Yes, you would.

On Mon, Jan 19, 2009 at 17:14, Rashmi Ranjan Padhy
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Can IP of shared hosting also be whitelisted? I would need to change the
> hosting plan later depending on the requirement. Do I have to apply for
> whitelisting again for the new IP?
>
>
> On Mon, Jan 19, 2009 at 4:14 PM, Ruth <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Thanks James
>> I have updated my IP address with Twitter... hope this will help
>>
>> Ruth
>>
>> On Jan 19, 6:27 pm, James Chivers <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Hi Ruth,
>> >
>> > I recently received a whitelisting, but I supplied my server IPs and
>> > so the folks at Twitter opened up their acl rate limits based on those
>> > I believe (and not account name).
>> >
>> > Alex (Twitter API Lead) answered a similar question
>> > recently:http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/browse_thread...
>> >
>> > So, it appears that should you have been approved, you should not be
>> > limited from your server IP(s). However, if you didn't supply any IP
>> > range info in your original request, I'm not sure Twitter have an
>> > 'account-only' rate limit (or whether they guessed your IP from recent
>> > connections, etc.).
>> >
>> > When you hithttp://twitter.com/account/rate_limit_status.xmlfrom
>> > your server, are you seeing the 'hourly-limit' decrement?
>> >
>> > Cheers,
>> >
>> > James
>> >
>> > On Jan 19, 10:46 am, Ruth <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> > > Hi,
>> > > I have received a whitelisting approval for Ruth_Z a few weeks ago,
>> > > and still getting rate limit errors. I know that I'm authenticating
>> > > fine. Is the fact that i didn't provide an IP address in my
>> > > whitelisting request can cause this problem.
>> >
>> > > Thanks
>> > > Ruth
>
>



-- 
Alex Payne - API Lead, Twitter, Inc.
http://twitter.com/al3x

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