From layoffs to not paying bills, Twitter has been on a cost-cutting drive since the Elon Musk acquisition. The latter has resulted in lawsuits from landlords and vendors, though one partner Twitter ...
Twitter has resumed paying its Google Cloud contract, according to Bloomberg. If you missed the initial news of the impending showdown, Platformer reported on June 10th that Twitter had been refusing ...
Last week Twitter took drastic measures to cut down on its server bills. Now, it’s also been shown that Twitter is blocking content from appearing in Google Search, though it’s more of a side effect ...
New Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino has restored the company's relationship with Google Cloud, reports say. She's restarted paying its bills after Elon Musk halted payments, per Bloomberg and the WSJ.
Twitter is refusing to pay the bills it owes to Google Cloud, reports say. Twitter’s contract with the service is up for renewal this month, and the fallout of not paying could deeply impact the ...
Twitter's search visibility on Google fell by 32% in a single day, according to Sistrix, following actions taken by CEO Elon Musk. Twitter's search visibility on Google dropped significantly following ...
New "temporary limits" on all Twitter accounts, announced by Elon Musk, have led to reported outages across the social media platform as it attempts to monetize the service and cut costs. Musk tweeted ...
More platform instability could be in Twitter’s near future. In 2018, Twitter signed a $1 billion contract with Google to host some of its services on the company’s Google Cloud servers. Platformer ...
Under Elon Musk's ownership, Twitter has stopped paying its Google Cloud bills, Platformer reported. It's unclear what will happen to some of the services hosted on Google Cloud, sources told the ...
The highest court in the US heard oral arguments on Tuesday and Wednesday targeting Big Tech that could reshape online speech. Queenie Wong was a senior writer for CNET News, focusing on social media ...
The Supreme Court considers how responsible major social media platforms—Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, especially—are for their most dangerous posts, challenging broad protections that tech companies ...