“If Twitter just provides the method of sampling 100 accounts and how they are verified as real, the deal should go forward on the original terms,” ​​Musk tweeted. “However, if it turns out that their SEC filings are materially false, then they shouldn’t.” He later tweeted that he was challenging Twitter’s CEO to a debate. “I challenge @paraga to a public debate about the Twitter bot rate. Let him prove to the public that Twitter has <5% fake or spammy daily users!” Musk wrote on Twitter. Musk also posted a poll on Twitter asking if less than 5 percent of daily Twitter users were spam or fake. The tweets from Musk are the latest in drama between the SpaceX CEO and the social media platform following legal action over his bid to buy Twitter. Earlier this year, Musk struck a deal to buy Twitter for $44 billion, but less than three months later, he ended the deal. His legal team argued at the time that there was insufficient information about bots on Twitter’s website. The group also claimed that the social networking company had fired several employees in violation of their agreement and that its statements about bots were inaccurate. The social media platform sued Musk to force him to complete the acquisition. “Having made a public spectacle of putting Twitter in the game, and having proposed and then signed a seller-friendly merger agreement, Musk apparently believes that — unlike any other party bound by Delaware contract law – he is free to change his mind. company, disrupt its operations, destroy shareholder value and exit,” the lawsuit against Musk said. Senate climate, tax bill grows to 755 pages, passes key CBO test Senate Democrats strike pact to protect climate, tax bill from changes But Musk filed a countersuit earlier this month, with his lawyers claiming he was not consulted on major decisions at the social networking company and that the billionaire had entered into a deal without knowledge of the platform’s “indications or omissions”, the which affected his perception of the site’s value, according to the Associated Press. Twitter responded to the counterattack, saying the argument “were concocted in an attempt to escape a merger deal that Musk no longer found attractive when the stock market — and with it, his vast personal fortune — declined in value.” — Updated at 3:26 p.m