Twitter uses visual identity signals like labels and badges on account profiles to help distinguish between various account types and to give more context about them. While some of these labels are generated by Twitter, others are the result of user activity. Here is a list of the labels and badges that are frequently seen on account profiles. Applied Profile labels by Twitter Checkmark in Blue The blue checkmark can indicate one of two things: either that a user's account has been verified according to Twitter's previous verification standards (active, notable, and authentic), or that the user has an active subscription to Twitter Blue, the company's new subscription service that launched on iOS on November 9, 2022. The active, notable, and authentic criteria that were applied in the previous process will not be reviewed for accounts that receive the blue checkmark as part of a Twitter Blue subscription. Here is more information about the blue checkmark. Gold Checkmark The
Open collaboration has been crucial to the success of the PyTorch framework for AI research ever since we collaborated with the AI community to develop it in 2016. PyTorch is one of the top platforms for study and creation in the AI community, with thousands of contributors who have created more than 150,000 projects on it. PyTorch Foundation Mark Zuckerberg said today that the project will move to the recently established PyTorch Foundation, a nonprofit organisation that will be a part of the Linux Foundation, a technological consortium whose primary goal is the cooperative creation of open-source software. The establishment of the PyTorch Foundation guarantees that decisions will be taken for many years to come by a diverse group of board members in an open and transparent manner. Representatives from AMD, Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Meta, Microsoft Azure, and Nvidia will make up the governing council, which is expected to grow over time. Our Commitment to AI Research Driven b