Elon Musk says Twitter deal ‘temporarily on hold over spam’

Twitter staff must really be wishing for a quiet life… Elon Musk, the gadfly billionaire who recently decided he wants to add the social media platform to his collection of tech firms, has just tweeted that his $43 billion bid to buy the company is “on hold pending details supporting calculation that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5% of users”.

Given Musk’s propensity for trolling it’s pretty hard to know whether this is A) a serious concern that is B) actually putting the deal on hold because C) Musk is getting cold feet; or whether it’s, D), an attempt to exploit the downward trajectory of Twitter’s share price in recent days to try to renegotiate a lower price to buy it. (Or, E), more Musk shitposting — with who knows what legal consequences.)

Update:  Musk has followed up with a second tweet — in which he writes that he is “still committed to the acquisition”.

We’ve reached out to Twitter for a response to Musk’s tweets about the deal being put on hold but at the time of writing the company had not commented.

 

Musk has made his hatred of Twitter spambots particularly clear — pledging that he would make tackling spam a priority after taking over the company.

So if spam/fake accounts do make up more than 5% of Twitter users there is a risk that Musk is overpaying — which is an especially stark risk if he does indeed intend to “authenticate all humans” in order to purge all spam. Since that could mean the size of the platform shrinking up to 5% — or more (if Twitter’s calculations are off).

The Reuters story Musk links to in his tweet is a report from May 2 on a filing made by Twitter earlier this month which states that false or spam accounts represented fewer than 5% of its monetizable daily active users during Q1.

In the quarter Twitter reported having 229M users who were served advertising.

Alternatively, if there is not in fact very many fake accounts to be purged from the platform, as Twitter’s filing suggests, it could call into question the soundness of Musk’s logic of emphasizing slaying spambots as a key plank of a strategy he’s suggested will unlock “tremendous potential” to grow Twitter. And on which his ~$43BN bid was, apparently, based…

Where will this chaotic saga go next? It’s anyone’s guess. But whatever happens it’s already extremely messy and damaging to Twitter — with the company’s share price down further in pre-market trading today. The Twitter board itself also continues to face questions over its decision to accept Musk’s offer.

A bunch of senior staff were also fired ahead of the anticipated change of direction augured by Musk. And there have also been reports of users leaving the platform over concerns that a Musk-led Twitter would open the floodgates to toxic hate speech. (Musk has said he would let former US president Donald Trump back on the platform, for example.)

Update 2: In a number of subsequent tweets Musk has thrown out a few ideas about how he plans to test how deep Twitter’s spam hole goes — saying in one tweet that his team will take a “random sample of 100 followers of @twitter” to check for bots.

Asked how he will randomize this sample, Musk initially tweeted to suggest ignoring the first 1,000 followers than picking every tenth — but did not sound entirely committed to this on-the-fly methodology, adding that he’s “open to better ideas”.

In another tweet responding to discussion about his “process” Musk expounded that “any sensible random sampling process is fine”, adding that he picked 100 as the sample size number “because that is what Twitter uses to calculate <5% fake/spam/duplicate”.

And in a further hint of how much of a living nightmare this situation is for Twitter, he followed that up by tweeting that: “Twitter’s legal just called to complain that I violated their NDA by revealing the bot check sample size is 100! This actually happened.”