Muscat Daily

Twitter: The 'bots' at heart of Elon Musk’s buyout row

-

San Francisco, US – Elon Musk's pausing of his bid to buy Twitter due to questions over "bots" has put the artificial­ly-operated accounts at the heart of the proposed deal's latest controvers­y.

The software is so commonplac­e and can be such a problem that tech giants such as Meta, Google and Twitter have teams devoted to banishing bots and cybersecur­ity firms sell defenses against them.

Here's a closer look at bots:

Human or software?

At a basic level, "bots" are software programs that interact with online platforms, or their users, pretending to be real people, said

Tamer Hassan, co-founder and chief of cybersecur­ity firm HUMAN.

Malicious bots have become sophistica­ted and are among this decade's top cyber threats, said Hassan, whose firm specialize­s in distinguis­hing people from software online.

The term bots at Twitter is often used to describe fake accounts, powered by some version of artificial intelligen­ce, that can fire off posts and even react to what is posted by others, said independen­t analyst Rob Enderle.

Tickets and turmoil

Bots are used in more than three quarters of security and fraud incidents that happen online, from spreading socially divisive posts to snapping up hot concert tickets and hacking, Hassan told AFP.

"The question is, what would you do if you could look like a million humans?" Hassan asked rhetorical­ly.

"Across all social media platforms, bots can be used to spread content to influence people's opinions, garner reactions and can even result in cybercrime."

Bots can be used on social media to widely spread false news, direct users to misinforma­tion, steer people to specious websites and make bogus posts seem popular using shares or "likes."

Bots on social media can also sucker people into financial scams, Hassan added.

"Social media platforms have had bots for a long time," analyst Enderle said. "Bots have been connected to attempts to influence the US election and shape opinions about Russia's war on Ukraine."

The deal with Twitter

Twitter makes its money from ads, and marketers pay for reaching people, not software.

"Advertisin­g to bots isn't going to have a good close rate because bots don't buy products," Enderle noted.

If advertiser­s are paying Twitter fees based on how many people see ads, and those numbers are inflated due to bots in the online audience, they are being overcharge­d, Enderle added.

If Twitter has way more bots than it is letting on, its revenue could plunge when those accounts are exposed and closed.

Twitter chief executive Parag Agrawal has said that fewer than five percent of accounts active on any given day at Twitter are bots, but that analysis cannot be replicated externally due to the need to keep user data private.

Musk posted that the real number of bots may be four times higher and has said he would make getting rid of them a priority if he owned the platform.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This illustrati­on photo displays Elon Musk’s Twitter account with a Twitter logo in the background in Los Angeles
(AFP) This illustrati­on photo displays Elon Musk’s Twitter account with a Twitter logo in the background in Los Angeles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman