As owner Elon Musk announced that XAI will employ public tweets for AI model training, Twitter on July 14 began its income-sharing program for qualified authors. Twitter introduced its revenue-sharing plan on Friday, enabling verified users to profit from adverts placed in response to other users’ messages.
A portion of the money made from the adverts that appear in the content that they produce will go to the content producers. In other words, your material may be made money off of other social networking sites in addition to this one. Alan Mask, the owner of Twitter, revealed this in a tweet from last month.
According to a tweet from Twitter, some social media content producers on the platform can make money from adverts. A portion of the money made from the adverts that appear in the content that they produce will go to the content producers.
In other words, your material may be made money off of other social networking sites in addition to this one. Alan Mask, the owner of Twitter, revealed this in a tweet from last month.
What are the guidelines for Twitter creators’ income sharing?
The revenue-sharing scheme is only accessible to Twitter Blue or Verified Organisations members who have earned at least five million post impressions over the previous three months, according to the support article.
Before receiving payment through a Stripe account, users will also be subject to a human inspection and must abide by the Creator Subscriptions regulations. There will soon be an application procedure as it wants to expand eligibility to additional authors. Those who fit the conditions may apply for the programming to the Monetization section in their account settings.
Additionally, there are also restrictions on how much money producers may make through its content monetization program. According to Twitter’s policies, sexual content cannot be made money. It’s also forbidden to monetize content that deals with pyramid schemes, get-rich-quick schemes, violence, crime, gambling, drugs, and alcohol. Additionally, it is illegal for a creator to try to make money off of copyrighted material that they do not own.
The payments occur at a time when Twitter is encountering several difficulties. In addition to being sued for 500 million unpaid severance payouts, Meta, owned by Zuckerberg, has been attempting to stifle Twitter’s dwindling traffic.