X, the social network formerly known as Twitter, is facing 2,200 arbitration cases that ex-employees filed after Elon Musk took over the company, slashed headcount, and made other sweeping changes there. The filing fees alone for that volume of cases could amount to $3.5 million.
The arbitration numbers were revealed in a new filing out Monday as part of a lawsuit in a Delaware district court. The case is Chris Woodfield v. Twitter, X Corp. and Elon Musk (No. 1:23-cv-780-CFC).
As CNBC has previously reported, many large corporations require workers to sign an arbitration agreement upon employment wherever it is legal to do so. This means to speak freely in court, where their speech can become part of a public record, workers would first need to get an exemption from a judge.
Yes, but it’s about a major tech company, so maybe it fits? NBC filed it in their ‘Tech News’ section.
I think that’s just more of a rollover from anything on the internet being labeled as ‘tech’, but like nowadays if the president sends a tweet its really not that notable of news, technologically. We could also start reporting every time a text is sent if we really wanted
You’re technically right, which is the best kind of right. It’s a destructive CEO story who just happens to run a tech company (into the ground)
This is like the Spanish guy kissing the winning footballer woman on the lips against her will. It’s going to be reported under sports, but really it’s a sexism story that just happens to be in sports.
But at least it is being reported and commented on, no?
It’s a social media company, not a tech company.
Unless you have a magic list of technology the company is releasing.
I don’t see what else one would call their own algorithms and media delivery systems.
Technology is a means to an end so I like to make the distinction of what the company actually does or make. Apple’s primary business is selling computer hardware (an actual technology product) so it’s a technology company. Microsoft sells software and cloud services (tech tools) so it’s a technology company. Netflix sells access to video, so it’s a media company. Are algorithms involved? Sure, but they’re child’s play compared to the algorithms used by high frequency traders, yet those people still unambiguously work for finance/banking companies. Every large retailer employs data scientists and teams of data analysts, but they’re still retailers rather than tech companies. Amazon is the trickiest to categorize. Amazon.com is a straight up retailer but AWS is clearly a tech “company.” Best to think of that one like a conglomerate.
Does Twitter make the content or do they serve content via webservers and applications? Sounds like technology to me.
Do buses pick you up at the corner or do you get on the bus? Sounds like technology to me.
A bus is an automobile.
Twitter is a website.
They released Twitter Bootstrap a while ago for “HTML, CSS, and Javascript for popular user interface components and interactions”, to this day, it is hard going to a website that doesn’t integrate in some way it at least once a day. The source code for lemmy.world’s CSS says it is using Bootstrap for example: