UPDATE: Apr. 2523-302-2512 the erotice review 2022, 2:19 p.m. EDT According to Bloomberg, the negotiations are in their "final stretch" and the deal could be reached as soon as Monday.
Elon Musk's sudden bid to buy Twitter in April may have seemed like a publicity stunt at some point, but now it's getting serious.
According to a report by The New York Times, quoting sources with knowledge of the situation, Twitter's board is nearing a deal to sell itself to Musk. The negotiations, which are in an advanced stage, went into the early hours of Monday, the sources said.
The key moment in the negotiations was Musk's announcement, via a SEC filing last week, that he has secured $46.5 billion in financing to acquire the company.
No final agreement has been made, and the deal may still fall apart, the report claims.
SEE ALSO: The worst Elon Musk tweets, rankedMusk started purchasing Twitter shares in January, having amassed a 9.2 percent stake by early April. A few days before announcing this publicly, he started questioning Twitter's policies and suggesting improvements to the service, including the addition of an edit button on tweets and changing Twitter's algorithms to be open source.
At one point it appeared that Musk just plans to influence Twitter by becoming a member of the company's Board, though that quickly fell through, followed by Musk's bid to buy the entire company at $54.20 per share.
Reactions to Musk's bid were mixed. There were, of course, memes. Some Twitter employees expressed concern about the idea, while some Wall Street analysts assessed that Musk's bid price was too low. Notably, Musk seems to still be on good terms with Twitter co-founder and board member, Jack Dorsey, having recently complimented him for his new title at his other company, Block.
Topics X/Twitter Elon Musk
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
How to Merge and Remove Duplicate Contacts in Android
The Origins of Sprawl by Jason Diamond
All the Better to Hear You With by Sabrina Orah Mark
Young, Queer, and Lonely in Paris by Sophie Yanow
Analyzing Graphics Card Pricing: October 2018
Letterboxd's Year in Review reveals it's really a 'Barbie' world
Internet conspiracy theorists are convinced aliens appeared at a mall in Miami
What We Aren’t Seeing by Francine Prose
How to Watch Netflix with Friends Anywhere (and No, It's Not Illegal to Share Your Password)
What Remains by Kerri Arsenault
The internet is talking like Kevin from 'The Office' now
Staff Picks: Boats, Brands, and Blasphemy by The Paris Review
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。