Twitter’s Friday Twitter Headquarters’ ‘X’ Investigated for Permit Violation.
San Francisco Department of Construction Inspection spokesperson Patrick Hannan says “a building permit is necessary to ensure the sign is structurally sound and installed safely.” The text says this sign needs planning clearance and installation.
The lawsuit stated that when municipal investigators attempted again on Saturday, “the tenant again denied access.”
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Sunday’s tweets were ignored.
Twitter’s District 6 supervisor, Matt Dorsey, called Twitter’s refusal of building inspectors “adversarial posture”. He wanted change.
Mr. Dorsey replied, “I would like to sort of extend an olive branch.” “Let’s figure out what we’re going to do with the sign, but we can have a good, productive partnership with a city employer,” a municipal official said. “I think many city government employees would like to work for X.”
Signs plague social media.
On Monday, San Francisco police prevented workers from removing the company’s bird insignia from a building because they didn’t tape off the sidewalk to safeguard pedestrians, according to the Associated Press.
Sign removal prompted a municipal complaint. The AP says the “X” was inserted after the sign was removed. An inspector reportedly went to Twitter’s corporate offices on Friday to alert the firm of the infraction and request roof access to evaluate the sign.
According to the complaint, Twitter workers informed the inspector the sign was a “temporary lighted sign for an event.”
The “X” sign drew criticism on social media for its bright flashing lights shining into apartments.
Elon Musk, who bought Twitter for $44 billion last year, tweeted on July 23 that “soon we shall bid adieu to the Twitter brand and, gradually, all the birds.” Twitter changed its logo 24 hours later.
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