Twitter said on Thursday it had blocked an account in a country for the first time, after German police asked the micro-blogging site to restrict access by a neo-Nazi group.
“We announced the ability to withhold content back in Jan (January),” Twitter’s chief lawyer Alex Macgillivray said in a message posted on the website.
“We’re using it now for the first time re: a group deemed illegal in Germany.”
In a separate tweet, Macgillivray posted a link to a letter from the police in the northern German state of Lower Saxony asking Twitter to block the account of Besseres Hannover, a far-right outfit which was outlawed last month.
The account is still visible on Twitter with the handle hannoverticker and calling itself “Das nationale Informationsportal aus Hannover” (The national information portal from Hanover).
But no message since the date of the ban, September 25, is visible in Germany, and the group’s website has also been blocked or deleted.
Prosecutors in Lower Saxony have launched a probe against around 20 members of Besseres Hannover on charges of inciting racial hatred and creating a criminal organisation.