Twitter's board finally relented, according to the

Washington Post

, and now plans to give Elon Musk access to the mountains of data needed to answer his questions about the number of fake accounts.

On Monday, the boss of Tesla threatened in an official document to withdraw his offer to acquire the social network which, according to him, "actively resists" his requests for information on spam and robotic accounts, which the platform refuted.

But the council of the Californian group should provide the multi-billionaire “a flood of data including some 500 million tweets published each day”, perhaps as early as this week, according to an article from the American daily published on Wednesday.

The Washington Post bases this information on an anonymous source familiar with the negotiations.

Contacted by AFP, Twitter declined to comment.

Agreement suspended

Elon Musk filed an offer to buy Twitter for $44 billion in April, after many twists and very critical messages from the social network.

In mid-May, he announced that he was suspending the agreement with the board of directors (before reaffirming his intention to buy the platform), citing his doubts about the data transmitted by Twitter on spam and fake accounts, as well as and on the measures taken to limit its proliferation.

The buyout agreement obliges the entrepreneur to complete the transaction, unless he can prove that the social network cheated him or that a major event changes his value.

Both parties have pledged to pay severance pay of up to $1 billion in certain circumstances.

The end of a "major impasse"

Twitter estimates that the number of fake accounts and spam on the social network represents less than 5% of its daily active users.

But Musk says the methodology employed by the platform is not "adequate" and that he must conduct his "own analysis".

If the board of directors gives him access to all the information, "it will end this major impasse," commented analyst Dan Ives on Twitter.

On the New York Stock Exchange, Twitter's stock hovered around $40 on Wednesday, a far cry from the $54.20 price offered by the world's richest man in April.

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