Elon Musk has said his X social media platform will fund the legal bills of people that have been treated unfairly by employers due to posting or liking something on the positioning formerly generally known as Twitter.
“When you were unfairly treated by your employer on account of posting or liking something on this platform, we are going to fund your legal bill,” Musk said in a post on X, adding that there can be no limits to funding the bills.
Late last month, Musk said that monthly users of X reached a “recent high” and shared a graph that showed the most recent count as over 540 million.
The figures got here as the corporate goes through organizational changes and is trying to boost dropping promoting revenue.
It was also the most recent in a series of comments from X executives claiming strong traction in usage, after Meta Platforms launched a direct competing platform called Threads on July 5.
After 17 years with an iconic blue bird logo that got here to symbolize the broadcasting of ideas to the world, billionaire Musk renamed Twitter as X and unveiled a recent logo in July, marking a deal with constructing an “every thing app.”
Musk earlier in July had said that the platform’s money flow stays negative due to an almost 50% drop in promoting revenue and a heavy debt load.
An upturn in promoting revenue that had been expected in June didn’t materialize.