* sftriman [100930 13:38]:
> Well, finding your site SuperTweet.net today was a great find for me!
> So I hope it doesn't go away any time soon. And I will be donating to
> your cause shortly.
>
> I updated my perl code using Net::Twitter to do oAuth - but it didn't
> work right. That's because
Well, finding your site SuperTweet.net today was a great find for me!
So I hope it doesn't go away any time soon. And I will be donating to
your cause shortly.
I updated my perl code using Net::Twitter to do oAuth - but it didn't
work right. That's because Net::Twitter has 12+ perl module
depend
I appreciate the response, Ryan.
I'll say that it's a bummer to find out about this in that way.
Twitter made a big deal about how Basic Auth was being shut off, so
finding out that there were exceptions like this is confusing and
disconcerting.
No matter the intent, it is hard to feel respected
I would love to see Twitter implement essentially the http://SuperTweet.net
approach, where I can set a separate password for use with Basic Auth
credentials that do not use my real Twitter password and I can revoke
or change that password independently of my real Twitter password.
This would shut
Ryan,
Proactive transparency in situations like these is very important,
because that is the only way not to undermine your own credibility.
Is there any way that the enforcement of rules can be made more equal
for all services and developers? The last issue I encountered (Brian
has the details)
There was a very easy solution, IMHO, to the basic auth issue that I
am surprised twitter didn't consider.
1) Add a new field to user profile settings that is "Allow basic
authentication for API." Set this to be false by default for all
users. You can even set a scary message here discouraging i
The bonus is that it's a way to still use plain old curl for testing.
Awesome!
On Sep 13, 9:21 am, Dewald Pretorius wrote:
> They must have known that this was going to be discovered. We're
> developers. We like building, testing, and breaking stuff.
>
> Unequal applications of the rules. Happen
They must have known that this was going to be discovered. We're
developers. We like building, testing, and breaking stuff.
Unequal applications of the rules. Happens all the time. Months after
you've disabled something at the request of Twitter, you find well-
known services that do exactly the s