(Daily Mail) Twitter founder Jack Dorsey has admitted that the social media company’s many failures were his fault – before immediately passing the blame to one of the tech firm’s activist investors.
In a blog post published Tuesday, Dorsey owned up to allowing the company to stray from the preservation of free speech, but added that he only allowed that to happen when he ‘no longer had hope,’ after an unnamed investment group bought up stock in the company in 2020.
Dorsey did not specify which company that was, but he was likely pointing to Elliott Management, which that year bought a majority share in Twitter for $387million under the direction of managing partner Jesse Cohn, who then set about trying to oust Dorsey.
The former Twitter CEO’s comments come as the new chief twit Elon Musk started releasing internal Twitter files from before his takeover, which showed that the company actively tried to suppress the tweets of many conservative account-holders.
Twitter founder Jack Dorsey has admitted that the social media company’s many failures were his fault
Jesse Cohn, a managing partner at the $55bn hedge fund Elliott Management which bought a majority share in Twitter in 2020 for $387m
Dorsey added that next week he would begin handing out $1million in grants per-year for engineers developing algorithms and platforms that would make the internet a freer place, a project he called ‘open internet development.’
‘It will start with a focus of giving cash and equity grants to engineering teams working on social media and private communication protocols, bitcoin, and a web-only mobile OS,’ he wrote.
Dorsey – who quit as Twitter’s CEO in November 2021 – began his post by laying out what he believed were three principles social media companies should adhere to.
He said that the first rule ought to be ‘resilience to corporate and government control,’ as well as only allowing the ‘original author to remove content they produce,’ and finally relying on ‘algorithmic choice’ to implement moderation online.
He went on to explain that under his watch he allowed those ideals to falter, and that they remained compromised to this day because of that.
‘The Twitter when I led it and the Twitter of today do not meet any of these principles,’ he wrote. ‘This is my fault alone, as I completely gave up pushing for them when an activist entered our stock in 2020.
He said he ‘no longer had hope of achieving’ those goals while Twitter was public, and that he planned to leave ‘at that moment knowing I was no longer right for the company.’
The former Twitter CEO’s comments come as the new chief twit Elon Musk has begun releasing internal files from before his takeover, which show that the company actively tried to suppress the tweets of many conservative account-holders
Dorsey said that, from next week, he would begin handing out $1m in grants per year for engineers developing algorithms and platforms which would make the internet a freer place, a project he called ‘open internet development’
It is believed that Dorsey was referring to Elliott Management, the New York City-based hedge fund worth $55billion which bought up a majority of Twitter’s shares, filled the board with its own people, and then set about trying to fire Dorsey.
Elliott’s campaign to take over Twitter was overseen by Cohn who, along with his team, felt Dorsey was not committed to running Twitter and needed to go if their investment was to flourish.
At the time, Dorsey was splitting his time between Twitter and his other company, the financial service Square, and the social media company’s value was flagging as its competitors’ soared.
That year Dorsey was also talking about plans to relocate to Africa for an extended period, which some pointed to as evidence that his focus was anywhere but at Twitter.
Dorsey appears in November 2018. He stepped down as Twitter CEO in November 2021
An except from Dorsey’s blog post in which he takes the blame for Twitter’s failures
Ultimately, Dorsey decided not to move to Africa as the pandemic descended upon the world, and he and Elliott Management reached a deal that would keep him on as CEO of Twitter.
The deal, however, included the formation of a committee comprising Cohn and four others who would examine Twitter’s leadership structure and its succession plan and determine what could be changed by the year’s end, according to the New York Times.
In November of the following year, Dorsey announced his departure from Twitter.
Elliott remained a shareholder in Twitter until the spring of this year, and sold off all of its stake after Musk first agreed to buy the company for $44billion in April, according to the Financial Times.
Dorsey wrote that the first rule for social media companies ought to be ‘resilience to corporate and government control,’ as well as only allowing the ‘original author to remove content they produce,’ and finally relying on ‘algorithmic choice’ to implement moderation online