Vikrant Shekhawat : Nov 02, 2022, 11:17 PM
Elon Musk reportedly wants to make the edit button available for free to all Twitter users without a Twitter Blue subscription. The Tesla CEO, who recently took over Twitter, on Tuesday announced plans to revamp Twitter's user verification process by charging $8 (about Rs 660) per month for the Twitter Blue subscription service. Currently, the edit feature is available to Twitter Blue customers in the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. The Edit Tweet feature allows users to make changes to a tweet up to 30 minutes after it is published.According to Casey Newton's new post on the platformer, Elon Musk will make the edit button available to all users on the platform at no extra charge. The highly sought after feature is currently available to Twitter Blue customers for testing in select regions such as the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.Facility to edit tweet up to 5 times within 30 minutesTwitter's most-awaited Edit Tweet feature has rolled out to Blue subscribers since last month. The tool allows users to edit a tweet up to five times within 30 minutes of it being posted. An edited tweet is seen with indicators indicating that the tweet has been edited. Users can also view the original tweet along with the edit history and subsequent changes.so is the new price of blue subscriptionA Twitter Blue subscription that gives other users access to upcoming features, including an edit button, currently costs $4.99 (about Rs 400) per month in the US, although the new revision increases the price to $8 (about Rs 660). Has been.Elon Musk bought Twitter last week for $ 44 billion (about Rs 3,63,700 crore). According to a report, since the acquisition, the Tesla CEO has fired Chief Executive Parag Agarwal, Legal Executive Vijaya Gadde, Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal and General Counsel Sean Edgett to put his stamp on the company. He also recently revealed plans to make social media less dependent on ads. According to a report, the micro-blogging platform will no longer allow its Blue service customers to access ad-free articles.