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Twitter bought Tweetdeck for $40 Million in 2011.


Exactly right - I meant the "real" TweetDeck of 2008-2010 lol :) Multiple columns of custom user groups, so straightforward. Oh yeah, no ads!


"Yellow" Tweetdeck.


Reminds me of the video where they yell at hard drives and measure disk latency. https://youtu.be/tDacjrSCeq4


I second Mullvad also. They don't even have usernames, emails or passwords. All you use to log in is a random number for your account. Can't get much more anonymous than that. And they financially sponsor wireguard, have a bunch of wireguard servers. Can't recommend them enough.


I found Mullvad pitifully slow, even with Wireguard.


Mullvad nodes are all over the place for me; same geo-location can provide ~300kb/s down -- a few hours later multiple mb/s.


I get close to my native bandwidth (80-90 Mbps for a 100 Mbps connection) when using a local wireguard server.


The 'p' it sends is asked for by encfs when setting up a new encrypted folder (not when mounting an existing in encfs).

As the comment in the code says, it's for setting the pre-configured "Paranoia" mode (AES, PBKDF2, IV-chaining, etc) in encfs.

Bad that it's not checking any results whatsoever when sending stuff..

[1] https://linux.die.net/man/1/encfs


> Is there a source you can find that shows neonicotinoids as used in the wild being calamitous for bees

The Swedish Board of Agriculture recently released a systematic review of scientific literature [0].

Bumblebees are more sensitive to subletal effects of neonicotinoids than honey bees [1][2]. There's a great variation in sociality, seasonality and living for various species of bees, which means the effects of neonicotinoids will vary between species [3][4][5].

A big issue is also that most studies only look for residue of neonicotinoids in plants or in the bee to figure out how calamitous they are. Even though many of the most used neonicotinoids have a high LD50 in bees [6], there are very few studies that look at the effects of the bees of the exposure. Instead of just looking at the individual level, more studies are needed that look at effects on sub-individual, hive and population level.

In rapeseed, there has been negative effects on the growth and reproduction of the bumblebee Bombus Terrestris linked to neonicotinoids [7][8]. And in [8] they also showed that Osmia Bicornis failed to create hives by rapeseed fields where clothianidin were used, but in average created 2.88 hives by non-treated fields.

--- [0] http://www.jordbruksverket.se/download/18.1a3130fb152332440f...

[1] Cresswell JE, Page CJ, Uygun MB, Holmbergh M, Li Y et al. (2012b) Differential sensitivity of honey bees and bumble bees to a dietary insecticide (imidacloprid). Zoology 115: 365-371.

[2] Cutler GC, Scott-Dupree CD (2014) A field study examining the effects of exposure to neonicotinoid seed-treated corn on commercial bumble bee colonies. Ecotoxicology 23: 1755-1763.

[3] Thompson HM, Hunt LV (1999) Extrapolating from honeybees to bumblebees in pesticide risk assessment. Ecotoxicology 8: 147-166.

[4] Williams NM, Crone EE, Minckley RL, Packer L, Potts SG (2010) Ecological and life-history traits predict bee species responses to environmental disturbances. Biological Conservation 143: 2280-2291.

[5] Brittain C, Potts SG (2011) The potential impacts of insecticides on the life-history traits of bees and the consequences for pollination. Basic and Applied Ecology 12: 321-331.

[6] LD50 for imidacloprid, thiamethoxam and clothianidin for the honey bee Apis Mellifera is 0.02-0.08 μg per bee. For acetamiprid and thiacloprid it's 8.1-39 μg per bee. EFSA 2012.

[7] Goulson D (2015) Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment. PeerJ 3: e854.

[8] Rundlöf M, Andersson GK, Bommarco R, Fries I, Hederström V et al. (2015) Seed coating with a neonicotinoid insecticide negatively affects wild bees. Nature 521: 77-80.


I'm one of the founders. This was the first time we did Security Fest, and it was a great success (if I may say so myself). Ask away if you have any questions!


The whole recent xkeyscore thing made me remember the random keyword-spamming during the Echelon craze.

The reason I made it is that awkward gut feeling you get if you ever used the word "bomb" or something in a sentence, and you're not sure if that will flag something so someone will monitor more of your conversation/traffic. There should never be a reason to have to think like that.

All sites and links are indexed automatically, and the search strings are generated randomly, based on a few sets of rules, and on text of the pages it finds.


Out of the box, no. There are plugins, but they encrypt on the server side.



Not only that, the article linked to contains this paragraph:

Stewart, a New Yorker who has resided in Salt Lake City for the past five years, will recover damages from the films, The Matrix I, II and III, as well as The Terminator and its sequels. She will soon receive one of the biggest payoffs in the history of Hollywood , as the gross receipts of both films and their sequels total over 2.5 billion dollars.

This paragraph is specifically mentioned in the snopes link. I think it is safe to dismiss this article without a more reputable source.


Are the files public? Then perhaps just use youtube.

If you need a CDN, CDN77 has worked fine for me at a reasonable price.

I'd start hosting them on a separate domain first, then move that to a CDN if necessary.


thanks, will take a look at CDN77

any idea whether Google Cloud Storage is suitable for such task?


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