Audio By Carbonatix
Twitter has picked April Fool’s Day, otherwise known as April 1, to start removing legacy blue checkmarks from accounts that had them on the platform.
Despite the significance of the day Twitter chose, the move has been anticipated for months now. Musk tweeted in December that the company would remove those checks “in a few months” because “the way in which they were given out was corrupt and nonsensical.”
Since then, people with legacy blue checkmarks have been seeing a pop-up when they click on their checkmark that reads, “This is a legacy verified account. It may or may not be notable.”
On April 1st, we will begin winding down our legacy verified program and removing legacy verified checkmarks. To keep your blue checkmark on Twitter, individuals can sign up for Twitter Blue here: https://t.co/gzpCcwOpLp
— Twitter Verified (@verified) March 23, 2023
Organizations can sign up for https://t.co/RlN5BbuGA3…
Before Musk acquired the company, Twitter used checkmarks to verify individuals and entities as active, authentic and notable accounts of interest. Verified checkmarks were doled out for free.
Today, Twitter users can purchase a blue check through the Twitter Blue subscription for $8 per month (iOS and Android signups will cost $11 per month due to app store costs). There are also other checkmark colors and badges available for purchase to denote whether an account belongs to a business or a government, for example.
Twitter says the purchase of a checkmark gives users access to subscriber-only features, like fewer ads on their timeline, prioritized ranking in conversations, bookmark folders, and the ability to craft long tweets, edit tweets and undo tweets.
The news comes just hours after Twitter made Blue subscriptions available globally.
Twitter did not respond to TechCrunch’s request for information about how many users have already signed up for Twitter Blue.
Latest Stories
-
Absa Group CEO reaffirms Ghana’s strategic importance during working visit
2 minutes -
Kwakye Ofosu pledges to support Aburaman SHS with a school bus
6 minutes -
StarLife Assurance provides GH¢100K insurance cover for SMEGA 2025 Award winners
15 minutes -
Victor Smith visits Seattle to advance Ghana’s drive for American investment
18 minutes -
Advertising agencies urged to embrace AI for creativity, global competitiveness
21 minutes -
The Damang Mines Extraction Licence to E&P: Public policy or bad faith exercise of statutory authority?
21 minutes -
I didn’t leave my journey to chance; I positioned myself for it — Oheneba Yaw Boamah
22 minutes -
Ghana moves toward interest-free banking as local lenders seek licences
22 minutes -
Aflao traditional council urges government to fast-track modern market project
25 minutes -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance on Monday, April 27
28 minutes -
Ghana mineworkers warn local outsourcing rule will cut wages, jobs
31 minutes -
Motor rider in court for defilement
32 minutes -
Soldiers deployed to Adamus site after government revoked mining leases
35 minutes -
Apostle Nyamekye calls for calm after Awusi controversy, urges Ghanaians to move on
39 minutes -
One dead, 19 injured as storm wreaks havoc in Binduri
43 minutes