Elon Musk's Twitter / X Testing Charging New Accounts $1 Annual Fee to Combat Spammers and Bots
Elon Musk's Twitter / X Testing Charging New Accounts $1 Annual Fee to Combat Spammers and Bots.
Elon Musk and His $44 Billion Takeover of Twitter: The Story So Far.
It can be tough to keep track of everything that’s happened so far, so we’ve created this timeline of events to help keep you up-to-date on the goings on at Twitter and Elon Musk’s actions. We will also be updating this article and slideshow as further events occur.
Step Two: Select Your Subscription Plan.
$1 USD Annual Fee (prices vary by country and currency). New users will be able to perform certain actions on the web version of the platform: post content, Like posts, Reply, Repost and Quote other accounts’ posts, Bookmark posts.
X Premium
Verified Organizations
New users who opt out of subscribing will only be able to take “read only” actions, such as: Read posts, Watch videos, and Follow accounts.
X said it will share the results of this test soon, but there is already scepticism online about the program’s ability to stop bots on the platform, with many users bemoaning an apparent increase in spam in recent months. Musk had signalled his intention to charge all X users last month, but this current test is limited in scope for now. X’s premium blue tick, which costs $11 a month in the U.S. for iPhones, has seemingly done little to prevent scammers and bots targeting users.
Musk has made no secret of his desire to turn X into an “everything” app that includes payment services. Last month, Musk admitted an advertiser boycott since his takeover over concern about its management of inappropriate or hateful content has caused U.S. ad revenue to decline by 60%.
Musk bought Twitter in October 2022 for $44 billion and has made a number of controversial decisions, including renaming it X, changing the verification system, and temporarily limiting the amount of tweets users can view in a day. Musk has also made sweeping layoffs, blaming them on ongoing revenue trouble. X faces lawsuits that allege the company is refusing to pay promised severance.
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Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.
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