The blue check thumbs-up process is changing. Here's how social media users may be affected - Action News
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The blue check thumbs-up process is changing. Here's how social media users may be affected

The blue checkmark is a familiar internet icon that confirms the user displaying it is verified in some way. But changes to the way those badges are awarded could affect how businesses and consumers interact online, social media watchers say.

Trading money for identity, fraud protection online makes for uneven playing field, says marketer

A smartphone with Facebook's logo is seen in front of displayed Facebook's new rebrand logo Meta.
Facebook and Instagram are changing the way they verify users, as Twitter has already done, with a move to having them pay for the blue check. (Dado Ruvic/Reuters)

For regulars onsocial media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram or Twitter, the blue checkmark is a familiar iconthat confirms the userdisplaying it is verifiedin some way.

But some current and comingchanges to the way those badges are awarded could affect how businesses and consumers interact online, social media observerssay.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, recently announced it's offeringverification tousers who pay for the privilege. The trial markets for Meta Verified recently expanded fromAustralia and New Zealand and now includethe United States.

The company has not indicated when Meta Verified is coming to Canada.

In recent years on social media, verification has meant your identity has been confirmed in some way by an employer, a governmental authorityor, most often, by the social platform itself.

There's been a shift in the verification process,to a model of paying for the badge,most notably by Twitter under the ownership of billionaire Elon Musk.

On first rollout, Musk publicly dismissed concerns that impostors would impersonate verified people or organizations by fooling readers with a paid blue checkmark. However, some companies had to deal with the fallout from impersonation or fake accounts that paid for verification.

A screenshot of a tweet from @EliLillyandCo that reads:
This tweet appears to be from pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly. In fact, it's from a parody account that snagged a blue verification checkmark by paying for it. Eli Lilly's stock plunged after this went online. (Twitter )

For example, Eli Lilly's stock plunged after false promises to offer medication for free were posted in a tweet that had a verified,blue checkmark next to the account but that tweetwas not actually from the company.

Beginning early this month, Twitter users couldno longer distinguish between accounts that have beenverified because they were publicly important or notable in some way, versus accounts that paidto be labelled as genuine or verified.

A screenshot from Twitter shows
Twitter's verification page no longer distinguishes between paid and unpaid verification. (Screenshot/Twitter)

Profileson Twitter's websitedeliberately combinethe two categories.

Instagram,Facebook moving to Twitter model

With Meta also moving toward paidblue checkmarks, social media educator Darian Kovacsbelieves it's an effort to get new revenue,while giving Instagram and Facebook users better access to customer serviceand address complaintsthe company's systems are slow to respond toimpersonation and other problems.

"Meta has never had great customer service. And because of that, they are hoping people will pay to verify themselves," he said,callingthe charge for online identity verification an "Elon Musk approach" to platforms.

"[Musk] bought his way into the social media world and now he's thinking, well, other people should be able to buy their way into coolness and verification in the same way he could buy his way into coolness and verification," said Kovacs.

A man with a beard holds a speech bubble saying
Darian Kovacs, who runs the Jelly Digital Marketing firm and teaches about social media, calls paid verification 'pay for play' on social networks. (Submitted by Darian Kovacs)

Kovacsnoted there have been problems withoffering verification without a charge.

According to Kovacs, legitimate groups or persons couldn't get verification at allor experienced lengthy wait times for the type of blue checkmark they wanted.

"Both modelsaren't perfect. But the pay to play model,I think it takes away from this whole idea that the internet is for all, social media is for all, and we are all on an equal level playing field, because all of a sudden now there's another level. There's a pay to play model," said Kovacs, also a founding partner of Vancouver-based agency Jelly Digital Marketing.

According to Meta, charging for verification is part of the investment the company is making to increase support for users.

The company said validatedsubscribers to Meta Verified will receive a badge confirming they have been authenticated through government identification, and will getassistance from real people rather thanautomated or digital systems.

Meta saidFacebook and Instagram users will continue to be able to report problems, including if they are being impersonated, but subscribers will have proactive and real-time monitoring for this type of problem.

'Pay to play'a problem for Calgary Instagram user

Blake Spence of Calgary is among those who've had problems with Meta support.

Spence said hisaccounts have been regularly impersonated by an unknown fraudster.

A white man with glasses sits in a living room.
Blake Spence's Instagram account was hacked. The Calgary resident says he doesn't like the idea that he'll have to pay to protect himself from such issues. (Anis Heydari/CBC)

After running a contest on his Instagram account, which he uses to promote LBGTQ+ events atbusinesses across Calgary, Spencenoticed multiple accounts popping up and attempting to impersonate him in messages to other Instagram users.

"Alot of followers thought they won the contest and they were asked to fill out a form which included their name, their address, personal information, including their credit card numbers."

A screenshot of an instagram post that says
The 'real' Instagram account warns users someone is potentially impersonating the account. (Screenshot/Instagram)

Spence pointed out he was not, and would never, be asking for that information simply to promote events or contests.

He said hundreds of people messaged him asking for their prizes. He notified Instagram through their reporting channels, and said other friends and followers did the same.

"They didn't do anything about it. It was reported numerous times and no action was taken."

While Spence said he is likely to pay for the verification service once it is available in Canada, he's not happy about it.

"It's unfortunate. I don't think we should have to pay for it."

As revenue has dropped at companies such as Twitter and Meta, the motivation for pay to play has been clear for some observers.

Meta, in particular, has reported a drop in profits and several consecutive periods of declining revenue. A new product, such as verification, could bring in more money.

However, social network researcher Siva Vaidhyanathanisn't entirely clear on Meta's plans.

While the company's revenues have been flattening, charging for verificationmay be more about reinforcing subscribers as a higher tier of customer for future Meta products,Vaidhyanathan,director of the Center for Media and Citizenship at the University of Virginia, told CBC News

A man of south Asian descent stands in front of a bookshelf, with a microphone in front of him.
Siva Vaidhyanathan, a professor of media studies at the University of Virginia, says Meta may be able to make paid verification a success. (Anis Heydari/CBC)

"The only thing I can suspect, and I'm only guessing here, is that the people who run Meta would like to start rolling out a series of financial relationships with their prime users ... if you register your financial information with some new level of verification, then you've established yourself as essentially a financial partner or a prime member of the Facebook community."

Can users trust blue checks anymore?

Whether someone reading posts on Instagram, Facebook or Twitter can trust that someone with a blue checkmark is who they say they are will depend on the platform's management itself, according toVaidhyanathan.

"If anyone is going to make paid verificationactually work with some sort of trustworthiness, Meta is likely to be able to do it, especially through Instagram. Twitter will never be able to do it."

It does create this two-tier system,which is not really in the spirit of either Facebook or Instagram.- Siva Vaidhyanathan, University of Virginia


Vaidhyanathansaid Meta is run by "professionals," in contrast toTwitter, whichhas let go of many employees who vettedusers for verification.

But ifpaid checkmarks are offered for a low monthly price, without a team to engage in actual detailed verification, the researcher suspects both the social network and the public will beimpacted negatively.

"It's going to hurt people's reputations. People are going to be accused of saying and tweeting things they never said. It's going to be chaos," saidVaidhyanathan.

Good for influencers,and golden retrievers

Paid verification has a prime market social media businesses, politicians and influencers.

"To have that extra fraud protection makes doing business, promoting yourself, being an influencer that much easier," saidVaidhyanathan, citing the example of a golden retriever popular on Instagram.

"She doesn't sell anything. She doesn't care to make any money. Nonetheless, every day her, mentions are filled with fake accounts. And this has been a phenomenon that has grown in the last year. So it's clearly a problem that they're not addressing [for unpaid accounts]."

A screen shows a man gesturing.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, shown on a screen in this file photo, may be trying to increase revenue for his company with paid verification, according to a social media observer. (Eric Risberg/The Associated Press)

Jelly Marketing's Kovacssaid it's unclear how far Meta will push these subscriptions.

"They haven't made it a major piece of their promotion and marketing at the moment."

But one thing is clear if paid verification becomes a permanent part of the social networking ecosystem, paying to playwill be yet another substantial change.

"It doescreate this two-tier system, which is not really in the spirit of either Facebook or Instagram, but spirits are long gone in that world," saidVaidhyanathan.