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Adrien Fillon
Takeover

Twitter starts rolling out paid subscriptions as UN calls for human rights to be respected

Musk’s takeover of Twitter has caused controversy in recent days.

TWITTER HAS BEGUN rolling out a controversial new paid subscription system that the social network’s unpredictable new owner, billionaire Elon Musk, ordered staff to build after taking over last week.

Days into the Tesla boss’s stewardship of one of the world’s leading platforms for discourse and activism, his promises and provocations are prompting a wave of reactions – including warnings from the United Nations and an apology from Twitter’s co-founder.

His plan to dial back content moderation on the site is causing such concern that UN rights chief Volker Turk earlier urged him to make respect for human rights central to the social network.

“Twitter has a responsibility to avoid amplifying content that results in harms to people’s rights,” Turk said in his open letter.

Reports of Musk laying off the platform’s entire human rights team were “not, from my perspective, an encouraging start”, he said.

Jack Dorsey, who co-founded Twitter in 2006 and stepped down as CEO last year, tweeted to apologise for growing the site too quickly a day after roughly half the company’s 7,500 employees were fired by Musk.

“I realize many are angry with me,” he wrote.

I own the responsibility for why everyone is in this situation: I grew the company size too quickly. I apologize for that.

Losses in Ireland

There were also mass layoffs at Twitter Ireland, the social media giant’s European headquarters. Some staff woke Friday to find out that they had been locked out of their accounts.

Taoiseach Micheál Martin criticised the way in which staff were let go, saying that it was “not acceptable” and was “fairly unprecedented”.

“We are concerned, and our concern is there for the employees of Twitter,” Martin said.

“There seems to be a fairly unprecedented approach being adopted here to a global workforce and that’s manifesting itself in Ireland.

What I would say is no matter who you are or what sector you are in, one must always treat people with dignity and respect, and the employees at Twitter deserve to be treated with respect.

‘Sprint’ to launch 

The remaining employees are witnessing an upheaval in their company’s culture. As early as last Friday, Musk launched his first flagship project, the redesign of the Twitter Blue subscription option.

He has reportedly told his team the redesign must be ready for potential activation by 7 November – the day before the US midterm elections – or their jobs will be on the line.

The platform’s mobile app began offering an update that will allow users to sign up for the new version of Twitter Blue, which Musk has said will cost $8 a month, and is set to grant users a blue checkmark and perks such as less advertising in their feeds.

“Starting today, we’re adding great new features to Twitter Blue,” says the update, only on iPhones for now.

Get Twitter Blue for $7.99 a month if you sign up now.

In a tweet, the California-based company’s director of product development Esther Crawford specified that the new service had yet to go live.

“The new Blue isn’t live yet – the sprint to our launch continues but some folks may see us making updates because we are testing and pushing changes in real-time,” she posted.

The current version of the service, which costs $5, contains premium features, such as a more comfortable reading mode.

Musk wants to add a blue tick that until now has symbolised account verification, though he has not explained how the paying accounts will be verified.

Verification has been free and serves as proof of authenticity for the accounts of users such as governments, journalists, celebrities and sports figures – a system put in place to prevent misinformation, but which Musk has derided as “lords & peasants”.

The update also lists other benefits mentioned by Musk, such as the ability to post longer videos and audio messages, and fewer ads.

Ad spend suspended

The California-based company needs to diversify its income, heavily reliant on advertising.

And with concerns that Musk’s tinkering with content moderation will flood the site with hate speech and misinformation, several advertisers have reportedly suspended their spending on the platform since he bought it.

Musk has insisted that content moderation remains a priority, that the rules had not changed, and that he would create a council dedicated to this task.

But he also blamed “activist groups” for pressuring advertisers.

“We did everything we could to appease the activists. Extremely messed up! They’re trying to destroy free speech in America,” he tweeted on Friday.

The social network is losing more than $4 million a day, he said, to justify the layoffs.

He promised Saturday that Twitter would evolve, with more convenient sharing and search tools, and ways to monetise content for creators.

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