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Twitter Social Networks

Former Disney CEO Says Company Found a 'Substantial Portion' of Twitter Users Were Not Real When It Evaluated Acquisition in 2016 (vox.com) 81

Bob Iger, former Disney CEO, explained on Wednesday why Disney didn't acquire Twitter in 2016. He said: "We enter the process immediately, looking at Twitter as the solution: a global distribution platform. It was viewed as sort of a social network. We were viewing it as something completely different. We could put news, sports, entertainment, [and] reach the world. And frankly, it would have been a phenomenal solution, distribution-wise. Then, after we sold the whole concept to the Disney board and the Twitter board, and we're really ready to execute -- the negotiation was just about done -- I went home, contemplated it for a weekend, and thought, 'I'm not looking at this as carefully as I need to look at it.' Yes, it's a great solution from a distribution perspective. But it would come with so many other challenges and complexities that as a manager of a great global brand, I was not prepared to take on a major distraction and having to manage circumstances that weren't even close to anything that we had faced before. Interestingly enough, because I read the news these days, we did look very carefully at all of the Twitter users -- I guess they're called users? -- and we at that point estimated with some of Twitter's help that a substantial portion -- not a majority -- were not real. I don't remember the number but we discounted the value heavily. But that was built into our economics. Actually, the deal that we had was pretty cheap."
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Former Disney CEO Says Company Found a 'Substantial Portion' of Twitter Users Were Not Real When It Evaluated Acquisition in 201

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  • I resemble that remark!
  • by youngone ( 975102 ) on Wednesday September 07, 2022 @09:32PM (#62861419)

    We could put news, sports, entertainment, [and] reach the world. And frankly, it would have been a phenomenal solution, distribution-wise.

    Maybe he's thinking of some other Twitter.
    No, wait, I just checked. Bob Iger's 71 and has no clue what's happening anymore.

    • > Bob Iger's 71 and has no clue what's happening anymore.

      we did look very carefully at all of the Twitter users -- I guess they're called users?

      I suspect he's right but I sure wouldn't count on him being right about anything. Except paying lawyers to make Harvey Weinstein's victims go quiet, maybe.

      Miramax!

      • That whole section reads like a conversation with my drunk brother-in-law, who "doesn't have internet" because he's a bit confused about what it is.

        Yes, it's a great solution from a distribution perspective.

        was the other bit that made me laugh, because Twitter is not that.

    • At $45 a share after waving all due diligence. That's gotta count for something. It's certainly more than some people can say.
    • We could put news, sports, entertainment, [and] reach the world. And frankly, it would have been a phenomenal solution, distribution-wise.

      Maybe he's thinking of some other Twitter. No, wait, I just checked. Bob Iger's 71 and has no clue what's happening anymore.

      Maybe he's think of something like cable channels. If those existed, maybe Disney could have their own, and several for sports, etc... Maybe they could even force providers to carry (pay for) all of them if they wanted to carry the main channel. Oh, wait...

    • >> we did look very carefully at all of the Twitter users -- I guess they're called users?

      They're called "Bots".
      Human or not.

      • I am unsure, there are a lot of really dumb and gullible people out there. I have came across people in real life (often from an under educated background) Who's speech and beliefs often seem very close to what the bots may generate. They are so sadly attracted to the news rags that align with their political stances (or other interests as well), that it is all they talk about, and will get angry when an attempt to moderate their ideas or add nuance to the more complicated situation then they may assume, a

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by tomhath ( 637240 )

      Bob Iger's 71 and has no clue what's happening anymore.

      "I remember when I was 71. I was a lot younger then, still driving an 18 wheeler and marching with Nelson Mandela in Selma" - Joe Biden

    • No, wait, I just checked. Bob Iger's 71 and has no clue what's happening anymore.

      Obligatory: It's a series of tubes [youtube.com]

  • Twitter personal info is privacy info. Remember Twitter is a person according to law. :)
  • And? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Wednesday September 07, 2022 @09:48PM (#62861439)

    Aside from being a cautionary tale about why you don't sign away your due diligence rights, or negotiate a deal during a multi-day bender, what exactly is the point of this story?

    • Re: And? (Score:1, Insightful)

      by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Twitter is a traded company, they have to disclose these facts. They have been publicly underplaying the share of bots on their platform and this is now the third person that confirmed it. The SEC should investigate and get massive fines and lawsuits going for cheating on their reports. This is basically the equivalent to Enron.

      • Re: And? (Score:5, Informative)

        by ISayWeOnlyToBePolite ( 721679 ) on Thursday September 08, 2022 @01:18AM (#62861913)

        Twitter is a traded company, they have to disclose these facts.

        No.

        They have been publicly underplaying the share of bots on their platform and this is now the third person that confirmed it. The SEC should investigate and get massive fines and lawsuits going for cheating on their reports. This is basically the equivalent to Enron.

        Se above.

        The 5% figure is from their form 10-k, "risk factors" and If you haven't read the actual paragraph it's on page 24 https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfr... [cloudfront.net] . If you looked at later filings I'm sure you'd find things like covid and higher energy prices in similarly vague language and I encourage you to just quickly browse the full document to get a feel for the language the SEC is perfectly happy with (and if you believe twitter is an anomaly, just pick any large publicly traded companys form 10-k).

        • You're both right.

          The crux of the issue is that Twitter reports 5% of it's users are bots. Musk backed out because he said that isn't true and there's no way to confirm that information. Iger is claiming the same; he said not a majority but a substantial portion were fake.

          So the issue here is if Twitter is reporting 5% in their 10-ks when it's wrong; if it's 10% then they've mislead investors by understating the risk factors.

          Honestly, I don't know why we're all debating this. Twitter is no lo

          • Re: And? (Score:5, Informative)

            by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Thursday September 08, 2022 @07:21AM (#62862425)

            Twitter claimed that ~5% of the accounts that advertisers are targeting with their ads are bots, mDAUs (monetizable daily active users), not that only ~5% of all accounts on the entire platform are bots. To the best of my knowledge they've never made any claims as to the total number of bot accounts on the platform. Musk has deliberately tried to conflate the two since he seems to have confused the court of public opinion with a court of law. He'll win in the former, but the latter will just say, "LOL! No" and it's only the latter that will decide if he's on the hook for $44bn.

          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            The crux of the issue is that Twitter reports 5% of it's users are bots. Musk backed out because he said that isn't true and there's no way to confirm that information. Iger is claiming the same; he said not a majority but a substantial portion were fake.

            Incorrect.

            Twitter makes a claim on the "monetizable daily users". It estimates that 5% of these may be bots.

            Twitter has never claimed 5% of its users are bots.

            If you want users, let's say Twitter has 100,000,000 users. It's monetizable users, which is cons

            • No (and it's the framing of the question that's all wrong).

              Context matters. What they have to disclose on their form 10-k are risk factor to their business and under that headline is the paragraph wherein you find the 5% figure. Read it in full and keep context in mind; I don't see how they have to prove their 5% and the bar is much higher than coming up with a different metric/figure to prove them wrong.

              We rely on assumptions and estimates to calculate certain of our key metrics, and real or perceived inaccuracies in such metrics may harm our
              reputation and negatively affect our business.
              We calculate our mDAU using internal company data that has not been independently verified. While these numbers are based on what we believe
              to be reasonable calculations for the applicable period of measurement, there are inherent challenges in measuring mDAU and mDAU engagement. For
              example, there are a number of false or spam accounts in existence on our platform. We estimate that the average of false or spam accounts during the fourth
              quarter of 2019 continued to represent fewer than 5% of our mDAU during the quarter. However, this estimate is based on an internal review of a sample of
              accounts and we apply significant judgment in making this determination. As such, our estimation of false or spam accounts may not accurately represent the
              actual number of such accounts, and the actual number of false or spam accounts could be higher than we have currently estimated. We are continually seeking
              to improve our ability to estimate the total number of spam accounts and eliminate them from the calculation of our mDAU, but we otherwise treat multiple
              accounts held by a single person or organization as multiple accounts for purposes of calculating our mDAU because we permit people and organizations to
              have more than one account. Additionally, some accounts used by organizations are used by many people within the organization. As such, the calculations of
              our mDAU may not accurately reflect the actual number of people or organizations using our platform. We regularly review and may adjust our processes for
              calculating our internal metrics to improve their accuracy. Our measures of mDAU growth and engagement may differ from estimates published by third parties
              or from similarly-titled metrics of our competitors due to differences in methodology. If advertisers, content or platform partners or investors do not perceive our
              metrics to be accurate representations of our total accounts or mDAU engagement, or if we discover material inaccuracies in our metrics, our reputation may be
              harmed and content partners, advertisers and platform partners may be less willing to allocate their budgets or resources to our products and services, which
              could negatively affect our business and operating results. Further, as our business develops, we may revise or cease reporting metrics if we determine that
              such metrics are no longer accurate or appropriate measures of our performance. For example, we believe that mDAU, and its related growth, are the best ways
              to measure our success against our objectives and to show the size of our audience and engagement going forward, so we discontinued disclosing monthly
              active usage after the first quarter of 2019. If investors, analysts or customers do not believe our reported measures, such as mDAU, are sufficient or accurately
              reflect our business, we may receive negative publicity and our operating results may be adversely impacted.

            • by nadass ( 3963991 )

              If you want users, let's say Twitter has 100,000,000 users. It's monetizable users, which is considered how many of those will respond to ads, is say, 100,000. The 5% figure is off that, which means Twitter claims that at least 95,000 users are real users.

              All Twitter has to show is that there are at least the number of accounts (minus 5%) are real accounts and "monetizable", whatever that means. Using the fake numbers, they need to show out of 100M accounts, they can find 95 (or 95,000) real accounts that meet whatever they define as "monetizable".

              You gave a definition, and then contradict yourself by retracting your definition -- which equates to retracting literally EVERYTHING you just argued for.

              Regardless of whether monetizable users refers to registered app users, anonymous scrollers, notifications recipients, paid subscribers (content creators, content consumers, and advertisers), or automated systems (bots of various types)... Twitter themselves only gave themselves little wiggle room (claiming ~95% are non-bots). Any variance within +/- 10

    • by Tailhook ( 98486 )

      This is another credible witness Musk could potentially call to compel further discovery. A judge and jury will listen hard to what Bob Iger has to say about why he walked away from the Twitter shit show.

      • Actually, he's more of a witness for Twitter's side of the story:

        "we ... estimated with some of Twitter's help that a substantial portion -- not a majority -- were not real. I don't remember the number but we discounted the value heavily. But that was built into our economics."

        So, in other words, Disney did the due dilligence and priced it into their offer, whereas Musk just made a wild offer without doing the background work and wants to back-peddle now he has belatedly found out the same information.

      • Not really. First up, Musk has been deliberately trying to conflate total number of bots with mDAUs (see above for definition). Twitter only claims that ~5% of its mDAUs are bots, not that the platform itself is only ~5% bots. That argument may work in the court of public opinion, but it's absolutely doomed to fail in a court of law. Second, Musk signed away his due diligence rights, where he could have gone over every facet of Twitter's operations, decided something didn't seem right, and walk away from th

      • by Dan667 ( 564390 )
        What do you mean? An example of a business that did not wave their due diligence and decided not to buy twitter after they evaluated them including bots? If anything it is damming musk to having made his bed and have to lie in it
    • There's a difference between Musk not asking questions - that's his own responsibility - and Twitter lying to investors. If they did lie, there could be criminal prosecutions.

      • Lying is usually a high bar to prove, often because it comes down to exact wording. "We estimated 0% of twitter users are bots". Isn't a lie if when asked how you estimate it you present a deeply flawed methodology. Being bad at what you do is not lying.

      • by orlanz ( 882574 )

        Are you saying there is a pretty good chance that Twitter has been lying to their institution investors along with their public auditor? That some of the top 10 largest institutional investors in the world didn't do their diligence? That one of the big four auditors, PwC, just let this slide since they been auditing them (2009)?

        Or are we saying none of those guys could figure this out but Disney and Elon could?

        Here is relevant lines from Twitter's Filings:
        Under Key Metrics:
        "...In making this determination

    • The point is that rich famous people are finally finding the courage to admit the truth behind allegations I've been called stupid, paranoid, crazy, incompetent, and criminally libelous for making years earlier.

    • by dohzer ( 867770 )

      Mostly that all platforms are subject to bots.

    • Does it need a third point? I think the first two are valid enough given what is currently happening.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )
      I came here to make more or less the same point. Iger claims they found this while investigating whether to purchase the company - i.e., during their due diligence. They didn't like what they found, so they didn't make a purchase agreement. Musk, on the other hand, first made the purchase agreement, and now wants to do the due diligence. Frankly, that's stupid, and not at all how mergers and acquisition works. Now he's whinging that the company isn't worth what he's already signed a contract to pay. T
    • It's to tell us that 'bots have a benefit - that is, that Twitter isn't owned by Disney because of them. Horray for the 'bots!

      It's also the reason Musk doesn't own Twitter, which I take as much less of a 'win' at this point, but you may have different opinions. Come to think of it, perhaps Twitter quietly cultivates bots and doesn't remove them - specifically to fail due diligence?

  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Wednesday September 07, 2022 @09:58PM (#62861469) Homepage
    And even then, many of the "real" accounts just troll, shitpost, pass on info from some marketing campaign/political astroturfing/lobbying/etc (often without being aware of that). The game has been gamed. Stop playing the game.
  • ...and the users of Twitter are very happy to have them.

    Likewise, the users are also very relieved that you never had to brains to figure that out.

  • What matters is can they identify real accounts and having done that are they only displaying advertisements to real accounts.

    With the exception of a few nation states I would expect Twitter can indeed identify real accounts from fake. And I don't think there are that many of those nation state accounts. From there the only real question is are they lying about who they show ads to. I doubt it because it would only be a matter of time before a disgruntled employee revealed something like that and the re
    • What matters is can they identify real accounts and having done that are they only displaying advertisements to real accounts.

      Why or perhaps more clear, in what context?

    • What matters is can they identify real accounts and having done that are they only displaying advertisements to real accounts.

      What matters even more, if that's true, how do I fake being a bot so I don't get pestered by ads?

      • What matters even more, if that's true, how do I fake being a bot so I don't get pestered by ads?

        You still see ads on the web? Get better blockers. I can't remember ever seeing an ad on twitter, but I also can't remember ever visiting twitter without at least abp or uo. In ordinary use I run with ns, uo, abp, fb container, and more, but even just uo completely blocks ads there.

        • The seeing part isn't so much the problem as the loading is. And if you block the loading, the pages refuse to serve the content you're after as well. So what I need is some way to convince them that they don't want to send their bullshit altogether and just give me the content I want.

          • The seeing part isn't so much the problem as the loading is.

            No, they are both big problems, unless you are experiencing the internet by carrier pigeon. Displaying animated ads in particular slows your browser, even if it's modern and your computer is modern, because browsers are so lame.

            And if you block the loading, the pages refuse to serve the content you're after as well.

            Most sites do not, and I have never run into a site which did that I cared about.

  • Yeah, antisocial networks are filled with bots, duplicated accounts, ghost accounts, paid astroturfers/shills, scamfronts, etc etc.

    That's why when I hear some absurd sounding claim of "500 million users use X!", my bullshit alarm screams.

  • to let us know that he was able to negotiate a better deal than Musk. People and their egos.
  • I think SEC is really more interested in the integrity of the financial aspect of the 10-k disclosure, accounting accuracy, etc. I doubt SEC is all that interested in how Twitter's operational bot algorithms works or how efficiently it catches spam to create more ad revenues. That's the engineers' jobs
    • by orlanz ( 882574 )

      SEC would be concerned about lying to the Public Auditor or the Public Auditor covering things up. SEC only cares about transparency on material matters. Accounting accuracy is actually PA job. PA may mess up, and raise SEC oversight, by agreeing that something dangerious to the business doesn't need to be reported in filings. Which funny enough would be raised by another PA auditing this PA. To get away with it, you would need to have 3 parties agree and risk their public image.

      So there would be a st

      • SEC 10-k form report is not about how efficiently the company's ad revenue algorithms work. It's not material. What is material is about how much ad revenue have been generated...etc. So arguing bot % is not material to SEC
        • Ad revenue directly reflects the efficiency of Twitter's bot-catching algorithms. If engineers do not do a good job of stopping spamming, nobody wants to advertise on it and revenue drop.
  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Thursday September 08, 2022 @04:48AM (#62862175)
    Judging by some of the "social media influencers" on Twitter, what difference is there between them & a bot?
  • The universe of Twitter is as real as Azeroth [wikipedia.org], sooner our society understands that it is just a game of likes and followers, not be taken seriously, sooner we can return to normality.
  • Rumor has it that after Disney's investigation uncovered the large number of bots on Twitter, the bots migrated to slashdot. That would explain a lot about some of the comment posts!

    • That might explain the pro-Trump / pro-Putin posts if we had more of them.
      It would explain why a nerd website big on science would have so many pandemic deniers and anti-vax nutjobs.

  • by nomadic ( 141991 )

    So they...didn't waive due diligence?

  • That extended Twitter use makes you become unreal (the virtual equivalent of Undead for humans).
  • The point of this story is that Disney did its due diligence and backed out. Musk waived due diligence because it was a hostile takeover. It shouldn't really matter what he turns up. He coerced TWTR into selling for $40 billion, and the board said ok. Then he got cold feet possibly because his financiers suggested putting a lien on Tesla if it turns out that he overpaid.

    Doing the due diligence now may not matter. The judge will likely say that he signed a purchase contract for Twitter "as is".

    Musk fired the

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