Skip to the content
Nairobi Tech Hub
  • HOME
  • Courses
  • Enroll
  • Jobs
  • About
  • Tech News
  • Contact
  • Login
  • HOME
  • Courses
  • Enroll
  • Jobs
  • About
  • Tech News
  • Contact
  • Login
Posted on April 3, 2023

Twitter’s new label makes it hard to differentiate between legacy and paid verified accounts

  • By.
  • View Count. 0
  • 0 Comments

Twitter was supposed to ceremoniously remove legacy verification checkmarks on April 1. While it appears to have put those plans on hold for now, the Elon Musk-led social network has revised the label attached to the check mark to make it virtually impossible to differentiate between those who earned it and all who paid for it.

When users tap or click on the blue checkmark, the label now reads, “This account is verified because it’s subscribed to Twitter Blue or is a legacy verified account.”

After Twitter introduced verification through the Blue subscription plan, the label on the legacy verified accounts read, “This is a legacy verified account. It may or may not be notable.” On the other hand, the label on the Blue account showed, “This account is verified because it’s subscribed to Twitter Blue.”

Because of this, it was possible to differentiate between two sets of verified accounts. But the new sign makes it hard to separate the two different verifications and identify notable accounts.

NEW: did they pay $8 or are they a legacy verified #bluecheckmark?

Twitter’s new change means you don’t know.

End of an era.

Pics: Friday vs Today. pic.twitter.com/0aabmOku1d

— John Scott-Railton (@jsrailton) April 2, 2023

Over the weekend, the New York Times also lost its verified check after it refused to pay for the verification service. In a reply to users posting a meme about the publication not paying for verification, Twitter CEO Elon Musk said, “Oh okay, we’ll take it off.”

Oh ok, we’ll take it off then

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 2, 2023

Over the last few days, many celebrities including LeBron James, Patrick Mahomes II,  Darius Slay, Monica Lewinsky, and William Shatner have said that they won’t be paying for a check mark.

Reporter Matt Binder pointed out that Musk deleted a tweet saying that Twitter will give “a few weeks grace” to legacy verified account holders to subscribe to Twitter Blue before removing verification marks from those who don’t pay. The deleted tweet also said that the social network will remove the checkmark if accounts specifically refuse to pay for Twitter Blue.

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”

however, if they specifically say they won’t pay for Twitter Blue, then Twitter will remove their checkmark pic.twitter.com/HiiWwf30tb

— Matt Binder (@MattBinder) April 2, 2023

Musk has promised that after April 15, the “For You” algorithmic timeline will only show verified accounts along with the accounts a person follow. Over the weekend, the Tesla CEO also mentioned that Twitter will soon add the date of verification to user profiles.

The social network is also reportedly working on a government ID verification feature for Blue subscribers, which will let them hide their checkmarks.

Twitter’s new label makes it hard to differentiate between legacy and paid verified accounts by Ivan Mehta originally published on TechCrunch

Write a comment Cancel reply

This site uses User Verification plugin to reduce spam. See how your comment data is processed.

Quick Links

Home

About

Instructor Application

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Features

Courses

Tech News

FAQ

Contact

Contact

P.O Box 51722-00100 GPO Nairobi.
C/O Jacky Oreta

info@nairobitechhub.com

Follow Us on

Footer Logo
Ⓒ 2023 NairobiTechHub.

Insert/edit link

Enter the destination URL

Or link to existing content

    No search term specified. Showing recent items. Search or use up and down arrow keys to select an item.