Elon Musk has announced that his X social media platform will cover the legal costs and initiate legal action on behalf of individuals who have faced unjust treatment from employers due to their posts or interactions on the platform previously known as Twitter.
"If you have experienced unfair treatment by your employer as a result of your posts or interactions on this platform, we will finance your legal expenses," Musk stated in a recent X post, noting that there will be no financial restrictions on this support.
Furthermore, Musk elaborated, "Our response won't just involve legal action; it will reverberate loudly, targeting the boards of directors within these companies," he commented in response to a thread discussing the swift behavioral changes brought about in the U.S. by the prospect of legal consequences.
Just last month, Musk disclosed that X's monthly user base had reached an "all-time high," substantiated by a graph illustrating the count exceeding 540 million.
These figures coincide with a period of organizational adjustments within the company, prompted by declining advertising revenues that X aims to bolster.
This development also forms part of a series of assertions by X executives asserting substantial progress in user engagement, following the launch of Threads—a competing platform by Meta Platforms (META.O)—on July 5.
Having sported the iconic blue bird emblem for 17 years, which became emblematic of disseminating ideas globally, billionaire Musk rebranded Twitter as X in July, accompanied by a new logo, signifying the platform's commitment to creating an "all-encompassing app."
In earlier July statements, Musk acknowledged the platform's negative cash flow, attributing it to a nearly 50% decrease in advertising revenue and a considerable debt load. The projected increase in advertising revenue for June did not come to fruition.
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