According to a media report, the board of directors of Twitter wants to comply with the requests for information from the tech billionaire Elon Musk.

Twitter will soon provide Musk with detailed data that will provide information about the number of false accounts in the short message service, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday, citing informed circles.

Musk had made a $44 billion purchase offer for Twitter, but recently threatened to withdraw the offer.

Musk said on Monday that Twitter was in "a clear breach" of its "obligations under the merger agreement." The company "actively" resisted his requests for information about fake accounts on the online network, which he viewed as a clear breach of its obligations as part of its takeover bid.

Musk makes the multi-billion dollar takeover dependent on the number of spam or fake accounts in the short message service.

This involves so-called bots: computer programs that use algorithms to interact with users and pretend to be real people.

According to Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal, less than 5 percent of accounts active on Twitter are bots.

However, the methodology used by the platform to capture these fake accounts is not "reasonable," Musk said.

He had to do his “own analysis”.

Some experts see Musk's probing questions about the bots as a way to prepare for his early exit from the Twitter deal - or to push the takeover price down.

German tech investor is helping Musk with the takeover

Musk's takeover bid for Twitter is supported by a bevy of well-known investors and well-known Silicon Valley figures.

One of the less prominent comrades-in-arms is a German technology investor who is hardly known in this country.

Dubai-based investment firm Vy Capital has pledged $700 million to fund Musk's bid for Twitter, making it the third-largest outside investor in the potential deal, which also includes Oracle founder and billionaire Larry Ellison and Sequoia Capital want to contribute.

Little is publicly known about Vy's sources of funding or the types of investments the firm makes.

The company's website consists of a single page without an address and contact details.

The assets managed by the German-born founder Alexander Tamas add up to more than 5 billion dollars, according to official documents.