- Elon Musk's sweeping rebrand of Twitter to X took effect on Monday.
- As the new logo debuted on the site, efforts were underway to erase a Twitter sign in San Francisco.
Elon Musk spirited the "X" logos onto Twitter's site seemingly overnight, but it may take longer to change the sign outside his company's headquarters.
Police showed up on Monday afternoon during efforts to remove the "Twitter" lettering from the massive sign on the building.
The issue, it seems, was the large worker lift, or "boom lift," used to take the letters down and the space it took up on the street.
The San Francisco Police Department halted the work on Monday afternoon and spoke with workers tasked with removing the sign, according to The San Francisco Standard.
The San Fransisco Police Department told Insider that officers attended to a report of "a possible unpermitted street closure" because a lift outside Twitter's headquarters in the city was used to remove some of the letters from the Twitter sign. The officers were "able to determine that no crime was committed, and this incident was not a police matter," the statement continued.
A representative for the San Fransisco Police Department declined to comment beyond the statement. An inquiry sent to Twitter's press address received the automated response, "We'll get back to you soon." A representative for Twitter could not be reached for comment, and Shorenstein, the owner of the building, declined to comment.
Two people familiar with the company told Insider that employees were not informed that the sign would be removed. A large lift "showed up," and men began dismantling the sign, one of the people said. The assumption is that the sign is set to be replaced with the new "X" insignia Musk has used to rebrand Twitter, which became part of his X Holdings earlier this year.
Employees in the Market Street office could see that the lift was blocking traffic on the cross street, normally a bustling part of San Francisco. The lift was parked in a lane normally reserved for through traffic and, at points, caused traffic to back up. Police showed up in the early afternoon and began directing traffic around the lift, one of the people familiar said.
Given the disturbance, police halted the removal of the signage before it could be completed, the person said. The lift is now gone, the person added. The full "Twitter" name remains on one side of the sign, while the other side shows only the letters "er" remain.
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Contact Sindhu Sundar at ssundar@insider.com.