More Than 1000 Employees More Leave Twitter, as the World Cup Nears

More Than 1000 Employees More Leave Twitter, as the World Cup Nears


Twitter employees on Thursday surpassed the deadline set by the new CEO and owner, Elon Musk. According to Musk's shared vision, they'd be required to sign a contract.

Internal estimates indicate that approximately 1,200 employees chose to take the alternative, which is 3 months of separation. They have since left the company, which has witnessed half of its workforce leave or be dismissed in recent months.

More importantly, Twitter is about to have one of its most busy days of the season before the highly-tweeted FIFA World Cup begins.

Does Twitter On the Edge?

Numerous Twitter users have predicted the platform's total collapse, but periodic issues and security breaches are more likely.

Twitter's staff don't believe in the company's future, as well, according to an HTML1an interview with over 400 Twitter employees that revealed that 89% of the verified employees doubted the credibility of Elon Musk's management.

The traffic on Twitter is more significant than ever, even as users are creating new accounts on sites like Mastadon and Tumblr. Although, this increased traffic could not be a good thing.

banks in 1929: well look at how many people want to visit our banks right now pic.twitter.com/cn0TSM5Nom

-- Ken Cheng twitch.tv/kenchengcomedy (@kenchengcomedy) November 18, 2022

There's still plenty of revenue to be made on this social network regardless of the millions of gun-shy marketers quitting because of the increase in impersonations.

This platform is probably going to go in some way or another. A few shrewd commentators take the belief that Musk's actions are caused by an incorrect information bubble that could be deflated at one point in the future.

This weekend could show how well the platform is doing.

This year's World Cup Starts on Sunday.

One of the world's most important events kicks off in Qatar on Sunday: the FIFA World Cup. It's also among the most significant events on Twitter because of the multitude of people who log on to the service to share their instantaneous reactions to everything that happens at the soccer pitch.

Twitter experienced intermittent outages during the World Cup in June 2010. However, it was not experiencing a mass exodus of staff during the weeks leading up to the. This weekend's record-breaking traffic volume is the company's first significant test following the Musk acquisition and could determine investors' expectations moving ahead.

Do not count on knowing the results of this testing on the microblogging platform. Did we mention our Tech headlines newsletter?

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