F1 people dodging Twitter ban in China

 F1 people dodging Twitter ban in China
Lotus Racing Updating Twitter pages

F1's new obsession with Twitter might have to take a backseat role in China this weekend.

Particularly over the pre-season period, many F1 figures - including drivers, bosses, team PR departments, media members and insiders - tapped into the power and popularity of the growing microblogging phenomenon.

But the Chinese government has banned and blocked many forms of social media on the internet, extending to Twitter in late 2009.

However, it seems there are ways to dodge China's Twitter ban. Having expressing dismay at the ban, HRT driver Karun Chandhok was greeted at Shanghai airport this week by three "very sweet fans" who told him the tricks.

Also on Wednesday, McLaren, Mike Gascoyne, Mark Webber, Heikki Kovalainen and several journalists have been Tweeting from Shanghai.

It is not clear if or how China's estimated 30,000 internet police will react to the violations of the internet censorship laws.

The operator of Virgin's official Twitter account said: "We'll probably just go low-key for China (in 2010) and then look at a proper solution for next year."

Source: GMM

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 andrewB andrewB
Only the celebrities and not many other use twitter anymore. I read months ago that about 70 percent of people who signed up for a twitter account dont use it or have cancelled it i never made a twitter account and nor do i will ever make one. Anyone else feel the same or had one and deleted it celebrities and other people have to realise that twitter isnt cool and never was. all they could be doing it saying lap times which the media will be covering anyways
April 14, 2010 7:18 am
 Kouki507 Kouki507
Some people use twitter because they find it practical, not because they find it "cool".
April 14, 2010 9:11 am
 radmeister radmeister
Yeah practical if you have a bunch of friends that you assume care so much to the point they need to know all your steps. Also i would imagine that going on tweeter from China can't be that hard, especially for Virgin..They have a pretty large data network and satellites in space, im sure they can bypass the chinese hub. Also, you could use a normal cellphone with a data connection and use it as a modem and go through a proxy. Nothing the Chinese could do about that.
April 14, 2010 3:50 pm