A
report in the Daily Telegraph today quotes a source close to founders
Biz Stone and Jack Dorsey as saying the founders "are being approached
with offers of wheelbarrow loads of cash".
However, it says that
Stone and his partner are "being very careful about who they accept
money from and who they give their equity to".
The service, which now has as
many as 1.7m UK users and 7m globally is used heavily by those working
in the media, digital and celebrities.
Most notably among
the celebrities using it are Stephen Fry who has attracted more than
322,000 followers or those who subscribe to his 140 character long
postings.
Fry's tweet on the death of Jade Goody has been widely
quoted today: "I suppose she was a kind of Princess D from the wrong
side of the tracks."
For Barack Obama it played a part in his digital communications campaign for the presidency.
Others
stars using it include NBA Pheonix Suns basket ball star Shaquille
O'Neal who recently Twittered during a break from a game.
Despite
the offers of such cash Twitter is not ready to accept new investors
having already turned down $500m from Facebook, which recently
redesigned its homepage annoying some users, and looks increasingly
like Twitter according to some.
Twitter says that the $35m it
recently received from venture capitalist Benchmark and Institutional
Venture Partners, which values the company at $250m, is sufficient.
Stone
said that Twitter was not "actively seeking more funding" as it still
has cash left from previous funding rounds when it accepted $15m of
investment from Amazon chairman and chief executive Jeff Bezos's Bezos
Expeditions and Spark Capital last summer.