Skip to main content

Twitter begins rollout of new gray check marks only to abruptly remove them

In the middle of writing an article about Twitter’s initial rollout of a new gray check mark verification badge, we noticed something odd: Twitter accounts that had the new gray check marks only minutes earlier were suddenly without them again. So what happened?

Elon Musk apparently happened. Mere hours after his newly purchased social media platform began its rollout of a new gray check mark in an effort to help clarify which high-profile accounts were actually verified, the new gray check marks began disappearing from various accounts, evidently at Musk’s behest. Just take a look at this tweet conversation between web video producer Marques Brownlee and Musk:

I just killed it

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 9, 2022

In the above tweets, Brownlee quote tweets a previous tweet of his own in which he described the new gray check mark and the old blue check mark and included a screenshot of his own account when it still had the new gray check mark. Brownlee’s quote tweet of that tweet then issued an update, saying that his account’s new gray check mark is gone. Musk then replies to Brownlee’s quote tweet, seemingly confirming what happened to the gray check marks that had disappeared so soon after being rolled out: “I just killed it.”

Then, in a subsequent reply Musk appears to state his reasoning for doing so:

Blue check will be the great leveler

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 9, 2022

Then Musk issued another confirmation. This time, as a standalone tweet, separate from the above conversation. This tweet seems to indicate that Musk will be taking more of a “tweet and delete” approach to adding features to the platform — rolling them out and then possibly quickly taking them away, with little context as to why.

Please note that Twitter will do lots of dumb things in coming months.

We will keep what works & change what doesn’t.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 9, 2022

The now-removed gray check mark could have helped (at least a little) to quell recent concerns about impersonation and to clarify Twitter’s stance on verification, the latter of which has become a bit muddled since the platform’s recent move to charge users $8 a month for blue check badge. After all, the blue check was originally intended to help users figure out if the accounts of public figures were indeed the official accounts of those high-profile people, brands, and organizations. Understandably, charging $8 for that blue check could confuse things if users can just buy a blue check without being verified by the platform, which may be the case according to Vox.

The gray check mark wasn’t an ideal fix for this issue, but in the absence of just giving Twitter Blue subscribers a different sort of badge or just walking back the whole notion of charging for a blue check, the gray check mark would still have been useful, particularly for accounts belonging to news organizations and governments.

Anita George
Anita has been a technology reporter since 2013 and currently writes for the Computing section at Digital Trends. She began…
Twitter to revamp verified accounts with a new label
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Twitter’s been in a bit of a state since Elon Musk closed a $44 billion deal to buy it last month.

Confusion over how the platform will proceed and workforce anger over mass layoffs has left some in the Twitter community looking for an alternative microblogging app that might offer a bit of tranquility away from all the hubbub.

Read more
Some blue check Twitter users were unable to edit their names
Twitter app on the OnePlus 10T.

Twitter's recent blue check verification drama took an even sillier turn yesterday. Amid all the recent commotion regarding Twitter Blue subscriptions, paying for blue checks, and impersonation versus parody, some Twitter users temporarily lost their ability to edit their screen names.

On Monday evening, some verified Twitter users began reporting that they couldn't change their screen names. It's unclear to us at this time if the issue these users were experiencing was a bug or a new feature of a platform that was recently purchased by Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

Read more
Mastodon surpasses 1 million monthly active users as Twitter backlash worsens
Series of four mobile screenshots showing Mastodon's sign-up process.

Mastodon, an alternative to Twitter that's been getting a lot of attention lately, just surpassed 1 million monthly active users this week, all while Twitter struggles to deal with the  backlash caused by recently announced changes to its platform.

On Monday, Eugen Rochko, founder and CEO of Mastodon, announced via a Mastodon post that the social media platform now has "1,028,362 monthly active users across the network today." This news comes after a particularly tumultuous week (and weekend) for Twitter after Elon Musk took over the popular microblogging platform just last month.

Read more