Twitter won’t sell blue ticks as fake accounts buy them – Reuters

Twitter refused to sell social network verification tokens (blue checkmarks) to users, as fake accounts began to massively buy them. This will be reported by Reuters.

After the innovation with a paid subscription for $ 8 per month, even more fake accounts of Elon Musk's companies Tesla and SpaceX, the online gaming platform Roblox, as well as Nestle and the military-industrial corporation Lockheed Martin appeared on the social network. And drug maker Eli Lilly and Company apologized to followers for posting "free insulin" from a fake account with a purchased checkmark.

Musk took over Twitter on October 28, when CEO Parag Agrawal and CFO Ned Segal left the company. The entrepreneur commented on the deal with a tweet: "The bird is free." The entrepreneur himself said that he bought Twitter not for profit, but to maintain a safe platform for communicating on the Internet and avoid a split in social networks.

First, Musk told users that Twitter verification (blue checkmark) would cost $8 despite their objections, and also planned massive layoffs. In early November, Bloomberg found out that Musk plans to lay off about 3,700 employees of the company – that's half the staff. He also sent the first email to the company's employees, in which he banned remote work: now employees must work from the office for at least 40 hours a week, except for special cases. Bloomberg reported that Musk is going to first of all remove the option of "lifetime" blocking of accounts.

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