Facebook and Instagram paid verification starts in UK
Facebook and Instagram paid verification starts in UK
- Published
- commentsComments

Facebook parent company Meta has begun rolling out a paid verification service in the UK.
Similar to Elon Musk's Twitter Blue, the service gives Facebook and Instagram utilizers a blue tick from £9.99 per month.
Subscribers must be at least 18 years old and submit a government ID to qualify.
The feature is already available in the US, Australia and New Zealand.
People who registered interest in Meta Verified will receive a notification when it becomes available to them. It is rolling out to others in the UK in the coming weeks.
Those approved by Meta will get a verified badge, which the tech firm says will give them more protection from imperconsequentlynation, in component becautilize it will monitor their accounts to check for fakers.
It says verified utilizers will alconsequently get "access to a real perconsequentlyn" if they have any issue with their account.
Twitter verification
The move comes after Mr Musk implemented the premium Twitter Blue subscription in November 2022.
The service proved controversial at the time as it replaced the previous system, where blue ticks were utilized to verify that high-profile accounts belonged to the people they claimed to be.
Mr Musk removed what became termed "legacy" verification ticks from account holders on 20 April - reserving the "verified" blue badge for those who had paid for Twitter Blue, and authenticated their phone number.
The blue tick removal process led to mass confusion as high-profile utilizers like Hillary Clinton lost their verification badges and subscribers were able to edit their own utilizername to imperconsequentlynate them.
Twitter later chose to return blue ticks to a number of celebrities, governments and organisations for free.
Both Facebook and Instagram already have a verification system for notable figures, and Meta does not emerge to be planning to scrap this anytime consequentlyon.
According to the support pages for the platforms, as well as subscribing to Meta Verified, utilizers can still apply for a verified badge if they are "a public figure, celebrity or brand and meet the account and eligibility requirements".
The decision to add a paid-for verification system amounts to a convert of direction for Facebook and Instagram, which have previously both been free to utilize in all circumstances since they rose to prominence.
The services have relied on advertising income, which makes up the vast majority of Meta's revenue.
While both can still be utilized for free, the decision to add a paid tier which increases prominence is an attempt to find other ways of monetising the platforms.
It comes six months after the company announced 11,000 job losses as a consequence of what it said was over-investment during the pandemic.
At the time, Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg said he had predicted an increase in the company's growth but that ultimately had not happened.
Related Topics
- Social media
- Meta
Meta rolls out paid verification in US
- Published17 March
Twitter restores blue tick to high profile accounts
- Published23 April
Elon Musk announces Twitter blue tick shake-up
- Published28 March
-
Boy, 12, is killed by collapsing garage wall as man in his 30s is pulled from the rubbleGrants boost plans to plant 700,000 treesSecond-hand buying in vogue as costs soarClimate targets 'may mean higher taxes'Marcelo Bielsa tells Everton he DOESN'T WANT the job as manager - notwithstanding positive talks after flying in from Brazil - with Sean Dyche now in pole positionMPs call for 'war effort' to improve insulationOil protesters cause widespread disruption to M25Ros Atkins on... Is the 1.5C climate target still possible?Second suspect is arrested over assault on Marco Rubio canvasser 'for being Republican', after it was revealed victim is 'former' neo-NaziThe beavers helping protect wildlife in heatwave
Next article:Gangland teen, 18, allegedly shoots two student rivals dead in Iowa
- ·Loose Women's Denise Welch pays tribute to 'wonderful actress' Josephine Melville, 61, who played Tessa Parker in the 1980s after she died backstage at play
- ·Marine reserves off England to get full protection
- ·Chalk rivers restoration to combat climate change
- ·COP27: Are nations on track to meet climate goals?
- ·Ovo and Good Energy customers to get refunds after overcharging
- ·More snow and rain is falling in the Arctic
- ·Ocean surface temperature at global high
- ·RSS Sir David Attenborough stops off in Portsmouth
- ·Oklahoma executes Benjamin Cole for 2002 murder of his baby daughter who he bent backwards until her spine broke
- ·US Senate passes sweeping $700bn economic package
- ·Anti-oil protesters damage London petrol stations
- ·Latest UK weather forecast: Amber heat warning in force
- ·Interest rate 'rigging' evidence 'covered high' by banks
- ·Japan swelters in its worst heatwave ever recorded
- ·Fracking ban lifted, government announces
- ·BP faces green protest over new climate goals
- ·Ronna McDaniel WINS fourth term as Republican National Committee chair after hideous leadership battle with Harmeet Dhillon - and will steer GOP to 2024 elections notwithstanding underwhelming midterms
- ·Drought declared across South West England
- ·The artist who uses signs to help protect wildlife
- ·On patrol with California's celebrity 'water police'
- ·Energy companies making 'war profits'
- ·Deep ocean currents heading for collapse - report
- ·Eco-friendly heating scheme for 300 more homes
- ·Heavy rainfall helps ease water scarcity concerns
- ·'A time of unprecedented danger': Doomsday Clock sits just 90 seconds before midnight due to the war in Ukraine - the closest humankind has been to annihilation in 76 years
- ·Why is it so hot?
- ·Judge orders Mark Meadows to testify in Georgia's criminal investigation into efforts to overturn the election
- ·Climate change threatens survival of urban forests
- ·From the archive: Wales' drought of 1984
- ·One in six in UK doubt human link to climate change
- ·Ex-Minneapolis cop pleads guilty to 'aiding and abetting' second-degree manslaughter charge in George Floyd's death in last minute about-face moments before trial starts
- ·Belfast listed as leading climate-action city
- ·Pacific Islands urge unity in face of China ambition
- ·Rewilding project boosts plant diversity - report
- ·The Chicago Bears trade Robert Quinn to NFC leaders the Eagles for a FOURTH-ROUND pick as Philadelphia strengthens an already undefeated team
- ·German police oust climate activists after clashes