Some politically active bloggers in the studied country deliberately continued publishing on officially court-blocked platforms, reasoning that official blockage created a legal defense against persecution: 'if they say you wrote this on your blog, I will say all of these blogs are blocked according to this court decision—they don't exist and they are officially inaccessible to citizens.' This co-option of censor infrastructure as a shield was treated as a serious protective strategy.
From 2011-shklovski-online — Online Contribution Practices in Countries that Engage in Internet Blocking and Censorship
· §Blocked sites as a form of protection
· 2011
· CHI
Implications
Consider hosting circumvention infrastructure on domains or platforms that the censor has already officially and publicly blocked, creating a documented gap between what the censor claims to block and what it actually monitors
Tool designers should be aware that official blocklist status can paradoxically reduce prosecution risk for some user populations and factor this into bridge selection strategies