The move may make it tougher for Mr. Musk, who has said he is not getting enough information from the company, to end the $44 billion acquisition.
Elon Musk has threatened to pull out of a $44 billion deal for Twitter, saying the company has refused to give him information about its fake accounts.
So Twitter now plans to give Mr. Musk access to a large swath of its data, potentially down to its very last tweet.
The social media company has agreed to allow Mr. Musk direct access to its “firehose,” the stream of billions of tweets that flow through the company’s network on a daily basis, according to a person with knowledge of the decision. Whether Mr. Musk will get full or partial access to that “firehose” is unclear.
The information would give Mr. Musk the tools to discern how many accounts on Twitter’s platform may be fake. But it will most likely not help him reach Twitter’s conclusion that 5 per cent of its active accounts are fake, since the company uses a different methodology involving proprietary data and human analysis to get to that figure. Mr. Musk has said he doesn’t believe that just 5 per cent of Twitter’s active accounts are fake.
Twitter’s move may make it more difficult for Mr. Musk to terminate the deal. On Monday, his lawyers sent a letter to the company, accusing it of stonewalling his efforts to obtain information that was essential to closing the deal. For weeks, Mr. Musk has also tweeted increasingly barbed comments about Twitter’s fake accounts, appearing to lay the groundwork to renegotiate or get out of the agreement.
Mr. Musk agreed to buy Twitter in April for $54.20 a share. If the deal falls apart, there is a $1 billion breakup fee. But the agreement includes a “specific performance clause,” which gives Twitter the right to sue him and force him to complete or pay for the deal, so long as the debt financing he has corralled remains intact.
A Twitter spokesman declined to comment on giving Mr. Musk access to the stream of tweets but referred to a previous statement.
“Twitter has and will continue to cooperatively share information with Mr. Musk to consummate the transaction in accordance with the terms of the merger agreement,” Twitter has said. “We believe this agreement is in the best interest of all shareholders. We intend to close the transaction and enforce the merger agreement at the agreed price and terms.”
Mr. Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Washington Post earlier reported that Mr. Musk got access to the Twitter firehose.
A company often shares confidential data with its acquirer as part of a transaction and the parameters around data sharing are negotiated before signing any deal. But Mr. Musk waived due diligence when he agreed to buy the social media company and Twitter began sharing confidential information with him last month.
statements, both publicly and to the company, that he was considering starting a rival social media service, The New York Times has reported. Typically, such matters are addressed by limiting who would have access to such information.
Mr. Musk has said he will ensure that a nondisclosure agreement will bind anyone reviewing confidential data provided by Twitter. He has also said he would not retain or share sensitive information about Twitter if the deal fell apart. Twitter has calculated that 5 per cent of its “monetizable daily active users” are fake. In April, the company reported it had 229 million monetizable daily active users.
Once Mr. Musk receives access to Twitter’s stream of tweets, he is likely to need a team of experts to analyze the data, as well as the computing capacity to process and store the enormous volume of information, company insiders said.
Source: The New York Times