Some personalities such as basketball star LeBron James and
author Stephen King still had their checkmarks.
"The Shining" author King, who has previously called Musk a
terrible fit for Twitter, tweeted: "My Twitter account says I've
subscribed to Twitter Blue. I haven't. My Twitter account says
I've given a phone number. I haven't."
Musk tweeted back to him: "You're welcome namaste," with a hands
folded emoji.
The Verge reported that James, who has previously said he would
not pay for verification, had not paid to keep the check mark.
Musk tweeted separately: "I'm paying for a few personally." and
later tweeted "Just Shatner, LeBron and King," referring to Star
Trek actor William Shatner, who had last month complained about
being forced to pay to keep his blue checkmark.
Among those losing their badges were former U.S. president
Donald Trump, Microsoft Corp cofounder Bill Gates and reality TV
star Kim Kardashian.
Under Musk's ownership, Twitter has changed how it hands out the
coveted blue checkmarks that were earlier given to noted
individuals, journalists, executives, politicians and
establishments after verifying their identities. They served as
a mark of authenticity.
Musk said in November that Twitter will begin charging $8 per
month for the badge in an effort to launch new revenue streams
beyond advertising.
The company later offered check-marks in other colors - gold for
businesses and a gray for government and multilateral
organizations and officials.
It has also started displaying labels like "state-affiliated"
and "automated by" against accounts to show when an account is
linked to a government or is a bot.
U.S. non-profit National Public Radio (NPR) stopped posting
content on its 52 official Twitter feeds after Twitter labeled
it "state-affiliated media" and later "government-funded media".
Public broadcaster Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) also
paused its activities on Twitter and sparred with Musk over
Twitter's definition of government-funded.
(Reporting by Yuvraj Malik in Bengaluru; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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