Twitter resumes verification processes
The social network will start this process again after the controversy generated in 2017 regarding the Jason Kessler brand
The new Twitter account verification policy came into effect this Friday, January 22, the date on which the company once again takes into account a series of requirements to qualify for a blue badge, which it will remove from those accounts that are inactive or incomplete under the new conditions.
Account verification gives a profile a blue mark, which establishes that that account is in the public interest and that the person managing it is who they say they are. However, the system used by the company generated controversy when in 2017 it was discovered that it had granted the mark to Jason Kessler, organizer of the Supremacist march in Charlottesville, in the United States, which ended in the death of one person.
Following the new requirements, Twitter no longer requires having a profile description or a header image, because users understood these elements as “too restrictive”, as detailed in a post on its official blog.
To be eligible for this recognition, the accounts must be “complete”, something that is defined based on three criteria: that they have an email, a verified phone number, a profile image and show a name.
The application of the new policy began this Friday, from which time the platform will remove the blue badge from those accounts that, under the new conditions, are inactive or incomplete.
Also, the company included in its policies new categories for the types of accounts that are candidates for verification. Before it collected those that were governmental, of entertainment; from companies, brands and non-profit organizations; of news; sports; and from activists, organizations and other influential individuals, but now it also adds from journalists, eSports and creators of digital content.
K. Tovar
Source: Whatsnew