时间:2026-02-22 12:17:20 来源:网络整理编辑:焦點
On Tuesday, Twitter'snew dastardly daddy Elon Muskvowed to do awaywith the platform's verification p
On Tuesday,Twitter'snew dastardly daddy Elon Muskvowed to do awaywith the platform's verification process. He called it a "lords & peasants system"that he'd democratize by making it available to anyone for $8 a month. Those users would get a verification badge, have their tweets prioritized in replies, mentions, and searches, and see "half as many ads."
The problem is, verification wasn't meant to be a free-for-all. It was meant to weed out phonies and trolls, tell you who on Twitter was a real public-facing figure, and help you decide who to trust. Since its creation in 2009, the verification system has also become a way to manage misinformation. Now all it will tell you is that someone has $96 to shill out, alongside their dignity.
So what does life after the death of a legitimate Twitter verification system look like? And who will be affected most by Musk's monetization madness?
The coveted blue checkmark that is now shorthand for clout and status had somewhat innocent origins. In 2009, celebrities and organizations began complainingabout impersonator accounts pretending to be them. At best, this created a PR headache for high-profile people worried about their reputations. At worst, it allowed misinformation to spread.
SEE ALSO:Elon Musk says Twitter Blue will cost $8, and include blue tick verificationWhich celebrities were complaining? I thought you'd never ask. None other than Kanye West. Did you know he has always been a loose cannon? Way before his anti-semitic remarksand MAGA allegiance, West, in his all-caps phase, eloquently aired his grievance. "I DON'T HAVE A FUCKING TWITTER!" he blogged, referring to the Twitter account @kanyewest, which belonged to someone else at the time. (West now uses that username but back then, he said he didn't have time for Twitter.)
But other high-profile figures weren't happy either. Now-retired Major League Baseball manager Tony La Russa sued Twitter for violation of the platform's Terms of Service. That's when Twitter co-founder Biz Stone announced the beta version of Twitter verification for "public officials, public agencies, famous artists, athletes, and other well known individuals at risk of impersonation," he said in the announcement. And thus the blue checkmark was born.
Ever since its conception, the verified Twitter account has been fraught with controversy. In 2016, Twitter opened up the verification processfor anyone to apply. This unlocked a new level of Twitter discord.
For one, the blue checkmark increasingly became an ego-affirming status symbol that separated the haves from the have-nots. The platform, which was known for being an equalizer where celebrities and normies could digitally rub elbows, was criticized for being classist and promoting the idea that verified accounts were more important than unverified accounts.
But it also intensified political polarization on the platform. Conservatives accused Twitter of left-leaning bias and prioritizing verified liberal accounts while rejecting or removing verification of conservative accounts. Right-ring figure Milos Yiannopoulos, who was eventually banned from the platform, lost his checkmarkfor violating Twitter rules (the rules in question were never specified). As the Outline reportedin 2017, "verifieds" or "'blue checks" had become shorthand for the liberal elites among conservatives.
In 2017, Twitter put its verification process on pause, only to bring it backin 2020 — this time with a clarified verification policy that incorporated public feedback.
Tweet may have been deleted
But the damage was done. This brings us to the present day where Musk wants to eliminate "Twitter's current lords & peasants system" by… charging people to verify their account. History buffs, if paying for clout sounds familiar, you might be thinking of the sale of indulgences, which didn't end well for the Catholic church.
Verification was introduced to decrease the "risk of impersonation" for "well known individuals," and it works as described. Public figures, especially political ones, are not only authenticated by the process, but can be better held accountable by their blue check. Does the system work perfectly? No. Sometimes verified accounts spread misinformation or provide a platform to hateful ideology. But in general, verification provides structure to an otherwise spineless cesspool.
SEE ALSO:Musk says advertisers are fleeing Twitter, so he's going to charge users to DM celebsThe blue check is crucial to journalists who need to cut through the noise to find sources and share news. To find and speak with sources, I usually search Twitter, then direct message or reply to someone directly to chat. And for this, the little blue icon works wonders: it helps to surface my messages and legitimize my request. For years, I struggled with this approach using an unverified account, and I would not want to go back. But if verification is open to all, then it will become less helpful to me and hundreds of thousands of others.
Any free service that becomes a paid privilege is going to exclude some of its original users. Many simply won't want to pay. Others, crucially, can't pay. And that makes Musk's plan for verification a larger blow to people of color than any other user segment. At $8 a month, verification will exclude writers and other public figures of color who historically make less money than their white counterparts.
Candice Frederick, a senior culture reporter at The Huffington Post, also notes that verification has been an important tool for journalists of color to have their work seen and appreciated in an industry that often affords more opportunities to writers with status from larger publications. You could argue that marginalized writers who may not have been verified under the original system can now find that legitimacy by purchasing verification, but you would be wrong. Buyinglegitimacy is exactly what keeps people of color out of positions of power to begin with.
Tweet may have been deleted
Given the increase in hate speech on Twitter — which rose more than 300 percent within the first 24 hours of Musk's tenure — paid verification will also make Twitter less safe for people of color. When anyone can pay to have their opinions prioritized and promoted, hate speech is given both a voice and an audience it didn't have before.
Probably not, and here's why: Paying for verification makes a blue check worth nothing at all. It's simple economics; value lies in scarcity. If blue checks become ubiquitous, they lose their power, and you lose your authority.
Don't let Musk fool you: You won't be paying for recognition or clout. You'll be shelling out to help Musk slowly recoup on his $44 billion boo-boo, and you'll be making the platform even more hellish than it already is.
TopicsTwitter
More than half of women in advertising have faced sexual harassment, report says2026-02-22 11:48
解凍!凱恩賽季首次連場破門 助熱刺收獲6輪不敗2026-02-22 11:46
26日賠率:曼城輕取藍狐領跑 倫敦三強不甘落後 ?2026-02-22 11:19
足壇5天第3起心髒病猝死 隊友嚎啕大哭崩潰到蹬腿2026-02-22 11:01
17 questions you can answer if you're a good communicator2026-02-22 11:00
曼城願賣托雷斯因誌在哈蘭德 繼續清洗籌8000萬鎊2026-02-22 10:36
亞冠聯賽官方祝賀上海海港成立16周年:期待留下更多紅色影跡2026-02-22 10:35
回歸河床 ?金特羅:對外界傳言不知情 專注於深圳隊的比賽2026-02-22 10:27
This company is hiring someone just to drink all day2026-02-22 10:16
突發!河北隊主力全員缺席訓練 俱樂部人士:明天怎麽踢不知道2026-02-22 10:08
Teacher absolutely nails it with new homework policy2026-02-22 12:06
中甲四川隊官宣李毅不再擔任主帥 啟動新帥遴選工作2026-02-22 12:06
河南嵩山龍門主帥:球隊狀態不錯 相信比賽會越打越好2026-02-22 12:03
賽後發布會僅耗時不到1分鍾 李金羽:恭喜滄州保級成功2026-02-22 11:58
Wikipedia co2026-02-22 11:58
法國名宿 :最好的梅西即將到來 6個月後我們走著瞧2026-02-22 11:01
山東泰山vs河北隊首發 :費萊尼孫準浩郭田雨出戰2026-02-22 10:53
10大轉會預測:曼聯熱刺簽強援 紐卡有意三獅國腳2026-02-22 10:33
Did our grandparents have the best beauty advice?2026-02-22 10:18
烏姆蒂蒂拒2000萬歐赴紐卡 巴薩或一怒之下恐解約2026-02-22 09:52