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Friday after-work drinks with Twitter’s new owner Elon Musk, who’s in?

After Elon Musk signaled his intention to continue the deal to buy the social media platform earlier in October, reports are emerging that the acquisition is almost over.

Crypto-friendly billionaire Elon Musk is set to finalize the acquisition of social media platform Twitter by Friday, Oct. 28 which brings to a close the protracted Musk-Twitter saga.

On Oct. 24 Musk vowed to the banks assisting with the roughly $13 billion of financing for the deal that it would be closed by the end of the week and the banks have completed the final credit agreement, one of the last steps before sending the money to Musk according to Bloomberg sources.

Musk has also reportedly notified his co-investors who are helping him fund the acquisition by sending over paperwork for the financing commitment according to Reuters sources which include venture capital firm Sequoia Capital, crypto exchange Binance, and Qatar’s Investment Authority.

During a conference in Saudi Arabia on Oct. 25, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao reaffirmed his commitment to backing Musk’s takeover, as per Bloomberg.

The latest developments in the deal point to Musk seemingly adhering to a court-issued deadline set by a Delaware judge in early October where Musk filed his intention to proceed with closing the deal at the original $44 billion price after previously wanting to back out in July.

Musk intends to close the transaction at a price of $54.20 per share. Twitter stock prices jumped on the news, closing at $52.78 a share and up 2.45% for the day as per Yahoo Finance.

In the past, Musk has highlighted many areas of the platform he wishes to change with his stated “top priority” being to cut down on crypto scam tweets and at one time planned to charge users 0.1 Dogecoin (DOGE) — much less than half a cent — to post on Twitter but later admitted it wouldn’t be feasible.

Crypto wallets on Twitter?

The news comes a few days after rumors emerged that Twitter may be working on a cryptocurrency wallet according to Security researcher Jane Manchun Wong who made Forbes 30 under 30 for her high-profile tech leak scoops.

On Oct. 25 she tweeted the platform was working on a “wallet prototype” that supports “crypto deposit and withdrawal” but did not provide evidence or a source for her claim. Cointelegraph has reached out to Twitter for comment.

Related: How Crypto Twitter could change under Musk’s leadership

Meanwhile, news of Musk’s deal nearing its end comes as internal documents from Twitter seen by Reuters on Oct. 26 reveal the platform is struggling to retain its most active users, those who log in to the platform up to seven days a week and tweet a minimum of three times a week.

While these heavy users are less than 10% of the total monthly overall users they account for a massive 90% of all tweets on the platform and around half of Twitter's global revenue.

The leaked research also found over the last two years the topics of interest among English-speaking heavy users have shifted with one of the highest-growing topics being cryptocurrency and interest in news, sports, and entertainment has seen a decline.

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Twitter board recommends shareholders vote for Elon Musk’s takeover

The board stated that Twitter will be hosting a virtual meeting at an unspecified date to vote on the merger ahead of its deadline on Oct. 24.

The Twitter board has unanimously recommended that shareholders vote in favor of Elon Musk’s takeover of the social media giant.

Twitter’s board of directors initially accepted the $44 billion takeover bid at $54.20 per share in late April, and shareholder approval is the final hurdle to the deal going through bar any potentially erratic antics from Musk.

According to a June 21 U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing, Twitter’s board of directors unanimously determined that the “merger agreement is advisable” and have called on shareholders to vote in favor of the deal.

The board stated that Twitter will be hosting a virtual meeting — at an unspecified date — to vote on the merger which has a deadline of Oct. 24.

If the merger goes through, shareholders will receive $54.20 in cash per share that they own, and with Twitter stock TWTR priced at $38.91 at the time of writing, the deal would mark a premium of roughly 39%.

The takeover appeared to be up in the air earlier this month after Musk took aim at the Twitter board for not providing data relating to the number of fake users on the platform, and he threatened to withdraw his bid if the data wasn’t handed over.

The board has since agreed to share data with Musk, and the issue has been resolved. Many onlookers believed that Musk was attempting to get out of the deal as a result of the share price fall since the takeover offer was first made.

An indication that Musk seriously intends to push forward with his takeover came on June 16, when the Tesla CEO addressed employees for the first time in a Q&A session concerning his plans for the company moving forward.

According to a leaked transcript of the call published by Vox, Musk suggested that he could be looking to integrate a host of digital payments into the service, including crypto:

“I think it would make sense to integrate payments into Twitter so that it’s easy to send money back and forth. And if you have currency as well as crypto. Essentially, whenever somebody would find it useful.”

“So my goal would be to maximize the usefulness of the service — the more useful it is, the better. And if one can use it to make convenient payments, that’s an increase in usefulness,” he added.

Bots and verifying accounts was also another issue he highlighted, with Musk outlining the value of introducing paid verified accounts to enable users to differentiate between real and fake users.

Related: Elon Musk gets hit with ‘ridiculous’ $258B Dogecoin lawsuit

Musk highlighted there being “quite a lot of crypto scams on Twitter” as being of the key reasons to introduce such a feature.

The issue is especially close to home for the Dogecoin proponent, given that a series of deepfake videos using his likeness to promote crypto scams recently circulated on the social media platform.

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