According to the six former Twitter employees behind this complaint, their boss Elon Musk had begun to provide some offices with rooms, real dormitories with beds. The objective, you guessed it: to increase the productivity of the teams, by allowing them to sleep on site, during periods of high professional activity.

But problem, as the plaintiffs explain, the lease of Twitter's headquarters in San Francisco does not authorize this transformation of offices into bedrooms. In addition, they believe that it violates the California building code because it is likely, according to them, to the creation of a hotel.