Splinter, a snarky website owned by embattled G/O Media, is shutting down immediately.

“As of today, Splinter will cease publication,” the site’s editor Aleksander Chan tweeted at 10:45 a.m. Thursday. “Thank you to all of our readers, fans and haters — it’s been a thrill.”

The news comes just weeks after G/O — which was formed when buyout firm Great Hill Partners in April scooped up sites including The Onion, Gizmodo, Jezebel and Deadspin — said the group turned a quarterly profit for the first time since 2015 after slashing 25 jobs.

In a separate email to staffers Thursday, G/O Media editorial director Paul Maidment said Splinter will reallocate its seven-person staff to the company’s other sites.

“Despite the hard work of everyone on that staff, which has produced much outstanding journalism and great scoops, establishing a steady and sustainable audience for a relatively young site has proved challenging in a fiercely competitive sector.”

“There will be no reduction of G/O Media’s editorial workforce as a result of this decision,” he added.

But insiders say there is no guarantee the seven staffers will accept jobs elsewhere in the company, especially since their severance agreements under their previous owner, Univision, remain in place.

Most staffers seem to be indicating they are now unemployed.

“For the first time in a decade, I’m on the job market,” senior political writer Hamilton Nolan tweeted. Deputy editor Jack Mirkison tweeted, “Splinter is shutting down & we’re being laid off.