Thread regarding Five9 Inc. layoffs

Layoff and sale rumors intensify as three execs are ousted

Five9 ousted three senior executives, signaling potential turmoil within the cloud contact center leader, a source told CXToday.

The decision is paired with speculation that the broader staff will experience layoffs and the growing speculation that the company is preparing itself to sell as activist investors press the company to change.

https://news.outsourceaccelerator.com/five9-axes-top-executives/

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| 1642 views | | 3 replies (last July 30) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k1dxft6n

3 replies (most recent on top)

@ah

AI/ChatGPT was not used in composing the post to which you're ignorantly referring.
If you'd have simply looked at the content of even one of the URLs provided within (example: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cite) and scrolled down to its, "Did You Know" section, you would've seen its content, which was quoted in the post.

It wasn't plagiarized, it wasn't composed by AI, it was (ironically) CITED, by the source linked (Merriam Webster dictionary URLs), via use of quotation marks in the post.

Thanks for showing everyone that you're not only an ignoramus who jumps to erroneous conclusions, but that you're also an insecure ignoramus who's easily intimidated by those who are obviously smarter/better educated than yourself.

Su-ks to be a d-mb@ss, but hey: https://youtu.be/cwYJxNnABp4?t=40

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Post ID: @an+1k1dxft6n

@a4

The word is, "citing".
And don't say it was a typo, just humble yourself and learn to know the difference:

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cite
vs.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/site
vs.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sighting

"Cite, Sight, and Site

As homophones—words that sound alike but are distinct— cite, sight, and site are easily confused, but they have different meanings, uses, and origins.

Cite is most often encountered in the sense of "to name in a citation"—that is, a line or short section taken from a piece of writing or a speech; it may also mean "to mention as an example" or "to order to appear in a court of law." Cite is from the Latin citare, "to rouse, call on, summon," source too of citation and recite.

Most of the senses of sight are concerned with seeing. A wonderful spectacle might be described as a sight, as might the general capacity to see anything ("my sight is not as good as it once was"). Sight is also used in a number of fixed phrases, such as "out of sight, out of mind," "sight unseen," and "set one's sights on." Sight comes from Old English gesiht, meaning "the faculty or act of sight, thing seen."

Site is most often concerned with location; it is related to situate, "to locate," and situation, "relative position or combination of circumstances at a particular moment." A building site is the place where a building is, or will be, located. In contemporary English, site is frequently used as a shortened form of website, to refer to the location of a group of web pages. Site comes from Latin situs, meaning "place, position, site."

Associating citation with cite, eyesight with sight, and situate with site may be helpful in applying these correctly."

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Post ID: @a8+1k1dxft6n

People are now writing articles siting other articles.

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Post ID: @a4+1k1dxft6n

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