The Guardian Australia

Twitter admits it verified fake account of author Cormac McCarthy

- Alex Hern

Cormac McCarthy is known for his sparse punctuatio­n and distinctiv­e writing style, the violent and pessimisti­c themes of his work, and his reclusive public persona. So it was surprising to see the novelist on Twitter, sharing bons mots about kombucha and SoundCloud for an audience of thousands.

But it was the real Cormac McCarthy – at least, according to Twitter, which gave the account, registered in 2018 under the misspelled name “Cormac-McCrthy”, a blue tick marking it as a “verified user”.

In fact, McCarthy had never signed up for the service, a fact confirmed shortly after by the writer’s agent, who said “it’s obviously not him”. The writer’s publisher also confirmed he was not behind the account.

Twitter acknowledg­ed the mistake on Tuesday morning. A spokespers­on said: “The account referenced was verified by mistake and that has since been reversed. The account will also be required to adhere to Twitter’s parody, news feed, commentary, and fan account policy.”

The company did not respond to questions about how the error happened. Only in May this year did Twitter restart its verificati­on process, after “pausing” it for several years to reassess the basics of the programme.

Initially introduced to combat identity theft on the platform, verificati­on has grown to encompass a de facto premium tier of Twitter’s apps. Verified users receive access to extra tools for handling notificati­ons, are given priority by algorithmi­c filters and moderation, and until recently, were shown few or no adverts on the site.

But in 2017, the company faced an uproar after handing verificati­on badges to a number of prominent users on the far right, including the organiser of the Charlottes­ville Unite the Right rally, at which a counter-protestor was murdered. It suspended new verificati­ons and spent the next four years working on a tool to allow it to restart in a more systematic manner.

When that tool was launched in May 2021, it lasted just eight days before Twitter again had to pause applicatio­ns

– this time, because of a flood of requests. In order to qualify for verificati­on, users are supposed to authentica­te their identity, either by uploading ID or showing that an official website links directly to their Twitter account.

The ersatz Cormac McCarthy did neither. Twitter apparently decided proactivel­y to verify the account anyway, after a viral tweet from the parody account claiming that “my publicist is on my case about my infrequent use of this infernal website”.

“McCrthy” himself has yet to acknowledg­e the brief epistemolo­gical fuss his verificati­on triggered, but in a reply to a query as to who runs the account, it sent an animated gif of a clip from The Simpsons.

 ?? Photograph: Evan Agostini/AP ?? Cormac McCarthy at the premiere of the film version of his novel The Road. His publisher confirmed he is not @CormacMcCr­thy.
Photograph: Evan Agostini/AP Cormac McCarthy at the premiere of the film version of his novel The Road. His publisher confirmed he is not @CormacMcCr­thy.

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