Musk contradicts Twitter safety chief, disavows statement as “fake news”
Enlarge (credit: Anadolu Agency / Contributor | Anadolu)
Ever since The Verge reported that Twitter shut down its communications office, it's been harder to confirm information about the company, which seems to be the way that CEO Elon Musk likes it. However, increasingly, Twitter trust and safety chief Ella Irwin seems more willing to confirm or deny rumors to media outlets, a move that's possibly irking Musk. Over the holiday weekend, Musk tweeted to directly contradict a statement Irwin provided to Reuters, causing even more confusion over what's going on at Twitter-and whether there's tension brewing between Musk and Irwin.
The timeline of the contradictory statements went like this: On Friday, Dec. 23, Reuters reported that Twitter had seemingly removed the social media platform's #ThereIsHelp feature, which was designed to share suicide-prevention resources alongside certain content.
Shortly after Reuters' report went live, Irwin emailed Reuters to confirm that the feature was temporarily removed." She said that it would be brought back this week, once Twitter finished fixing and revamping our prompts."