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Jack Dorsey promotes his social networking protocols and suggests that they don't pose a threat to the lives of his former employees.
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Jack Dorsey responded to Elon Musk’s purported expose, "The Twitter Files," in an essay that is thankfully not written as a Twitter stream.
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After Elon Musk spent more than a week pushing five document releases known as The Twitter Files, Dorsey's reply came from him.
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These documents include Slack logs and internal documents. They also show emails about Twitter's removal from Donald Trump's account following the January 6th riots.
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Musk's promotion and the threads have taken on a conspiratorial tone. It portrays the Twitter leadership and employees in a conspiracy to silence Twitter users.
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Dorsey doesn't believe that. He stated that his tweet that "mistakes had been made" at Twitter was inaccurate but believed the company had "no mal intent or hidden motives."
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And that everyone acted according to the best information available at the time.
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Dorsey wrote that "I still wish for Twitter and every company to become uncomfortably transparency in all of their actions."
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He also added that he wished the files had "many more eyes to see and interpretations to consider."
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Other ways that the Twitter Files posts were damaging have been: in some instances, incomplete censoring led to contact information for politicians, Twitter employees, and Dorsey himself being leaked.
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