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A number of super-injunctions have been abandoned after details leaked on Twitter, to the displeasure of some judges. However, activists in countries such as Syria or China might be concerned that they would be unable to see information they need to know. Twitter insists that the system will only formalize a system it already uses, where tweets are blocked or deleted following full judicial process. Being able to limit tweets to particular countries, rather than blocking them altogether, expands its ability to "let tweets flow". In a blogpost, it points out that France and Germany restrict pro-Nazi content; under the U.S.'s First Amendment, tweets with such view would be legal in the U.S. while illegal in those countries. Google, Yahoo, eBay and Facebook already use similar systems to control what content is shown in which countries. In China, Google indicates when a search result has been censored. In the same way, blocked tweets will say: "This tweet from [username] is withheld." The blocking can work at the individual tweet or account level. But some users have been critical of the move, which has already seen an update to Twitter's API, the means through which programs access and show tweets. Every tweet includes fields such as the user's name, time of the tweet and the tweet's content. But now it will also include a "withheld in countries" field. Terence Eden, a London-based mobile developer, complained on Twitter: "I don't want to develop on an API which contains a 'withheld_in_countries' field. What's next, a 'for_your_own_good' field?" He added: "I helped develop a Twitter client that Chinese pro-democracy activists used. Guess that's dead now. Thanks, Twitter." Eden, who describes the move as censorship, said it would be difficult to work around because Twitter will identify which country a user is in by their Internet address. "You can spot the censorship, but it's hard to route around it," he said. Twitter says it will continue to post requests for the blocking or censoring of tweets to the Chilling Effects site, where it has recorded requests to remove tweets from its service. Intellpuke: You can read this article by Guardian Technology Editor Charles Arthur in context here: www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/jan/27/twitter-faces-censorship-backlash
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