X attempts to fight impersonation with government ID verification

X has launched government ID verification for paid X Premium subscribers, after clues emerged in August that the feature was coming, TechCrunch has reported. The service, which appears to be optional, has launched in "numerous countries" including the US, but is not available for now in the European Union (EU), the European Economic Area (EEA), and the United Kingdom. 

In a new help center page, X said the verification is for "safety and security purposes" and to "prevent impersonation." It may also be used to screen age appropriate content in the future. Meanwhile, users will receive benefits like prioritized support, along with a visible label that shows your identity has been verified (though only if someone clicks on the blue checkmark). Down the road, X plans to expedite Premium reviews for users who verify with ID. 

The social network partnered with Au10tix, an Israeli-based company specializing in identity verification. X requires you to check a consent form allowing "X and Au10tix [to use] images of my ID and my selfie, including extracted biometric data, to confirm my identity and for X's related safety and security purposes, including preventing impersonation." Au10tix may store such data for up to 30 days. 

After Elon Musk purchased X (then Twitter), he announced that the verification program would be revamped and badges only given to paid users. The new program experienced problems from the get-go, though, thanks to issues like rampant impersonation and checkmarks being assign to scammers and bots. The program was later modified to give verification marks to large organizations and users with millions of followers. 

X doesn't conduct ID checks itself, apart from safeguards for verified organizations. Meanwhile, Au10tix advertises "8-second verification without even partial human involvement" and "first-of-a-kind tech detecting synthetic fraud patterns globally." The company says it has previously worked with companies like Google, PayPal and Uber.

Last month X changed its policy adding the ability to capture certain user information, but it has a checkered history in terms of privacy. The FTC recently said that Elon Musk "may have jeopardized data privacy and security" at X and has reportedly been investigating the company and Musk since March.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/x-attempts-to-fight-impersonation-with-government-id-verification-104016771.html?src=rss https://www.engadget.com/x-attempts-to-fight-impersonation-with-government-id-verification-104016771.html?src=rss
Creato 1y | 15 set 2023, 12:20:08


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

Netflix finally lets iOS users download an entire season with one tap

You'll finally be able to download all the episodes in an entire season on Netflix with just one tap if you're on iOS. The streaming service introduced the capability on Android years ago, but it r

30 gen 2025, 15:40:20 | Engadget
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra review: Too much AI, not enough Ultra

It feels like every major tech company is totally convinced that AI is the future. And for all I know, they may be right. But while we’re waiting for someone to develop our seemingly inevitable

30 gen 2025, 15:40:18 | Engadget
Grubhub is bringing new delivery robots to college campuses

GrubHub is partnering with Avride, an autonomous robot delivery company, to expand its offerings on college campuses. The pair have lau

30 gen 2025, 15:40:17 | Engadget
Netflix is the exclusive home of WWE's 2K fighting game on mobile

If there are two things Netflix has been pushing over the last couple years its live sports and games. A large part of this initiative has come through its partnership with WWE to stream live shows

30 gen 2025, 15:40:16 | Engadget
Lime announces $25 million action plan to help fix London's e-bike chaos

In November, Transport for London (TfL) announced n

30 gen 2025, 15:40:15 | Engadget
Microsoft's Surface Pro and Laptop for Business are getting Intel's new AI PC chips

What a difference a year makes. When Microsoft announced the

30 gen 2025, 15:40:14 | Engadget