Twitter withdraws verification of its main account from The New York Times

The American newspaper had refused to pay for the new verification service offered by Elon Musk’s company 

 

The social platform Twitter has removed its verification mark from the main account of The New York Times (NYT) newspaper, two days after the New York newspaper announced that it refused to pay for the new verification service offered by Elon Musk’s company. , dubbed Twitter Blue.

 

However, the other sections of the newspaper do maintain the distinction of Twitter, which had announced that this Saturday the reorganization of the verification service would come into effect, which requires users to pay $8 to maintain the brand and $1,000 to the companies.

 

The vast majority of accounts distinguished with the blue mark continue to maintain the distinction, although when selecting the certification it is indicated that said account “is verified because it is subscribed to Twitter Blue or is a legacy verified account”.

 

In other words, it does not clarify whether the verification mark appears on the user’s profile because he has paid or because he already had it prior to the entry into force of the new service. On Friday, The New York Times jokingly anticipated an “apocalypse” on Twitter due to changes in this system, and insisted that it was not willing to pay for its institutional accounts.

 

The Times, which with 55 million followers is among the 25 most followed accounts on that social network, also informed its journalists that it will not reimburse them for the subscription to Twitter Blue, which provides the famous blue mark next to the username, “except in unusual cases in which it was necessary to work”, he adds.

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