Report: Terrorists get services on X
Blue check payments by sanctioned groups could violate U.S. law
SAN FRANCISCO >> X, the social media platform owned by Elon Musk, is potentially violating U.S. sanctions by accepting payments for subscription accounts from terrorist organizations and other groups banned from doing business in the country, according to a new report.
The report, by the Tech Transparency Project, a nonprofit focused on accountability for large technology companies, shows that X, formerly known as Twitter, has taken payments from accounts that include Hezbollah leaders, Houthi
groups, and state-run media outlets in Iran and Russia. The subscriptions, which cost $8 a month, offer users a blue check mark — once limited to verified users like celebrities — and better promotion by X's algorithm,
among other perks.
The U.S. Treasury Department maintains a list of entities that have been placed under sanctions, and while X's official terms of service forbid people and organizations on the list to make payments on the platform, the report found 28 accounts that had the blue check mark.
“We were surprised to find that X was providing premium services to a wide range of groups the U.S. has sanctioned for terrorism and other activities that harm its national security,” said Katie Paul, the director of the Tech Transparency Project. “It's yet another sign that X has lost control of its platform.”
X and Musk did not respond to a request for comment. Musk has said that he wants X to be a haven for free speech and that he will remove only illegal content.
On Wednesday, after the Tech Transparency Project published its research, X removed check marks from several of the accounts.
Since Musk's acquisition of Twitter in 2022, the company has made drastic changes to the way it does business — in some cases spurning advertising in favor of subscription dollars. It has also restored thousands of banned accounts and rolled back rules that once governed the site.
Musk also did away with Twitter's verification policy, in which staff members vetted politicians, celebrities, journalists and others, granting them a blue check mark to show they were real. Instead, people now pay for those badges, and popular paid accounts are eligible to receive a cut of the revenue for ads displayed next to their posts. Subscriptions for organizations cost $1,000 per month.
(X still denotes official government accounts with a complimentary check mark, now gray.)
It is unclear how the organizations and people highlighted in the report skirted X's rules to pay for their premium status. (Musk has laid off roughly 80% of X's staff.) Because X no longer verifies the identities of users before granting
check marks, it is also possible that the accounts discovered by the Tech Transparency Project belong to impersonators.
Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, appears to have started paying X in November for a premium account and frequently posts news releases and memes mocking the United States and Israel to his 93,000 followers. His account is labeled ID-verified, meaning the account holder provided a copy of a government-issued ID to X.
An account that identifies as Harakat Hezbollah alNujaba, an Iranian-backed militia, also received the blue check mark in November and promotes its causes to more than 11,000 followers. And the Yemeni militia known as the Houthis subscribed this month.