Blue checkmarks began to disappear from formerly verified Twitter accounts on Thursday, as policies implemented under new owner Elon Musk began to take hold.
Musk, who purchased the company for $44bn in 2022 and has thus far struggled to make it profitable, has been threatening to remove what he called “legacy blue checks” for months now. The checkmark previously denoted accounts that had been verified for authenticity and was given to accounts of celebrities, journalists and media outlets.
Now users seeking verification will have to pay for Twitter Blue, a controversial $8 a month subscription program under which any account can obtain a blue checkmark.
The rollout of the changes on Thursday was chaotic. Numerous high-profile users took to the platform to assert they would not pay for blue checkmarks under the new policy, while others announced they would leave the platform entirely.
Nonprofit organizations Human Rights Watch and the NAACP have tweeted they will not be paying for Twitter Blue.
<p lang=«en» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«en»>Human Rights Watch is not paying for the #BlueCheckMark — here's why: https://t.co/1fp25DumH9 pic.twitter.com/QjpsoV5PCHSCOTUSblog, a news website that follows the workings of the US supreme court, said it would cease posting on Twitter entirely. The publication follows a similar move from NPR, the US radio network, which left Twitter last week after being labeled as a “state-affiliated media outlet” under new platform policies.
The removal of free verification processes has also raised concerns about the risk of misinformation and impersonation of legitimate organizations and people. A plethora of false government accounts – including some posing as the US Internal Revenue Service amid tax-filing
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