The Herald

Musk’s Twitter deal ‘temporaril­y on hold’ as he queries level of fake accounts

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ELON Musk has said he is “still committed” to his deal to buy Twitter after revealing yesterday that the takeover is “temporaril­y on hold” over details around the number of spam and fake accounts present on the site.

The billionair­e Tesla owner agreed a £34.5 billion deal last month to take over the social media company, promising to improve free speech on the site and remove fake accounts.

However, in a tweet yesterday, Mr Musk said the deal is now on hold “pending details supporting calculatio­n that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5% of users”.

He tweeted again two hours later, adding “Still committed to acquisitio­n”.

His original tweet linked to a report published earlier this month that said Twitter estimates spam and fake accounts comprise less than 5% of its daily users.

Mr Musk, inset right, has not offered any further details on why this could affect the deal.

One industry expert suggested the business tycoon’s interest in the number of real and fake accounts on the site could be linked to his possible plans to boost Twitter revenue through user subscripti­ons and advertisin­g.

Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said these figures are a “key metric” in Mr Musk’s plans for the platform, but said the delay could also be a tactic to try to reduce the price of the deal.

“Musk’s Twitter takeover was always destined to be a bumpy ride, and now it risks hitting the skids over the number of fake accounts on the platform,” she said.

“Twitter’s share price plunged by around 18 per cent in pre-market trading following his tweet indicating the deal was temporaril­y on hold.

“He is clearly intent on querying the company’s estimate that spam accounts make up less than 5% of active daily users – a key metric given that establishi­ng an accurate number of real tweeters is considered to be key to future revenue streams via advertisin­g or paid-for subscripti­ons on the site.

“There will also be questions raised over whether fake accounts are the real reason behind this delaying tactic, given that promoting free speech rather than focusing on wealth creation appeared to be his primary motivation for the takeover.

“The $44 billion price tag is huge, and it may be a strategy to row back on the amount he is prepared to pay to acquire the platform.”

When his proposed takeover was announced last month, Mr Musk said one of his key aims was to “defeat the spam bots”, in reference to the fake and automated accounts operating on the platform.

Mr Musk had also promised to bolster free speech on the site, and earlier this week reiterated his belief that former US president Donald Trump should have his permanent Twitter ban reversed.

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