In true Musk-ian fashion, Twitter seems to have postponed the announced removal of legacy verification for the accounts of politicians, celebrities, notable figures, and organizations. The system was originally designed to verify the authenticity of these accounts and protect against impersonation.
According to Twitter owner Elon Musk in a now-deleted Tweet, these legacy-verified accounts won’t lose their checkmarks for “a few more weeks.” But added that “unless they say they tell they won’t pay now, in which we will remove it.”
Elon Musk quickly deleted a tweet saying legacy verified accounts would not lose their checkmarks on April 1 as he previously said, won’t happen for another “few weeks”
— Matt Binder (@MattBinder) April 2, 2023
however, if they specifically say they won’t pay for Twitter Blue, then Twitter will remove their checkmark pic.twitter.com/HiiWwf30tb
This caveat was almost immediately applied to The New York Times’ main account after a user pointed out that the publication said it wouldn’t pay for a subscription — an ironic twist as The Times was also the first to report that according to internal documents, Twitter was planning to make legacy verification exemptions for the platform’s 10,000 most-followed organizations.
One account has lost its verification badge: NYT, for saying it wasn’t going to pay for it pic.twitter.com/FdCdN0YUE9
— Ken Klippenstein (@kenklippenstein) April 2, 2023
Only the publication’s main account has been de-verified as of this writing.
When you remove one verified account (@nytimes) out of pure vindictiveness, but have no uniform policy or plan. pic.twitter.com/dtzA60YHrR
— Nicole Perlroth (@nicoleperlroth) April 2, 2023
In the interim however, legacy and Twitter Blue users have seemingly been lumped together by the platform.
Instead of getting rid of verified accounts, Elon just turned off any differentiator between official organizations and people paying $8.
— Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) April 2, 2023
Now anybody really can pretend to be anybody and there's no way to stop it at scale during a big news event. Fannnntastic. pic.twitter.com/QmE53oAPfZ
To keep their checkmarks, individual accounts will need to pay $8 a month or $84 a year for a Twitter Blue subscription, while organizations will be charged $1,000 per month + $50 each for their affiliate accounts.
Musk announced last week that beginning April 15 (but this may now also be subject to change), only verified accounts will be included in the platform’s ‘for you’ recommendations.
The exemptions that The Times saw would also reportedly include Twitter’s top 500 advertisers, a move that can be seen as an attempt by the company to claw back the 40% it has lost in advertising revenue.
Information for this briefing was found via Twitter, The New York Times, and the sources and companies mentioned. The author has no securities or affiliations related to the organizations discussed. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.