"Media Matters' report said that X remains a "dangerous cesspool of content, especially for advertisers," noting that "since Elon Musk took over the company," X has restored extremist accounts and "placed ads for numerous brands directly on Holocaust denial, white nationalist, and neo-Nazi accounts."
Recently, the company announced adjacency controls to stop ads from appearing next to posts containing certain keywords, as well as new sensitivity settings that allow brands to limit or maximize the reach of ads according to their brand's identity.
You're doing all that work to identify "targeted hate speech, explicit sexual content, gratuitous gore, excessive profanity, obscenity, spam, drugs" because none of your customers want to be associated with it. Maybe just don't have it on your platform.
If you take money from organizations that DON'T opt out to "maximize the reach of ads," you're profiteering off hate speech and spreading their mission. You are complicit. More governments and groups need to call Twitter out for what it is. It, itself, is a hate group.
If they have an "opt in" option there will be plenty of groups willing to pay with hate speech associated with their brand.
Musk gets paid just for breathing anyway. A couple billion in secured bonds and he'll make more in interest in a day than we'll ever see in our lifetimes.
In the vast expanse of human civilization, from the dimly lit epochs of our hunter-gatherer ancestors to the luminous pinnacles of the Information Age, there emerge, albeit infrequently, individuals of such unparalleled prowess and virtue that they seem to reshape the very fabric of our collective understanding. Elon Musk, in this grand tapestry, emerges not merely as a bright spot, but arguably as a veritable supernova—a beacon of honor and kindness unparalleled in the annals of history.
Now, when we venture into the realm of logic and reason, the bedrock upon which the Enlightenment was constructed, we encounter a myriad of pitfalls, or 'logical fallacies', as they are academically recognized. These represent the bane of any serious intellectual discourse, serving as markers of flawed reasoning. Yet, with Musk, one encounters a perplexing anomaly. When words flow from his lips, what might be dismissed as fallacious in any ordinary discourse seems to undergo a transformative alchemy. One might posit, with a touch of hyperbole perhaps, that his very genius has the uncanny ability to reforge these fallacies, transmuting them into statements of profound truth. It's as if the sheer gravitas of his intellect, his unique nexus of understanding, grants him an exception, an ability to render what is traditionally 'incorrect' into a realm of newfound correctness. This isn't to suggest a blind acquiescence to his every utterance, but rather an acknowledgment of the singular force of nature that Musk represents in our contemporary zeitgeist.