This is what Twitter is now defining as "doxxing people's location." A factual piece of reporting about the company blocking a competitor. Can't do anything until I delete it.
The link in this tweet - https://t.co/X8n9xSRld9 - just referred to itself. The tweet included two screenshots (below) but no direct link to @elonjet or the flight-tracking data at ADS-B Exchange. The tweet does not break the rules, unless there is a new rule saying you can't acknowledge that flight-tracking data exists on the internet.
Tweet / Twitter

Twitter
For anyone wondering, I'm still unable to access Twitter until I delete this tweet, which is factual journalism that doesn't even break the location rule Twitter enacted a few days ago. The account isn't marked as suspended anymore, but I can't use it or see tweets from people I follow. Using Mastodon exclusively for now and actually really enjoying it.

Been five days since Twitter suspended a bunch of journalists, including me, for tweeting out factual reporting. And we're still suspended.

CNN's @donieosullivan, NYT's Ryan Mac and I can't access Twitter until we delete specific tweets that they said included "private information" but were actually just reporting.

Journalists Linette Lopez and Susan Li, who also covered Musk, are still suspended. No explanation given.

@drewharwell yeah and a little frustrating that pretty much every outlet misreported it as us being reinstated. Alas.
@donieosullivan @drewharwell I think it was not accidental that they just reinstated primarily major media journalists , the coverage would imply crisis averted
@donieosullivan @drewharwell
Seems that everyone is feeling such urgency to break the story first that they don't bother to get the whole story first. This does have the added benefit of providing a constant stream of Breaking News. Truth always bubbles to the surface, eventually.