Twitter knows its verification process is порнография-2019a bit of a mess, and the company wants your help fixing it.
Twitter officially "paused all general verifications" in November of 2017 after verifying a white supremacist. In a Tuesday blog post, the social media platform announced plans to start verifying accounts again early next year. But before that can happen, Twitter wants users to weigh in on how verifications should look in the future. Oh, and Twitter is going to be taking back an untold number of the coveted blue badges while it's at it.
While theoretically paused, over the past three years the company continued to verify thousands of accounts. This, understandably, led to some confusion about the process. Tuesday's announcement means that Twitter realizes it needs to delineate a clear policy for what types of accounts get verified, and why some accounts do not.
Of particular note, Twitter also realizes that some presently verified accounts maybe shouldn't be.
"We recognize that there are many verified accounts on Twitter who should not be," explains the unsigned blog post. "We plan to start by automatically removing badges from accounts that are inactive or have incomplete profiles to help streamline our work and to expand this to include additional types of accounts over the course of 2021."
So, while at least initially, the company plans to pull badges from inactive accounts or accounts with incomplete profiles, next year it may de-verify account for other, as of yet unspecified, reasons. Fun!
Another huge change is that Twitter intends to launch a "public application process" for verification early next year, along with "new account types and labels." Twitter already labels some accounts (like political candidates), but it's currently unclear if future labels will look similar.
Possibly because it knows the blue badge (or lack of one) engenders a rather emotional response from its users, Twitter wants those very same users to have a say in the badge's future. The company launched a survey, and is soliciting public feedback under the hashtag #VerificationFeedback, with the intention of allowing people to help shape Twitter's future account verification policy.
So speak now, or forever hold your unverified peace.
Topics Social Media X/Twitter
Monstrous Hurricane Iota leaves scenes of disaster in Central AmericaJD boosts investments for employees and shoppers amid intense eNuggets vs. Thunder 2025 livestream: Watch NBA playoffs for freeWhy hurricanes are retaining power when they hit landStellantis reportedly considers manufacturing Leapmotor EVs in Italy · TechNodeWorking on OurselvesNYT Strands hints, answers for May 11Vivo and Nokia sign 5G patent license agreement, ending infringement dispute · TechNodeNvidia hires exHuawei plans Q2 launch for new triple Netflix's 'Entergalactic' is a technical triumph of animation Hurricane Ian's victims need your help. Here's where you can send assistance. 'Hocus Pocus 2' ties to deleted scene from the first film How to remove yourself from group texts on iOS and Android European iPhones will charge via USB How to delete spam YouTube comments 'Hocus Pocus 2' review: Cheeky, nostalgic, and practically magic 'Hocus Pocus 2' fails to deliver caramel apple catharsis How the Targaryens and the Kardashians are entirely the same Google Pixel 7 will probably be easier to get
0.1887s , 10014.078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【порнография-2019】Enter to watch online.Twitter to 'automatically' de,