Let them eat each other.

  • @JeeBaiChow
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    1271 month ago

    Isn’t this extortion? Since when are companies obliged to advertise on any platform?

    • @[email protected]
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      651 month ago

      Careful, you might get sued for not advertising on X. I’m presently planning to buy ads confirming that I have nothing to sell. You know, for “protection.”

      Shut up, it’s sarcasm, leave me alone.

      • @JeeBaiChow
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        151 month ago

        Good thing you said sarcasm. Otherwise I’d have to take out an x campaign, in all caps, using your sorry post as an example of a conservative oligarch supporting troll.

        • @[email protected]
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          131 month ago

          I hate that the world has become so stupid that I have to say it. Used to be a person could say something absurd and it was obvious that they were joking.

          • @JeeBaiChow
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            91 month ago

            Only now, they become president and actually do the dumb things they post. I feel ya, buddy.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      I commented on it below. There are no specifics in the article, but from the phrasing “collective action among competing”, my guess is that this is probably an antitrust claim. That is, there’s no obligation to buy service from a given company, but there may be an obligation for competitors to not collude in making buy/not-buy decisions from a supplier.

      • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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        231 month ago

        But if my memory is at all correct, they kinda all chose to leave/scale-back because of all the Nazi/hate speech “conservative” talk on Twitter. He then went full Karen and told them to F’off he didn’t want/need them anyway.

        I think this is just a way to try and get free money now that he has bought an administration with a DoJ for hire. It’s time for him to try and get a return on that investment.

        • Flying Squid
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          430 days ago

          Your memory is all correct.

          And I’m no lawyer, but I’m guessing him telling them to fuck off is not going to help his court case.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      I think the crux of it is they are claiming collusion, in an anti-trust way. But I haven’t heard the lawyers claim that once. Not once.

      • @Graphy
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        41 month ago

        I assumed he’s trying to get those settlement payout bribes that trump is cashing in on

  • Chozo
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    801 month ago

    Musk will do anything to get advertisers back, except remove the nazi content from his platform.

    • @AngryRobot
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      331 month ago

      Why would he remove the content he bought the platform to promote?

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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    751 month ago

    Nestlé accused of having a modicum of an ethical backbone. Interesting.

      • @[email protected]
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        430 days ago

        You don’t have to support either one–the best case is they both waste a bunch of resources fighting each other in a lose-lose legal battle.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      Well, the clown told them to release the dams, which Nestle makes money from, probably not to keen on that.

  • @[email protected]
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    451 month ago

    But I thought he told them to go fuck themselves? I wonder why that didn’t work.

    Lonnie, you big stupid baby, at least you looked cool to your blathering legion of mouth-breathing fans.

  • @[email protected]
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    341 month ago

    And what makes an advertising boycott legally actionable? "We want less regulation. "

    "No!!! You can’t avoid my shithole platform. "

  • Zeppo
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    291 month ago

    What is the supposed legal basis of this?

    • @T00l_shed
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      311 month ago

      Musk is a petulant child who is running the government now, and will abuse it to whatever ends he desires

      • @hemmes
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        81 month ago

        This is honestly the most likely reason.

        Because legally speaking X has an uphill battle to try and prove collusion. Brands are not competitors, they’re buyers. Outside of some outstanding finding that GARM and co. colluded with the likes of Facebook and Snapchat for kick backs or rate reductions, X doesn’t have a win here.

        The thing Poppa X does have is lots of money. So far that’s worked a little, the WFA has shut down GARM citing that the legal battle has “drained its resources and finances.” But the WFA and some of the brands they represent are still named (Unilever has settled - never heard of them) - do they have the cash to push back? WFA doesn’t, they’re a non-profit. The rest? Not sure.

    • @[email protected]
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      30 days ago

      Collusion among all the big players in an industry, in order to exclude other players from succeeding in that industry is indeed anti-competitive, and potentially illegal. There’s potential merit here in businesses coordinating with each other on who to blacklist withing the industry, which is why lawyers were willing to take on the case.

      Ultimately, it’s a question for a judge whether they’re doing this for the purpose of suppressing competition, somehow, or whether they’re doing it for valid business reasons (like, say, avoiding a company with a history of not paying its bills, or avoiding a company with a history of sabotaging business relationships, or avoiding a company that their own customers actively hate, and would lose them business).

      Of course, with the courts the way they are these days, I’m not holding my breath for the obviously-sensible ruling.

      • Zeppo
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        The problem with that is companies who advertise with X and X themselves are not in the same industry. That’s like saying if I had a hardware store who advertises with a newspaper, that means my hardware store is in the same business as the newspaper. What?

        As far as “why lawyers were willing to take on the case” I’d guess it’s because they’re going to rake in huge fees regardless of the outcome.

    • @wiLD0
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      130 days ago

      Judges in Texas.

  • @fiendishplan
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    261 month ago

    Who’s running Tesla? Doesn’t seem like he’s spending a lot of time with it lately.

    • strawberry
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      111 month ago

      I hope a Lego gets permanently stuck in each of his shoes. at an angle. fuck it make it two bricks per shoe. I’ll pay. make it three.

  • Monkey With A Shell
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    1930 days ago

    ‘I order you, in the name of the free markets of both ideas and products, to give money to this specific person’

    Our very legitimate SCOTUS

  • DFX4509B
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    171 month ago

    Look who’s talking, mofo… The guy did things that screwed over advertising on the late Twitter.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮
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    I want so bad for the judge to see this shit on their docket and immediately throw the book at Elon. Figuratively. And literally.

    (Actually, let him go ahead and sue Nestlé; they deserve it for other reasons)

  • @fox2263
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    1630 days ago

    Free speech means they don’t have to advertise there.

  • @andrewta
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    30 days ago

    So they’re going to pick a fight with a large number of very wealthy corporations, And with the wealth these corporations have , Twitter thinks they’re going to win.?

    This is gonna look something like a first year boxer getting in a ring with four of the greatest boxers of all time.

    I mean, what’s the argument here, you have to do business with every other business on the planet? How does that even make logical sense?

    If I run a burger shop and for whatever reason I don’t do business with your company, you’re able to sue me? How does this play out in the real world?

    • @Marleyinoc
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      930 days ago

      We’ve seen how large corporations kneel down to power, too, so maybe he’s hoping his position in the Administration will get them to settle. Typically bully shit.

      • @[email protected]
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        229 days ago

        Yeah. I don’t know how successful it might be, but it might be similar to Trump suing all the media corporations for daring to be critical of him.

    • @kreskin
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      127 days ago

      I mean, sure, if the courts are independent and choose to defy our shadow-president.