San Antonio Express-News

Twitter to make upgrade to blue checks

- By Rachel Lerman

Elon Musk said Twitter will launch a verificati­on feature with multicolor­ed check marks, just weeks after the botched rollout of its paid-for blue check model, which had to be scuttled when impersonat­ion accounts ran rampant.

Musk tweeted Friday that Verified will launch in a week, this time with gold check marks for companies, gray for government­s and blue for individual­s, who can also qualify for a “secondary tiny logo” denoting they belong to an organizati­on.

All verified accounts “will be manually authentica­ted before check activates,” Musk tweeted.

The Twitter owner did not elaborate on what manual authentica­tion would entail. Accounts with legacy blue check

marks on the social media site had to have their identity verified to get the token and are predominan­tly used by companies, celebritie­s, journalist­s, politician­s and other public figures. It’s unclear whether Twitter has a system in place to manually authentica­te accounts, especially after cutting its workforce dramatical­ly in the past month.

The billionair­e took over Twitter last month in a $44 billion deal that he proposed, then tried to cancel, then proposed again. Since the acquisitio­n, Twitter’s workforce has been in chaos. Musk slashed about half its jobs, then delivered an ultimatum to the remaining employees to commit to a new “hardcore” Twitter or leave. Hundreds of employees refused to sign the pledge.

The company’s Trust and Safety team, which is responsibl­e for combating hate speech and policing content on the site, has undergone a major upheaval under Musk — from leaders leaving to carefully crafted decisions being reversed. He seems to be making many critical decisions by polling Twitter users. Musk restored former President Donald Trump’s account and plans to reinstate nearly all previously banned accounts after conducting separate polls.

Several major advertiser­s have halted advertisin­g on the site since Musk took over, putting Twitter’s main source of revenue at risk.

Musk upended the legacy check mark system soon after he took control of the company, rolling out a feature in the company’s Twitter Blue subscripti­on service that let anyone pay $7.99 and get a blue check mark on their account, provided they had an Apple ID and phone number.

But the new paid system quickly went awry. Accounts were created impersonat­ing public figures, elected officials and brands. Tweets purporting to be from politician­s or companies went viral.

The chaos made it difficult to quickly tell which accounts were valid and which were impersonat­ions, eroding trust in posts on the site. Twitter disabled new sign-ups for the service.

On Friday, Musk tweeted that the company is “tentativel­y launching Verified on Friday next week.” He did not say what exactly that would mean for accounts that had check marks under the old system or for accounts that are interested in paying for Twitter’s subscripti­on service.

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