Am account that reposts viral posts is among the big beneficiaries of Twitter's new monetization scheme.
The "Internet Hall of Fame" account appears to have netted $100,000 from the scheme.
Musk previously said that accounts based on "theft" of others' post would not get paid.
The "internet hall of fame" account, which has 1.9 million followers and describes itself as highlighting the "best of the internet," in a screenshot Thursday was shown to have been paid $107,247.00.
He didn't define exactly what he meant by "theft of posts," and it isn't totally clear whether Internet Hall of Fame would meet that definition.
Persons:
Oliver Alexander, Elon Musk, Oliver, Musk, Andrew Tate, Twitter
Organizations:
of Fame, Morning, Twitter, Copyright, Washington Post