After the acquisition of the company by Musk, the operations are in a state of disarray.
The billionaire has made some severe cuts to both budgets and headcounts in an attempt to turn his social network into a viable business, a considerable challenge given the company's steep new debt obligations under the deal.
Musk has refused to pay rent for the company's offices, and even dismissed the janitors as he forced them back to the office.
The New York Times reported last week that the offices in San Francisco are turning into a rat's nest because of all the food and body odor.
One source said that the smell in there was crazy.
The smell of rotting food is not the only sign that the services are starting to fail. Users reported widespread service disruptions last week, just days after Musk bragged about the service working smoothly despite him removing one of the more sensitive server rack.
After internal systems went down, engineers were forced to keep the data centers running.
According to the NYT, Musk has to interrupt meetings at random to share his ideas. Musk is trying to keep information from leaking to the press, according to some sources.
Advertising, once the majority of the company's revenue, has fallen far short of expectations over the last month, which is unsurprising.
The fact that the company is being sued for not paying rent is not helping.
There is a question about what is gone at a social media site. There is a data center with janitors and some toilet paper. The New York Times is published by The New York Times Company.
There is an overwhelming number of porn bot accounts that are owned out.