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Bit.ly Says It ‘Does Not Block Cryptocurrency Sites,’ Fixes Links For Andreas Antonopoulos’ Book

On November 3, renowned Bitcoin advocate, Andreas Antonopoulos,
took to Twitter to claim that URL shortening service, Bit.ly (Bitly),
had blocked crypto-related links from his upcoming book.
Cointelegraph has reached out to Bitly, and learned that the links
“had been inadvertently blocked,” while the company has reportedly
resolved the issue. Nevertheless, crypto-related bans still exist in
mainstream media.
‘Why are you blocking links to cryptocurrency sites?’
Antonopoulos, author of several well-known guides to cryptocurrencies,
including “Mastering Bitcoin”, called out Bitly on Twitter,
revealing details of the block. The company allegedly blacklisted over
200 links featured in “Mastering Ethereum,” Antonopoulos’ new
book, due for publication in around four weeks.
“Why are you blocking http://bit.ly links to crypto-currency [sic]
sites?” he asked , adding:
“I'm about to publish my fourth book and it has about 200
http://bit.ly links in it. If you are going to block links, I
will need to remove all 200 and replace them with a competitor
[.]”
Responding to his tweet, user Wagner Santana, enclosed a screenshot
of what seemed as Bitly blacklisting a blockchain.info link which had
been “identified as being potentially problematic by the service.”
Overall, commentators were quick to come to Antonopoulos’ defence,
calling for a move away from “centralized” link shorteners, adding :
“Not your keys, not your Bitcoin? Not your (shortener), not
your link.”
‘Bitly does not categorically block cryptocurrency sites’:
the company disavows rumors
On November 5, Bitly did reply to Antonopoulos’ tweet, claiming
that the links were “inadvertently blocked,” and that “the issue
was resolved over the weekend.”
“They all should be working now,” the company added .
In response to the Bitly’s explanation, Antonopoulos requested more
details regarding the block. Specifically, the “Mastering Bitcoin”
author asked the URL shortening service whether the block was
triggered by “too many redirects”, third-party reports or a “poorly
curated blacklist”, adding:
“What assures me (and the rest of the crypto-currency community)
that this won't happen again? What steps have been taken to ensure it
doesn't?”
The company had left those questions unanswered by press time.
However, in a separate tweet, it mentioned that  “no particular
filter triggered in this situation.”
A Bitly representative informed Cointelegraph over email that the
blacklisting happened accidentally, due to internal security systems,
while that the company does not specifically target cryptocurrency
sites:
"Recently, we became aware that one of author Andreas M.
Antonopoulos' links had been inadvertently blocked. On
occasion, as in this case, our security systems generate false
positives. Bitly does not categorically block cryptocurrency
sites. Once we were alerted to the issue we unblocked the
domain."
Crypto-related blocks still persist in mainstream social media
Over the past months, both Facebook and Google have reversed their
crypto bans , which were originally introduced earlier this year, mainly
due to “deceptive promotional practices” among cryptocurrencies and
initial coin offering ( ICOs ) ads.
Therefore, on September 25, U.S. tech giant Google announced that
starting in October, it will allow registered cryptocurrency exchanges
to advertise on its Google Adwords platform, targeting the U.S. and
Japanese audiences.
Facebook, in turn, reversed its ad ban for pre-approved cryptocurrency
firms back in June, but maintained the ban on ICO advertisement.
Still, the stigma attached to crypto-related business continues to
reappear in mainstream social media, although the Bitly incident has
turned out to be a misunderstanding — just a few days ago, for
instance, Apple reportedly took down a popular crypto podcast.
The “Off the Chain” podcast was hosted by Morgan Creek Digital
partner and crypto analyst Anthony "Pomp" Pompliano, and had
apparently been “mysteriously” removed from the U.S. iTunes store
on November 5, after allegedly soaring to fourth place for podcasts in
the “investing” category. Pompliano tweeted:
“Last week we released a podcast discussing the ultimate
argument for Bitcoin. It exploded & ranked #4 in U.S.
investing category before mysteriously being taken down by
@Apple. We had no warning. We don’t know why. They took
down our podcast, but they can’t take down Bitcoin!”

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