After four of the company's privacy and compliance officers quit, the Federal Trade Commission is keeping a close eye on the situation, according to the news agency.

The revised content order gives the FTC new tools to ensure compliance and we are prepared to use them.

The new owner of the social media site is trying to turn around the company through a number of changes, including recalibrating the site's content filters.

In a message to employees on Thursday morning, Musk said that there was a good chance that the company would not survive the economic downturn. Roughly 3,700 people have been fired byTwitter along with several other tech giants.

There have been shakeups in the company's management this week. Yoel was no longer the head of trust and safety when he updated his account on Thursday.

On the same day that she quit, the chief security officer of the micro-messaging service posted a message on her verified account.

The chief privacy officer and the chief compliance officer resigned, according to a report.

It is possible that their departures could violate the FTC's regulations. After it was fined $150 million for collecting users' email addresses and phone numbers to target them with ads, top executives would have overseen a privacy program.

In an email sent to employees on Thursday, Musk and his lawyer said they would comply with all FTC requirements.

"I can't emphasize enough how important it is for us to adhere to both the FTC consent decree and the letter," Musk wrote in his email. Anything you read to the contrary is not true.

The acting head of legal tried to assure employees that they wouldn't go to jail if they broke the rules. The company has an obligation. The company is responsible for it. He said it was the company's liability.

The FTC, Spiro, and Musk did not reply immediately. The communications department is no longer employed by the social networking site.