Twitter ordered to give Musk additional bot account data

Twitter ordered to give Musk additional bot account data

A US judge told Twitter on Thursday to surrender more data to Elon Musk on fake accounts, a key issue the billionaire is using to try to cancel his buyout bid.

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Alastair Pike / AFP

While Judge Kathaleen McCormick allowed the Tesla boss's team an opening to bolster its

argument that Musk was misled, she chastised them for "absurdly broad" requests for

"trillions upon trillions of data points."


The judge ordered Twitter to hand over data on 9,000 accounts the firm audited at the end of

2021, which opens the door for that information to be used in Musk's effort to quit the $44

billion deal.


"Some additional data from plaintiff (Twitter) seems warranted," McCormick wrote, without

elaborating, in her four-page ruling.


READ: Musk lawyers seize on Twitter whistleblower revelations


Musk has argued Twitter was dishonest on the number of false or spam accounts, prompting

strong denials and a lawsuit from the social media firm that has led to a trial set for mid-

October.


Musk's lawyers pushed hard in a hearing Wednesday to force the firm to turn over mountains

of information, while seizing upon a freshly revealed Twitter whistleblower's claims of serious

flaws inside the company.


Twitter lawyer Bradley Wilson countered that the company deceived nobody, and that Musk

wants a "do-over" regarding questions he should have asked before he made his unsolicited

buyout offer early this year.


The firm opposed handing over certain types of data for reasons including the potential to

violate user privacy protected by law, its attorney Wilson argued.


Even if Musk's experts come to a different conclusion about the number of spam accounts at

Twitter, that would not amount to a breach significant enough to let him break the buyout

contract, Twitter attorneys argue.


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Whistleblower Peiter Zatko's complaint to US authorities accuses Twitter of issuing untrue

statements on account numbers because "if accurate measurements ever became public, it

would harm the image and valuation of the company."


It was not immediately clear whether the complaint, and its use by Musk's attorneys, will

significantly alter the course of the case.


Twitter's lawyers had expressed concern that Musk could misuse sensitive data they turn over

to his lawyers.


The judge said the billionaire's team "have agreed to treat this data as highly confidential."

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