A verified ‘copycat’
Twitter’s Musk mocks Zuck for also adding sub fees
Elon Musk poked fun at Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s announcement that his flagship social media properties — Facebook and Instagram — will be charging a monthly subscription fee for a verification check similar to that introduced by Twitter.
Musk, who rolled out the Twitter Blue subscription service soon after he completed his $44 billion takeover of the microblogging site, felt vindicated by Zuckerberg’s announcement Sunday.
The Twitter boss said it was “inevitable” that Zuckerberg would follow in his footsteps.
He also posted a laughinghysterically emoji on his Twitter feed in response to a meme depicting Zuckerberg as the hapless Mr. Bean who copies from a man sitting next to him. The other testtaker represents Musk.
Meta Verified will cost $11.99 a month on Web and $14.99 a month on iOS. It’s launching in Australia and New Zealand this week ahead of a wider rollout that will include the US.
Judging from social media reaction, it appears Zuckerberg has some convincing to do before Facebook users fork over money on a monthly basis.
“Introducing Meta Verified, the subscription service that lets you trade your government ID for a blue badge, false sense of security, and direct access to customer support,” one naysayer tweeted.
“Because nothing says authenticity like handing over personal info to a social media giant.”
Another Twitter user wrote: “Meta Verified is just as cringe as Twitter Blue and I would rather disappear into the abyss never to be known again than spend a dime trying to gain traction by paying for faux popularity on social media.”
‘Pay to play’
One commenter suggested that Zuckerberg’s announcement could spell the end of free Internet.
“I remember the days when Facebook’s homepage said ‘it’s free and always will be’,” remarked one Twitter user. “Social media is quickly becoming pay to play . . . It’s no longer an information highway that connects people . . . it’s starting to become a toll road.”
Separately, Facebook on Monday temporarily fought off a collective lawsuit valued at up to $3.7 billion over allegations the social media giant abused its dominant position to monetize users’ personal data.