User would log in to Twitese, which would do all its work through a proxy (or set of proxies) based outside the US which would handle all the Twitter traffic -- you'd never actually have to access the twitter site.
On Sat, Aug 22, 2009 at 09:14, bang <bang...@gmail.com> wrote: > > yes, I can access twitter.com with proxy, but the users of Twitese > couldn't access, that's the problem. > One of the most useful feature of Twitese is made Chinese people use > Twitter without proxy > > On Aug 22, 10:10 pm, JDG <ghil...@gmail.com> wrote: > > you could speak with a proxy outside of china, which could do the OAuth > for > > you > > > > On Fri, Aug 21, 2009 at 23:40, bang <bang...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > I'm the builder of Twitese (http://twitese.appspot.com/), a chinese > > > web client for Twitter. I know that if a new web app want to show from > > > [myApp], the only way is to use OAuth, but in china that's infeasible, > > > because twitter has been block in china, chinese people can not access > > > twitter.com to use OAuth. So I can't use OAuth. The only way to login > > > is use HTTP Basic, as the result, statuses post from Twitese just show > > > "from web". So I want to apply a source for my Twitese, is that > > > possible? > > > > -- > > Internets. Serious business. > -- Internets. Serious business.