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