Thanks to a new feature,Watch A Wife Who Lost Her Chastity To A Friend Episode Full HD Online "blue checks" may no longer dominate reply threads on X.
There has been a lot of criticism over the past few years regarding how Elon Musk changed the blue check. The blue checkmark was previously used to verify the authenticity of notable users when the platform was known as Twitter. Under Musk, X now doles out blue checks to anyone who pays $8 per month for X Premium. On top of that, blue check subscribers were given priorityin the mentions of posts.
SEE ALSO: How Elon Musk and X's decision to sue advertisers may have just backfiredAs a result, X users would often find blue checkmark accounts' posts sitting at the top of the replies to their own post, even if these replies were completely irrelevant to the conversation.
\And here's how it looks on X for web:
The latter two reply sorting options are pretty straightforward. "Most recent" shows replies in chronological order from newest to oldest. "Most liked" shows the replies with most likes first. Blue check accounts appear to have completely lost any advantage that the paid subscription provided them when selecting either of these two menu options.
It's unclear exactly how X is determining how to sort posts via the "most relevant" option. However, it appears to be the same sorting method as the previous default. Blue checks do still appear to be prioritized in this view.
Any user can change the reply sorting options on any post that they view, not just their own posts.
It'll be interesting to see if these new options prove to be popular with X's user base. If many X users prefer to view replies via most liked or most recent, it seems like X Premium subscriber rates could potentially take a hit as one of blue check users' paid subscription benefits loses some of its power.
Topics Social Media X/Twitter Elon Musk
Previous:Presidential Confusion
The Morning News Roundup for September 5, 2014How to save videos on SnapchatAlexander Melamid’s “The Art of Plumbing”Netflix loses subscribers in Australia for the first time in yearsThe Morning News Roundup for September 4, 2014The Morning News Roundup for September 17, 2014Netflix loses subscribers in Australia for the first time in yearsThe Morning News Roundup for September 11, 2014'Only Murders in the Building': Read that silly end credits article about BenCardboard, Glue, and StorytellingLelo Ina Wave 2 review: The best rabbit vibrator out thereHow Samuel Johnson Celebrated His SixtyThe Morning News Roundup for September 15, 2014Meta takes down huge 'Spamouflage' campaign with ties to ChinaThe Well on Spring StreetSee live Florida beach webcams as Hurricane Idalia nears landfallStalking Seán O’CaseyPhotographs of Italy’s Abandoned DiscothequesPastless Futureless ManPhotographs of Italy’s Abandoned Discotheques Snow White Is Tired by Alec Mapes What I Want to Say About Owning a Truck by J. D. Daniels I Once Bought a Huge Wrap in a Walgreens in Manhattan by Ed Atkins Wild Animal Tales by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya “A Threat to Mental Health”: How to Read Rocks by Brian Tucker Making of a Poem: Hua Xi on “Toilet” by Hua Xi She Who Helps See by George Saunders Cruising at the LA Fitness by Danez Smith Christmas Tree Diary by Jake Maynard William and Henry James by Peter Brooks I Killed Wolf’s by Todd McEwen Issue No. 250: A Crossword by Adrienne Raphel Tracings by Sarah Aziza A Painter Is Being Beaten: Freud and Kantarovsky by Jamieson Webster Horrific Surrealism: Writing on Migration by Viet Thanh Nguyen On Augusto Monterroso’s The Gold Seekers by Matt Broaddus Learning to Ice New Theater, New York, January 2025 by Rhoda Feng Multiple Worlds Vying to Exist: Philip K. Dick and Palestine by Jonathan Lethem Spanish Journals by Catherine Lacey
2.8164s , 10131.2109375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch A Wife Who Lost Her Chastity To A Friend Episode Full HD Online】,Exquisite Information Network