The account verification system on Elon Musk’s Twitter couldn’t get any more incomprehensible, and yet perplexity reigned supreme on Saturday, with blue badges making a comeback on some media accounts or personalities – let them be. or not.
“On my soul I didn’t pay for Twitter Blue, Tesla man you gonna feel my wrath pass!” tweeted American rapper Lil Nas X, whose profile shows the blue check mark.
Formerly free, and a guarantee of authenticity and notoriety, it now means that the user is subscribed to Twitter Blue (for 8 dollars per month) and that his telephone number has been verified by the platform.
On Thursday, accounts that had the old blue badge lost it unless they paid for the new one, following Elon Musk’s strategy put in place this winter to authenticate users and generate new revenue.
But a tiny fraction of former distinguished users subscribed – less than 5% of the 407,000 profiles concerned, according to researcher Travis Brown.
On Friday and Saturday, a growing number of personalities found a blue tick, apparently without action on their part, such as writer Stephen King, NBA champion LeBron James or former President Donald Trump.
“No means no, guys,” tech journalist Kara Swisher tweeted on Saturday, explaining that she was “forcibly checked” without her “consent.”
“People need to know: does Elon love me for me or for the 1.49 million people who follow me?” she added, an hour after claiming she wouldn’t pay “eight bucks a month for a blue tick and blah tools”.
Many authenticated users despite themselves were keen to let it be known that they had nothing to do with it, because the controversial badge has become a symbol of support for Elon Musk.
“Please note that I have not subscribed to Twitter Blue, even though for some mysterious reason my blue tick is showing again,” said author Rick Wilson.
Progressive economist and Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, who mocked Elon Musk’s “ill-controlled impulsiveness” last July, said on Saturday: “I had nothing to do with it and I’m certainly not paying for it.” .
The Twitter, Tesla and SpaceX boss responded with an image of a baby smeared in tomato sauce, crying over his plate of pasta and wearing a blue checkmark-stamped bib.
On Friday, the leader had indicated that he “paid personally for some subscriptions”.
“Checkmate,” he mysteriously tweeted on Saturday, amid speculation.
“Musk’s business model is to falsify celebrity endorsements like a box of penis-enlarging pills,” attorney Max Kennerly said.
Accounts of deceased people, such as American chef Anthony Bourdain, have also received the new blue badge.
And many official media accounts have it too, even the New York Times, which lost its certification in early April after Elon Musk called the information published there “propaganda”.
Some major news organizations have a gold badge reserved for “verified organizations” that pay at least $1,000 a month.
But US public radio NPR and public media group CBC Radio-Canada had still not resumed tweeting as of Saturday.
These two organizations recently suspended their activities on Twitter in protest against the labels that Twitter had attached to them: “government-funded media” or “state-affiliated”, terms previously reserved for non-independent, government-funded media. autocratic.
On Friday, Elon Musk’s platform removed these labels, including for the official Chinese agency Xinhua (New China) or the Russian RT.
“Was the real purpose of all this NPR fuss to help China and Russia? Looks like: By removing the labels from state-controlled media, Twitter is helping propaganda,” stressed Kara Swisher Saturday morning.
AFP did not contact Twitter, which no longer officially responds to the press except with an emoticon in the shape of a poo.
04/23/2023 12:33:41 – San Francisco (AFP) – © 2023 AFP