newsroompost
  • youtube
  • facebook
  • twitter

#RIPTwitter in top trends after Elon Musk’s ultimatum to employees; memes float

Twitter’s new owner Elon Musk had set Thursday deadline for its employees to sign a new agreement to ‘work for longer hours at high intensity’ or leave.

New Delhi: The chaos & turbulence in the beleaguered social media behemoth Twitter, post its sell-off to billionaire Elon Musk, reflected on the social media as many netizens commented on ‘demise’ of Twitter and also shared memes & jokes on new ‘hardcore’ system being put at the company.

Twitter’s new owner Elon Musk had set Thursday deadline for its employees to sign a new agreement to ‘work for longer hours at high intensity’ or leave. Reports suggest that this has sparked mass resignations at the company while many others have made up their mind to say ‘goodbye’ to the company.

Those leaving the company will be given three-months severance package.

Since takeover, Elon Musk’s abrasive decisions at the company is receiving attention as well as wide criticism. From sacking almost 50% of Twitter employees to shutting down many of its offices hasn’t gone down well with the employees, who are already staring at a bleak future.

According to reports, many old & new employees of Twitter are announcing their departures from the company following harsh & impulsive decisions by the new owner.

The billionaire himself had shared plans of sacking more than 3,000 employees in first week. The billionaire remains unfazed by mass resignations at Twitter and has maintained that this won’t affect the social media as the ‘best minds are staying with him’.

While the company witnesses storm of layoff & resignations, many netizens have taken to Twitter to share memes & deride the ‘change’ in company.

#RIPTwitter has been trending on top on the social media and this is how netizens are mocking the microblogging site as well as its new owner Elon Musk. While, many took this as means to shared farewell message to the company they served for 13 long years.