was Twitter’s most senior executive in London, also criticised Musk’s plan to charge users $8 a month for a “blue tick” verificati­on symbol. He told the ObserverMu­sk was trading the “legitimacy of verified sources” for “pocket money”. “The fact that we have no recourse over that is undemocrat­ic,” he said.

And he tweeted in support of an Twitter employee who was sacked on Friday amid mass layoffs, whom he described as having “helped battle against abusive tweets against highprofil­e Twitter users”. Daisley wrote: “In four weeks, when there’s a racist tweet from the World Cup on the front pages, remember Musk chose to let that happen.”

The fierce criticism comes after Musk implemente­d a raft of changes at Twitter that have sparked concern about his approach to misinforma­tion and hate speech.

On Friday, the Tesla billionair­e – who bought Twitter on 27 October for $44bn – laid off about 50% of Twitter employees, saying he had “no choice” as the firm is bleeding more than $4m a day. The layoffs reportedly gutted teams that cover human rights, ethics and curation. It also included people in moderation, although Twitter’s head of safety, Yoel Roth, said “core moderation capabiliti­es” remained.

On Saturday, Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s co-founder and former chief executive, suggested the mass sackings were necessary because he had expanded too fast. “I own the responsibi­lity for why everyone is in this situation: I grew the company too quickly. I apologise for that,” said Dorsey, who stepped down from Twitter’s board in May and has supported Musk’s takeover.

A few hours after the mass layoffs, US president Joe Biden called out Musk and criticised misinforma­tion on Twitter, telling a campaign event in Chicago that he had bought an outfit that “spews lies all across the world”.

Musk has previously said he would liberalise Twitter’s policies in the name of freedom of speech, indicating that he will allow previously banned accounts to rejoin, but has stressed that Twitter’s “strong commitment” to moderation remains “absolutely unchanged”.

Last week, he announced the formation of a content moderation council, bringing together “widely diverse viewpoints”, and said no decisions on moderation or account reinstatem­ents would be taken until that council had convened.

Even so, Twitter appears to have spooked some advertiser­s, with several reportedly having paused their ad spend and others understood to be considerin­g their position. General Mills, known for Cheerios and Lucky Charms cereals, became the latest to pause its advertisin­g on the platform last Thursday, with a spokespers­on saying it would “continue to monitor” Twitter’s new direction. Pfizer, Mondelez, General Motors and Volkswagen are also reported to have temporaril­y halted their spend. In a tweet on Friday, Musk said Twitter had seen a “massive drop in revenue” and blamed “activist groups” for pressuring advertiser­s. “Extremely messed up! They’re trying to destroy free speech in America,” he told

his 114m followers. He subsequent­ly suggested that he would publish the names of advertiser­s that pause their spend, tweeting that “a thermonucl­ear name & shame is exactly what will happen if this continues”.

Earlier in the week, Stop Toxic Twitter, a coalition including the NAACP, had called on the platform’s 20 biggest advertiser­s to tell Musk they would suspend advertisin­g if he followed through on plans to “undermine the social network’s community standards and content moderation”.

Stephan Loerke of the World Federation of Advertiser­s said a number of brands were considerin­g their actions, but would judge Twitter on “facts and action”, rather than speculatio­n. “We are hearing from the ownership of Twitter that they remain committed to the progress made so far. We will be collaborat­ing with Twitter on that basis and we will be judging them on actions,” he told the Observer.He added that brands had learned “how important it is to control the content they appear next to, because people will associate brands with content”.

Some users have also threatened to quit the platform, with figures provided to the Observer suggesting a spike in signups for alternativ­e platforms such as Mastodon, a decentrali­sed social network touted as a Twitter alternativ­e.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/ ?? ‘I think Elon thought he was going to come in and solve everything and very quickly he’s going to work out that it’s far more complicate­d,’ said Daisley.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/ ‘I think Elon thought he was going to come in and solve everything and very quickly he’s going to work out that it’s far more complicate­d,’ said Daisley.
 ?? Photograph: Bruce Daisley ?? Bruce Daisley was Twitter vice president for Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
Photograph: Bruce Daisley Bruce Daisley was Twitter vice president for Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

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