Hi Bill,
Whitelisting is done per IP, related to the number of requests by your
server.

-Peter

On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 1:58 PM, Bill Kocik <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> I was just looking at the form use to apply for whitelisting, which
> says you must fill it out while logged in as the account you want the
> rate limit raised for. In my case, my app will be used by arbitrary
> Twitter account holders, who will not be using my credentials, so
> whitelisting my Twitter login will do nothing for my app. I saw Alex
> mention in another thread that whitelisting by OAuth will become the
> preferred method for whitelisting apps running in clouds (mine will be
> in EC2).
>
> I am assuming that OAuth whitelisting means I'll be able to whitelist
> my app, and the raised limit would apply for requests having OAuth
> access tokens obtained by my application, regardless of the Twitter
> user they belong to?
>
> Thanks,
> -Bill
>



-- 
Peter M. Denton
www.twibs.com
[email protected]

Twibs makes Top 20 apps on Twitter - http://tinyurl.com/bopu6c

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