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Jason Alexander says goodbye to Twitter following verification removal and reveals which platforms he’ll stay loyal to

Another bites the digital dust.

If you’ve been listening to the continuing noise around the Elon Musk era of Twitter, you know there’s a whole hullabaloo around checkmarks and verification. The latest celeb to take a stand? None other than Seinfeld’s George Costanza, Mr. Jason Alexander.

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Alexander took to, well, Twitter to air his grievances against Twitter. “Twitter has removed my verification,” he said in a tweet with almost 3 million views as of this writing. “I will no longer be posting on this app.” Alexander joins a number of high profile celebrities and organizations that have left the service over being forced to pay $8 a month for promoting something that used to be free.

He left it with a nice missive: “I wish you all well.”

Oh, but that’s not all. Alexander tweeted one more time and shared two other places he can be found: Spoutible and Instagram. He also added “take care all.” Nothing wrong with a little politeness.

If you’re like me, then you’re probably going “what the hell is Spoutible?” Well, it’s a social media site where you can “Stay informed with real-time news and insights from people you know, industry leaders, journalists, and notable figures, all in one convenient place.” Does that clear it up? Not really?

After a little more digging (Googling), it looks like Soutible went live on Feb. 1 and is the “first Black-owned viable competitor to Twitter,” per beta tester Myron Clifton on Medium. How does it work?

“300 characters, and you can embed memes, gifs, and other user’s spouts. I have found myself at first limiting myself until realizing I had burst through 280 and was living my best Spoutible life.”

Can’t wait to “spout” to Alexander.


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Image of Jon Silman
Jon Silman
Jon Silman was hard-nosed newspaper reporter and now he is a soft-nosed freelance writer for WGTC.