Top Twitter Execs Resign Amid Elon Musk’s Tumultuous Takeover, Prompting FTC Concern

A number of top executives at Twitter have resigned from the social media company amid Elon Musk’s confusing and highly disorganized takeover of the platform.

Twitter headquarters stands on 10th Street on November 4, 2022 in San Francisco, California
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Image via Getty/David Odisho

Twitter headquarters stands on 10th Street on November 4, 2022 in San Francisco, California

Top executives at Twitter have resigned from the social media company amid Elon Musk’s chaotic, disorganized takeover.

Chief information security officer Lea Kissner announced their departure in a tweet on Thursday. Sources close to Twitter said chief compliance officer Marianne Fogarty also resigned, as did chief privacy officer Damien Kieran, per the Washington Post.

The employees left just after Musk, the new CEO of Twitter, sent a company-wide email that warned of “difficult times ahead.” He has since implemented a mandatory return-to-work policy as well.

I've made the hard decision to leave Twitter. I've had the opportunity to work with amazing people and I'm so proud of the privacy, security, and IT teams and the work we've done.

I'm looking forward to figuring out what's next, starting with my reviews for @USENIXSecurity 😁

— Lea Kissner (@LeaKissner) November 10, 2022

The development has sparked concern from the Federal Trade Commission, as reported by NBC News.

“We are tracking recent developments at Twitter with deep concern,” said an FTC spokesperson. “No CEO or company is above the law, and companies must follow our consent decrees. Our revised consent order gives us new tools to ensure compliance, and we are prepared to use them.”

If Twitter is found to not be complying with the FTC’s consent order, which requires the platform to reach certain privacy and security requirements, the company could be fined hundreds of millions of dollars. In Musk’s email sent on Wednesday, he told all employees they must return to office to work 40 hours a week effective on Thursday.

“Without significant subscription revenue, there is a good chance Twitter will not survive the upcoming economic downturn,” Musk said in the email, which stressed his desire to charge users $7.99 for verification. “We need roughly half our revenue to be subscriptions.”

The new Twitter Blue subscription, which gives a blue checkmark to anyone willing to pay for it, has already been notably abused by people impersonating others.

In a Twitter thread shared on Thursday, Platformer manager editor Zoë Schiffer revealed that Musk called a company-wide meeting following the departures. He gave staff just a one-hour notice, and he turned up late. He cautioned employees that if they can “physically make it to an office” but don’t, then he’ll consider it a resignation. He also cautioned that “bankruptcy isn’t out of the question.”

Wow. Elon Musk just told Twitter employees he’s not sure how much run rate the company has and “bankruptcy isn’t out of the question.”

— Zoë Schiffer (@ZoeSchiffer) November 10, 2022

That $44 billion acquisition sure hasn’t paid off for Musk so far.

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