@github any update on when users will be able to edit OAuth scopes?
This page says it's coming in the future developer.github.com/v3/guid…
This page says it's currently possible developer.github.com/apps/bu…
I tried a test case and it doesn't appear to be live yet.
It does look fun!
Oh that reminded me -- the way that you connect the X2 to YouTube with that temporary code -- building and teaching software developers that kind of thing is literally my actual job!
Ok I just watched it, and wow great job 👏👏👏
That was a *lot* of videos in videos in videos, must have required either a ton of setup time or a ton of post-production, or both!
ok I was curious so I just tried the SMS verification and got "Your Twitter confirmation code is XXXXXX"
I tried a 2fa challenge and got "XXXXXX is your Twitter login code. [...]"
So yeah I can't think of another way to trigger that unless someone got past the password prompt.
Could also be someone trying to add your phone number to another Twitter account and it's a verification message. I can't remember if their 2fa messages and phone number verification message text are the same.
oh yeah! I saw it came out and it was on my queue to watch on the plane tonight, but then I had to cancel that trip. I am looking forward to watching it very soon tho! 😊
My summer go-to is a Negroni (gin, campari, vermouth, bitters), winter is Boulevardier season (bourbon, campari, vermouth, bitters). Can you tell I like Campari?
While that sounds nice in theory, the real world is more complicated. Apple's OAuth server is a great example. User IDs are scoped to the app to prevent cross correlation, and the app gets a proxy email instead of the user's real email. Users don't always want to be identified.