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Journalist Tricked Captors Into Twitter Access

itwbennett writes "Kosuke Tsuneoka, a Japanese freelance journalist held captive in Afghanistan since April 1, was released over the weekend. His freedom came a day after he sent two Twitter messages from a captor's phone. 'i am still allive [sic], but in jail,' read a message sent at 1:15 p.m. GMT on Friday. It was followed a few minutes later with a second message, also in English, that read, 'here is archi in kunduz. in the jail of commander lativ.' The message referred to the Dasht-e-Archi district of Kunduz where he was being held. On Tuesday, speaking in Tokyo, Tsuneoka revealed how he managed to convince his captors to give him access to the Internet. 'He asked me if I knew how to use it, so I had a look and explained it to him,' said Tsuneoka. 'I called the customer care number and activated the phone,' he said."

3 of 141 comments (clear)

  1. Re:step 2 missing by adwarf · · Score: 4, Informative

    Per this article (http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/6698137-how-abducted-reporter-kosuke-tsuneoka-used-twitter-while-in-captivity) they released him because was muslim... So his tweets had nothing to do with anything....

  2. Re:Journalists Trick Slashdot Into Believing Story by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Informative

    The guy says in TFA that he quite explicitly explained what the effect of him posting something on Twitter would be:

    "They asked what that was. And I told them that if you write something on it, then you can reach many Japanese journalists. So they said, 'try it'."

    So then, where's the trick, again?

  3. Re:Ha! by doubtless · · Score: 3, Informative

    except that his captors weren't Taliban but a group of corrupt local warlords trying to stir the taliban government.

    this is from his tweet - http://twitter.com/shamilsh/status/23085559558

    --
    geek page at KY speaks