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Twitter has started hiding some coronavirus links behind a warning notice that tells users “this link may be unsafe.”

The notice claims that it’s being applied because the site may steal passwords or personal information, install malicious software, or it has broken Twitter’s terms of service.

However, it doesn’t appear to be applied at the site level and instead seems to only be warning users that attempt to view some coronavirus articles on certain sites.

For those looking to read my article on #COVID19 , Evidence over hysteria – COVID-19 It is reposted here – https://t.co/qof8RHHcTX — Aaron Ginn (@aginnt) March 22, 2020

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Other links to non-coronavirus articles on those same sites don’t have this warning notice.

*chuckles in #Collapsitarian * BofA Calls For "War-Time Measures", Urges Near-Total Fed Takeover Of Capital Markets | Zero Hedge https://t.co/WWUuDwjVxh — CollapsitARian-15 (@thefreerifleman) March 23, 2020

The warning notice blocks Twitter users from accessing the link immediately and advises them to go back to the previous page.

Twitter users can choose to ignore the warning and continue to the article but the link for this is much smaller than the “back to previous page” button.

These warning notices seem to have started being applied to some coronavirus links yesterday after Twitter-owned platform Medium removed a popular coronavirus article from Aaron Ginn after it generated more than 2.6 million views in 24 hours.

Wow. After 2.6M views 5.5K claps in less than 24hrs, @Medium took down my article for "violations" I guess citations from CDC, John Hopkins, WHO, is too much for the thought police. Tell @Medium what you think about it. @brithume @greggutfeld @scrowder — Aaron Ginn (@aginnt) March 22, 2020

Ginn reposted the article to news outlet Zero Hedge but when users attempted to view the article, these warning notices started to appear.

The blocking of some coronavirus links comes after Twitter has faced growing criticism of its rules around coronavirus content.

Pro-China propaganda from Chinese officials that attempts to blame the US for the coronavirus has not been impacted by these rules and in some cases, it’s even been amplified by bots.

Meanwhile, Twitter has told users that they may be forced to remove some jokes about the coronavirus to “keep people safe on Twitter.”

If you're tired of cancel culture and censorship subscribe to Reclaim The Net.