I should work on properly ingesting Twitter links so I can fully own my likes, reshares and replies on that site. For now, I need to look into a “silo-based translator” to the IndieWeb.
@ablaze @aaronpk Ah ok, that makes sense. I did some research on it couple of years back, and FAA always deferred to individual airlines to make the call on that. The airline has the authority to disallow calls, but it's not an FAA regulation. Some in-flight companies (like GoGo) explicitly forbids VoIP calls in their ToCs (at least used to) that you agree to when you join their network.
@ablaze @aaronpk Did you by any chance grab the pamphlet/page from her? I'm not aware of an actual VoIP ban by FAA, but flight attendants sometimes confuse it with regular cell calls. Although, many carriers block VoIP calls via their in-flight WiFi, due to noise complaints, etc, as well as bandwidth concerns. Some technologies work around that, but if VoIP is "blocked" (as far as they're concerned) and you're on a call, you're more likely to be mistaken for doing a cell call.
@aaronpk Yes, VOIP calls. I actually ignored her at first, and she came back shaking with rage and waving a printed FAA page in her hand and told me she would tell the captain I was ignoring her instructions if I didn't stop. I stopped.
@aaronpk Last time I took a call on a plane, the flight attendant interrupted me and told me I was violating FAA regulations and subject to a $25,000 fine if I didn't hang up immediately.
Here’s what I’ve been working on lately, as part of the Unlock team: a decentralized, permissionless protocol for creators to get paid for their work on the web. https://link.medium.com/nWzQlSj8LT
Last day at Mozilla today.
Just a couple of weeks shy of 13 years (!?!!), I've decided to keep pushing for a free and open internet in other ways in different places.
Much ❤️ to all the amazing people I got to spend time with over the years.
Tomorrow I go to San Francisco for a few days. Then home for a week. Then back to San Francisco for a week
@aaronpk I agree, but there's a whole section on "HTTPS requests can be intercepted from mobile apps" that most developers will just ignore because they believe they Figured It Out
@aaronpk also, your blog post doesn't immediately address the pinning case—lots of mobile apps pin their certificates now (which, again, is only as secure as far as the computing platform is .....)