The coveted blue tick mark displayed on verified social media accounts – normally reserved for celebrities, politicians, professional athletes, and other high-profile figures – may soon lose its meaning. Well, at least on Twitter, if its new owner, Elon Musk, decides to go ahead with plans of charging $8 a month for those using a premium Blue service. Enrolling in the paid service would be the only to keep or achieve verification on the platform.
“Twitter’s current lords & peasants system for who has or doesn’t have a blue checkmark is bullshit. Power to the people! Blue for $8/month.”, said Musk on Twitter this Tuesday, November, 1.
Twitter already offers a paid subscription option, launched in 2021, in some countries at $4.99 a month, allowing people some perks such as being able to edit tweets within a 30-minute window after posting them and a time-limited “Undo Tweet” function. Musk, who bought the company after not being able to get out of a deal to acquire Twitter for $44 billion, added that the price could fluctuate according to country.
“This will also give Twitter a revenue stream to reward content creators”, said Elon, adding that “There will be a secondary tag below the name for someone who is a public figure”.
Online users didn’t react well to the idea of having to pay to get verified on Twitter.
Youtuber and Makeup artist Zoe Amira was quick to comment on the plans of the Tesla co-founder and richest person in the world with a net worth of $203 billion.
“So, you’re just marketing the concept of the blue check all while pushing the entire actual concept behind verification to a secondary tag…”, mentioned the content creator.
Seth Everman, a Swedish YouTuber, social media personality, and musician, best known for making comedic piano videos and parodies, has a lot of questions when it comes to involving content creators as part of the revamp plan.
“What kind of content creators? posting memes that get thousands of retweets? or videos per view? or just text tweets? or per follower you have? or simply all tweets by “verified” users?”, asks Everman.
Landscape and commercial photographer Dave Zdanowicz, from Bradford UK, thinks paying for doesn’t necessary equals benefits:
“So, if every Twitter user pays $8 a month. Who gets the priory reach? Surely that dilutes the system. The more people that pay it. The less beneficial it is.”, questions Zdanowicz, adding: “The danger now is that anyone who pays will be bumped up to the top of people’s feed and everything else will be diluted.”
Not everyone was against Elon Musk’s attempt to make some extra millions, though.
“For those unaware of what Elon is referring to. This is a great idea. All true accounts can be verified, removing the spam and scam, then public figures will have a brief tagline. Elon has found a solution and a way forward to keep everyone happy.”, shared California-based Baseball Blogger Dan Clark.
David Hogg, a gun control activist and one of the co-founders of the March for Our Lives movement, believes changes are necessary:
“I may not agree with this entire thread, but this is something Twitter has needed to do for a long time that pretty much every other platform provides. It will help writers, journalists, activists and others continue to do their work.”, says Hogg, who became a household name when he was a 17-year-old high school senior who survived the Marjory Stoneman Douglas shooting on February 14, 2018.
This is not the first time Elon Must hinted at a possible paid Twitter verification. Earlier this year, in April, the entrepreneur and Chief Engineer at SpaceX hinted on Twitter about a possible paid authentication checkmark service for those willing to purchase premium features on the social media service.