Here's what you get with the Ksh.10K annual Twitter Blue subscription
Twitter Blue, Elon Musk’s subscription
option for Twitter since he acquired the social media platform in October last
year, has been rolled out for Android users.
Twitter launched the Ksh.10,000-a-year
($84) Blue subscription for web users on Monday as an addition to the Ksh.993 ($8)
monthly option.
For mobile, Android users got a Ksh.1,365
($11) monthly plan on Thursday, similar to what iOS users are
required to pay.
So far, Twitter
Blue is available in the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan.
But what exactly does one get for
forking out such amounts of money to access the originally-free platform?
The first premium feature Twitter is
offering under the Blue plan is the
blue verification mark, although it is unclear how Twitter will authenticate users beyond account
owners who just have a phone number.
“Blue subscribers with a verified phone
number will get a blue check mark once approved,” is all the company said on
December 11 while announcing the feature.
Since
then, it has introduced three check-marks; gold checks for companies, grey for government entities, and
blue checks for individuals, whether or not they are celebrities.
Twitter Blue users fall in this category.
Subscribers
also get the ability to upload longer videos. Currently, Twitter caps the video
length for regular users at 2 minutes and 20 seconds, and even if the video is
less than that, it needs to be less than 512 MB.
With
Twitter Blue, subscribers will get the ability to upload videos of up to 10
minutes.
Additionally,
Twitter says it is giving priority ranking in conversation replies, mentions
and search results for Blue users.
Other features are an Edit Tweet option, seeing half the number of ads, a
thread reader, ability to download higher quality videos, as well as custom
icons and themes.
“Subscribers will be able to change their
handle, display name or profile photo, but if they do they’ll temporarily lose
the blue check-mark until their account is reviewed again,” the company
says.
Twitter Blue is part of Musk’s effort to grow its
subscription business of the company he acquired for $44 billion, including a
substantial amount of debt financing.
He has
touted new the verification system, for instance, as a way of levelling the playing field and promoting free
speech.
However,
the initial launch of the new system was marred with controversy and
back-and-forth amid concerns of impersonation.
It is
still not clear how much the company has made since the launch of the subscription
service and data about its uptake is not yet available.
After taking over the tech
giant, Musk laid off around half of the company's 7,500 staff and ended
many of the employee perks such as free meals.
In November, he said
the company had seen a slump in revenues after several of its advertisers
pulled out.
“Twitter has had a massive drop in revenue, due to activist groups pressuring advertisers, even though nothing has changed with content moderation and we did everything we could to appease the activists,” Musk tweeted.
Twitter has had a massive drop in revenue, due to activist groups pressuring advertisers, even though nothing has changed with content moderation and we did everything we could to appease the activists.
Extremely messed up! They’re trying to destroy free speech in America.
There have also been reports that the company has
allegedly failed to pay rent at offices around the globe, including the San
Francisco headquarters, where their landlord is suing for non-payment and from where
the company has been putting office items up for auction.
According
to a Financial Times report published
earlier this week, Twitter will be due for interest payment on the loans worth
nearly $13 billion Musk took to purchase the company by the end of January.
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