Why Oreo Maker Mondelez Pulled Its Ads Off Twitter After Musk Takeover

Oreo maker Mondelez has pulled its adverts off Twitter after Tesla Inc boss Elon Musk acquired the social media website, CEO Dirk Van de Put mentioned in a Reuters Newsmaker interview on Tuesday. “What we’ve seen recently since the change on Twitter has been announced, is the amount of hate speech increase significantly,” Van de Put mentioned. “We felt there is a risk our advertising would appear next to the wrong messages.

“As a consequence, now we have determined to take a pause and a break till that threat is as little as attainable,” he said.

Twitter last week laid off half its workforce as advertisers pulled spending amid concerns about content moderation. Mondelez joins a number of major companies that have halted advertising on Twitter, including United Airlines, General Mills, luxury automaker Audi of America, and General Motors.

Gilead Sciences said earlier on Monday the company and its unit Kite were in the “technique of pausing promoting” on Twitter.

Last week, Volkswagen said it had asked its brands to pause paid advertising on Twitter until further notice in the wake of Elon Musk’s takeover of the social media platform. “We are carefully monitoring the state of affairs and can resolve about subsequent steps relying on its evolvement,” Europe’s top carmaker had announced in a statement.

The firm, which has lost many members of its communications team, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Van de Put added that Mondelez, which makes Cadbury and Milka chocolates, is expecting a strong holiday season. The consumer in Europe, Mondelez’s largest market, is currently what worries him most, he added.

Last month, Musk tweeted that the company will form a content moderation council “with broadly numerous viewpoints.” Musk said no major content decisions or account reinstatements will happen before the council convenes.

The self-described “free speech absolutist” said in May he would reverse Twitter’s ban on former US President Donald Trump, who was removed from the microblogging site in January last year over the risk of further incitement of violence after the storming of the US Capitol.

© Thomson Reuters 2022


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