Twitter’s boss Elon Musk has unveiled a tentative new plan for person verification which will probably be launched subsequent Friday (December 2), the billionaire confirmed on Twitter.
The transfer comes after he paused monetising the “blue test”, which verifies person id, following a wave of parody accounts impersonating former presidents and celebrities.
Musk mentioned on the social media platform that there could be three kinds of verification ticks.
“Gold test for firms, gray test for presidency, blue for people (celeb or not) and all verified accounts will probably be manually authenticated earlier than test prompts,” he wrote on Twitter on Friday, calling it “painful however needed”.
He additionally mentioned all verified accounts could be manually authenticated earlier than they’re given considered one of these test marks.
It was not instantly clear, nonetheless, if customers must pay for the service.
The Verge reported that the subscription to make use of the service referred to as “Twitter Blue” might enhance from $5 to $20 (about €5 to €20).
Musk has used Twitter as a platform to survey customers about some firm plans, reminiscent of whether or not Twitter ought to provide a normal amnesty to suspended accounts, supplied that they haven’t damaged the regulation or engaged in egregious spam.
On account of the ballot, which he referred to as a “Vox Populi, Vox Dei” (the voice of the individuals, the voice of God), he mentioned he would start reinstating controversial accounts.
Final week, former US president Donald Trump, who has been accused of spreading COVID-19 misinformation and was impeached for incitement of riot over the 2021 US Capitol assault, had his Twitter account reinstated.
Musk has additionally fired a lot of Twitter’s workers, together with those that eliminated accounts that unfold misinformation or incited hatred. Others have stop in droves after Musk issued an ultimatum to workers to decide to a “hardcore” new Twitter and work gruelling hours, or go away the corporate.
Twitter’s Brussels workplace reportedly closed this week after the 2 remaining workers left, elevating fears about whether or not the social media firm will adjust to Europe’s strict new rules on policing on-line content material.