The Guardian (USA)

Facebook and Instagram to get paid verificati­on as Twitter charges for two-factor SMS authentica­tion

- Josh Taylor

Facebook and Instagram users will soon need to pay to be verified on the social media platforms, as Meta follows in the footsteps of rival platform Twitter.

Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s chief executive, announced in a Facebook post on Sunday that the service would first roll out in Australia and New Zealand later this week.

The company said it would cost US $11.99 a month on web or US$14.99 on iOS and Android (or, in Australia, $19.99 on web or $24.99 on iOS and Android).

Zuckerberg said in addition to a blue badge the service would offer “extra impersonat­ion protection”, improved reach for verified users and direct access to customer support.

In a blog post, Meta said it would rely on government ID documents to prove the identity of verified accounts, to avoid the embarrassm­ent of accounts impersonat­ing people and brands – as happened when Twitter initially rolled out its paid verificati­on service.

Accounts must also have a posting history and users must be at least 18 years old.

The service would not be available to businesses at this stage, Meta said.

The increased visibility of posts from verified users would “depend on a subscriber’s existing audience size and the topic of their posts”, the company said. Those with smaller audiences might see more of an impact.

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The company said it would also offer “exclusive stickers” on Facebook and Instagram stories and Facebook reels.

Meta cut 11,000 staff in November – the equivalent of 13% of its workforce – amid falling ad revenue and economic downturn. The company’s share price fell by more than 70% in 2022 before a rebound and in July it reported its first ever fall in revenue.

Twitter’s CEO, Elon Musk, responded to the news in a tweet saying it was “inevitable” Meta would follow Twitter.

Twitter restricts SMS two-factor authentica­tion to paid accounts

Separately, Twitter announced on Friday it would provide SMS-based twofactor authentica­tion only to users who are subscribed to the US$8-a-month ($11.65) Twitter Blue service from 20 March.

The company currently provides free two-factor authentica­tion through third-party apps and a security key,

which are considered more secure than SMS-based systems. If non-subscriber accounts that use SMS authentica­tion do not switch before the deadline, Twitter said it would disable two-factor authentica­tion for that account.

The move has sparked concerns that it could lead to widespread hacks on accounts next month if they fail to switch over.

Twitter’s last transparen­cy report prior to Musk’s takeover shows that as of December 2021, although just 2.6% of active Twitter accounts use two-factor authentica­tion, 74.4% of those use SMS as their method of authentica­tion.

Musk has claimed Twitter was being “scammed” US$60m a year from fake two-factor authentica­tion messages. He separately supported a tweet claiming the scams were being run by telecommun­ications companies that had set up bot accounts to run the twofactor authentica­tion process to get revenue from the text messages from Twitter.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? Meta has announced it will charge Facebook and Instagram users to have verified accounts, whileTwitt­er says it will provide its SMSbased two-factor authentica­tion only to paid users.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters Meta has announced it will charge Facebook and Instagram users to have verified accounts, whileTwitt­er says it will provide its SMSbased two-factor authentica­tion only to paid users.

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