Rose McGowan is back on Twitter after she posted a message to Instagram late Wednesday saying that the company had suspended her account.

“TWITTER HAS SUSPENDED ME,” the actress had written. “THERE ARE POWERFUL FORCES AT WORK. BE MY VOICE.”

In a statement on Thursday, Twitter said that McGowan had been temporarily blocked from tweeting after she posted someone’s phone number. Once the offending tweet was removed, the company said, the ban was lifted.

We have been in touch with Ms. McGowan's team. We want to explain that her account was temporarily locked because one of her Tweets included a private phone number, which violates our Terms of Service. 1/3 — Twitter Safety (@TwitterSafety) October 12, 2017

The Tweet was removed and her account has been unlocked. We will be clearer about these policies and decisions in the future. 2/3 — Twitter Safety (@TwitterSafety) October 12, 2017

Twitter is proud to empower and support the voices on our platform, especially those that speak truth to power. We stand with the brave women and men who use Twitter to share their stories, and will work hard every day to improve our processes to protect those voices. 3/3 — Twitter Safety (@TwitterSafety) October 12, 2017

After Twitter lifted the suspension of her account, McGowan sent a new tweet questioning Twitter’s priorities, while also seeming to reference President Donald Trump’s tweets about North Korea.

when will nuclear war violate your terms of service? https://t.co/72FiiyoZ59 — rose mcgowan (@rosemcgowan) October 12, 2017

McGowan has been a vocal critic of film producer Harvey Weinstein, who has been accused of sexually harassing and assaulting multiple women, including McGowan. She settled a lawsuit against Weinstein in 1997 after an incident in a hotel room at the Sundance Film Festival, The New York Times reported last week.

In the days following the Times’ report, McGowan has addressed Weinstein’s behavior on Twitter.

A post shared by Rose McGowan (@rosemcgowan) on Oct 11, 2017 at 9:19pm PDT

In addition to criticizing Weinstein, McGowan has used Twitter to slam individuals, including actor Ben Affleck, who she said knew of Weinstein’s behavior but failed to act. She also started a petition calling for the entire board of Weinstein’s production company to resign.

Before Twitter clarified its reasoning for the suspension, users were quick to slam the social media network, with some calling for a boycott. It’s unclear whether that is still happening.

Twitter suspended Rose McGowan and just slapped every sexual assault survivor right in the face. Fuck the world. — Kelly Ellis (@justkelly_ok) October 12, 2017

Trump threatens nuclear war: no problem



Racism/homophobia/threats? No problem.



Rose McGowan calling people out? Banned from Twitter. — Simon Brew (@simonbrew) October 12, 2017

People wonder why women don't report sexual assault? Rose McGowan spoke out about her experience and was LITERALLY FORCIBLY SILENCED. — OhNoSheTwitnt🏳️‍🌈 (@OhNoSheTwitnt) October 12, 2017

Racism: Sure

Transphobia: Whatevs

Harassing Women: Cool

Literal Fascism: Okay

Holding Men Accountable: UM EXCUSE ME? https://t.co/D9L6CIblhq — 🎃FUCKO LANTERN🎃 (@hitherehaidar) October 12, 2017

.@rosemcgowan's Twitter was suspended.



Women should not be punished for speaking the truth.#ROSEARMYhttps://t.co/KQfi4Sg7ts — Women's March (@womensmarch) October 12, 2017

Everyone go into @rosemcgowan's account and RT three recent tweets. I cannot believe she's being muzzled on twitter. ON TWITTER. — Scott Weinberg (@scottEweinberg) October 12, 2017

**Rose McGowan speaks out on Weinstein rapes**



Twitter: suspends her account



**Trump threatens nuclear war**



Twitter: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ pic.twitter.com/dskrAccz0u — Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) October 12, 2017

This story has been updated with Twitter’s statement explaining why McGowan’s account was locked and to note that she is tweeting again.