Hi Furkan, Public information is public. If someone without a Twitter account can view that information on a user's Twitter profile, or if the same information can be returned from an unauthenticated API call, it's considered public information and you may display it. Twitter does not require certain display conventions to indicate that the information comes from a protected account, but as you may notice, we use a lock icon on protected accounts.
Brian Sutorius Twitter API Policy On Jul 11, 3:02 pm, Furkan Kuru <[email protected]> wrote: > I have read the terms of service (https://twitter.com/tos) and api rules. > > But it is not clear whether we can publish a protected account's profile > information as shown in their profile page. (only screen_name, name, > website, bio, follower, friends count) with a proper way as twitter > specifies (i.e twitter icon, screen name) > > We will add a filter for protected accounts if we do not have right to > display basic user information for protected users. > > -- > Furkan Kuru
