X, the social network that most people still call Twitter, says it is adding staff to its safety and elections teams as it starts allowing more political advertising.
"We're currently expanding our safety and elections teams to focus on combating manipulation, surfacing inauthentic accounts and closely monitoring the platform for emerging threats," the company said in a blog post today.
X probably wouldn't need to hire more staff if not for owner Elon Musk's extreme cost-cutting. Since buying Twitter in October 2022, he has reduced the employee count from about 7,500 people to around 1,500.
Hiring more people might help X appease regulators. European regulators reportedly urged the company to hire more human moderators and fact-checkers to review posts. The US Federal Trade Commission has been investigating whether X has enough resources to protect users' privacy and comply with obligations from previous settlements with the FTC.
Twitter banned political ads in 2019
Twitter started banning political ads in late 2019 but relaxed the policy in January 2023 to allow cause-based advertising and other types of political ads. Prior to Musk's purchase of Twitter, the company policy said it "globally prohibits the promotion of political content" because of "our belief that political message reach should be earned, not bought."