Twitter will bring back its system for verifying user identities next year, and is asking people to provide feedback on what the requirements should be for the coveted blue check mark.
The San Francisco-based company will start letting people request verification in early 2021. It published a draft document on Tuesday outlining a preliminary set of requirements. Accounts must be active, notable and “associated with a prominently recognized individual or brand.”
Twitter also highlighted six types of account that will qualify, but suggested others may come later:
▶️ Government
▶️ Companies, brands and non-profits
▶️ News
▶️ Entertainment
▶️ Sports
▶️Activists, organizers and other influential individuals
Twitter said users can give the company feedback on the criteria for two weeks, then it plans to publish a final policy Dec. 17.
Twitter has used a blue check mark to verify the identity of well-known and popular Twitter users for years -- a way to distinguish real users and corporate accounts from potential impersonators. But the verification program has been confusing, and the company has offered little clarity around the criteria. It previously allowed users to request verification, but halted the program in 2017, with Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey calling the process “broken.”
“We haven’t been clear about who can become verified and when, why an account might be unverified, or what it means to be verified,” the company wrote in a blog post on Tuesday.
As part of the revamped verification process, Twitter said it may remove verification if a user’s account is dormant, or if it repeatedly breaks the company’s rules. Twitter recently confirmed that it will soon stop the special treatment U.S. President Donald Trump receives for his personal Twitter account. While he often violates Twitter’s rules, his tweets are considered newsworthy and thus he does not receive the same punishment other users might. This will end when he leaves office in January.
The verification process on Twitter has posed problems for the company in the past. Twitter, unlike Facebook Inc., does not require people to use their real identity on the service, so verification badges are an important tool for ensuring people can quickly tell if they are hearing from a real politician or corporate leader, for example.
But verification was also exclusive, and just a small group of Twitter’s overall user base is verified. Over time the blue check mark came to represent a kind of implicit endorsement from the company. Twitter was criticized shortly before shutting the program down in 2017 for verifying known white supremacists, which users took as a validation of those users’ beliefs.
“Verification was meant to authenticate identity & voice but it is interpreted as an endorsement or an indicator of importance. We recognize that we have created this confusion and need to resolve it,” Twitter said at the time.
The company is considering other types of changes that might help users quickly identify an account’s owner. Dorsey, for example, suggested that the company should start labeling bots on the service, an idea he’s floated publicly for years.
#Twitter #News
The San Francisco-based company will start letting people request verification in early 2021. It published a draft document on Tuesday outlining a preliminary set of requirements. Accounts must be active, notable and “associated with a prominently recognized individual or brand.”
Twitter also highlighted six types of account that will qualify, but suggested others may come later:
▶️ Government
▶️ Companies, brands and non-profits
▶️ News
▶️ Entertainment
▶️ Sports
▶️Activists, organizers and other influential individuals
Twitter said users can give the company feedback on the criteria for two weeks, then it plans to publish a final policy Dec. 17.
Twitter has used a blue check mark to verify the identity of well-known and popular Twitter users for years -- a way to distinguish real users and corporate accounts from potential impersonators. But the verification program has been confusing, and the company has offered little clarity around the criteria. It previously allowed users to request verification, but halted the program in 2017, with Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey calling the process “broken.”
“We haven’t been clear about who can become verified and when, why an account might be unverified, or what it means to be verified,” the company wrote in a blog post on Tuesday.
As part of the revamped verification process, Twitter said it may remove verification if a user’s account is dormant, or if it repeatedly breaks the company’s rules. Twitter recently confirmed that it will soon stop the special treatment U.S. President Donald Trump receives for his personal Twitter account. While he often violates Twitter’s rules, his tweets are considered newsworthy and thus he does not receive the same punishment other users might. This will end when he leaves office in January.
The verification process on Twitter has posed problems for the company in the past. Twitter, unlike Facebook Inc., does not require people to use their real identity on the service, so verification badges are an important tool for ensuring people can quickly tell if they are hearing from a real politician or corporate leader, for example.
But verification was also exclusive, and just a small group of Twitter’s overall user base is verified. Over time the blue check mark came to represent a kind of implicit endorsement from the company. Twitter was criticized shortly before shutting the program down in 2017 for verifying known white supremacists, which users took as a validation of those users’ beliefs.
“Verification was meant to authenticate identity & voice but it is interpreted as an endorsement or an indicator of importance. We recognize that we have created this confusion and need to resolve it,” Twitter said at the time.
The company is considering other types of changes that might help users quickly identify an account’s owner. Dorsey, for example, suggested that the company should start labeling bots on the service, an idea he’s floated publicly for years.
#Twitter #News
Is a picture worth a thousand words?
Maybe. Then this picture is a thousand words on what you should NOT do on YouTube.
What's your view? Comments here also show on the related blog post.
#Strategy #Fail #YouTube
Maybe. Then this picture is a thousand words on what you should NOT do on YouTube.
What's your view? Comments here also show on the related blog post.
#Strategy #Fail #YouTube
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
How do YOU think about brands?
I'm working on a future blog post, how to think about brand. I thought it would be interesting to have a discussion and get your viewpoint.
How do you think about a brand?
#Discuss
I'm working on a future blog post, how to think about brand. I thought it would be interesting to have a discussion and get your viewpoint.
How do you think about a brand?
#Discuss
My favourite Twitter fail and reply
This is from a while back when new people, who clearly had no clue how to use Twitter, were routinely put in charge of the FordUK account.
Great image response. 😂
__________________________________
If you don't get the reply this should provide any missing context.
#Twitter #Fail
This is from a while back when new people, who clearly had no clue how to use Twitter, were routinely put in charge of the FordUK account.
Great image response. 😂
__________________________________
If you don't get the reply this should provide any missing context.
#Twitter #Fail
Telegram has some of the clearest most granular permissions which can be set for admins and users of your channels and groups.
Do you have a preferred setup?
#Discussion #Telegram #Feature
Do you have a preferred setup?
#Discussion #Telegram #Feature
Do you embed social content?
I've shared some views and compared embeds from Instagram, Twitter and Telegram.
Share your thoughts in the comments 👍
#Instagram #Twitter #Telegram
I've shared some views and compared embeds from Instagram, Twitter and Telegram.
Share your thoughts in the comments 👍
#Instagram #Twitter #Telegram
Social Media Account Security
This has been a topic I have returned to often in the past few years and people still don't get it. So I wrote this up on my blog.
Please read the article, then feel free to add your comments.
Thanks 🙏
#Discuss
This has been a topic I have returned to often in the past few years and people still don't get it. So I wrote this up on my blog.
Please read the article, then feel free to add your comments.
Thanks 🙏
#Discuss
Starting today WhatsApp is super excited to have ... carts! 🤑
Carts are aimed at businesses that typically sell multiple items at once.
👍 ... or ... 👎
Are you a WhatsApp user? Are you excited about carts?
More details on the Facebook blog here.
#WhatsApp #Feature
Carts are aimed at businesses that typically sell multiple items at once.
👍 ... or ... 👎
Are you a WhatsApp user? Are you excited about carts?
More details on the Facebook blog here.
#WhatsApp #Feature
Act as XXXXXXXX on ... YouTube.
That's a pretty short list!
I remember when Google Photos and Google+ where included 🤓
Obviously G+ has been dead for a while now, but the omission of Google Photos is quite recent and probably related to the announcement of the end of free high quality storage.
Anyone else notice the removal of Google Photos?
#Google
That's a pretty short list!
I remember when Google Photos and Google+ where included 🤓
Obviously G+ has been dead for a while now, but the omission of Google Photos is quite recent and probably related to the announcement of the end of free high quality storage.
Anyone else notice the removal of Google Photos?
This YouTube embed hack no longer works 😐
Not sure who else might have been using this, but YouTube have now closed the loophole.
Essentially when embedding third-party videos I would craft the embed URL adding a related playlist which would play after the third party video finished.
Google now seems to check whether the video is in the playlist and where not prioritises the playlist, no longer showing the embed.
Ah well ...
#YouTube
Not sure who else might have been using this, but YouTube have now closed the loophole.
Essentially when embedding third-party videos I would craft the embed URL adding a related playlist which would play after the third party video finished.
Google now seems to check whether the video is in the playlist and where not prioritises the playlist, no longer showing the embed.
Ah well ...
#YouTube
Signal introduces group calls
Details here on the Signal blog.
Are you a Signal user.
Have you tried it out?
#Signal #Feature
Details here on the Signal blog.
Are you a Signal user.
Have you tried it out?
#Signal #Feature
Twitter stops prompting users to quote tweet first.
More details in this Twitter thread.
#Twitter #News
More details in this Twitter thread.
#Twitter #News
A, B, & C - Same Thing - Different Views
I've written a blog post for the @TeamFordzilla community to try to help explain how I've set up their community space, but they are struggling to understand.
Any suggestions about how to speed up understanding, especially for new Telegram users?
#Telegram #Discussion
I've written a blog post for the @TeamFordzilla community to try to help explain how I've set up their community space, but they are struggling to understand.
Any suggestions about how to speed up understanding, especially for new Telegram users?
#Telegram #Discussion
What can Telegram be used for?
Lots of things!
The limiting factor is your imagination.
Example:
A "Practice Room" for @SingAtSix
Clunky? Neat? ... What are your thoughts?
#Telegram #Discussion
Lots of things!
The limiting factor is your imagination.
Example:
A "Practice Room" for @SingAtSix
Clunky? Neat? ... What are your thoughts?
#Telegram #Discussion