BBC:
X ad boycott gathers pace amid antisemitism storm
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
By James Clayton
North America technology reporter
An advertising boycott of social media platform X is gathering pace amid an antisemitism storm on the site formerly known as Twitter.
Apple, Disney, Comcast and Warner Brothers Discovery have all halted advertising on X, US media report, following hot on the heels of IBM.
The European Commission, TV network Paramount and movie studio Lionsgate have also pulled ad dollars from X.
It comes after X owner Elon Musk amplified an antisemitic trope.
The corporate boycott has also been picking up steam in the wake of an investigation by a US group which flagged ads appearing next to pro-Nazi posts on X.
A spokesperson for X told the BBC on Thursday that the company does not intentionally place brands "next to this kind of content" and the platform is dedicated to combatting antisemitism.
Mr Musk came under fire on Wednesday after he replied to a post sharing an antisemitic conspiracy theory, calling it "actual truth".
The billionaire Tesla and SpaceX entrepreneur denied he is antisemitic and later said his comments referred not to all Jewish people but to groups like the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and other unspecified "Jewish communities".
The White House denounced Mr Musk's endorsement of the post.
"We condemn this abhorrent promotion of antisemitic and racist hate in the strongest terms," said spokesperson Andrew Bates.
On Friday evening, the ADL - one of the most vocal critics of how X moderates incendiary content - offered rare praise for Mr Musk's steps to fight hate on the platform.
Mr Musk had posted on X that anyone using terms such as "from the river to the sea" - which the ADL has described as a coded call for Israel's destruction - could be suspended from the platform.
ADL chief executive Jonathan Greenblatt replied that this was "an important and welcome move".
X chief executive Linda Yaccarino posted on Friday evening that the platform had been "extremely clear about our efforts to combat antisemitism and discrimination. There's absolutely no place for it anywhere in the world".
By James Clayton
North America technology reporter
An advertising boycott of social media platform X is gathering pace amid an antisemitism storm on the site formerly known as Twitter.
Apple, Disney, Comcast and Warner Brothers Discovery have all halted advertising on X, US media report, following hot on the heels of IBM.
The European Commission, TV network Paramount and movie studio Lionsgate have also pulled ad dollars from X.
It comes after X owner Elon Musk amplified an antisemitic trope.
The corporate boycott has also been picking up steam in the wake of an investigation by a US group which flagged ads appearing next to pro-Nazi posts on X.
A spokesperson for X told the BBC on Thursday that the company does not intentionally place brands "next to this kind of content" and the platform is dedicated to combatting antisemitism.
Mr Musk came under fire on Wednesday after he replied to a post sharing an antisemitic conspiracy theory, calling it "actual truth".
The billionaire Tesla and SpaceX entrepreneur denied he is antisemitic and later said his comments referred not to all Jewish people but to groups like the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and other unspecified "Jewish communities".
The White House denounced Mr Musk's endorsement of the post.
"We condemn this abhorrent promotion of antisemitic and racist hate in the strongest terms," said spokesperson Andrew Bates.
On Friday evening, the ADL - one of the most vocal critics of how X moderates incendiary content - offered rare praise for Mr Musk's steps to fight hate on the platform.
Mr Musk had posted on X that anyone using terms such as "from the river to the sea" - which the ADL has described as a coded call for Israel's destruction - could be suspended from the platform.
ADL chief executive Jonathan Greenblatt replied that this was "an important and welcome move".
X chief executive Linda Yaccarino posted on Friday evening that the platform had been "extremely clear about our efforts to combat antisemitism and discrimination. There's absolutely no place for it anywhere in the world".
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGESImage caption,
Mr Musk hired X chief executive Linda Yaccarino to help build relationships with advertisers
The ad boycott follows an investigation by left-leaning pressure group Media Matters for America, which said it found ads bought by the companies next to posts including Hitler quotes, praise of Nazis and Holocaust denial.
On Thursday, IBM became the first company to pull its advertising from the site, saying the juxtaposition of its ads with Nazi content was "completely unacceptable".
X argues it has stronger brand safety controls than other social networks and that hate speech and extremism have fallen on the platform despite large cuts to the company's safety team.
Several outside groups disagree with that assessment and say that such content has increased under Mr Musk's leadership.
It is unclear how much of X's revenue currently comes from ads, because it's now a private company and no longer publishes quarterly reports.
But before Mr Musk took over the firm, advertising made up about 90% of Twitter revenue.
Mr Musk has attempted to change its reliance on ad dollars by trying to create a paid-membership tier.
If you pay a monthly fee, you can have a blue tick by your name and your content will be boosted. Yet that still makes up a tiny fraction of revenue.
In an interview with the BBC in April, Mr Musk said "almost all of them [advertisers] have either come back or they're going to come back".
Three months later he acknowledged in a post on X that ad revenue had fallen by 50%.
His appointment of Ms Yaccarino, a former ad executive, was widely seen as an attempt to smooth relations with advertisers.
Media caption,
Watch: In August X took down flashing sign after complaints
But building those kinds of relationships is difficult when the company's owner himself is the one making the controversial posts.
It is also hard to square advertisers' fears that the platform does not moderate content enough, with Mr Musk's commitment to free speech.
The BBC interviewed Twitter investor Ross Gerber last month and he said advertisers were worried about Nazi content not being removed.
"I do not want my ads anywhere near Nazis and I would say that 99% of brands would agree with that," he said.
"To lose advertisers over Nazi voices is the dumbest policy you could imagine."
Although Mr Musk is the world's richest man, he borrowed billions to buy Twitter and has to pay interest on those loans.
Unless he is able to staunch the flow of ad dollars from the platform, it could become an increasing financial burden.
Mr Musk hired X chief executive Linda Yaccarino to help build relationships with advertisers
The ad boycott follows an investigation by left-leaning pressure group Media Matters for America, which said it found ads bought by the companies next to posts including Hitler quotes, praise of Nazis and Holocaust denial.
On Thursday, IBM became the first company to pull its advertising from the site, saying the juxtaposition of its ads with Nazi content was "completely unacceptable".
X argues it has stronger brand safety controls than other social networks and that hate speech and extremism have fallen on the platform despite large cuts to the company's safety team.
Several outside groups disagree with that assessment and say that such content has increased under Mr Musk's leadership.
It is unclear how much of X's revenue currently comes from ads, because it's now a private company and no longer publishes quarterly reports.
But before Mr Musk took over the firm, advertising made up about 90% of Twitter revenue.
Mr Musk has attempted to change its reliance on ad dollars by trying to create a paid-membership tier.
If you pay a monthly fee, you can have a blue tick by your name and your content will be boosted. Yet that still makes up a tiny fraction of revenue.
In an interview with the BBC in April, Mr Musk said "almost all of them [advertisers] have either come back or they're going to come back".
Three months later he acknowledged in a post on X that ad revenue had fallen by 50%.
His appointment of Ms Yaccarino, a former ad executive, was widely seen as an attempt to smooth relations with advertisers.
Media caption,
Watch: In August X took down flashing sign after complaints
But building those kinds of relationships is difficult when the company's owner himself is the one making the controversial posts.
It is also hard to square advertisers' fears that the platform does not moderate content enough, with Mr Musk's commitment to free speech.
The BBC interviewed Twitter investor Ross Gerber last month and he said advertisers were worried about Nazi content not being removed.
"I do not want my ads anywhere near Nazis and I would say that 99% of brands would agree with that," he said.
"To lose advertisers over Nazi voices is the dumbest policy you could imagine."
Although Mr Musk is the world's richest man, he borrowed billions to buy Twitter and has to pay interest on those loans.
Unless he is able to staunch the flow of ad dollars from the platform, it could become an increasing financial burden.
https://t.me/WeTheMedia/94368
ReplyDelete"👀WOW!!!
Rep. Higgins on J6 Tapes🔥🔥
"Prepare to be shocked. This release will reveal the insidious truth that the left and the corrupt officials at FBI/DOJ do NOT want Americans to see.
No less than 5-10 key Democrats will announce they’re retiring from Congress. Don’t doubt me."
https://twitter.com/RepClayHiggins/status/1725687969778974816
https://apnews.com/article/jan-6-tapes-congress-capitol-insurrection-c737a543c379413ad6e025ac603ac3e3
"
Co-incidence? Probably getting desperate at what is coming. Your move...
From The River to The Sea, Palestine shall be cleansed of Jewish contamination.
ReplyDeleteTHAT Is the real meaning of the slogan.
Mfer, have u heard of the land of the given shall be cleansed of gentile?
DeleteElon Musk has been a disaster for Twitter , now X.
ReplyDeleteAnd X has been a disaster for Elon Musk, diverting his attention from managing arguably much more vital Tesla Motors.
ReplyDeletehttps://t.me/WeTheMedia/94372?single
"Elon’s about to go scorched Earth on Media Matters, “their board, their donors, their network of dark money, all of them …”
Media Matters got caught by backend data. They were posting inflammatory content, which they then captured in screenshots to provoke advertisers into cancelling X contracts.
#FAFO in action
Link
https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1725771191644758037
"
Popcorns? Will be fun to see the chosen lose that aura...
ReplyDeletehttps://t.me/professor_patriot_official/9424
"ALL of the advertisers are pulling from X today because the “real J6” tapes are released on X
And also the elites get rug pulled on Monday. T2S and ISO 20022
Larry Fink (Blackrock) and Tim Cook (Apple CEO) did not get anything from Xi Jingping at Wednesday’s dinner
What happens to $APPL stock on Monday when the Apple “hedge fund” is liquidated of U.S. Treasuries, and iPhone sales bottom out?
(footnote; Alasdair MacLeod used to talk about the “target 2 system”, but I never made the correlation until today between T2S and ISO)
Why would Citigroup announce massive layoffs beginning Monday?
Citigroup doesn’t need people to manage a U.S. Treasury bond market that won’t be there come Monday.
Why did Gavin Newsom really go to Beijing to see Xi Jingping?
Gavin Newsom is a “Nobody”
Because Biden wanted to liquidate California to China to get money from Xi to continue to fund the cabal (ooops, I mean the Federal Reserve).
(How did the United States acquire the Louisiana purchase? The French had debts to pay.)
**because the United States has debts to pay and no more financier’s.
Why did the Bank of Japan collapse last night and got a temporary Fed “patch” while Xi was still in California?
They have to keep the system going until the reset starts."
https://t.me/professor_patriot_official/9425
We'll find out soon enough...
https://t.me/DissidentThoughts/2686
ReplyDeleteLooking at the schedule for upcoming Treasury auctions, the 20-year bond auction on Monday, November 20 stands out.
Long-dated UST bonds are notoriously difficult to issue, and that's simply because they will mature in two or three decades, and with that length of time comes a lot of uncertainty. Nobody really knows how the geopolitical landscape will evolve over the new few years, let alone the next couple of decades, and that directly impacts demand for USTs on that part of the yield curve.
This is true for both the 20Y and 30Y bonds, but the 20Y UST bond is a much less sought-after security — it is probably the least demanded UST which the Treasury issues. This is because the 30Y is the cheapest-to-deliver Treasury bond, and so hedge funds seek it for Treasury futures basis trades. Treasury realizes this, and keeps 20Y bond auction sizes small and infrequent, as they increase the pace and size of 30Y bond issuance.
The previous 20Y auction went smoothly, but this was prior to the latest quarterly refunding announcement. Next Monday will be a real test of the Treasury market's appetite for UST bonds since then, and we may get a spike if it does very poorly.
https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel/49638
ReplyDeleteThey know what's coming?
https://t.me/professor_patriot_official/9455
ReplyDelete"Did you know that John Podesta and his brother Tony (on the right) keep some VERY interesting friends...like James Alefantis (left), CEO of the infamous Comet Ping Pong pizzeria for example.
Yeah, you remember #PizzaGate, right? Well, one of the guys that claimed to have "debunked" it was just arrested for raping toddlers.
Read that again.
The same guy?
C'mon, man.
What are the odds that an actual child rapist was involved in proving PizzaGate was just a wild "conspiracy theory"?
This then begs the question as to whether or not PizzaGate was really debunked or did pedophiles help cover it up?
All these odd connections to pedophilia and child sex trafficking.
And what with Mr. Alefantis being a long-time partner of David Brock, the Founder of Media Matters for America, an organization that played a key role in similarly "debunking" the claim about the pizzaria, we can't NOT now revisit the whole sordid affair.
So, we have to wonder if it's possible that MMFA itself was involved in similarly running cover for a network of powerful pedophiles?
It's almost like there's a pattern here.
So many connections.
NOTE: They are all good friends of both Bill and Hillary Clinton as well as Barack and Michelle Obama.
h/t
@dom_lucre
"
The bigger the skeletons to come out, the bigger the diversions...what's next? Israel card not really blowing up the region as hope for...Space aliens, nuke?
https://t.me/professor_patriot_official/9447
ReplyDeleteHmmm...
Worth a watch...
ReplyDeletehttps://rumble.com/v3wtvjv-who-wef-democide-the-interview-about-cutting-off-the-head-of-the-snake-in-g.html
His father was Hussain Najadi, a founding member of Arab-Malaysian Development Bank, and we know what had happened to him in downtown Kuala Lumpur.
https://t.me/PascalNajadiNEWS/3060