Tesla CEO Elon Musk made his biggest direct threat yet to pull out of a deal to buy Twitter on Monday. In a new securities filing, an attorney for Musk argued that he has a right to scrap the deal since he’s not satisfied with Twitter’s responses to his requests for information about how many spam and fake accounts are on the platform.
But as many tech experts pointed out, that’s not really what’s driving Musk’s threat.
Musk has grown increasingly desperate for an offramp to potentially terminate the deal and save face.
What actually seems to be happening is that, as the deal has become less appealing and more financially onerous, Musk has grown increasingly desperate for an offramp to potentially terminate the deal and save face. And it’s not clear that this gambit will work.
In recent weeks Musk has made a number of theatrical public complaints alleging that Twitter has so many bot accounts that he isn’t getting a fair deal and that he’s effectively purchasing a faulty product. But there are two glaring flaws with this argument.
First, as Bloomberg columnist Matt Levine has pointed out, part of the very reason Musk said he wanted to buy Twitter was that he wanted to tackle the problem of spam accounts. His release announcing the deal stipulated that he partly wanted to improve Twitter as its owner by “defeating the spam bots.”
“The spam bots are not why he is backing away from the deal, as you can tell from the fact that the spam bots are why he did the deal,” Levine wrote in a column in May. “He has produced no evidence at all that Twitter’s estimates are wrong, and certainly not that they are materially wrong or made in bad faith.”
Twitter estimates in security filings that less than 5 percent of its 229 million daily active users are bots. When CEO Parag Agrawal explained the outlines of the methodology for making this estimate in a tweet thread, Musk chose not to engage in a serious back-and-forth with him but instead responded with a poop emoji. He never provided evidence or a serious argument for suggesting Twitter’s estimates are wildly off the mark.








