Would they even allow you to rate an app that you have never installed?
This works up until you discover that your domain registrar and dns provider are all using cloudflare to protect their websites.
You might need to flush your DNS, X removed cloudflare and are now directly serving their site directly from twitter's own network.
Cloudflare's dashboard is currently down as well. My domain is registered with cloudflare so I'm 100% helpless to get things back online. I can't edit DNS records to bypass cloudflare and I can't change nameservers…
Ironically I can't even read the link in the article because cloudflare is down.
In other countries these setups are fairly illegal because it bypasses the international call tariffs that the typically state owned telco company would be entitled to. A local domestic call might cost $.01 per minute…
Correct. You can open up an USD account in maybe Zambia and transfer funds to another USD account in Dubai without it ever touching the US financial system.
I have been using sendgrid for years and years and don't believe I have ever paid anything for it.
This was kind of my experience with reporting a bug to Google as well. Some years ago I managed to upload a SWF file to "google.com" which allowed me to do an XSS and access anyone's gmail, contacts, etc. I reported it…
Would they even allow you to rate an app that you have never installed?
This works up until you discover that your domain registrar and dns provider are all using cloudflare to protect their websites.
You might need to flush your DNS, X removed cloudflare and are now directly serving their site directly from twitter's own network.
Cloudflare's dashboard is currently down as well. My domain is registered with cloudflare so I'm 100% helpless to get things back online. I can't edit DNS records to bypass cloudflare and I can't change nameservers…
Ironically I can't even read the link in the article because cloudflare is down.
In other countries these setups are fairly illegal because it bypasses the international call tariffs that the typically state owned telco company would be entitled to. A local domestic call might cost $.01 per minute…
Correct. You can open up an USD account in maybe Zambia and transfer funds to another USD account in Dubai without it ever touching the US financial system.
I have been using sendgrid for years and years and don't believe I have ever paid anything for it.
This was kind of my experience with reporting a bug to Google as well. Some years ago I managed to upload a SWF file to "google.com" which allowed me to do an XSS and access anyone's gmail, contacts, etc. I reported it…