On Wednesday, a day before a deadline for Twitter to submit a report to the FTC, Twitter’s chief information security officer, Lea Kissner; chief privacy officer, Damien Kieran; and chief compliance officer, Marianne Fogarty, resigned.
In internal messages later that day, an employee wrote about the resignations and suggested that internal privacy reviews of Twitter’s products were not proceeding as they should under the FTC settlement.
Some engineers could be required to “self-certify” that their projects complied with the settlement, rather than relying on reviews from lawyers and executives, a shift that could lead to “major incidents,” the employee wrote.
“Elon has shown that his only priority with Twitter users is how to monetize them,” the person wrote in the message, which was viewed by the Times.
The employee added that Spiro, Musk’s lawyer, had said the billionaire was willing to take risks. Spiro, the employee said, told workers that “Elon puts rockets into space — he’s not afraid of the FTC.”
The FTC said that it was tracking the developments at Twitter with “deep concern” and that “no CEO or company is above the law.” Musk later sent employees an email saying Twitter will adhere to the FTC settlement.
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