For decades, the "Middle East crisis" was a headline about crude oil, tankers, and the price at the pump. But as of March 2026, the stakes have shifted from the engine to the motherboard. While the world watches drone strikes over Isfahan and naval skirmishes in the Persian Gulf, a more quiet, more lethal war is being fought over the very building blocks of the 21st century: semiconductors. The "Digital Iron Curtain" is falling, and it isn't just dividing East and West—it’s threatening to starve the global AI revolution of its most basic needs. The Helium Hostage: Why the Strait of Hormuz is the New Silicon Valley We’ve long been told that the South China Sea is the "front line" of the chip war because of Taiwan’s dominance in fabrication. But the ongoing U.S.-Israel war with Iran has revealed a terrifying bottleneck: The Middle East is the lungs of the semiconductor industry. To make the world’s most advanced 3nm chips, you don’t just need engineers;...
Twitter as you know is a very public thing. If on the other hand you find it a little weird to have strangers following you and reading your tweets. You can create a protected account.
To protect your account.
1. Login to Twitter
2. Click on Settings
3. Scroll down and check the box besides "Protect my updates"
4. Save Changes
What happens once I protect my updates.
2. Your Tweets are not indexed by search engines.
3. Your Name still appears on Twitter's people search. You will receive a follow request each time someone wants to follow you. Only by allowing someone to follow you will they be able to see your Tweets.
4. When you follow someone you can see their tweets on your public Timeline but they will not be able to see your Tweets.
5. @relies sent to people following you will not be seen
6. If you already have a public twitter account but want to protect it. All updates after that will not be seen. Your profile will be still visible to approved followers.
7. People who want to follow you can send a request which you would need to approve before they can start following you. Till suck time whenever that person visits your Twitter profile. They will see the message "You've requested to follow this person. Remove?" untill you take action
If you have any further questions or feedback please use our comments section.

any idea what i should do if my account was public and a couple of people followed me, and now i want to make it private but i can't get rid of them?
ReplyDeleteYou can always block them. Find he people you want to remove click on their profile from you home page and then use the block option found by clicking the wheel icon.
ReplyDeleteWhat if I've always had a private account, but then I switch it to be public - do all of my older, private tweets become public at that time?
ReplyDeleteTwitter is very simple it's either public or private.
ReplyDeleteThe good news however is that private tweets will always remain private.
ReplyDeleteGood point. I was just curious for 2 reasons:
ReplyDelete1.) Library of Congress records all public tweets - so I didn't know if I switched from private to public, if that would mean all of my past tweets would be logged into the Library - or just the new 'public' ones.
2.) Just found out that any tweets I favorite are actually pushed to my own RSS feed. I'd love to add this RSS feed to my Google Reader, so tweets with links I could favorite, to read later on my Google Reader. Only problem with this approach is that I don't think G Reader will be able to subscribe to my favorites RSS feed because my twitter account is private. Anyone know of any way I might be able to hack this together so it works?
Thanks!