Twitter’s Elon Musk Lawsuit Could Center on Bot Accounts: All You Need to Know

How Twitter’s bot accounts could be key to deciding the lawsuit over Elon Musk’s $44 billion (roughly Rs. 3.5 lakh crore) buyout bid.

Advertisement
By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 15 July 2022 12:47 IST
Highlights
  • Twitter tolerates some automated uses of bots
  • Bots are said to be responsible for more than 3/4th of online fraud
  • Musk's lawyers claim that Twitter provided false information about bots

Twitter claims that it manages to limit bots to less than 5 percent of its userbase

Photo Credit: Olivier Douliery/ AFP

If Twitter's lawsuit over Elon Musk's $44 billion buyout bid ever reaches trial, the case will likely centre on a ubiquitous and often unloved technology: bots.

The information Twitter has or has not provided on its tally of fake or spam accounts is Musk's stated reason for backing away from the deal -- a move that prompted the firm to sue him this week.

Here's a closer look at the complications around bot accounts, and how they would be key in deciding the case.

Advertisement

Good bot, bad bot

At a basic level, "bots" are software programs that do automated tasks online, often with the aim of emulating how people behave.

Advertisement

Twitter tolerates some automated uses, like an account that tweets every time the Hubble space telescope crosses the sky over a given city.

But, Twitter has rules about automated actions by accounts, including barring software from posting about hot topics, firing off spam, attempting to influence online conversations, and operating across multiple accounts.

Advertisement

The company says it wages a daily campaign against spam or fake accounts that keeps their number to less than five percent of users.

Musk's lawyers, in notifying Twitter on July 8 that he was "terminating" the agreement to buy the company, alleged the platform made "false and misleading representations" about bots and had not provided details he needed to check its assertions.

Advertisement

Thorny question

Determining the number of bots on the site is a bit of an art because the tally is determined in part by Twitter's internal definitions and the workers who apply the rules.

While some cases are clear-cut violations, some can require the judgement of people who have to weigh various facts.

"People can disagree on what should be considered a bot or a spam account," said Edwin Chen, a former Twitter employee, who is now CEO of content moderation firm Surge AI.

The figure would also be tricky for an outsider like Musk to confirm because the bot weeding process can include checking IP or email addresses or other sensitive user data.

"I think a lot of people, not even just my former colleagues but people just generally within the tech industry, know that this is a thorny, thorny question," Chen added.

Twitter's lawsuit, which urges a court to force Musk to honour his buyout offer, could result in a trial or settlement talks that would need to plunge into the finer points of things like the firm's bot definitions and policies.

Musk's lawyers said he has already asked for but had not received "Twitter's methodology and performance data" about finding and suspending spam and fake accounts.

"In short, Twitter has not provided information that Mr Musk has requested for nearly two months," the lawyers wrote in laying out the argument for aiming to abandon the deal.

The deal with Twitter

Speculation has mounted that the bot issue -- with its tricky, detailed and case-by-case aspects -- is just a convenient route for Musk to abandon or renegotiate his proposal.

Yet, bots are a problem online.

"Bad actors have nearly infinite resources and incentives to use bots for nefarious purposes," said Tamer Hassan, co-founder and chief of cybersecurity firm Human.

Bots are used in more than three-quarters of security and fraud incidents that happen online, from spreading socially divisive posts to snapping up hot concert tickets and hacking, Hassan told AFP.

Also, Twitter makes its money from ads, and marketers pay for reaching people, not software.

Thus "advertising to bots isn't going to have a good close rate because bots don't buy products," analyst Rob Enderle told AFP previously.

If advertisers are paying Twitter fees based on how many people see ads, and those numbers are inflated due to bots in the online audience, they are being overcharged, Enderle added.

If Twitter has way more bots than it is letting on, its revenue could plunge when those accounts are exposed and closed.

Or as Musk's lawyers put it, Twitter's true daily users who can be shown advertising are "a key component of the company's business, given that approximately 90 percent of its revenues come from advertisements."


Noise co-founder Amit Khatri joins Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast, for a special episode. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Twitter, Elon Musk
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Amazon Sale 2025: OnePlus 13s, OnePlus Nord 5 Deals Revealed
  2. iPhone 16 Pro, iPhone 16 Pro Max Offers Listed Ahead of Flipkart Sale
  3. Amazon Sale: iPhone 15 Price to Drop Below Rs. 45,000
  4. CMF Headphone Pro India Launch Set for This Date
  5. Meta's Ray-Ban Display Smart Glasses Get a Screen, Brings New Features
  6. Xiaomi 17 Pro Design Teased Again as Phone Surfaces on Geekbench
  7. OnePlus 13 Gets Big Price Cut at Amazon Great Indian Festival Sale
  1. Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra to Be Available at Its Lowest Price During Amazon Sale
  2. How to Buy the iPhone 15 for Under Rs. 45,000 in This Amazon Great Indian Festival 2025 sale
  3. Meta Ray-Ban Display Smart Glasses Launched With a Screen and Meta Neural Band
  4. Ray-Ban Meta Gen 2 Smart Glasses Launched With 2X Battery Life, 3K Ultra HD Camera
  5. Oakley Meta Vanguard Smart Glasses With a Centrally-Placed Camera Launched, Aimed at Athletes
  6. NASA’s Artemis Prepares Crews for Future Mars Missions
  7. JWST Identifies Compact, Metal-Poor Star-Forming Region Tracing Back to Early Universe
  8. Researchers Develop Method to Predict Rare Green Auroral Events on Mars
  9. Kanyakumari Now Streaming on This OTT Platform: Know Everything About This Telugu Romance Drama
  10. Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle OTT Release: Know When and Where to Watch it Online?
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.