Elon Musk’s Twitter needs every penny. With thousands and thousands of {dollars} in allegedly unpaid rent and bills, plus $13 billion owed to lenders who financed his takeover, there may be “nonetheless a lot work to do” if the corporate is to keep away from chapter, Musk said last month.
Twitter just lately auctioned off an estimated $1.5 million of furnishings and tools from its San Francisco headquarters, all the way down to trifles equivalent to keyboards and USB dongles. However the firm has left tens, or doubtlessly a whole lot, of 1000’s of {dollars}’ value of shimmering belongings to collect mud in former staff’ properties.
Some folks laid off or fired by Musk are puzzling over why Twitter hasn’t bothered to gather their company laptops, the most recent head scratcher in a takeover characterised by botched product launches, abrupt policy changes, and delayed paychecks.
Eric Frohnhoefer, a California software program engineer fired in November after confronting Musk via tweet, says he has not heard a peep about returning his company-issued Apple MacBook Professional M1 Professional laptop computer from 2021 (8/10 WIRED Recommends). “It’s nonetheless sitting in a closet,” he says. Just like the laptops of 1000’s of distant Twitter staff that Musk has terminated or let resign since early November, his was digitally locked, rendering it ineffective.
Refurbished variations of his mannequin can nonetheless fetch round $1,000, and new ones retail for twice that. Frohnhoefer doesn’t really feel indebted to Musk and is in no rush to return the machine. “I’m pleased letting it sit there and be a brick,” he says.
Two different ex-Tweeps say they’re much less relaxed about their custody of Musk’s costly paperweights as a result of they’re among the many staff nonetheless owed severance, and so they concern it may result in additional delays to their compensation, and even authorized issues down the road. On ex-employee discussion groups, braver souls have mentioned trying to crack their laptop computer’s lock code or wipe and reset the gadget, a kind of sources says.
Twitter didn’t reply to a request for remark.
Companies sometimes need their gadgets again rapidly from departing employees to guard proprietary information and lower your expenses, by slicing leases for the tools or via reuse and resale. However there are exceptions. Snap and Airbnb confirmed that they allowed staff laid off throughout the pandemic to maintain their company laptops.
Some former Twitter staff have instructed colleagues they despatched gear again after reaching out to the corporate for pay as you go delivery bins. Others inside the previous few days acquired generic emails asking them to fill out a “Twitter Machine Assortment Survey,” a number of folks say. However 4 out of 5 who spoke with WIRED had not acquired the e-mail themselves and are nonetheless babysitting Musk’s property.
“I believe at this level Twitter figured it will price an excessive amount of to attempt to take all these laptops again with nowhere to retailer them—they haven’t been paying lease shortly you recognize,” says Frank Meng, a machine-learning engineer in Canada laid off by Twitter in November. He came upon solely final week from one of many non-public group chats that returns may eventually be occurring.
The survey seen by WIRED describes badges, authentication tokens, company bank cards, company-issued cell telephones, and laptop computer chargers as objects that may be returned. Nevertheless, displays, keyboards, mice, show cables, and stands don’t have to be collected, in line with the shape. What ex-workers ought to do with laptops isn’t made clear.
The survey asks for an deal with the place a delivery field for returnable objects may be despatched, but it surely additionally offers choices to drop tools at some Twitter workplaces.
When WIRED wrote to a Twitter electronic mail deal with for tools returns that was shared by an ex-worker, an unsigned response got here again after about three hours linking to the shape and saying that additional directions and a field would arrive inside 30 days of submission. One laid-off employee says they’re not dashing to fill it out. “Elon can wait.”