Speaking after two days of closed-door talks with Turkish officials, Colin Crowell, Twitter's head of global public policy, told AFP: "We did not agree on opening an office in Turkey."
"Making greater investments here to grow our business has a relationship to whether or not we can count on the continuity of our service," he said.
"And an investment climate in which our service has been shut off would give any company reservations about making an imminent investment," Crowell said in an interview in Istanbul.
"Twitter, YouTube and Facebook are international companies established for profit and making money," Erdogan said on Sunday. "Twitter is at the same time a tax evader. We will go after it."
Turkey had criticised Twitter for not opening a physical office in the country and paying domestic taxes.
But Twitter has rejected charges of tax evasion, saying the company already has a reseller in Turkey which pays the applicable taxes.
"That relationship is similar to many companies which do business here," Crowell said.
The much-criticised ban was lifted on April 3 after the country's top court ruled the blockade breached the right to free speech.
The government estimates that Twitter generates USD 35 million a year in advertising revenue in Turkey.
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