The BBC's technology editor looks at claims that Twitter may be heading for calamity.
Staff have been leaving in their droves - half the workforce was laid off by Mr Musk one week after he completed his purchase of the platform, and many more are choosing to leave since he sent an email demanding "hardcore" working conditions and long hours from his remaining employees.
Let's take the two biggest vulnerabilities that could knock the blue bird off its perch very swiftly.Twitter, like all big websites , will be constantly under attack from bad actors - even at state level - wanting to cause mischief.
Twitter's security is likely to be pretty robust. You can't run a site used by 300 million people every month that's held together with a bit of string. But that robustness requires continuing maintenance. As you can imagine, all of those machines generate a lot of heat. Data centres have to be kept cool, and they require a constant source of electricity.
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