Olufemi Adeyemi
Twitter Blue was launched in Australia and Canada in June, and is now expanding into the United States and New Zealand. The subscription service promises more features and more content for users.The subscription costs $2.99 a month for iOS, Android, and
web users. For that fee, users will be able to customize everything from the
app’s icon to the navigation bar. Users can also use Twitter Blue to preview
and edit tweets before they are sent.
Some news organizations on Twitter will also be ad-free to
Twitter Blue subscribers. According to CNBC, Twitter will pay a portion of the
money it gets from subscriptions to participating news sites based on what
users read.
Perhaps the most useful Twitter Blue feature is an undo
button, which lets you recall tweets before they send. (I can think of a few
times that would have saved me from an embarrassing typo.) Other features in
the initial launch included a reader mode for tweet threads, bookmarks folders,
the ability to theme your Twitter app and app icon, and, as of last month, a
Labs program that lets subscribers try out some new Twitter features early.
But as part of Tuesday’s expansion, Twitter Blue is about to
get a lot more useful for people who love reading and finding news on Twitter.
One feature lets people view ad-free articles on participating websites and
gives a portion of revenue from Twitter Blue subscriptions to those sites. If
you’re a Twitter Blue subscriber, when you come across a link from a publisher
offering ad-free articles, you’ll see an “Ad-free with Twitter Blue” label
under the headline.
The feature builds off the company’s acquisition of Scroll, which offered similar functionality, and Twitter had said in October it would be rolling it into Twitter Blue. More than 300 US-based sites are participating in the program, including The Washington Post, The Atlantic, BuzzFeed, The Hollywood Reporter, and, full disclosure, The Verge. The company says it hopes to include publications from outside the US in the future. And Twitter says it doesn’t change the proportion of money it gives to publishers if you subscribe to Twitter Blue from iOS or Android, which take a cut of digital purchases.
Twitter Blue’s ad-free articles feature doesn’t let you pass
paywalls, Twitter says, so depending on the publication, you might not be able
to read some articles even if you’re a Twitter Blue subscriber. And
unfortunately, ad-free articles aren’t available on Android right now, and the
company didn’t share a timeline for when that might change.
Disappointingly, you’ll still see ads on Twitter even when you subscribe to Twitter Blue, and don’t hold out hope that an ad-free feed will be arriving anytime soon, if at all. “We are not currently considering a Twitter ads-free product,” Twitter senior director of product Sara Beykpour said in a briefing.
Ad-free articles aren’t the only Scroll feature making a comeback; Twitter Blue will now offer a Nuzzel-like roundup of the most-shared articles from the people you follow called Top Articles that updates every 24 hours. Twitter wound down Nuzzel when it bought Scroll but committed to bringing “core elements” of the product to Twitter at some point.
The roundup of top articles won’t be an email like Nuzzel
was. Instead, you’ll access it on Twitter itself, though it’s only available on
Android and the web at the moment. A Twitter spokesperson said it will arrive
on iOS “very soon.”
Twitter Blue subscribers will also be able to customize
their navigation bar so that you can pin areas of the app that you want to be
more easily accessible. Customizing the navigation bar will only be available
on iOS to start, and custom themes is an iOS-only feature as well.
Twitter Blue costs $2.99 per month in the US (or an
equivalent price in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand).
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