Twitter may offer publishers a new way to monetize their content outside of the usual recurring subscription option. According to Twitter CEO Elon Musk Will be allowed Media publishers to charge users for access to individual articles they post to the site as early as next month. Users will end up paying a price per article that is higher than the cost to access each article if they had a subscription instead. But Musk said it’s for those who want to read the occasional story from a specific outlet, so each article likely won’t cost the same as a monthly subscription.
The platform, which will roll out next month, will allow media publishers to charge users on a per-article basis with a single click.
This allows users who would not sign up for a monthly subscription to pay a higher price per article when they want to read an occasional article. …
– Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 29, 2023
For now, details about the upcoming feature remain murky. Musk only said it would start appearing next month — it’s not clear what types of accounts and media outlets will be able to offer per-article fees. In addition, the owner of Twitter did not say how much the site will receive as a commission. When the company officially replaced Super Follows with subscriptions, Musk announced that it would not take any money from creators for the next 12 months. After the year is over, it will be Twitter Take a 10 percent discount on subscriptions.
Engadget reached out to the website for clarification, but they don’t have a press team anymore. We’ll have to wait for more information to see if Twitter will apply the same rule for per-article payments. Eventually, the company will undergo a downgrade – Twitter, under Musk, has been introducing more and more paid features to increase revenue. It’s so well known at this point that its verification badge now comes as a perk of an $8 per month Blue subscription. Twitter also closed its free API to launch a new one that users have to pay for. It would cost enterprise customers about $50,000 per month to access the new API, so some organizations and companies like the New York City Transit Authority have opted to end Twitter integration or leave the website instead.
“Reader. Infuriatingly humble coffee enthusiast. Future teen idol. Tv nerd. Explorer. Organizer. Twitter aficionado. Evil music fanatic.”