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They organized this quicker than I expected. I'm very curious about the criteria they used to decide who goes.
Probably whoever leaked the email is layoff #1
ha ha. No. They're the sneaky one that will have put in thousands of lines of whitespace and punctuation fixes which the software used to fire people will detect as "ultra active". They'll get a promotion and double bonus.
For engineers at least:

git ls-files -z | xargs -0n1 git blame -w | perl -n -e '/^.?\((.?)\s+[\d]{4}/; print $1,"\n"' | sort -f | uniq -c | sort -n | head 1500

Merged with a hitlist of people who have made anti-musk comments internally or externally of course.

A purge based on silly metrics and grudges, as all good bullies and tyrants do.

So much for that $8/mo rollout
He's owned it for a week and people are like "why haven't you turned it around yet?!?!?"
Not really. If that’s what you got out of the comment you replied to, you may want to read it again because you definitely misinterpreted its point.
Is this really Musk doing ? So many compagnies are laying off these days it was probably in the work for a while
I suspect the nonzero interest rates are making capital actuallly prioritize returns.

Therefore pie-in-the-sky projects not making money are scrapped.

I would say it depends on how many get laid off
He came in swinging for 75%; it now sounds like somebody talked him down to 50%.
He came in saying he was going to lay off half the staff and you ask whether it's his doing?
it's wild that Musk was trolled into paying $44B to destroy a perfectly viable company.
His determination to set his 44B on fire is commendable
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Losing 200 million a year and mostly being not profitable is viable?

Edited to say "mostly" not profitable.

No, having enough cash in the bank to continue on for another 10 years (as Twitter did) is viable. Viable is not "making profits".
They certainly could do worse.
Like owing $1B/year in interest?
Anyone got real numbers for the debt?

Grade CCC bonds are well above 16% these days, and the amount of debt is $13 Billion. This very well could be $2 Billion/year interest payments.

I remember reading rumors of ~10% since the debt was signed in April 2020 and rumored to be 50% fixed and 50% adjustable. But I never actually found the real information or confirmation.

I think it's safe to say that the interest payment is somewhere between $1 and $2 billion, but there is also principal that needs to be paid back, right?

-----

That's not counting whatever debt Elon did to get his $33 Billion portion of the bill. I'm just looking at Twitters debt they now owe Morgan Stanley (and a few other banks) as part of the $13 Billion leveraged buyout portion of this company purchase.

Didn't Twitter post like a billion in profits in 2019?
yea, and profit in 2018. 5 billion revenue in 2021 with a 200 million loss.
Best info I can find is that they were only ever profitable in 2018 and 2019.
Amazon went 14 years before posting a profit. Not that I think Twitter was necessarily investing revenue correctly, but a business can go pretty far even in the red.
Because Amazon was spending on R and D. AWS came as a result of that. Amazon's core business was known to overspend(still do) just for customer's satisfaction, and it was very clear Amazon could turn into profit any day they want. Same is not the case for Twitter.
Twitter spent more than a billion dollars on R&D in 2021, which more than eclipsed its net loss.
Difference is Amazon spent a lot of it on durable infrastructure (datacenters, servers, fulfillment centers).

I don't know how Twitter spent its money, but seemingly on undifferentiated software (i.e. not durable) or moderation? Both of which are recurring expenses.

The difference is that Amazon made plenty of cash, and chose to reinvest all of it. For nearly all of those 14 years they could have just decided to be profitable, if it had been advantageous to do so.

I don't think Twitter is in the same position at all

I think it is fair to say that left to its own devices (that is, pretend the last year of disruption and then this hadn't happened), Twitter could have become profitable enough to muddle on.

Everyone knew they had too many employees, and that big money-making possibilities... don't seem to be there, due to the nature of the niche they've carved. But they had a lot of money in the bank, so they didn't need to make any sudden movements. Sensible downsizing and incremental improvement of the bottom line, and, yeah, that's a viable business.

It may not be super exciting, but if you want exciting, head south on 101, Meta is about 40 minutes out depending on time of day.

16 years isn't enough time to figure out a profitable business strategy? How much longer would you have given them?
Business thats covering its costs doesn't need anyone to give them anything. They just have to survive. They were surviving.

They could turn no profit in a hundred years, and thats fine.

A business that does not turn a profit pretty explicitly does need people to give them money though right?
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Tesla historically has not been profitable until recently and they are getting help from carbon credits.
Were they ever even profitable?
Layoffs were always coming, whether Musk bought it or not.
it's funny how he got so much shit here a week ago, but now everything just started tanking, stripe layoffs, lyft layoffs etc etc

apparently he was into layoffs before it was cool

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Do you have a crystal ball? How do you know how things will turn out?

I mean, it's not like Twitter had some amazing business plan going forward.

Musk made a bad call for sure. There's no obvious path to recouping that investment.

But calling twitter a "perfectly viable company" is part of the problem. It's comments like this that inflate the bubble. Twitter has thousands of employees who have done close to nothing for at least several years.

Facebook/meta are at least trying new things. Twitter seems to be afraid to make any decisions at all.

> Musk made a bad call for sure. There's no obvious path to recouping that investment.

You people really miss the bigger picture from the business side of things - Musk now owns the most impactful social network on the planet. Having an additional $44 billion in wealth does not bring you anything that is actionable. Its just inert wealth. Only when its used, wealth actually becomes something meaningful.

And Musk bought the biggest social network on the planet with that money. At this moment, he can do anything from boosting his own projects and businesses through Twitter to creating entirely new paradigm like making Twitter into a Western Wechat.

(Im obviously not counting Facebook as a top social network at this point)

> Facebook/meta are at least trying new things

Meta is banking on something that may or may not materialize. Its a gamble. Musk is going to copy what's already successful elsewhere.

> You people really miss the bigger picture from the business side of things - Musk now owns the most impactful social network on the planet.

This is an extraordinary claim. Most impactful as measured by what? Twitter isn’t even in the top 10 for dau/mau.

They are almost exactly the same size as reddit in terms of active users.

> (Im obviously not counting Facebook as a top social network at this point)

That’s just being unreasonable.

Impactful in how many of those other social media sites consist of links to Twitter I presume.
> Most impactful as measured by what? Twitter isn’t even in the top 10 for dau/mau

It generates a lot of the agenda in certain socioeconomic segments. It disseminates a lot of information to these segments. Those segments dont overlap with Reddit. And if Musk keeps the 'free speech' thing going, it can also attract the segment that Reddit addresses.

Make take on Twitter for the last 5+ years is that it grew into its potential, it has value as-is, but there isn't a growth or monetization story beyond what it already has.

The private equity downsize strategy is probably right--you have to get it into a leaner state to start printing money--but the execution is poor, and Musk can too easily fiddle with the wrong knob and drive away uses a la Tumblr.

> Twitter said in the email that its offices will be temporarily closed and all badge access will be suspended in order "to help ensure the safety of each employee as well as Twitter systems and customer data."

Is this normal during mass layoffs?

Imagine being on the team that's clearing out everybody's desks. Once that's done, you're no longer needed. But hurry up, now.
That work is probably contracted.
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It’s unusual for a new owner to lay off 50% of a company at once
I have seen investment banks disable all logins for a whole division or trading floor, invite the people they aren’t firing to an all hands / town hall meeting to tell them as much, then announce to everyone else on the floor that they no longer have a job and will be escorted out of the building with any belongings they choose to collect within 30 minutes.

I’m not sure how normal it is, but it doesn’t objectively seem like there’s anything wrong with it.

There's an episode of "Succession" that captures this vibe pretty well.
There's an outdoor area on the top (11th) floor of our building - the door is always locked during restructures.
Ooooh that is dark. Must have been fun for the smokers who have been around for a while. Having worked at a company that went through a few years of trouble, there were all sorts of little signals like that you'd learn to pick up on.
Nothing that is going on at Twitter is "normal"
> Is this normal during mass layoffs?

Yes, and for good reason.

A company I was familiar with in the 80's had a subsidiary in another state with a couple hundred employees. They decided to close that office, and lay everyone off.

Being nice guys, they gave the branch 3 months notice of the closure and layoffs, and expected them to keep working as usual.

After 3 months, the parent company officials arrived to find the office building empty and looted clean.

Top talent would have already left by now. Others wait for severance (which may be pitiful in this case). I watched this long ago, and see it repeated.
Stripe set a high bar today in terms of severance, you can almost guarantee Twitter’s terms aren’t going to be as generous.
California law requires 60 days notice or 60 days pay, so I'd assume that's what they'll be getting.
This headline is starting to get old. Shit or get off the pot.
I'm following the Twitter story with close interest, but even I don't think we need a submission for each micro-event individually.
On the flipside, HN threads get very confusing when new information surfaces hours after hitting the front page. New arrivals start "correcting" people who commented with out of date information.
Yeah, it is getting quite boring since all of this market chaos was expected and as you can see, everyone here being surprised that these layoffs in general are happening. The news need an outrage story to get clicks and eyeballs for their ad money, so why not give Twitter and Elon Musk more attention and drama? It is the same pattern.

But I don't think a social network with a head count of more than 7500+ and increasingly burning hundreds of millions of cash, nearing into the billions for years is sustainable. The layoffs where going to happen either way; with or without Musk's takeover of Twitter.

But of course I couldn't care less on what happens to Twitter, Elon Musk can do whatever he likes with it and yet the screeching loudmouths relying on Twitter will end up screaming in outrage and will calm down and end up paying for their verified checkmarks.

Ready to watch this stupid company burn to the ground, and take elon with it
I don't think that would happen.
I guess the company is $1B/year in the hole and they need to close that. Will they get there cutting 3k people and charging $8/verified? The math isn’t too crazy.

-> I made some shitty comments last night about this (firing lots of people) in another thread. I regret them because it was mean. It was meant to be cold in a business is business sort of way, yes, but they came off as mean after I read them again.

> I guess the company is $1B/year in the hole

you mean: the company now owes $1 billion a year in interest on the debt used to finance the leveraged buyout. musk paid too much and now has to loot the company to afford it

>The second source described the proposed cuts as "delusional," adding that when user traffic kicks up, the service can fail "in spectacular ways."

>Teams across Twitter are racing to present a plan to achieve the cost savings by a Nov. 7 deadline, according to one of the sources and the Slack message. Some employees have been ordered to work in the office every day of the week to meet the deadline, the source said.

Bringing his renowned brand of work-life balance to Twitter I see.

Do we consider it reasonable that a mature service of 16 years is exposed to 'spectacular' failures when there's a traffic surge?
Are you the kind of person that screams at your waiter or waitress when your expectations aren't met?
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I doubt they are, let alone the kind of person that hurls random personal attacks at strangers based on shaky analogies.
If a well estabilished restaurant loses half its waiters right before the biggest dining week in the year, is it reasonable to expect that it fails in spectacular ways?
Yeah, but firing half the waiters on short notice is the unreasonable part.
Preface: Not questioning anyone's ability, and don't want to hurt anyone's feelings. I understand there's red tap, politics, etc.

Twitter's UI design and usability is lacking greatly.

Till this day, I'm confused. This button, it's to see who replied, and this button it's to view actual comments. Clicking an image on a tweet shows a different view with replies in comparison to clicking the body of the tweet. And once I finally get to see comments, it shows me 5 or so comments, with a "show more" that shows 3 more.

Content is just one long stream of white without any grouping/sections. And both sidebars are white. Truly a pain. I've noticed these problems like 5+ years ago. And these problems are not subjective, but objectively wrong. I believe some of these layoffs are correct.

Agreed. A regular frustration for me is clicking on a tweet that is a replay to a tween, and then I still have to scroll back to see the original tweet. I'm old and mostly use desktop, so I don't really know that's how it works on mobile.
That's because it was optimised to show you ads, and not for your comfort. Otherwise it wouldn't be a ridiculously bloated SPA, and instead be more like Nitter or some of the other alternate UIs that have appeared. Given the focus on $$$, I doubt Musk will change that aspect of Twitter in a direction that's better for you.
Definitely, platforms optimize for ads. But these things are actually not concerning ad display/engagement. On the contrary, these UX improvements would increase my engagement, and thus ad engagement.
Instagram is also optimized to show me ads, but it also has an arguably nice UX too, at least much better than Twitter IMO.
i’d really be struggling to sleep tonight if i worked at twitter
Three HN top posts about Twitter, Lyft, and Stripe laying off people, and looks like just a start.

In Twitter's case though, the writing was in the wall ever since Elon fiasco began.

All of these companies and many more have too many people. They have never lived through a period of stagnation or decline.

Investment banks and many other industries were that way once. It’s not new.

This doesn’t mean Twitter is about to die, nor does it mean they are saved. For tech to get sustainable, it is just the start, though.

Why does it look like just a start? What information do you have?
Maybe the US is in a recession.
What's interesting is this is almost the opposite of April, 2020. Rather than low-wage service sector workers getting laid off, it's high-wage tech workers.
Half of Twitter employees number 3,700 and if on average they make $100K then that's $370 million off Twitter's expenses. Does anyone know if that would make them profitable if current revenue doesn't decline?
Total cost per employee is likely double their salary figure. Also the ave. salary is going to be way more than 100M/yr/employee.

[M as in the Roman numeral M]

Ummm... no. Fully burdened costs is total cash comp plus between 25% and 35% as a general rule in the US.
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> Also the ave. salary is going to be way more than 100M/yr/employee.

I find that very unlikely!

(but that’s because you made a typo)

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The average has got to be a lot higher than that and you should also include taxes and overhead for another 50%.

Edit: Twitter median employee compensation is $232,626. Assuming they do fire 50% and that's the average of fired employees plus 50% tax and overhead that would come to about $1.3 billion per year. https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/ceo-pay-ratio/

> if on average they make $100K

if you only count tech people, this is too low. If you count all employees, including people paid to review posts or moderate, or handle customer reports etc, it might be too high an estimate.

So if you fired half, which half? If it was the tech employees, i think twitter would save a lot more than your guess, and if it was just the support/moderators, it would not save much money at all imho.

Twitter lost ~200 million last year on ~5 billion revenue. With this purchase, the company is burdened with an additional 1.2 billion in interest expense on Elon's loans. Elon would have to fire something like 400% of their workforce (with no resulting loss in revenue) to dig himself out of the hole just from the added interest payments he's on the hook for.
Can someone explain to me how is it possible that a person takes out a loan, but then a company that the person owns is responsible for the loan?
Maybe Elon is still responsible for the loan but maybe Twitter is the collateral. If he fails to repay the loan, the bank seizes Twitter assets but Musk's personal wealth is untouched. Similar to how LLC's shield their owner from being financially responsible.
Assuming revenue stays the same, that would bring them close to profitability as long as you don't consider the loans Elon took out on the company's balance sheet.

If you do, they would still be massively unprofitable.

$370 million would have made the difference to make 2021 profitable. But now Twitter owns some of the debt incurred to purchase Twitter, adding to their expenses
> Thank you for continuing to adhere to Twitter policies that prohibit you from discussing confidential company information on social media, with the press or elsewhere.

Ha.

Thank you, also response from employees: https://www.nbcnews.com/business/business-news/twitter-layof...

reporter's thread: https://twitter.com/oneunderscore__/status/15883356977855897...

>Employees in Twitter just got an email from their bosses saying layoffs are coming tomorrow.

>Those who are staying will get a note tomorrow in their work email. Those who are let go will get an email sent to their personal address.

>Slot machine-style layoffs.

>Some employees I'm hearing from at Twitter are desperate to get laid off and get severance. The work culture there is beyond toxic.

>Some are afraid to push back against Elon because they don't want to risk getting fired for cause — disagreeing with Elon — and losing severance.

>"At the end of this nightmare, I better get a cash prize," one told me.

I am a software engineer and I am a little worried seeing all these layoffs. No company will have 100% layoff, so it could be possible to weather this downturn? What could be the best strategy to get through this difficult period?
This happens every decade or so. Don't live beyond your means and you will be OK, even if you get laid off.
These layoffs are because someone bought the company and saddled it with enough debt that it’ll take a billion dollars per year to pay the interest.

This is nothing like Stripe’s 14% layoffs from elsewhere on the HN homepage.

Nevertheless it does add to all the hiring freezes and layoffs we are seeing from other large companies (including, as you mentioned, Stripe).
I don't know the American market, but they are screaming for qualified developers in Europe and Asia where I work. I have been around long enough to know that if you are a good developer there will always be work for you. Especially if you are not super specialized and open to working with people.
There are plenty of highly paid dev jobs in the US too, it’s just that the market isn’t river-of-lava-on-the-sun hot like it has been the last 10+ years.
>layoffs don’t consider individual peformance

This is not true. The way layoffs almost always work is the CEO tells their VPs they need to cut, say, 10% of their staff. The VPs tell their Directors they need to cut 10% of their staff. And so on, and so forth.

And everyone managing people at every step of the way has an unofficial stack ranking in the back of their mind, and they just cut the names at the bottom of that ranking. The person turning in half assed work while being obviously overemployed will be the first to go.

Yeah right. This assumes no politics. Reality, and yes, I've been a consultant for too long is that first the consultants, temps, ... go. These are the best and the worst workers.

Then whoever is up for a promotion gets fired. Because, well I'm not sure. Somewhere between threatening the boss' job and jealousy. This causes a number of not-layed-off people to also leave (just read the comments in this thread to see a few people that will do that). Whatever hope your company ever had of good morale is gone and will never return. Everyone hates each other from this point forward, and hierarchy is determined purely on ability to fire and pay.

Then the consultants get rehired for 20% higher pay, the worst workers first. Then the temps for 10% less, because work isn't getting done, and management finds out once again they never knew what the company is actually doing, that everyone used layoffs for their personal gain, and it's created an accelerating disaster. None of this fixes the problems, whether it's customer service or team morale, that the layoffs created, at best they slow the downward slide.

And I guarantee that it'll turn out to be a lot more expensive than never doing the layoff in the first place.

On my first layoff my friend told me you're the lucky one. I didn't understand until I survived a layoff at another company. Total downward spiral in the aftermath. I envy those who escaped sooner.

Anyone that can within reason should quit if they survive the first round of layoffs.

move to a company which actually makes money, preferably doing something anti-cyclical. For example, whatever company conned Musk into thinking that they can assess the value of engineers immediately based on git contributions is probably going to have a great business, first going into companies and selling them the software that lets them do that. Then later when it turns out they fired the wrong people they can sell consultants to replace them. Then later when it turns out the consultants can't take over the systems well enough without the fired engineers they will be able to sell reduction services yet again.

It will take four years and several big bankruptcies before people catch on that they are being conned. By that time there will be other companies coming up that you can jump ship to.

Find ways to be better at your job. Speak up more. Take some initiative, solve a problem that needs solved. Be friendly. These are things we should always be doing, so the best time to do them was a year ago. The next best time is now.
We went through a similar period in 2008. It's best to live below your means and increase your savings. It may take longer to find a new role when thousands of candidates are also looking and large companies have frozen hiring.
Labor supply will increase considerably, while labor demand declines.

Comp packages will decline across the board, or at the very least stagnate for years.

If you work for a fairly valued, profitable company, you’re likely to keep your job. If you work for a highly unprofitable and overvalued moonshot company, you likely won’t

The best way to weather it is to sock away as much cash from your current job while times are good.

If a Bay Area techie at a FAANG can't swing a half a year of unemployment after working the Bay for 5+ years, something is wrong.

I don't know why comments are so against these layoffs. Twitter is known for having a "chill" work environment and I have heard many stories of people just slacking off and doing other things while getting paid. I would actually like to see Twitter's team and culture rebuilt regardless of who bought it.
Bigco software engineering has been quite chill / slack-off for some time. Rude awakening for a lot of devs if they have been resting on their laurels.
Many of these people are going to be unemployable in standard "Churn out CRUD 24/7" jobs.
Because you're not going to know who the 'slackers' are in the first week or so of owning a company and actions like these are a great way to ensure that your company doesn't get rebuilt.

Despite how many Musk reply guys seem to exist, most of them aren't engineers and even fewer of them are dumb enough to work for a Musk-owned Twitter where you get to be overworked and underpaid.

Why not? If the rumors are true, there are people who don’t commit code (or design docs etc) for months on end. Wouldn’t it be pretty easy to identify those people?
I work with a pretty good QA tester guy who doesn't write any of code, but can configure an entire realistic test network across Windows / Linux servers, Android devices, IOS devices in a day.

Are ya going to fire him after seeing his lack of GIT commits after one week as CEO?

Obviously I meant if their job duties involve writing code or something…
You might want to calibrate your view of what is obvious. Which is the point gp was making.
Well the current events says Engineers were asked to print code which applies to only relevant parties (ex, people who are expected to commit code). If you are QA testing and aren't expected to commit code then it should be obvious that you are not subjected to that rubric.
Because you and I both know those rumors aren't true. Upper management at any big company isn't going to let any of that slide no matter the culture. And implying that 50% of people are that level of unproductive is laughable by any metric. You could probably make some shit up by pointing at a technical manager that hasn't written code in a while but that's not indicative of their actual performance.
It's dishonest to say they won't rank before firing.

But worst case...

These firing decisions are not irreversible! If you accidentally fire a 10x programmer, you can re-hire.

A 10x programmer isn't going to come back to a company that fired him for nonsense reasons.
No true scotsman fallacy aside, firms make this mistake all the time and have to rehire the star/legacy maintainer at contractor rates to keep things running.
> These firing decisions are not irreversible! If you accidentally fire a 10x programmer, you can re-hire.

Ha! At a significant price premium, or that programmer is a moron.

All of Musk's companies have a reputation for being really sucky places to work. Interesting, but poorly paid, authoritarian and very long hours. It's suffering you accept to learn stuff and then leave, I've heard it described. Not a place to have kids.

Meaning Musk cannot rehire anyone who's left these companies.

>At a significant price premium, or that programmer is a moron.

You're stating the obvious as if it's not implied by my statement.

Alternatively, they might be A-OK returning to their codebase/team without fuss.

Edit: even if you pay an exorbitant premium, that could be cheaper than keeping N other 1x or -X programmers.

Wouldn’t call that obvious - a whole host of reasons exists as to why one wouldn’t rejoin a company that just fired them, many not related to money.
You're mixing and raising new issues beyond rehire price for an individual.

Who are you disagreeing with?

Is it that simple? I doubt it. The man owns Starlink. Imagine that for a second. Imagine owning a social network that is a first class citizen to a global satellite network that no government can ever censor.

He could be pivoting the company into something astonishing.

Let's build a better one that people control.
That’s the whole point, no one is supposed to control it. Ugh, I sound silly, but here’s the Batman quote:

Not the hero we want, but the hero we deserve.

Yes, reverse the bans and connect this shit to Starlink and tell governments “I got no clue where those damn satellites are, can’t help ya, Trump’s tweeting from somewhere in Somalia with a VPN”.

Wow, yeah, what a utopian vision you paint.

Wait hold on a minute isn't there already some kind of amendment that makes this irrelevant?

Although since the Saudis own such a massive chunk of this newly private company I guess the US government is no longer the only one that Elon needs to concern himself with.

The man bought the company using Saudi cash. It is much, much more likely that he's going the other way on censorship.

Of course, astonishment might still be appropriate.

Didn't realize the Saudis were such big shareholders -- apparently now second only to Musk in total percentage of ownership https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/31/tech/murphy-saudi-musk-twitte...)
Second only to Musk, with 4% ownership (based on their stake, and total deal size).
Not to mention installing a social networking app doesn’t somehow make your iPhone capable of satcom.
>Imagine owning a social network that is a first class citizen to a global satellite network

I guess the zeitgeist really did decide Net Neutrality is a bad thing. Like imagine a telecom owning a social network?

Ok I imagined it and I hate it.

> Like imagine a telecom owning a social network?

You mean like Verizon and Tumblr? ;)

In order for it to be a social network, doesn’t it need to have users?
The months leading up to Verizon's fateful decision in December 2018, they were in the range of over 500 million MAU. Within a couple months after, the number was half that.
Failing to learn the lessons of Betamax continue to haunt decisionmakers, essentially.

The takeaway should likely be: Twitter will be fine if people can still post their porn there.

Wasn't the downfall of Betamax that the tapes were limited to 1 hour (which Sony thought was fine since that was the unit of commercial videotapes) and most people wanted to record sporting events that took longer than an hour?
That didn't really work out.
Exactly my point and that of GP.
That would be insanely impressive
A censorship-resistant communication system and a Starlink sized dish are a good recipe for people going to jail in countries where Twitter is actually censored.

Governments that engage in active censorship also frequently are not the warm-and-fuzzy entities that westerners are used to when they think of governments.

Sounds great, but who pays for it? The purchase of Twitter was done via loans and now, interest rates are not zero. Musk will have to service considerable debt to keep Twitter alive.

If he can pull this off, he'll go down in history as one of the must successful business person of his generation. If he fails, he will still has Paypal, SpaceX and Tesla to brag about.

if it fails it cements him as a loose canon who is now past him prime
It will cast a narrative of Musk as someone who is successful only in a low interest rate economy. When interest rates tighten, companies have to show they can deliver more than Treasury notes. That was really easy when the interest rates were close to zero.
Presumably Twitter will be immediately profitable after these layoffs. Enough to cover the interest on the debt? Not sure
That maybe takes care of debt servicing, but what about growth? Business exist to grow shareholder value (public or private). Elon needs to solve that puzzle.
If 50m people pay the 8 dollar a month fee that’s another decent chunk of change.

Will be interesting to see how all these rapid fire changes play out over the next few years.

I’m not sure the path to growth for Twitter depends on a lot of net new development. More so better monetization of the existing platform, which can largely be done via small tweaks here and there

> he purchase of Twitter was done via loans and now, interest rates are not zero. Musk will have to service considerable debt to keep Twitter alive.

Those loan rates were negotiated before the recent hikes. They had some range built in based on what the market did, but he is definitely paying below current market rates.

Too many people, too fast. There's no way these are going to be sensible, surgical layoffs. The service is definitely going to suffer.
Fair point. Agreed on the surgical layoffs. I assumed that Twitter's culture was rotting very deeply already since they haven't made much progress for a long time.
There’s an underlying fact that the committee of people didn’t care about Twitter as a company right? That if you believe in your company and the welfare of your workers, and you believe Elon is a threat to them and your vision of whatever modern communication Twitter serves, then you wouldn’t sell it to him.

But they did right? As in the group lacks conviction.

There was not a single stipulation in that sale that said “please keep our people on for X amount of time”.

They took the cash and bounced.

That was a hard red pill to swallow.
The board represents the shareholders, of course they were going to take an over market offer. If they hadn't they'd be mired in shareholder lawsuits til the end of time.
Oh sure. The board and upper management were inept and ineffectual, I don't think anyone will argue otherwise. But so what?
The management and the shareholders are not the same thing. The board represents the shareholders, not the management. If they don't take the offer they get sued for breaching fiduciary responsibility.
It's twitter. The service suffering is actually a desirable feature.
Is it? In general at every place I've worked the vast majority of the work has come from launching & supporting new products. Existing infra does not really break that often, so if we just want Twitter as it is, that should be doable by 1/10th of the people. I'm not picking just on Twitter -- I feel this is the case broadly. Maintenance of a system that doesn't change is fairly straightforward as compared to innovation.
> if we just want Twitter as it is

Musk explicitly doesn't want that though, because he needs Twitter to earn a lot more money than it currently does.

False. He can pump profits keeping earnings flat by slashing costs. See probably removing 1/3 the cost with this single move.
The maths don't even begin to work out there.

He just made Twitter take on $13bn of debt to finance his purchase, the company will owe around $1bn a year in interest payments that it didn't used to. The layoffs announced today probably won't even cover that extra interest.

That's probably a billion in recurring expense of the worst kind. Debt can be satisfied with an equity issuance in the future post restructure.
That doesn't account for the lost ad revenue due to the rise of controversial content.
You clearly don't have experience with infra serving millions of people in real time. Everything is hard and infra breaks all the time.
How many people are actually involved in fixing Twitter's infrastucture? Must be in the hundreds. Maybe a thousand with their own data centers.
If your experience with services not under active development is that they are "breaking all the time," I'm sorry to say that you've worked only at places where the quality bar is very low.
Services that aren't under active development break as the things above them change and they are put into environments they weren't in before. This is very normal and the reason you don't see problems happening because of this is either because you're moving slowly (which is a valid way to do things…but not typical) or your have an army of people keeping it all running smoothly.
Alternative take: I was at Google when they killed Reader. At the time they pulled the plug, Reader had already been destaffed for years and was kept going in one guy's 20% time. The infrastructure effectively ran itself - the underlying Google datacenter teams replaced machines when they died, everything else was automated.

My experience there was pretty consistent with that: if you leave things alone, they won't break. Virtually all breakage was caused by changing things. On a well automated system repairing the physical components, rolling OS updates from time to time and so on, is not a huge amount of work.

The idea that Twitter is ever "not under active development" is ludicrous.

Services with hundreds of millions of users, antagonistic spammers/hackers/countries, and advertisers spending millions are never in maintenance mode.

You sound like you're trying to apply your understanding of lifestyle software businesses to one of the largest real-time communication networks in human history.

I don't believe I claimed Twitter was not under active development. The point that I was making here is that if we were OK with Twitter as-is, it would be possible to maintain it with far fewer people than they employ now. Indeed, 'maintenance' will be defined differently for an indie hacker vs. a popular website with user-generated content. But all software has some split of "keeping the lights on" vs. innovating.

What is your estimate of Twitter's effort split between those two categories?

You're moving the goalposts to a hypothetical situation where anyone is OK with Twitter as-is.

No one is. Twitter cannot be "as-is" because it would be overrun by bots and bugs.

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Exactly. Any one who has ever worked in SaaS industry realizes how many cogs in a wheel it takes to keep it running. Sure, there are always inefficiencies and redundancies. But, I highly doubt Elon figured out in a week that 50% of employees are not necessary. This looks like the vindictive and impulsive action of a man baby who has never been told that he doesn't always know what's best. Time will surely tell. All the best to those who were laid off, but most importantly, good luck to those who are staying back. They are in for a ride.
No one is contesting the merits of infra at scale. There are essential teams that would likely be untouched because their job is operationally critical. However, other teams for less vital jobs would be cut. I think you are making an assumption that the core team who manages the infra is being laid off which is not clear.
I remember the original Ruby on Rails Twitter going down a lot. And their error page said something like "Reason: Too many whales".
The verge article mentioned elsewhere in this discussion claims "His team of outside advisors has spent the last week determining which engineers to keep based on their contributions to Twitter’s codebase, according to employees involved in the discussion". Of course how well of a job they can do in a week is anyone's guess, but it sounds like there was a lot more internal and external knowledge involved than just Elon's gut feeling on who's important.
Sounds like it's actually s/a lot/very little/
It's also just cruel. Twitter employees must be feeling immense whiplash. First they were being bought out, then they weren't, then they were again, then a huge change in work culture literally overnight, now mass layoffs.

Elon Musk, it seems, does not think about the humans affected by his decisions. Regardless of anyone's opinions on whether the culture was good or bad, this sort of sudden mass loss of employment will cause pain. Pain that didn't need to happen.

It's almost like Elon Musk _wants_ to drastically shift the work culture.
Yes, of course. Stress and Fear are the cornerstones of responsible leadership. You can say that this is intentional, but it just means he is an asshole.
> Too many people, too fast.

There is no indication of how many people.

> There's no way these are going to be sensible, surgical layoffs.

We have no clue whose going to be laid off.

You clearly have your mind made up, regardless of reality.

> There is no indication of how many people.

“About half of Twitter’s workers appeared set to lose their jobs, according to previous internal messages and an investor”

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/03/technology/twitter-layoff...

> We have no clue whose going to be laid off

No but we do know this plan was thrown together extremely quickly. We know a few days ago developers were told to print off (!) their code for review. Let’s state the obvious: it takes more than a week to plan an effective layoff of half your staff.

The "too many" people is in comparison with other companies and the revenue these companies bring in. Twitter is at the highest end of the list of more employees per money.

It might not be the wisest thing, but in comparison with others tech companies and only in this component it's accurate.

> Too many people, too fast. There's no way these are going to be sensible, surgical layoffs.

If I were working there, I'd want the layoffs to be as swift and brief as possible. Having the sword of Damocles hanging over my head day to day would be unbearable. I'd rather Twitter have one big layoff and then re-focus on the product if it were me.

> The service is definitely going to suffer.

I see this claim, but don't quite get it. What are engineers doing there? Are they like Homer Simpson pushing a red button every day to keep the site running? It seems like kind of a set-and-forget type of operation at this point, since so few new features are developed. They copied a couple of other social media startups (Clubhouse & Substack) in the past couple of years, and they changed the stylesheet, but otherwise, doesn't seem like much has happened. Have they done a ton of optimization work that we simply don't know about? (And if not, why do they need it?) I just don't get the claim.

FWIW, I'm expecting to see essentially no difference in Twitter for at least six months.

They're working on that 'edit' button.
Many big tech companies, especially in the social space, are extremely bloated. They could literally have 10x more employees and everyone would still find something meaningless to work on. On the other hand they could have had far fewer employees and the company would have delivered better results and built a better product. A lean, focused engineering culture will do wonders to a company like Twitter.
I do agree overall, but it is very hard to achieve such a lean organization. Broad layoffs such as this tend to demotivate employees and cause your best employees to look for work where they don't have to worry as much about job security. I am fairly certain anybody with talent and drive would not be looking forward to continue working at Twitter in the coming days, at least without a significant pay raise (which Musk would want to avoid).
I dunno, if 50% of the chaff gets cut, that would be good with me. It all depends on who they’re letting go.
How confident are you in Elon's ability to identify "chaff" within a week? What makes you think the remaining 50% will continue to work at full capacity after this?
One way is to look at a few most recent perf reviews. Another way - look at some internal productivity metric that many companies introduced during Covid/WFH.
Have you ever seen either of those be remotely well correlated with actual job performance?
Yes. Underperformance is a decent indicator. Number of PRs is not a great one, but it can be somewhat correlated with eng velocity/productivity. Twitter will probably end up using a combination of metrics like that.

They will hopefully also talk to EMs, but at this scale might choose not to. It's going to be an ugly process but I doubt it's going to be a random one. They clearly understand that it's in their interest to retain the most skilled and performant employees.

Also, don't want to sound too cynical, but I would guess that it's actually not that hard to evaluate eng performance with all the data companies are collecting during WFH. I am sure Twitter requires using a VPN, so digging into that data would yield quite a revealing and precise performance metric. The only reason this approach is not widespread is ethical, not technological.

It's not a good look to wish for people to lose their jobs.
Losing jobs will eventually happen regardless for any business that loses money like they were. When the company has over-hired, layoffs at least mean they're taking corrective action now.

Sucks for the people affected now, possibly impacts fewer people long-term though. I doubt many Twitter employees will struggle to find reemployment quickly.

You're mistaken. I am not wishing for it and my comment doesn't "wish for it". I am just not against the decision that I clearly have no say in. I'm just looking forward into a decision that was already made.
I see what you're saying, but I think this is a take that doesn't stand up to much analysis. The correct amount of employees is the goal, we wouldn't cheer their workforce growing by 10x as a universal good, it's not sustainable and likely to imperil the jobs of everyone. But it's the "good" that's the inverse of this "bad".
I didn't really understand yakaccount4's take on this. If they are concerned about optics, what can one do to not layoff? would they just let the company continue to perform mediocrely and continue to bloat its burn just for the sake of not laying off people?
> would they just let the company continue to perform mediocrely and continue to bloat its burn just for the sake of not laying off people?

Who's more important the workers or the company? I bet the answer to that question will align with people's views on the layoffs.

It's not that black and white. It's nuanced, it is situational, and it is conditional.
this makes the common mistake that there will always continue to be a company with resources for the workers, regardless of how it performs. The company as a concept exists as a going concern, _then_ it can support workers. If the company ceased to exist, the workers could continue to report to work and produce output, but they would be unhappy with the compensation.
> Who's more important the workers or the company?

The workers all lose when the company goes bust.

The company goes bust without the workers. There’s more to it than just the extremes.
True. It's also true that the best thing a company can do for its workers is make a decent profit.
Amazon went over a decade minting millionaire employees while not making a profit. Ditto Uber, and half of the other cheap-money unicorns.
> I see what you're saying, but I think this is a take that doesn't stand up to much analysis.

I don't think it needs to, nor was I trying to make any kind of argument of the sort. The (former) employees are going to suffer and pay the price for the past mistakes of the corporate leaders. It's a depressing situation even if it is the absolute correct action for Twitter to take.

For that reason, I don't think it is hard to understand why there are so many comments against the layoffs.

Firing people based off of "lines of code submitted" immediately after crunching them for 80+ hour weeks is a really shitty way of trying to accomplish that goal.
At the same time, "too many people would lose their jobs [in insurance]" was *one of the reasons why we didn't get the public option when Obamacare passed.

There are definitely cases where people losing their jobs is a necessary evil to get us to a place of greater good. We should certainly support those that get laid off, but it shouldn't stop us (collectively) from improving how our society functions.

I'm reminded of the Soviet Union joke about full employment. Of course we have full employment - like at the subway entrance: one person takes your ticket, another brings it to the machine, the third one makes the stamp and the fourth hands it back to you. See? Everyone has a job!

I am speculating as a non Twitter user looking at it from the outside that the Twitter staff and primary Twitter user base shared the same views and culture.

So Musk is probably going to alienate a majority of his users doing this and Twitter will probably go into disrepute and decline now.

I have seen this happen to forums and boards I posted on where some moderators get de-modded which angers a lot of the users who leave or start posting less. Then the culture goes into decline and never returns. Maybe something like that is about to happen, or maybe not.

> I would actually like to see Twitter's team and culture rebuilt regardless of who bought it.

There you go. I don't think having giant operational costs at a company and having a head count in the thousands and sitting there losing more money without maximizing revenue it sustainable for any business.

Perhaps Twitter itself was overdue a massive correction, hence the first step is drastic layoffs and cuts.

I had lunch there a couple of times. The food was fantastic!

I'm curious how much damage all this negativity will have on Twitter culture going forward and what it will take to rebuild it. Is it just throwing money at the layoff "survivors" or is it really the mission of building the Internet's town square? I'm pretty interested to see how this plays out!

I've worked in Fortune 50 and in the Gov. Both are equally unproductive. Swaths of people doing nothing all day. Stagnancy is remarkable.

Also, makes it incredibly easy to climb the ranks and get rewarded for it. Whenever there is malaise in workplace, I work twice as hard. Build tools for others, solve their problems, uplift folks and motivate them. What good is it to sit around sadly wasting away your life with a resentful attitude. It's not fun and these people make things worse for others that are around them. By far the worst is working in the Gov. Not only people slack off, but they don't even try to hide it. Openly and shamelessly. It's not my type of an environment at all.

I wanna build shit with cool people and live a fulfilling life.

I’m having a hard time believing that a large number of people are doing nothing but slacking off at these companies. When people say their tech company has a “chill” culture normally they mean they don’t have to work overtime or during the weekends. Or they don’t get super stressed about hard deadlines. Not that they work 30 minutes a day. I worked for 2 big tech companies that have the “chill” culture label and never met somebody that was literally doing nothing or didn’t have a project assigned. I’m sure there are exceptions but that’s it. It’s not like in the TV show where they go and hang in the roof all day.
A very large number of people do slack off at these companies. Some engineers code only a few hours a week. They do attend meetings and such, but the actual task delivery timeline is very relaxed.
But how do you know that’s actually true? They might be just posting that to sound cool in some social app. In these companies everyone has a manager and assigned to a project. I don’t think it’s like in the tv shows or in consulting companies where you can spend months waiting for a project and actually doing nothing.
I've always heard these types of stories, and someone showed me a clip from a show once with some nerds on the roof. I can't help but wonder if that's real life for some people. I get nervous sometimes if I'm taking too long taking walks during my break, not that I'm going to get caught or scolded for going a few minutes over, but that mentally I'm harming my integrity by not honoring the commitment I made.

I can imagine the type of person that embodies this type of developer is someone who clicks 'I agree' without reading the terms of service, or shows up late to personal engagements.

"If you do not receive an email from twitter-hr@ by 5PM PST on Friday Nov. 4th, please email peoplequestions@twitter.com"

Reminds me of that AOL employee that kept their badge for 6 months after they were laid off and kept eating at the cafeteria (or something along those lines)

Honest question: Why would anyone willingly stay at Twitter? He seems extremely employee unfriendly, and it’s not like working at Twitter is some noble cause. Why wouldn’t you immediately go work somewhere else, assuming you’re reasonably employable?
Because you'll get severance if they fire you.
All Tesla employees (some who had worked there for 10+ years) who were laid off this year got 1 week severance. You think he's gonna let Twitter employees get anything of value out the door?
And Tesla is being sued for WARN Act violations, which mandates 60 days severance, but it remains to be seen if they can enforce it

> An employer who violates the WARN Act notice requirement is liable to each affected employee for an amount equal to back pay and benefits for the period of violation up to 60 days. An employer who fails to provide notice as required to a unit of local government is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $500 for each day of violation. The penalty may be avoided if the employer satisfies the liability to each affected employee within three weeks after the closing. In any suit, the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs. These are the only remedies that WARN provides.

That fine might not be large enough to discourage bad actors

Maybe it counts per day of violation per employee? As in, they’re all separate offences, not one offence against 1000 employees.
At $500 per day at a max of 60 days, you're capping out at $30,000 per employee

When you're talking about thousands of employees, it gets up in the millions, but that's not much compared to the pile of cash already on fire

True, it’s just more expensive than just paying them. There is no logical reason to not do so.
Isnt Twitter in California where the WARN act applies?
WARN is Federal, but states can have their own stricter versions.
Could also be opportunity. Tumultuous times are sometimes the best environment to advance quickly. Not my cup of tea, but some ambitious folks thrive in that.
How could you judge what it can become before it has became? Seems premature to leave if I was an employee not getting laid off. It really depends though, if I was an employee there then I would know who was lacking and who was performing, so it would be easier to judge the merit of the layoff.
No Musk company has a reputation for being a good place to work. He has a business philosophy that seems to be opposed to treating employees well.
It's a strategy. SpaceX has a reputation for mediocre pay, but if you point that out you get a whole bunch of people telling you that it's okay because it's such a privilege to work there. He wants his employees to come from his fanbase, because they're cheaper.
Purpose in life often comes with a price.
If only there was a name for organisations whos purpose is spesifically to ensure all their resources go to a worthy cause....A charity!
If only charities were effective in their use of resources.
The privilege is shooting rockets into space, not working for Musk. I hardly doubt anyone thinks it would worth it to get treated like shit _and_ work on Twitter, but I guess we'll see!
This wouldn't explain Tesla, though.
> It's a strategy.

Exploiting people is indeed a strategy, whether its with chains, legal loopholes or just taking advantage of their dreams and passions.

I dunno, if he just happens to exploit people to do worthy things then that’s still better than most billionaires right?

We don’t get annoyed at the truly bad ones exploiting people, that’s just the way things are (e.g. Bezos), but because there is a disconnect between what we perceive as lofty goals (e.g. exploring space, electric cars) and exploiting employees, Musk gets a ton of (personal) flak.

Of course, it doesn’t help he can be an arsehole.

He’s currently having people work 84 hour weeks so he can purge the ones who balk. You couldn’t make this stuff up, it’s too cliche.
He’s already mandating “84 hour workweeks”, as well as revoking WFH options. Those 2 items alone, even only 1 of the 2, are enough reason to leave a company and never look back. There is literally nothing that could balance the situation in favor of working there.
I have heard nothing but exceptionally good things from top performers for him. So maybe it's not so black and white after all.
Sounds like confirmation bias.
Meh. Just anecdotal evidence. Not inherently bad, just limited in what it can tell you.
Counter point: I am personal friends with two big name Tesla employees whose hiring and quitting were both in the press. They both despise the guy.
But does you being friends with them mean they are any good?

I mean, not to say you are wrong, but we only have your word for it ;)

Someone should ask Chris Lattner what he thinks of Elon. :)
Why were there still thousands of engineers working at Yahoo! years after they'd done anything even slightly interesting, at the moment they got bought by a fading regional telephone company?
I didn't last until Verizon, but Yahoo!, for better or worse, was a lot of different products with a shared user database, adsystem, package repo, and mediocre corporate management.

If you were happy with your product, and corporate management wasn't involved, eh, it's fine. I might have stayed at YTravel longer if corporate meddling didn't get to me; although going to an actual small team rather than a small team in a big corp was a much better fit for me and it turned out really well.

I know lots of really talented people still there after they got sold to PE as well.
Severance. Otherwise yeah, I'd be out of there on Monday if I was unlucky enough to survive the layoffs tomorrow.
Haha "including your spam folder"? These guys are using gsuite email, why would official internal emails be in spam? Are they planning to have some 3rd-party layoff contractor send the mails from Bulgaria or something?
Note that it says if you're let go, the email will come to your personal email. I assume because your access to corporate email will already be revoked.
The way this entire thing has been run is a f*cking disgrace. Yes they have a business to run. Yes they need to do what they need to do to keep things healthy on that end, but these are PEOPLE we are talking about here. They have lives and families. The amount of contempt I have for Musk over the way he is treating them is unbounded. We used to think this guy was Bruce Wayne. Turns out he's Lex Luthor.
Wow laying off a large chunk of an unprofitable company is lex luthor evil? Guess the bar for super villain has become substantially lower.
Lex Luthor would never make so many stupid comments on social media. Musk is more cartoon villain than comic book villain. But I think the Joker once lampshaded that a CEO was more evil than he would ever be. Its probably somewhere in the Even Evil has Standards trope (https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/EvenEvilHasStand...).
Lex Luthor did, however, take forty cakes. That’s as many as four tens. And that's terrible.
Layoffs are part of business yes (pretty much what I said in my parent post). What I have a problem with is the way this is being done. Forcing people to quit by dropping arbitrary deadlines without any notice? Notice of 84 hour work weeks? Sleeping in the office? Asking devs to print up their code? All this because he doesn't want to pay severance etc. I think that is hella f*cked up.
> Forcing people to quit by dropping arbitrary deadlines without any notice? Notice of 84 hour work weeks? Sleeping in the office?

Did any of this happen as a matter of policy? Or are you getting upset about rumors and hearsay?

Your original comment made it sound like businesses shouldn't layoff people because they were people who had real lives. After reading this follow-up, I realized you have no issues with layoffs, but you actually just had an issue with how they were laid off. Basically, same outcome, but with more grace.
It’s not the same outcome at all - severance pay is often the difference between needing to take out a loan or not when embarking on a job search after a layoff. Lack of that stability will have material impact on many people: they might have to move, change which schools their kids go to, avoid medical treatment not covered by Medicare, etc etc. He’s not committing some sort of victimless crime.
> but with more grace

> Grace - courteous goodwill.

I think we are saying the same thing. Goodwill can only be built with actions and that would be similar to what Stripe did in their layoffs. The lack of goodwill would result in what you are saying.

Not paying severance is also part of business and what people signed up for if it is not a law or a contract.
He hasn’t communicated with the employees. He has left them twisting in the wind. They’re finding things out from his tweets instead of through proper company channels. It’s unprofessional and disrespectful.
Forcing people to work over weekends, 84 hour weeks, finding any excuse to make them quit or fire them "for cause" like making them print their code out physically? The end of the year is coming. It's supposed to be the holidays soon. Thanksgiving is in like 3 weeks. C'mon, dude.
Just so. Some big Grinch energy coming from one of the wealthiest people on the planet.
Having employees pull 80+ hr crunch time is common in the AAA game industry... whats so bad about it happening for a few weeks at twitter?
Yes it is common in the gaming industry. That is not a good thing nor a justification for it happening elsewhere.
Having then pull 80+ weeks is bad no matter where it is.

The game dev work environmental is notoriously shitty, that doesn't make it okay to make it shitty elsewhere.

> Having employees pull 80+ hr crunch time is common in the AAA game industry

You say that as if the working conditions in the AAA game industry _aren't_ widely regarded as horrible...

Crunch happening in the games industry isn't a defense of it happening elsewhere. It shouldn't be happening in the games industry either.

I don't think you should diminish the great work of Lex Luther by associating Musk with him. Musk is not a genius, he just got rich with first mover advantage in Online banking (paypal) and disrupting a lazy industry (Cars but electric!).

The real measure of Musk will be seeing how well this all goes. If he's really is smart, this may work. But by all accounts we're seeing what taking 44 billion dollars and setting it on fire looks like.

>Musk is not a genius, he just got rich with first mover advantage in Online banking (paypal) and disrupting a lazy industry (Cars but electric!).

I'm not saying he's a genius, either, but first mover and disruption aren't exactly without foresight.

Yeah, but buying twitter isn't smart. It shows a glaring lack of critical thinking and foresight. So like most rich people. He got lucky in the past and the past may not be a measure of the future.
Thats what they said about Tesla and SpaceX.
Musk is a good project manager if you think that crash or crash through is a good project management methodology. And Telsa and SpaceX (Which is supported by defence industry) are very different in their offerings than twitter.....
So he lead first new major US car company in a century and started the first viable private rocket company in 50 years, but you’re concerned that he won’t be able to figure out how to make Twitter profitable?

Is that your honest opinion?

People want cars, defence wants rockets. People use twitter, but in the list of things that are required in the future. A terse environment for people to shitpost each other may not be essential.

We'll all wait and see how it shakes out.

In the future? You might as well just replied "Yes."
This is like arguing that the best basketball player in the world is going to easily become a world-class chef.
That is a lame analogy.

The skills to run SpaceX and Tesla transfer to running Twitter a lot more than basketball to cooking. For one thing, they all (leading SpaceX, Tesla and Twitter) have running a large business in common.

HE DIDNT FUCKING START THOSE THINGS.

Jesus christ the dick riding on HN is insane.

Does it need to be a good financial outcome for it to be smart?

I view the whole thing as Elon getting bored and wanting a new toy to play with. When you have as much wealth as he does, a loss hardly really matters. If he can make it profitable somehow, that's just a bonus.

> He got lucky in the past

The mental gymnastics people on HN perform to diminish Musk's real achievements deserves 10s across the board.

I mean if you hate the guy just say so (for extra credit, explain why). Don't lie about his achievements and intelligence. They are so obviously real. Yes, luck is involved too, but it's not the only thing by far. He fucken self-learned rocket science in 6 years.

> When I met Elon it was apparent to me that although he had a scientific mind and he understood scientific principles, he did not know anything about rockets. Nothing. That was in 2001. By 2007 he knew everything about rockets - he really knew everything, in detail. You have to put some serious study in to know as much about rockets as he knows now. This doesn't come just from hanging out with people.

Robert Zubrin - aerospace engineer

> Elon is brilliant. He’s involved in just about everything. He understands everything. If he asks you a question, you learn very quickly not to go give him a gut reaction.

He wants answers that get down to the fundamental laws of physics. One thing he understands really well is the physics of the rockets. He understands that like nobody else. The stuff I have seen him do in his head is crazy.

He can get in discussions about flying a satellite and whether we can make the right orbit and deliver Dragon at the same time and solve all these equations in real time. It’s amazing to watch the amount of knowledge he has accumulated over the years.

Kevin Watson - Head of Avionics, Launcher

https://www.reddit.com/r/SpaceXLounge/comments/k1e0ta/eviden...

> first mover advantage in Online banking (paypal)

That's being generous. He's not a paypal founder. He started a different company, which merged a couple times into becoming part of paypal.

Turns out this guy who consistently beat all odds and pushes progress further than imagine, is just completely randomly involved in all these events, as CEO but that's just a detail. And obviously he's a fraud, there's someone else all this time really running the show, probably a lizard.

Elon is brash, tough to work with and doesn't behave in upstanding ways, and I don't think I'd want to work for him; he's a jerk. But all this doesn't make wishful denial become true.

> Turns out this guy who consistently beat all odds

Where is the Hyperloop? Since he announced it China has build 3 thousand miles of high speed rail.

How many cars travelled through boring company tonnels?

How many years ago was Full Self Driving meant to be released?

> doesn't behave in upstanding ways

He was sued for sexual harrasment, unfair dismissal, dangerous working conditions, defamation, reneging on signed contract, by SEC for lying to investors, and countless others.

If an average person broke this many laws, their life would be ruined.

Yes, isn't that all proof that he's clearly not just a mere average joe? Everyone fails, he fails less than most all of us, and he does really daring things.

We can dislike him all we want for all his flaws, he's going to be in history books. If he wasn't so ruthless about achieving his goals, the moonshots he did achieve would have been failures as well.

We can dislike someone and still recognize their impact, people aren't black or white. Nuanced opinions are possible.

He fails less because he got lucky at some time and made his money, and then after that he acts like a bully and tries to beat down any opposition. Selling company at 420, what was he penalized? Other allegations, what did he lose? If there was a genuine fear of him losing something substantial, I am pretty sure his attitude will change.

No one is questioning his impact, but the people do question and have the right to question the methods. But we live in a corrupt system, we can point fingers in many directions, and rightly so. He is just one of a breed.

Why should he lose something for _allegations_? Don't we live in a society based on the concept of innocent until proven guilty?
he lost multiple lawsuits, and the penalties were pitifull
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> Yes, isn't that all proof that he's clearly not just a mere average joe?

I'm not sure anyone ever considered him the average joe. He was born into privilege for a start.

Why do you think the hyperloop should be anywhere? It was just an idea Elon threw out there for someone else to build, not a project he tried to build. (Don't confuse Boring Co Loop in vegas with an attempt to build high speed partial vacuum tunnel at human scale)

You are right that he is not an average person.

Yes he became the worlds richest man by luck.

Incredible. The man isn’t smart. Tesla, SpaceX, and Starlink were just luck. And he was lucky with PayPal.

No, Musk is only a genius if he does it with a fourth, fifth, or sixth business. Perhaps then he’ll graduate from lucky to fortunate.

Just to play devils advocate:

Musk more or less got trapped into a deal with Twitter that was largely based upon numbers that were fabricated by executives.

From his perspective, the way to salvage this mess is layoffs. Some of the previous executives (Parag) have committed fraud imo, and should face consequences. They won't though.

Lot's of twitter employees will suffer. To varying degrees, many of them played a role in the house of cards that is twitter.

> Lot's of twitter employees will suffer

This is the only part of this I am speaking to because the rest is exactly what is happening. Musk messed up and now a whole lot of people are put in a terrible situation going right into the holiday season. It's unconscionable for one of the richest people in the world to behave this way.

I was alluding to the fact that the Twitter execs deserve a great deal of the blame. There are many guilty parties in this story. Elon is just one.

The Twitter executives have been up to shenanigans for quite some time it seems. That is imo, the actual main reason this deal has been so messy.

Citations please. And don't cite Musk, he's not a neutral party to this. He's going to say anything that will make the old executives look bad.

Also, it was Musk who waive due diligence. This is ENTIRELY all on him.

EDIT: Since max depth was reach, there are _multiple_ comments about how he waived due diligence.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2022/06/in-letter-to-twi...

https://www.zdnet.com/article/musk-did-not-seek-due-diligenc...

The bot thing was an entire hail mary to stop the purchase. It doesn't matter if Twitter lied about the bots.

It's odd to ask for citations then provide none for your own claims.

Regardless, I was referring to twitter whistle blower that confirmed the number of spam accounts is fabricated: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22186683-twitter-whi...

There is a LOT of fishy stuff in these documents. The twitter executives have committed fraud but it seems like they'll be getting away with it.

Can you point out where in the report it is claimed that the number of spam accounts is outright fabricated? The closest I can find is that Mudge accuses Twitter leadership of not knowing and/or not being interested in the total number of spam bots, but that is a very different accusation than fabricating the number of spam bots.

In addition, the number of spam bots is more or less a red herring - the only representation regarding bots that Twitter made during the acquisition was the false/spam/etc. rate among its mDAU. There was no representation made as to the total number of bots on Twitter, nor the percentage of all Twitter accounts which are bots.

That Musk focused on a different number is more or less entirely on him, and is a significant reason his lawsuit never really went anywhere.

It's also important to note that data scientists Musk hired failed to find evidence that supported his "wildly higher" claim - one firm found an 11% "fake user number" at an 80% confidence interval, while the other found a 5.3% spam accounts as a percentage of mDAU at a 90% confidence interval. Hardly the kind of evidence one would want to have when accusing Twitter of lying, let alone fraud.

Page 8 there’s an entire section dedicated to discussing bot accounts.

“The company could not even provide an accurate upper bound on the total number of spam bots on the platform. The site integrity team gave three reasons for this failure: (1) they did not know how to measure; (2) they were buried under constant firefighting and could not keep up with reacting to bots and other platform abuse; and, most troubling, (3) senior management had no appetite to properly measure the prevalence of bot accounts—because as Mudge later learned from a different sensitive source, they were concerned that if accurate measurements ever became public, it would harm the image and valuation of the company.”

Yes, that's the section I read. None of it supports a claim that bot numbers were fabricated.

The first and biggest problem is that the paragraph is talking about the total number of spam bots on Twitter, while the number that Twitter represented to Musk was the percentage of false/spam accounts as a percentage of mDAU. These are two different metrics and cannot be directly compared. Even if the paragraph directly accused Twitter of falsifying and/or fabricating the total number of spam bots on Twitter, it would have no relevance towards the merger since Twitter made no representations of the total number of spam bots on Twitter to Musk.

The second problem is that nothing in that paragraph implies fabrication - it's basically complaining that Twitter isn't paying attention to a metric Mudge thinks should be measured. "We don't know the answer and aren't interested in finding out" is not the same thing as "We don't know the answer and made something up instead".

The third problem is that Musk's own analysis failed to hint at fabrication as well - even if Mudge directly accused Twitter of fabrication, his claim was contradicted by other evidence.

> None of it supports a claim that bot numbers were fabricated

'In fact, Mudge learned deliberate ignorance was the norm amongst the executive leadership team. In early 2021, as a new executive, Mudge asked the Head of Site Integrity (responsible for addressing platform manipulation including spam and botnets), what the underlying spam bot numbers were. Their response was “we don't really know."'

If they don't know what the spam numbers are, then where is the 5% figure coming from?

I already quoted this part but this is also relevant: "The company could not even provide an accurate upper bound on the total number of spam bots on the platform."

They aren't able to provide an upper bound on the total number of spam accounts.

None of this is to due with the spam accounts that are known, and not counted as part of mDau. Those spam accounts are KNOWN, and not included in counts.

These documents are stating that twitter has no information on the actual total number of spam accounts.

> If they don't know what the spam numbers are, then where is the 5% figure coming from?

It's 5% of mDAU.

> If they don't know what the spam numbers are, then where is the 5% figure coming from?

Again, that is 5% of mDAU, not 5% of accounts. Mudge is complaining about the latter, Twitter only represented the former.

In any case, Twitter's methodology to get the 5% figure, based on what was stated in court, appears to be:

1. Every day, have someone(s) randomly sample 100 users from the mDAU pool and use various pieces of data to try to determine which of those sampled accounts are spam/false accounts

2. At the end of the quarter, use the 90 samples to estimate the proportion of spam/false accounts among all mDAU users

This allows one to get a relatively tight estimate of the proportion of spam/false accounts among mDAU users without knowing the precise number of spam accounts among mDAU or the upper bound on the total number of spam accounts among all users on the platform. The former isn't known because of the statistical nature of the method, and the latter isn't known because the pool the samples are drawn from isn't the one needed to determine the total number of bots.

> None of this is to due with the spam accounts that are known, and not counted as part of mDau. Those spam accounts are KNOWN, and not included in counts.

Non-mDAU users consist of more than just spam accounts, though - for example, inactive users and users using non-monetizable clients are excluded. If the precise makeup of the pool of non-mDAU users is not known, then that would easily explain not knowing the upper bound on spam accounts.

Strictly speaking, one can trivially provide an upper bound on the number of spam accounts - just give the total number of accounts - but that's hardly a useful answer. Presumably Mudge wanted something with more precision, and if that information is not tracked than Twitter obviously wouldn't be able to give a useful answer, no deception needed.

> These documents are stating that twitter has no information on the actual total number of spam accounts.

But it doesn't state that Twitter fabricated the total number of spam accounts, does it?

And once again, the total number of spam bots is irrelevant to Musk's purchase. Twitter made no representations regarding such a statistic in its SEC filings or in the merger agreement, so there can be no fraud or falsification regarding that statistic. The only statistic Twitter provided regarding bots was the 5% number, and that was bots as a percentage of mDAU, which is different from the statistic Mudge was complaining about.

Actually, from what I recall of Mudge's claims, it basically validates Twitter's mDAU metric. Mudge's complaint boils down to he thinks the mDAU metric is the wrong thing to measure in large part because it focuses too much on measuring value for advertisers rather than the health of the platform.
Page 8 of the report contradicts what you are saying.
No it doesn't. Scroll to the very next page, and especially read paragraphs 15 and 16.
Those paragraphs are discussing that there are a number of KNOWN fake accounts that are not included in mDAU.

The very next paragraphs state that they have no idea just how many total fake accounts there are. That is, there is a number of fake accounts that they don't know about (and don't make any effort to count), and they are concerned that counting them will affect stock price.

Said another way, they are admitting they aren't counting all the fake accounts. That's in paragraphs 17 & 18

The relevant financial representations have always been about the mDAU numbers. It's Musk who is trying to pretend that the "5% of mDAU may be spam account" really meant "5% of all accounts are spam accounts."

Mudge isn't saying that Twitter's statements about mDAU are wrong; he's saying that he thinks it's a bad metric, because mDAU ignores the effect of fake accounts. Even if Mudge is correct in his assessment that mDAU is a bad metric, it does not sustain any allegations of fraud.

> Mudge isn't saying that Twitter's statements about mDAU are wrong;

He literally did say that. I get the sense you're not reading the whistleblower docs... Or just arguing for the sake of arguing. I've quoted Mudge. Whereas you are inferring things based on what Musk said.

I've already linked the docs so I won't again. I've pointed out where this information can be found. Those documents are in no uncertain terms stating that Twitter does not have a grasp of how many fake accounts there are. Therefore, any number they give is wrong.

No, he didn't.

P11:

> On May 13, Mr. Musk expressed doubts about the accuracy of Twitter's claim in legal filings that <5% of accounts are “bots,” or automated spam accounts that spread propaganda and hurt the experience of real users:'

He's repeating Musk's claim here. Recall that Twitter says that 5% of mDAU are potentially spam. That's not the same as accounts.

P16:

> However there are many millions of active accounts that are not considered “mDAU,” either because they are spam bots, or because Twitter does not believe it «can monetize them.

So when Twitter is saying "mDAU generally excludes spam bots", he's indirectly saying that it's correct.

P26:

> A more meaningful and honest answer to Mr. Musk’s question would be trivial for Twitter to calculate, given that Twitter is already doing a decent job excluding spam bots and other worthless accounts from its calculation of mDAU. But this number is likely to be meaningfully higher than 5%:

Quite literally saying here that "<5% of mDAU is spam" is correct!

So, yes I have read the whistleblower docs. The disconnect here is that I believe you have not read Twitter's filings, which do not in fact claim that "<5% of accounts are spam" but "<5% of mDAU are spam" (see, e.g., https://sec.report/Document/0001418091-22-000075/).

> Therefore, any number they give is wrong.

This is an incorrect conclusion to draw. Twitter states that they estimate that a certain percentage of a subset of users is spam/false accounts. That they don't know the percentage of spam/false accounts outside of that subset of users has no bearing on the accuracy of their statement regarding their chosen subset.

As a greatly reduced example, I can say that neither the @elonmusk nor the @chancery_daily accounts are spam accounts. I have no idea how many accounts Twitter has, let alone how many of those are spam accounts, but that lack of knowledge does not affect the accuracy of my first statement.

Trapped into a deal? Are you serious? No one held a gun to Elon Musk’s head and told him to buy Twitter. He did that on his own accord.

He should have just left them alone. If the executives were so incompetent, he’d have gotten a better deal by waiting for them to fail. Or shorting the stock like a normal investor.

Yes, trapped in a deal.

The deal was always contingent on the confirmation that bot accounts were accurate. This was a precondition from the beginning.

Twitter did in fact lie about the bot numbers and Musk somehow caught wind of it and tried to back out.

I know it’s popular to hate the guy but facts matter more than your disdain.

> Twitter did in fact lie about the bot numbers

Did it? At least based on what was shown in court, that seems hard to believe, especially given data scientists he hired failed to produce mDAU spam numbers significantly off from what Twitter had, let alone off to the point where fabrication becomes a likely explanation.

Facts such as: a) he voluntarily waived due dilligence b) he explicitly claimed he was buying twitter to fix the bot problem c) no-one has ever shown that twitter were lying about bot numbers, and the only way you can pretend they were is if you pretend they were claiming their mDAU number was their user account number.
> no-one has ever shown that twitter were lying about bot numbers, and the only way you can pretend they were is if you pretend they were claiming their mDAU number was their user account number

This is entirely false. Read the whistleblower report:

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22186683-twitter-whi...

“The company could not even provide an accurate upper bound on the total number of spam bots on the platform. The site integrity team gave three reasons for this failure: (1) they did not know how to measure; (2) they were buried under constant firefighting and could not keep up with reacting to bots and other platform abuse; and, most troubling, (3) senior management had no appetite to properly measure the prevalence of bot accounts—because as Mudge later learned from a different sensitive source, they were concerned that if accurate measurements ever became public, it would harm the image and valuation of the company.”

Even what you quoted, taken at face value, says that twitter never lied about bot numbers.
> The deal was always contingent on the confirmation

Any citation for that? I thought Elon waived most of the contingencies.

> but facts matter

true, they do. And the fact here is that Elon backed out of the legal fight and purchased the company. Why do you think that happened?

> Any citation for that? I thought Elon waived most of the contingencies.

IIRC it's kind of true. Section 7(b)(i) of the merger agreement [0], which is part of the section describing the conditions under which the merger will take place, states:

> each of the representations and warranties of the Company contained in this Agreement (except for the representations and warranties contained in Section 4.2(a) and Section 4.2(b)), without giving effect to any materiality or “Company Material Adverse Effect” qualifications therein, shall be true and correct as of the Closing Date..., except for such failures to be true and correct as would not have a Company Material Adverse Effect

And Section 4.6 of the agreement describes Twitter's representations regarding its SEC documents and financial statements. Among other things, it states:

> As of their respective dates... none of the Company SEC Documents at the time it was filed... contained any untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, or are to be made, not misleading.

At least by my reading (and the general sense I got from more knowledgeable commentators), this basically means that Twitter represents that its SEC filings contain no material inaccuracies, and that the merger shall take place unless those filings contain inaccuracies significant enough to cause a Company Material Adverse Effect.

So in one sense, the deal depends on Twitter's numbers being not too inaccurate - if Musk could prove that Twitter's numbers were wrong and that that inaccuracy was enough to cause a MAE, then he would be able to back out of the deal.

What is incorrect, though, is the implication that the deal could not go forward until Musk checked Twitter's numbers. The deal basically assumes Twitter's numbers are correct, with the default action being that the merger will happen. The onus was on Musk to prove Twitter's numbers incorrect to the point that it will cause a MAE; otherwise, he must go through with the deal. Proving a MAE is an incredibly high bar - from what I've seen from other commentators, a MAE has been found once in the entirety of Delaware's corporate legal history, and given how Musk's evidence was turning out during trial it seemed extremely unlikely he would have been able to successfully argue that claim.

[0]: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1418091/000119312522...

The only thing that deal was contingent on was his financing, and the contingency that would trigger if he failed to come up with it was him owing Twitter a billion dollars.
If that's even remotely true, he could have continued the court case. Presumably he would have won. Facts matter in a court case, and I think Elon's legal team told him that the facts weren't on his side.
Because it’s exceptionally difficult, if not impossible, to obtain accurate bot account metrics without data that is exclusive to the company.

Factor in that Twitter did not have processes in place to accurately count the spam accounts themselves. The truth is that there is not currently an accurate count of Twitter’s fake users.

Page 8 of this whistleblower report goes into details: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22186683-twitter-whi...

> Because it’s exceptionally difficult, if not impossible, to obtain accurate bot account metrics without data that is exclusive to the company.

Which is why the court ordered discovery that forced Twitter to give him that data.

Musk did not get trapped into a deal. He thought he was being cute and it blew up in his face.

First he was on the board, then he wasn't. Then he thought it would be funny to agree to buy Twitter for a price that had "420" in it, then the markets declined and he sued to get out of a contract nobody forced him to sign.

Either something changed recently in Musk, he has been hiding the fact that he has had a few screws loose for years, or both.

I guess most people just get depressed when they hit middle age. When you are wealthy, you can knock up one of your employees and buy a company on a whim.

Just another oddity to add: that employee he knocked up was apparently via IVF. So, very intentional.
> the markets declined and he sued to get out of a contract nobody forced him to sign.

Small correction: he wrote an open "I declare" letter to Twitter 'canceling' the deal: Twitter got to Delaware court first (within days of his letter), and it took Musk's lawyers 2 weeks to file.

> Musk more or less got trapped into a deal with Twitter that was largely based upon numbers that were fabricated by executives

What numbers were fabricated?

The fake account numbers.

Page 8 of whistleblower report: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22186683-twitter-whi...

(comment deleted)
I read through it, can you please quote the part where Mudge says Twitter lied about their mDAU count, or lied about their count of bots on the platform?

Mudge says Parag is lying about not being incentivized to remove spam, and then tries to do a sleight of hand thing by saying Musk is right because Musk is confused by what he sees in his own replies on the site vs what Twitter is actually reporting in their SEC filings. Those are two separate numbers, and Twitter only reported one.

Elon's takeover began 6 months ago, and he's never hidden his disdain for how the company is run. All those PEOPLE with lives and families would have been smart to take the hint and start interviewing instead of waiting to see if Elon would spare them.
He made a joke offer and attempted to back out of the deal for 6 months straight. Nobody knew if it was going through or not.
Doesn't matter, either case started to look bad for Twitter. Either stock price drop or Elon being forced to buy.
> His team of outside advisors has spent the last week determining which engineers to keep based on their contributions to Twitter’s codebase, according to employees involved in the discussion [from the verge article]

That's a striking difference to the stripe layoffs discussed earlier today, and the experiences many others shared there.

Dumb question - but for those that remain, now that they no longer have RSUs / ESPP / etc, would you expect their salaries to be made commensurate to what their comp was before? How is this usually handled for companies that go from public (and where a large part of comp is stock) to private?
Likely turns into cash over the same period at the buyout price. It technically depends on the change of management clause in your contract.

The firings will reduce the owed cash that Elon has to payout as a result of the stock swap. Smart move

There are RSUs. When a company goes private, the RSUs convert to cash on the same vesting schedule. Of course the company can cancel them, but they usually keep the vesting schedule to keep the employees.

For the Twitter employees (if they keep their jobs and the RSUs are not canceled) this is a very good deal, because the stock price was really high due to the deal.

In our case the RSUs all insta-vested and got paid out, then got replaced with nothing.
That is not universally true. Sometimes it works like that, sometimes it doesn't. Depends on the buyer and given that this particular buyer doesn't seem interested in respecting legal contracts, I wouldn't be confident that it will work with Twitter as you describe here.
1. Delayed Cash bonuses with similar vesting times to RSUs

2. Delayed Cash bonuses with vesting terms tied to some company metric or calculation derived from company metric

3. Not replacing it to cause attrition to reduce costs

4. Some sort of hypothetical share tracking unit that only has a value if the company goes public or is bought again

Varies by company. My company recently went from public to private and they mostly told everyone getting RSUs to pound sand. No adjustment to salary to compensate for the change.

I'd be out the door already except the day they announced that, my director called me and gave me an RSU equivalent that was even bigger. Apparently they don't want to lose me yet. We'll certainly lose some developers though, and I don't blame them. Eventually I'll be one of them.

If I worked at twitter I'd unionize with the remaining employees.