Skip to main content

Turks can tweet again, thanks to court ruling lifting Twitter ban

turkey twitter ban controversy news
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Updated by Jeffrey Van Camp on 4-03-2014: Twitter will soon return to Turkey. The Turkish government’s ban on Twitter was lifted on April 2 by the country’s Constitutional Court. According to Webrazzi, banning communication services like Twitter violates Turkey’s freedom of speech laws. There is a chance that the gov’t will not comply with the ruling. A lower court has already ruled that banning Twitter is against the law, but the TIB, or Telecommunications Authority, of Turkey decided to ignore it. YouTube is also banned at the moment.

Many tech-savvy Turkish citizens have found ways around the ban using relatively easy  DNS (Domain Name Service) and VPN (Virtual Private Networks) techniques. In response, the gov’t began ordering Turkish Internet providers to pretend to imitate Google servers, and likely others. This is an attempt to intercept traffic and stop people from using the services.

———

Original Post by Trevor Mogg on 3-21-2014:

Turkey blocks Twitter after PM says he wants to ‘eradicate’ it

Twitter users in Turkey were blocked from the service Thursday night, just hours after the country’s prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan, said he wanted to “eradicate” it.

The site drew Erdogan’s ire after a number of users in recent weeks posted content such as voice recordings and documents claiming to highlight alleged corruption among some of his close associates. The prime minister has described it as a smear campaign orchestrated by his political opponents.

Twitter users inside the country were blocked from the site from around midnight local time, though workarounds were soon appearing online, one of which came from Twitter itself (below) explaining how users can post tweets using SMS.

In a statement Thursday, the Turkish government said that court orders demanding Twitter remove certain links had been ignored by the San Francisco-based company.

“If Twitter officials insist on not implementing court orders and rules of law….there will be no other option but to prevent access to Twitter to help satisfy our citizens’ grievances,” the statement said.

In a speech to thousands of supporters Thursday ahead of local elections at the end of the month, Prime Minister Erdogan was rather more frank about the situation, calling Twitter “a malice to society,” and saying he wanted to “eradicate” it.

“We will wipe out all of these,” Erdogan said. “The international community can say this, can say that. I don’t care at all. Everyone will see how powerful the Republic of Turkey is.”

Twitter said it is “looking into” the situation though is yet to make any official statement on the matter.

Earlier this month Turkey’s prime minister also threatened to ban Facebook and YouTube after similar content alleging wrongdoing was posted on the sites. The latter was banned in Turkey for three years from 2007 after videos appeared online that the government claimed insulted the Republic’s founding president.

The government has given no indication as to how long the Twitter block will last, though as time goes on it’s likely an increasing number of the 10 million users in the country will pick up on the workarounds, allowing them to continue posting tweets.

[via Reuters]

Article originally published on 3-21-2014.

Jeffrey Van Camp
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Deputy Editor, Jeff helps oversee editorial operations at Digital Trends. Previously, he ran the site's…
Twitter’s new Unmentioning tool is perfect for avoiding online drama
A person's hands holding a smartphone as they browse Twitter on it.

Getting mentioned by one of your followers on Twitter can feel like a badge of honor. Sometimes, however, you may get mentioned by someone in a conversation you never asked to be a part of in the first place. Twitter now provides a solution to that problem with its new "Unmentioning" feature.

As the name suggests, Unmentioning allows users to remove themselves from a Tweet or thread that includes their username. Twitter began testing the new feature on a select few users in April, but now it's rolling to everyone on the platform — provided they updated the Twitter app on their phone.

Read more
Elon Musk holds off on Twitter deal pending fake account data review
Elon Musk stands looking to his right.

Even billionaires can get a sense of buyer's remorse — for some weird reason. Elon Musk announced on Friday he is temporarily putting the Twitter deal on hold pending a review of fake/spam account data.

Musk holding off on the $44 billion acquisition of the social media platform shook up the stock market in the process. Twitter's shares nosedived by more than 10% to $40.50 at market opening, trading $14 below the acquisition price of $54.20 per share.

Read more
Twitter Circle will soon let you send semiprivate tweets
A Twitter icon on a blue background on a smartphone's screen, all on a white background.

Robert de Niro introduced Ben Stiller and all of us to a concept called the Circle of Trust in the 2000 film Meet the Parents. Now, over 20 years later, Twitter is taking that lesson to heart and spinning it into a new feature it's testing called Twitter Circle.

The Twitter Safety team on Tuesday introduced the feature, which is designed to allow users to share their tweets with up to 150 people instead of sharing them with a public audience. Some people are able to use Twitter Circle already, but it's currently unknown when it will be rolled out to everybody. The testing phase is not exclusive to either iOS or Android, nor is it exclusive to Twitter Blue subscribers.

Read more