Musk said early Saturday that cash flow at Twitter remains negative because of a nearly 50% drop in advertising revenue coupled with “heavy debt.”

38 points
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37 points

Hmmmmm I wonder where all that heavy debt came from? Chin scratch I wonder why all the companies don’t want to advertise here anymore? NOBODY KNOWS!!!

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15 points

I’m amazed people still drive and ride in Teslas after seeing how badly this guy runs a social media site.

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7 points

Well, Tesla is publicly traded, makes money, and clearly their cars work because they have lower than average road fatalities. With the disparity of how badly Twitter’s being run vs Tesla I wonder how long it’s been since Elon’s actually been in charge of anything other than being a spokesperson for Tesla.

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7 points

@Catch42

@kuontom @const_void

No one really knows if Tesla makes money. It’s been long noticed that Musk is extremely dishonest and could easily be faking all of the numbers.

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5 points

It’s a public company, there are legal requirements for reporting its cash flows to its shareholders. If they’re being fudged to that degree then that’s massive fraud and Musk would be in very serious legal trouble.

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4 points

Don’t understand how public companies work, do ya?

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6 points

They are among the most unreliable cars… lol

And fewest fatalities because they are not selling as well as a honda civic…

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4 points

fatalities statistics are based on % not absolute number

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1 point

Exactly. If I start a brand of cars that explode as soon as you turn the ignition but only sell one, suddenly my brand has the fewest fatalities.

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6 points

To be fair, they’ve got the killed-or-injured-by-a-software-driven-vehicle market virtually cornered.

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4 points

they have lower than average road fatalities

Are you sure about that?

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1 point

Yes, because rising road fatalities and having lower than average road fatalities are not mutually exclusive. Radar-era autopilot was incredibly safe, so even though Elon made the stupid decision to make it vision-based which has caused fatalities to go up, they’re still below average. You can check NHTSA’s ratings just type in Tesla in the search bar and you’ll see that they’ve gotten a 5 star rating on every car in every category.

Of course if you look at Tesla’s own data they claim to the orders of magnitude safer, which I’m sure is only possible with some creative data manipulation, but it’s silly to claim that Tesla’s are less safe than average.

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1 point

Lower fatalities is a function of the driver type, not of the car.

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5 points

I trust his companies when I know the engineers don’t let him have any say whatsoever.

Neuralink and spacex are interesting to watch, because how badly could he fuck them up in a way that engineers will let him? Not much.

Tesla is just on the edge of being fucked up by him, his weird yoke and insistence on capacitive buttons are very close to being too much… but the thing that made me finally decide not to ever get a tesla was his insistence on using exclusively cameras instead of cameras+radar for autopilot.

If you don’t care about self-driving, and don’t care about the yoke/capacitive buttons, teslas are fine cars.

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2 points

I don’t see how a social media site and an automobile company have much in common.

It’s quite possible that Musk is better at some things than he is at other things. Engineering and manufacturing are quite different from maintaining a large social media company, the skills don’t translate.

Another major difference is that Musk built Tesla up from a small size, so it was always structured according to his style and expectations of management, whereas he bought Twitter as an already-large company with an established corporate culture that didn’t match what he would have done. That’s the first time he’s bought such a large pre-existing company, as far as I’m aware, and he’s having huge problems “reshaping” it.

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6 points
*

@FaceDeer

@kuontom @const_void Bullshit. He did not found Tesla. And Tesla gets many billions of dollars of subsidies, something you can’t do with Twitter. It’s easy to imagine how Musk mismanaged Tesla just as badly as Twitter now, but with the advantage of the government saving him back then. Also, with ZIRP (zero interest rate policy) by the Feds, you can borrow money at basically zero cost anytime you want. You can string along a disastrous mismanaged company for years in that scenario.

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2 points

As I said:

Another major difference is that Musk built Tesla up from a small size,

Emphasis added. From Tesla’s Wikipedia page:

Tesla was incorporated in July 2003 by Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning as Tesla Motors. The company’s name is a tribute to inventor and electrical engineer Nikola Tesla. In February 2004, via a $6.5 million investment, Elon Musk became the company’s largest shareholder.

Given the current size of Tesla, being able to buy a majority share of it for a mere $6.5 million clearly makes it a very small company by comparison.

Also, with ZIRP (zero interest rate policy) by the Feds, you can borrow money at basically zero cost anytime you want. You can string along a disastrous mismanaged company for years in that scenario.

Why do any companies go broke, in that case?

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14 points

Cash flow at twitter remains negative because I don’t understand the business.

FIFY Elmo.

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1 point

And can’t trust that others might be smarter than him.

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13 points

I wonder if you built a bonfire of $100 dollar bills, how tall would $44 billion look like?

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13 points

29ish miles.

A single bill of US currency is 0.0043 inches thick.

$44bil in $100 bills is 1,892,000 inches, which comes out to 29.861 miles.

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3 points

That’s a stack, not a pile.

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2 points

/c/TheyDidTheMath ?

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5 points

There was a Reddit post where they figured out how much money the Joker burned in the Dark Knight, and it was roughly 6.5 billion dollars.

So 44 billion would be about 7 times that much.

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0 points

In 50s that’s 59.7 miles, or just 3 miles shy of the von karman line which marks the edge of outerspace

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1 point

in 1s it’s about 2986 miles which is more than enough to go coast to coast.

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