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Elon Musk’s Twitter deal draws lawsuit from investor with five shares seeking info about bots

  • John Solak, who owns five Twitter shares, sued the company in Delaware for records related to discussions concerning bot accounts
  • The number of fake Twitter accounts has been a hot-button issue for billionaire Elon Musk since he agreed to buy the company for US$44 billion

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People holding mobile phones are silhouetted against a backdrop projected with the Twitter logo in this illustration picture taken in Warsaw on September 27, 2013. Photo: Reuters
A Twitter Inc shareholder wants a judge to force the social-media platform to hand over internal files about spam and fake accounts that have become a hot-button issue in billionaire Elon Musk’s US$44 billion buyout of the company.

John Solak, who owns five Twitter shares, sued the company in Delaware Chancery Court Tuesday for records related to discussions between its directors and executives about problems with so-called bot accounts.

Musk, co-founder of electric-car maker Tesla Inc, said this week that Twitter is violating the terms of his US$54.20-per-share offer by refusing to give him more information about how much of the platform’s traffic is driven by fake accounts. He’s threatening to blow up the deal over the issue.

“Stockholder’s purpose in seeking these books and records is to investigate the possibility of board-level breaches” of legal duties to investors over directors’ failure to properly oversee public disclosures of the bot numbers, according to the complaint.

Representatives of San Francisco-based Twitter didn’t immediately respond to an email message seeking comment on the suit.

Twitter is incorporated in Delaware, home to more than 60 per cent of Fortune 500 companies. Investors often sue in Delaware to gain access to files of companies incorporated in the state to collect information that can be used in lawsuits against firms or directors. They have to show a proper purpose for accessing the files, however.

Musk has seized on the fact that in regulatory filings, Twitter reported fewer than 5 per cent of all users are bots, while they may make up as much as 20 per cent of the company’s audience. He’s demanding more information about those accounts.

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