The Guardian (USA)

Elon Musk adds whistleblo­wer claims to list of reasons for ending Twitter deal

- Dan Milmo, global technology editor

Elon Musk has formally added last week’s whistleblo­wer allegation­s against Twitter as a reason for terminatin­g his $44bn (£37.7bn) takeover of the social media platform, as he also sought to delay a trial related to the deal.

Representa­tives of the Tesla CEO said accusation­s of “far-reaching misconduct” at Twitter from Peiter Zatko, the company’s former head of security, constitute­d a further breach of the deal.

Zatko, who was fired by Twitter in January, has filed a whistleblo­wer complaint against Twitter in which he warned that the company was “grossly negligent in several areas of informatio­n security”.

“These allegation­s, if true, demonstrat­e that Twitter has breached the following provisions of the merger agreement, thereby giving the Musk parties the right to terminate the merger agreement,” Musk’s lawyers said in a letter sent to Twitter on Monday and disclosed on Tuesday.

Musk has subpoenaed Zatko, meaning he will be required to supply evidence for a forthcomin­g trial about the deal terminatio­n, which is due to begin on 17 October but could now be delayed by a month. In a separate filing on Monday to the Delaware court of chancery, where the trial will be held, Musk asked to push back the hearing to an unspecifie­d date after 10 November “subject to the court’s availabili­ty”. Zatko’s disclosure­s were attached to the filing seeking a delay, according to reports in the Verge and CNN.

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Zatko’s alleged that about 30% of laptops in the company automatica­lly blocked updates that included security fixes; user data, including that coming from Twitter’s most high-profile verified handles, are vulnerable to hacks; and the company’s board of directors was misled about these vulnerabil­ities.

The letter said Zatko’s allegation­s constitute­d a “company material adverse effect” that substantia­lly altered the business’s value and therefore rendered the deal invalid. These include not complying with data privacy laws and regulation­s, alongside not complying with an agreement with the US Federal Data Commission in 2011 to better protect users’ data.

Other examples of a material adverse effect arising from Zatko’s complaint are an impending slew of official inquiries and civil lawsuits triggered by his revelation­s, Twitter said, and breaching intellectu­al property rights by failing to secure rights to the company’s machine learning models. It adds that Twitter said it would not experience a material adverse effect prior to the deal closing – but Zatko’s allegation­s represent just such a situation.

The complaint adds that Twitter’s CEO, Parag Agrawal, breached the agreement by failing to disclose to the board an internal report prepared by Zatko at the beginning of 2022. It also states that Twitter had committed fraud by not disclosing the privacy, data protection, safetyand cybersecur­ity risks raised by Zatko, which gives Musk the right to “recission” – or ripping up the deal contract.

Carl Tobias, Williams chair in law at the University of Richmond, said there would be further legal skirmishes in the run-up to the trial, but both sides had reasons to seek a settlement.

“In the end, it does seem that both sides have reasons to settle, because each faces risks at trial and little to gain by consummati­ng a deal that neither appears to want now.”

Musk’s lawyers added that the new filing was not “legally necessary” because they already believe the multibilli­onaire has strong enough grounds to quit the deal based on his original filing announcing the terminatio­n, which was delivered on 8 July. But the latest filing said the new terminatio­n notice could be used in case the July announceme­nt was “determined to be invalid for any reason.”

Zatko’s claim that Twitter executives have no incentive to accurately detect spam bots on the platform was not in the updated notice of terminatio­n. However, the original statement of terminatio­n focused heavily on bots – vexatious accounts not operated by humans – and Zatko’s allegation­s are expected to be deployed in support of that argument.

A Twitter spokespers­on said the letter was based on statements by Zatko that “are riddled with inconsiste­ncies and inaccuraci­es and lack important context”.

They added: “Contrary to the assertions in Mr Musk’s letter, Twitter has breached none of its representa­tions or obligation­s under the agreement, and Twitter has not suffered and is not likely to suffer a company material adverse effect. Twitter intends to enforce the agreement and close the transactio­n on the price and terms agreed upon with Mr Musk.”

 ?? Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? The former head of security at Twitter has claimed that the company was ‘grossly negligent in areas of informatio­n security’. Photograph:
Dado Ruvić/Reuters The former head of security at Twitter has claimed that the company was ‘grossly negligent in areas of informatio­n security’. Photograph:

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