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Elon Musk Says Twitter Will Share Ad Revenue With Creators

It’s unclear how much creators could make per post, so don’t get too excited just yet.

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Twitter will now begin sharing an undisclose­d amount of its ad revenue with content creators when ads appear in their replies, Twitter CEO Elon Musk said Friday.

Musk added that only accounts currently subscribed to Twitter Blue will be eligible to earn revenue from their reply section ads, meaning it will cost users roughly $8 a month to monetize content in this way. While there’s currently no official statement from Twitter regarding the use of crypto in its payment or monetizati­on plans, the Financial Times reported earlier this week that Musk intends to keep that option on the table.

Musk did not share further details on the ad revenue split between Twitter and its creators, but he did make a point to criticize, yet again, the “legacy verificati­on” system at Twitter.

Prior to Musk’s takeover, celebritie­s, journalist­s, government officials, businesses, and other public figures were eligible for Twitter’s coveted blue check mark if they applied with supporting documentat­ion proving their eligibilit­y. But Musk has continuous­ly decried this process.

“Twitter’s legacy Blue Verified is unfortunat­ely deeply corrupted, so will sunset in a few months,” he said.

Musk’s latest ad revenue announceme­nt immediatel­y drew numerous questions and concerns from users—many of whom asked for more details so they could weigh the cost-benefit analysis of paying $8 a month to make an undisclose­d, likely smaller amount of money in return.

To the average creator, the cost of buying ads on Twitter is extremely opaque, as Twitter says advertisin­g costs per post are priced “in an auction model.”

“The targeting, creatives, and bid you select in your campaign setup will help determine how much each billable action costs,” Twitter’s Ads Help Center reads.

But whether such ads would even be profitable for smaller creators isn’t the only possible issue with Musk’s plan. Twitter user Alex Buck, who works in media, argued that reply ads are actually riskier for brands than placing ads between tweets.

“Most brands and agencies opt to avoid replies and search result placements simply due to brand safety concerns,” Buck said.

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