The Daily Telegraph

Twitter took money for blue ticks from terrorists, say campaigner­s

- By James Titcomb

ELON MUSK’S X, the company formerly known as Twitter, is potentiall­y violating US terrorist sanctions by allowing groups such as Hezbollah to purchase verificati­on “check marks”, campaigner­s have claimed.

The Tech Transparen­cy Project (TTP), a group that monitors big tech companies, said it had identified 28 accounts associated with terrorist or sanctioned groups that had the verificati­on mark.

They include Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, Naim Qassem, his second in command, Iranian state media and leaders of the Houthi terrorist group responsibl­e for attacking ships in the Red Sea. Since last April, X has required accounts to pay a monthly or annual subscripti­on to be verified, although payment is believed to have been waived in some cases.

The TTP said taking money from the groups amounted to “a potential violation of US sanctions”.

X removed verificati­on from all of the accounts shortly after the report was published, as well as suspending an account for Harakat al-nujaba, an Iranian-sponsored militia.

The company said it would “take action if necessary” and added that some accounts may be receiving verificati­on without breaking sanctions.

X’s official terms of service ban sanctioned entities from making payments on the social network.

The social media platform said: “X has a robust and secure approach in place for our monetisati­on features, adhering to legal obligation­s, along with independen­t screening by our payments providers.

“Several of the accounts listed in the Tech Transparen­cy report are not directly named on sanction lists, while some others may have visible account check marks without receiving any services that would be subject to sanctions. Our teams have reviewed the report and will take action if necessary. We’re always committed to ensuring that we maintain a safe, secure and compliant platform.”

The company previously verified public figures for free, but Mr Musk has opened verificati­on up to all accounts willing to pay £9.60 a month.

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