Facebook and Instagram paid verification will allow anyone to get a blue check

The social media blue badge verification system is further losing its original meaning on additional platforms. On Sunday, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook and Instagram would begin selling paid verification for a monthly fee. The new paid verification program comes in the wake of Twitter Blue’s subscription service last year, which allows subscribers to get a blue verified badge next to their name.

Zuckerberg’s solution is officially called Meta Verified, and it will allow Facebook and Instagram users to pay a monthly fee to get a blue checkmark next to their name. Meta Verified will cost $11.99 per month if purchased on the web or $14.99 per month if purchased via the company’s iOS apps. In addition to the blue badge, Zuckerberg says Meta Verified subscribers will “get extra impersonation protection against accounts claiming to be you, and get direct access to customer support.”

Twitter Blue’s launch in November 2022 was a disaster, with subscribers abusing the paid verification service to impersonate the accounts of various companies and celebrities. Twitter subsequently paused the Blue service and relaunched it in December with tighter impersonation measures in place. In order to subscribe to Meta Verified, users will be required to verify their identity with a government ID. That, of course, raises privacy concerns. Do you want Facebook to have a copy of your government-issued identification?

Tech companies like Twitter and Facebook, which rely on advertising for the majority of their revenue, are understandably nervous about a weakening economy and a softer ad market. It’s no surprise that Meta is seeking alternative revenue models at a time like this.

However, now that anyone can soon be paid to be verified, the blue verified checkmark that once stood for notability and even a voice of authority or knowledge, now simply represents that the users of a particular social network are just paying subscribers, and thus loses its original meaning—and with it, any social media street cred the mark once held.

Meta Verified will roll out in Australia and New Zealand first, and expand to more countries later this year.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90853370/meta-paid-verification-facebook-instagram-zuckerberg-subscription?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creată 2y | 22 feb. 2023, 17:21:28


Autentifică-te pentru a adăuga comentarii

Alte posturi din acest grup

Why Apple needs Tim Cook more than ever in the age of Trump

In December 2023, I wrote an article exploring Apple CEO Tim Cook’s most likely successors, because t

26 apr. 2025, 10:10:03 | Fast company - tech
Families demand action from Meta over children’s deaths linked to platform harm

“Meta profits, kids pay the price,” was the message delivered by dozens of grieving families at the doors of Meta’s Manhattan office on Thursday.

Forty-five families traveled from

25 apr. 2025, 20:10:07 | Fast company - tech
The other Blue Sky is getting tons of traffic

There’s Blue Sky and then there’s Bluesky.

Blue Sky, a paper goods company

25 apr. 2025, 15:30:05 | Fast company - tech
Google’s profits skyrocketed 50% in Q1, beating expectations

Google’s profits soared 50% in this year’s opening quart

25 apr. 2025, 15:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Here’s how top chief product officers are getting AI right

The AI revolution is redefining business and tech leadership—and no one is standing more squarely on the front lines than product leaders.

Once seen as a behind-the-scenes role, the CPO

25 apr. 2025, 13:10:13 | Fast company - tech