Twitter launches way for users to charge for access to their content

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 Twitter is allowing users to charge for access to their content, “from long-form text to hours-long video".

Twitter owner Elon Musk said the company will not keep any of the money users make from subscriptions for the first 12 months.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Twitter is letting users charge for access to their content, “from long-form text to hours-long video”, owner Elon Musk said in a post on the website on Thursday.

Mr Musk said that for the first 12 months, Twitter will not keep any of the money users make from subscriptions.

That means users will keep about 70 per cent of their subscription revenue on mobile, after accounting for the fees Apple and Google take on their app stores, he added.

He did not elaborate on the technical aspects of the plan.

Mr Musk, in a bid to make it possible for people to make money off their Twitter accounts, is going head-to-head with Substack, the newsletter company, with similar money-making options.

Meanwhile, Substack is becoming more like Twitter. The website recently launched a Notes feature, which allows users to post on a public feed.

Earlier this week, Twitter temporarily disabled likes, replies and retweets if a tweet had a Substack link. 

The changes may help woo more content creators onto the platform, or keep them from leaving. Although Twitter will not take a cut of users’ subscription revenue for the first year, it could be a move to generate more cash in the future.

Twitter, a subsidiary of X Corp,

has struggled recently with efforts to monetise its platform. Advertising, which accounted for more than 80 per cent of Twitter’s revenue, has declined by 50 per cent since Mr Musk took over.

The company is hoping to drive revenue through

a premium version of Twitter called Twitter Blue,

but only 1 per cent of Twitter’s monthly users have signed up. BLOOMBERG

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