Twitter's CEO, Parag Agrawal, has stood by his company's longtime spam metric. In a statement Monday, the company said: "Twitter has and will continue to cooperatively share information with Mr. Musk to consummate the transaction in accordance with the terms of the merger agreement."The company also said it intends to "close the transaction and enforce the merger agreement at the agreed price and terms."
Musk has alleged that the true number of spam accounts is likely much more, potentially as high as 90%. Musk has previously said the acquisition "cannot move forward" until the company provides "proof" of its spam metric.
Some Wall Street analysts have said this pushback may be a case of buyer's remorse and an effort to pressure Twitter into negotiating a lower price for the $44 billion deal. There have been questions from the start about how Musk would finance the acquisition. Social media stocks have also taken a hit in recent weeks amid broader market jitters.
Monday's letter speculated that Twitter may be "withholding the requested data due to concern for what Mr. Musk's own analysis of that data will uncover."
The letter also claimed Twitter had sought to restrict access to the information by interpreting the merger agreement narrowly, such that providing the information would fall outside the scope of Twitter's contractual requirements.
But the letter charged that even by Twitter's narrowed definitions, it still has an obligation to furnish the information.
In a separate securities filing, Twitter previously disclosed that Musk had waived a due diligence clause in the deal that could have made it easier for him to back out of the agreement; without it, Musk could face a tougher climb, and the prospect of litigation.
In making the agreement to buy Twitter, Musk has made spam bots on the platform a central issue. He has vowed to defeat them or "die trying," even as he has described Twitter as being vital to "the future of civilization."