World | Twitter Mexico Mulls Twitter Clampdown 'Twitteros' avoid drunk-driving checkpoints, feared to aid drug gangs By Jane Yager Posted Feb 3, 2010 4:36 AM CST Copied FILE - This Oct. 15, 2009 file photo shows a Japanese participant in Twitter Inc.'s special event launching a Japan-based mobile version of the popular microblogging service in Tokyo, Japan. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, File) There's a new public enemy in Mexico: los Twitteros. Twitter users who warn one another about roadside drunk-driving checkpoints have so angered authorities that the Mexican government is considering restricting and monitoring social networking sites. But in a country in the grips of a violent battle against drug cartels, the fear of Twitteros is about much more than drunk driving, Global Post reports. Support for the proposed restrictions is fueled in part by the growing fear that drug cartels and kidnappers are using Facebook and Twitter to do business—and locate targets. "Criminals can find out who are the family members of someone who has a high rank in the police," a crime expert said. "Perhaps they don’t have an account on Twitter or Facebook, but their children and close family probably do." Read These Next The leader with the highest approval rating may be a surprise. New Epstein files document Trump flights. Kansas City Chiefs moving across state line. James Cameron is still torqued about a 2013 joke about him. Report an error