Twitter CEO Musk says user signups at all-time high, touts features of
"everything app"
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[November 28, 2022] (Reuters)
- Twitter Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk says new user signups to the
social media platform are at an "all-time high", as he struggles with a
mass exodus of advertisers and users fleeing to other platforms over
concerns about verification and hate speech.
Signups were averaging over two million per day in the last seven days
as of Nov. 16, up 66% compared to the same week in 2021, Musk said in a
tweet late on Saturday.
He also said that user active minutes were at a record high, averaging
nearly 8 billion active minutes per day in the last seven days as of
Nov. 15, an increase of 30% in comparison to the same week last year.
Hate speech impressions decreased as of Nov. 13 compared to October of
last year.
Reported impersonations on the platform spiked earlier this month,
before and in wake of the Twitter Blue launch, according to Musk.
Musk, who also runs rocket company SpaceX, brain-chip startup Neuralink
and tunneling firm the Boring Company, has said that buying Twitter
would speed up his ambition to create an "everything app" called X.
Musk's "Twitter 2.0 The Everything App" will have features like
encrypted direct messages (DMs), longform tweets and payments, according
to the tweet.
In another tweet early on Sunday, Musk said he sees a "path to Twitter
exceeding a billion monthly users in 12 to 18 months."
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An image of Elon Musk is seen on a
smartphone placed on printed Twitter logos in this picture
illustration taken April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration//File
Photo
Advertisers on Twitter, including big companies such as General
Motors, Mondelez International, Volkswagen AG, have paused
advertising on the platform, as they grapple with the new boss.
Musk has said that Twitter was experiencing a "massive drop in
revenue" from the advertiser retreat, blaming a coalition of civil
rights groups that has been pressing the platform's top advertisers
to take action if he did not protect content moderation.
Activists are urging Twitter's advertisers to issue statements about
pulling their ads off the social media platform after Musk lifted
the ban on tweets by former U.S. president Donald Trump.
Hundreds of Twitter employees are believed to have quit the
beleaguered company, following an ultimatum by Musk that staffers
sign up for "long hours at high intensity," or leave.
The company earlier in November laid off half its workforce, with
teams responsible for communications, content curation, human rights
and machine learning ethics being gutted, as well as some product
and engineering teams.
(Reporting by Juby Babu in Bengaluru; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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