As we reported, Twitter announced today that it may block specific content on a country-by-country basis if required. However, it seems very easy to get around these upcoming limitations.
Indeed, Twitter’s Help Center itself gives a good clue on how to bypass them very easily. Here’s a step-by-step explanation:
Identify withheld content
The first thing to do is to identify that some content has been blocked in your country. You won’t need to monitor Chilling Effects to know a tweet or a user have been blocked if you stumble upon them. Instead, you’ll see the following warnings:
Change your country settings to ‘Worldwide’
Twitter then goes on to explain how to tell the platform that it has misidentified your country, which it automatically guesses based on your IP. You can find this parameter in your account settings:
What Twitter refrains from saying, and that many may have guessed, is that nothing prevents you to do the same even if Twitter didn’t get your country wrong. In other words, all you have to do if you want to see a ‘blocked’ tweet is to change your Country setting after reading the warning.
Since Twitter made clear that restrictions will likely be limited to one or several countries, the best way to prevent this problem from ever happening is to set this setting to ‘Worldwide’ another country right now.
Update: It seems that Twitter automatically reverts to your IP country if you try to set it to “Worldwide” but changing to another country worked fine for us.
Why it is clever
Chances are that Twitter perfectly knows about this workaround, and its details are particularly well thought. Knowing that content has been blocked is a very good start, but that’s not the best thing about it.
What’s particularly clever is its ease of use, even in countries where technical workarounds may be difficult to access. Users won’t need to hide their IP with a proxy: Twitter lets them change it manually, despite the potential loss in hyperlocal ad dollars for the platform.
Well done, Twitter, chances are tweets will continue to flow for quite a while.
Thanks @tapbot_paul for the tip.




















Bottom line is money. There is no money in backing us in the Middle East, so they will cave in. Time for an independent Twitter for LGBT users alone, and an independent LGBT Google, because they're planning the exact same move. I already canceled my Twitter and Google Plus accounts in protest, but unless we get straight support, the protest will be stomped all over by the superior anti-gay forces terrorising us in the Middle Easter Islamic states, where homosexuality is punished by death.
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LikeIs this OK to translate this article into Korean and share it through my blog? Korean twitter users are very much worried about this move: recently, there was a man arrested for retweeting some tweets by a North Korean account.
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LikeI personally don't believe this article.
Surely tweets would be blocked based on your IP address, otherwise Twitter would be liable for not taking reasonable measures to prevent restricted information from spreading. The REAL workaround will be the way users phrase tweets e.g 'Ryan Giggs' would turn into 'former Man United and Wales captain'. Tweets of this nature will be a lot harder to keep track of.
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LikeTwitter is blocking out the access by proxy so they OBVIOUSLY track you with a very clear purpose! be aware!
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LikeJust went from US to Worldwide. Should I stay there or switch somewhere? Not a techie at all.
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Likeoldwhitedude Setting to Worldwide didn't work for me and other users, we managed to change the setting but it automatically reverted to our IP country. Do you still see "Worldwide" after confirming your password, saving your settings and refreshing the page?
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LikeAnna Heim No, I just checked and I was re-United with the United States.
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LikeLet governments do their own dirty work. They have the power to censor their own networks, the Saudis have restricted pornography from entering their countries for some time now. Companies kowtowing to government pressure is neither heroic nor commendable.
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Like:( que pesar
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LikeSad day. My #nowplaying for today will be mostly angry political bands. Blogged a response here: http://musingsfromsussex.com/2012/01/27/blog-dont-tell-me-what-i-cant-read-twitter-censorship/
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LikeI already been Hashtag blocked 2 twitters Accounts in the last week for Twitting about Occupy, OWS, only ! So I create another 2 more accounts to get the word out and I will keep doing it as far they (I Think is the MF's Gov. Contractors that monitor Twitter, NOT TWITTER Itself) keep fu***ng with me.
I also get banned from Facebook last week for the same reason. The ask me for an ID copy, etc. NO WAY !!! So I create another Facebook account in stead.
I think is the U.S. Gov't. or the big Arab investment on twitter they did no to long ago or both.....but not twitter.
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LikeJOIN US
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LikeJOIN US You're joking? You can't even twitter about things like Occupy? Now I really feel like I'm living in the the last democratic patch of the world ... Is that type of blocking really legal over there?
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Likegry m tJOIN US I first saw tagblocking and search filtering (happened to me more than once) with Iran supporters in 2009, then met people who tweet for #Gaza/#Palestine who reported the same, but even I was initially surprised that the #OWS tags got targeted. In several countries, not only those you'd expect it like China, Iran, etc but also here in the UK we've seen court cases and jail time/fines for tweets or FaceBook pages the establishment didn't like, while death threats to activists are never sanctioned.
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LikeJOIN US Sounds like your problem with Facebook the fact that you're not using a real name. It's a serious issue, especially for activists, but it's not directly linked to the content you post. There are plenty of OWS Facebook groups - and tweets.
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LikeJust read the update. I can change the previous country setting to another country, but not to Worldwide. Just as you write on the update. Thanks!
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Likerahadian p. paramita Exactly, I was just going to tell you :)
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LikeAnna Heim Is it really changes the user IP like proxy does?
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Likerahadian p. paramita No, the IP stays the same but it doesn't take it into account.
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LikeIt doesn't work! After I pick Worldwide from the list, save the changes and type in the password, it is reset to United States.
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LikeSilver Fang You're right! I had noticed the problem in passing while testing but assumed it was only taking time to adjust. Didn't realize it wasn't working properly, I just updated the post.
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LikeAnna HeimSilver Fang Please, update the conclusion as well. If Twitter sets your country automatically again when setting to worldwide, then there is no free flow of tweets. If you need to set to every single country to get all tweets, this is no option.
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LikeRyoSilver Fang If the other option is to have some governments block Twitter altogether, changing the country setting sounds OK, especially if we get warnings when tweets are blocked.
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LikeAnna HeimSilver Fang Further to this during #IranElection we were asked to reset our Location to Iran to help mask tweeps there. It was still Iran during the February #Bahrain #lulu twitter war (ongoing) Now suddenly it is fixed as UK. The application has changed, sometime recently!
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