Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Elon Musk hit with lawsuit over controversial Twitter stake

Add as a preferred source on Google

Elon Musk looks to be in hot water over his recent purchase of Twitter stock.

A lawsuit brought by a fellow Twitter investor accuses the billionaire entrepreneur of costing shareholders money while Musk himself saved around $143 million.

Recommended Videos

Filed by Marc Bain Rasella in a New York federal court on Tuesday, April 12, the lawsuit highlights Musk’s apparent failure to report his March 14 share purchase to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) within the 10 days stipulated by law when a stake exceeds 5%.

Specifically, the suit alleges that Musk made “materially false and misleading statements and omissions by failing to disclose to investors that he had acquired a 5% ownership stake in Twitter as required.”

It says that this meant anyone who sold shares between March 24 (the date by which Musk should have declared the purchase) and April 4 (the date when details of the purchase were made public) lost out on gains as Twitter’s share value jumped by 27% when the purchase became known.

The lawsuit also claims that the boss of Tesla and SpaceX gained in the region of $143 million during the same 11-day period when he purchased further Twitter stock at a depressed price, a move that saw him become the company’s largest single shareholder with a 9.2% stake.

Rasella’s lawsuit seeks class-action status on behalf of Twitter investors who sold stock during the crucial 11-day period, and who consequently missed out on gains they would have benefited from had Musk disclosed his investment within the required time frame. The action is calling for a jury trial for compensatory and punitive damages of unspecified amounts.

Musk, a long-time critic of Twitter who also happens to have more than 80 million followers on the platform, caused a stir with his surprise investment in the San Francisco-based company when it came to light last week.

Twitter responded by offering Musk a seat on its board, but he suddenly declined the offer on Friday, the same day the appointment was due to become effective. Twitter only announced Musk’s change of heart on Monday following a weekend in which Musk fired off a bunch of now-deleted tweets suggesting various Twitter-related ideas from the serious to the absurd.

The SEC is yet to make any public comment on whether it plans to take action against Musk for his apparent failure to disclose his stock purchase within the stipulated time frame.

Representatives for Musk have also declined to comment on the lawsuit. Musk hasn’t tweeted about it yet, either …

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
You can finally get rid of Bing on your Windows 11 PC
Windows users can finally stop accidentally opening Bing while searching for Calculator
New Bing search engine.

After years of forcing Bing into nearly every corner of Windows Search, Microsoft may finally be giving users a way out. The company is reportedly testing changes in Windows 11 that would allow people to completely disable Bing-powered web results from the operating system’s built-in Search experience.

For many PC users, this is a long-overdue change. Windows Search has spent years blending local file searches with Bing suggestions, online results, news links, and Microsoft services - often frustrating users who simply wanted to find an app, document, or system setting on their computer.

Read more
ChatGPT is eyeing a major “super app” overhaul that wants to do real work for you
ChatGPT is apparently tired of just answering questions now
ChatGPT running on a phone

OpenAI is reportedly preparing a major transformation of ChatGPT that could fundamentally change how people interact with artificial intelligence. Instead of remaining primarily a conversational chatbot, the company now wants ChatGPT to evolve into a “super app” powered by AI agents capable of managing tasks across both personal and professional life.

According to a report by the Financial Times, OpenAI executives increasingly believe the future of AI lies not in chatbots that simply answer questions, but in intelligent systems that actively complete tasks for users. The company’s long-term vision reportedly includes AI agents capable of organizing schedules, booking travel, writing software, generating content, and managing workflows across multiple services and platforms.

Read more
I asked ChatGPT to restore an image. It produced a naked man with a fish head
No, ChatGPT, I do not want to see a picture of a sweaty human with a giant fish head, hooked on cigarette and booze.
AI image generated by ChatGPT.

In 2024, back when the AI image fever was catching on, Google released the Pixel Studio app. It was meant to be a joyful playground where you could bring your imagination to life using AI. Well, it went a bit above and beyond. In our tests, Google’s app created disturbing images of SpongeBob dressed as a Nazi, Mickey Mouse as a slave owner, Elmo pointing a shotgun at Big Bird, Yoda doing cocaine, and Mr. Krabs holding an assault rifle. 

Well, ChatGPT is doing something similar, but in an even more worrying fashion.

Read more