Twitter is considering charging businesses and brands $1000 to retain gold verification checkmarks on the platform, a new report from The Information revealed on Friday afternoon. In internal documents obtained by the outlet, Twitter would also charge an additional $50 for every affiliated account as well. For companies seeking to keep their verification, $12,000 a year is a costly change for a feature that has previously been a free tool used to stop bad actors from engaging in impersonation.
Matt Navarra, a social media consultant, was the first to point out this pricing change and his tweets align with the report from The Information. There is no date set for this move as pricing is still being finalized and is subject to change. Before charging users $8/month for Twitter Blue, Musk originally planned for a $19.99/month subscription before decreasing the price after backlash, so there is precedent for a price change.
Tweet may have been deleted
The gold checkmark is a recent addition to Twitter, having been rolled out in December as "Verified for Organizations" (formerly Blue for Business). This was a part of a site-wide relaunch of Twitter Blue, after its disastrous initial launch in November alienated and drove many brands away from the platform due to impersonation concerns. The initial Twitter Blue rollout allowed anybody willing to pay $8 to be verified, and required no identity checks whatsoever, opening the door for many users to tweet seemingly on behalf of corporations and government officials.
Twitter has not officially announced the policy, and did not immediately respond to Mashable's request for comment. If the plan does go forward, it would be an unsurprising move for the platform since Elon Musk took over last year. Musk stated before buying Twitter that he would look for avenues to monetize the app. Taking a concept meant to ensure validity and charging a stack for it fits Musk's pattern. Musk has attempted to boost revenue in other ways including mass layoffs, banning third-party APIs since they don't bring in ad revenue, and the possible introduction of a costly ad-free Twitter Blue subscription tier.
Additionally, Musk has stated that Twitter is looking to compensate creators through features like Coins and a creator fund. However, as it stands, Musk might not be in the financial situation just yet to deliver on his promises. Maybe that $1000 per month from businesses will help.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Twitter may soon charge brands $1000 to keep gold checkmark-款曲周至网
sitemap
文章
4
浏览
6
获赞
83
Chase bank tried to be relatable on Twitter and got absolutely dunked on
Brands, may we remind you for the umpteenth time, that if you're trying to get #relatable on TwitterHow to try MusicLM, Google's text
MusicLM, an experimental tool from Google that turns written prompts into music, is now accepting eaGoogle Pixel phones may get a dashcam feature
You may already own your next dashcam and you don't even know it yet.9to5Google analyzed some unreleSpaceX releases a cool video of a Starship test flight
SpaceX, with relatively little pomp and circumstance, carried out another successful test flight forDr. Dre, a big USC donor, says his daughter got into USC 'on her own'
Dr. Dre wrote that his daughter Truly was accepted to the University of Southern California "all onApple's Reality Pro headset: What we know as WWDC nears
This is a massive moment for Apple. On Monday, June 5, at the WWDC conference in Apple Park, CupertiHyundai and Kia will pay $200 million in settlement over 'Kia Challenge' car thefts
Viral videos breaking down how car thieves can steal certain Hyundai and Kia vehicles are going to eWell, duck it: The Apple keyboard will finally let you curse
Apple wants to let you drop F-bombs. The company showed off its new AI-powered keyboard for iOS on MThese coronavirus trackers can help you sort through the info overload
If you're like me, the daily barrage of information about the progress of the coronavirus pandemic cHow to download Instagram Reels
If TikTok has a feature, you can be certain Instagram Reels will also eventually have that exact samTwitter reportedly ran family
Twitter's confusing advertising priorities are once again under the microscope as users report familWhy today's biblical locust swarms can't be stopped
In 1937, aboard slowly-moving trains, the Army National Guard used flamethrowers in an attempt to quTwitter admits it went too far with '5G causes COVID
Even Twitter admits it was too heavy-handed with its misinformation labels for posts about COVID-19,NASA Mars rover spots dusty weather blowing across the Martian desert
Martian weather is awfully dusty.A camera aboard NASA's Mars Curiosity rover — a car-sized robGoogle Pixel phones may get a dashcam feature
You may already own your next dashcam and you don't even know it yet.9to5Google analyzed some unrele