Twitter will relaunch its Twitter Blue subscription service on Monday, it said Saturday, providing some details about how the service will work after a disastrous debut last month.
Twitter Blue got off to a rough start and had to be suspended last month after trolls used the service to impersonate celebrities and companies, including Eli Lilly, Nintendo, and Lockheed Martin. In the case of Eli Lilly, pranksters impersonating the drugmaker declared, We are excited to announce insulin is free now, forcing the company into an awkward apology for something it didnt do.
Elon Musk has pushed for more subscription revenue at Twitter since taking it over in late October, saying the company cannot survive on advertising alone.
Twitter Blue returnswith changes
Were relaunching @TwitterBlue on Monday subscribe on web for $8/month or on iOS for $11/month to get access to subscriber-only features, including the blue checkmark, the company tweeted on Saturday.
Subscribers, it added, will be able to change their handle, display name or profile photo, but if they do theyll temporarily lose the blue checkmark until their account is reviewed again.
The company also said Twitter Blue subscribers will be able to edit tweets, have 1080p video uploads, and will get the blue checkmark after your account has been reviewed.
It added, Well begin replacing that official label with a gold checkmark for businesses, and later in the week a grey checkmark for government and multilateral accounts.
Last month, impersonators were able to easily pull off their stunts because under the first Twitter Blue, anyone could pay $8 a month for a blue checkmark and be off and running with their antics. Before Musk, that mark indicated that a notable companys or individuals identity had been verified. Twitter previously offered the verification for free.
The changes announced Saturday would appear to make it more difficult to pull off impersonations, but time will tell.
Twitter noted on Saturday that users could subscribe to Twitter Blue on the web for $8 per month or on iOS for $11 per month. Apple charges a 30 percent commission on many in-app purchases. Musk and many others, including notably Epic Games, have criticized this arrangement.
Either way, Musk wants more subscription revenue.
Ad sales account for 90% of Twitters overall revenue. Advertisers steered clear of Twitter after Musks $44 billion takeover. General Motors, United Airlines, General Mills, and others paused advertising on the platform, worried about brand safety as Musk, a self-described free-speech absolutist, brought dramatic changes to Twitter.
Last weekend, Musk said that advertisers were returning to Twitter after the initial exodus. Speaking during a Twitter Spaces broadcast, he said that Apple had fully resumed advertising on Twitter. He also thanked other advertisers for returning, though it wasnt clear which ones he was referring to.
Last month Interpublic Group (IPG), one of the worlds largest advertising companies, recommended its clients pause spending on Twitter last month due to moderation concerns.
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