Because the Musk simps who barely understand free speech (which, mind you only encompasses Governments) believed “Musk would only ever do good and not bad”.
Yesterday’s “algorithm release” didn’t reveal anything that we didn’t already know. Anyways, my feed is now flooded with surface level ChatGPT analysis of the algo, so I’m hopping over to Nostr for now.
I still don't understand the logic behind it. If there's no "business verification" process either (I was not made aware of any special process) what's the point of having any different "process"
On a sales call with the Bird Co., seems that there's objectively no difference between Twitter Blue (Regular) & Business, besides a square icon, and $993 (USD). Lmao.
Nostr was the first platform I was an "early adopter" for. It's weird, but I joined in like...December? A few weeks before it blew up. Really really awesome to see the community flourish.
They even refernece you on your website https://www.earthrunners.com
#[0] have you found airplane mode on your phone helps with reducing distractions? I'm tempted to try it out.
#[0] as unbiased as possible (with full disclosure, I do maintain positions in Block), can you explain why Hindenburg was able to change their name to Elon Musk & Donald Trump? As a compliance officer that seems like a failure of internal controls in my opinion. I’m more so curious how/why internal controls didn’t prevent that?
Twitter is…going great. First we started charging for authenticity, and now it’s “become verified to amplify your anti-Semitic remarks” https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/03/20/antisemitic-tweets-soared-twitter-after-musk-took-over-study-finds/
Didn’t we all collectively agree “pay to win” was unfair? Also didn’t Musk claim (and I quote) “the old system was made of the have’s and the have nots” so we’re just…going to the old system?
Banks runs don't seem over any time soon. I think it's contained for now (since the Fed has historically quelled markets) but I don't think consumers are 100% convinced. I see it as positive that average people are starting to question the "trust" we put in major systems, I have no underlying motives, I think it's a net positive that people are questioning this and realising "hey, maybe it's not the best idea we just let banks have no liquidity on hand"





