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this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
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I charge $1/month to send email on my email service. There’s a reason for that. It’s because it’s the smallest amount I can charge, and spammers are unlikely to pay anything, no matter how small, to send email. If they do, and I catch them, I’d probably be able to get their payment account suspended. So, I understand why this could be a good approach to combatting spam. Here’s the problem with Twitter doing it:
My first thought is that it still requires them to follow up on catching spammers (similar to the paid checkmark, this as a "solution" makes me think they won't do that).
I could see spammers deciding "hey, I'll make more than $1 before I'm caught" and do something with payment to hide their tracks (maybe a simple thing that should be known), meanwhile normal users say "Eh, I gotta pay? No thanks."
What if this is just a plan to recreate the original x.com and be a payment processor. Gotta have an excuse to rebuild payment processing architecture right?