Sure, but it seems solve-able (even decoding urls one by one with captcha is better than nothing)
Maybe they should publish the mapping of shortened url -> target page, for at least not losing all access to the legacy links
The Hannibal Directive refers to preventing the kidnapping of soldiers, and it seems that in this case, it applied to civilian kidnappings as well. However, as this interview states, it was still used to prevent…
Note that the tweet you mentioned as proof is incorrect. I couldn't find the text quoted there, nor in the attached video. I can see how some civilians were hit by the IDF as collateral damage, but it is not widely…
Also, the in-memory feature (‘:memory:’) allows you to start working “on the fly” and saving the work to disk later. Really convenient for the user, zero cost for the developer (same API for in-memory/fs db and smooth…
Nice and challenging puzzle! Not sure how it can be implemented, but it would be nice to see a possible solution on timeout, or suggest hints
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Sure, but it seems solve-able (even decoding urls one by one with captcha is better than nothing)
Maybe they should publish the mapping of shortened url -> target page, for at least not losing all access to the legacy links
The Hannibal Directive refers to preventing the kidnapping of soldiers, and it seems that in this case, it applied to civilian kidnappings as well. However, as this interview states, it was still used to prevent…
Note that the tweet you mentioned as proof is incorrect. I couldn't find the text quoted there, nor in the attached video. I can see how some civilians were hit by the IDF as collateral damage, but it is not widely…
Also, the in-memory feature (‘:memory:’) allows you to start working “on the fly” and saving the work to disk later. Really convenient for the user, zero cost for the developer (same API for in-memory/fs db and smooth…
Nice and challenging puzzle! Not sure how it can be implemented, but it would be nice to see a possible solution on timeout, or suggest hints
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