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Aaron Parecki

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  • Sebastian https://twitter.com/sebmck   •   Jun 1
    If you are a Facebook employee organizing collective action, do not use corporate laptops, phones, or apps! This includes Work Chat, Messenger, and WhatsApp. Communication between employees is not privileged. You signed this away in your employment contract.
    Aaron Parecki
    holy crap, that even applies to using personal devices on company property.

    which I guess isn't that significant right now but still.
    Portland, Oregon • 67°F
    4 likes
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 1:32pm -07:00
  • Sebastian https://twitter.com/sebmck
    If you are a Facebook employee organizing collective action, do not use corporate laptops, phones, or apps! This includes Work Chat, Messenger, and WhatsApp. Communication between employees is not privileged. You signed this away in your employment contract.
    Portland, Oregon • 67°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 8:25pm +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 1:31pm -07:00)
  • rabble https://twitter.com/rabble
    There are many things you can do to support a protest without the risk of the front line beyond just tweeting and donating money. Here’s a good start.
    Portland, Oregon • 67°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 8:27pm +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 1:28pm -07:00)
  • Tristan 🌦 https://twitter.com/twaddington   •   Jun 1
    I've been getting the weirdest Twitter ads today.
    Aaron Parecki
    Same, and some of them are from really suspicious looking Twitter accounts. I haven't clicked, but I'm wondering if the sites they promote are some sort of tracking network. Kinda want to dig into this now.
    Portland, Oregon • 67°F
    1 like
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 1:26pm -07:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    I wrote an in-depth explanation of the "Sign In with Apple" Zero-Day that was revealed by a security researcher this weekend.

    The problem had nothing to do with OAuth or JWT, and you might be surprised at how simple the bug actually was.

    https://aaronparecki.com/2020/05/31/30/the-real-cause-of-the-sign-in-with-apple-zero-day
    Portland, Oregon • 65°F
    29 likes 16 reposts 3 replies 3 mentions
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 1:04pm -07:00 #apple #siwa
  • Adobe Photoshop https://twitter.com/Photoshop
    So embarrassed to be sharing this childhood photo, but here it goes...This is a snap of us at age 10!

    Share your childhood photos in the comments. #TBT
    Portland, Oregon • 63°F
    Thu, May 28, 2020 4:01pm +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 12:13pm -07:00) #TBT
  • Eliza Skinner https://twitter.com/elizaskinner
    If actual bad apples killed dozens of people, there would be a national recall of ALL apples.
    Portland, Oregon • 63°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 4:37pm +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 12:05pm -07:00)
  • Philip Saa 🇩🇪 #blm #demilitarizethepolice https://twitter.com/cowglow
    The phase "what are you going to do about it?" should never come out of a cop's mouth.
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 6:56pm +00:00 (reposted on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 12:03pm -07:00)
  • Jacky Alciné https://v2.jacky.wtf

    Someone unsubscribed from my newsletter and said to keep the politics out. Who did they think I am? Like lol, my newsletter isn’t about making beats or how to be Black around white people.

    Portland, Oregon • 63°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 11:50am -07:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 11:55am -07:00)
  • Karen Attiah https://twitter.com/KarenAttiah
    My latest: A dispatch from the Failing States of America.

    How Western media would cover Minneapolis if it happened in another country https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/05/29/how-western-media-would-cover-minneapolis-if-it-happened-another-country/
    Fri, May 29, 2020 9:53pm +00:00 (reposted on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 11:37am -07:00)
  • Aaron Parecki
    I keep seeing "Jun 1" in log files and being like wait what's wrong with my server
    Portland, Oregon • 62°F
    17 likes 2 reposts 2 replies 1 mention
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 11:32am -07:00
  • Hank Green https://twitter.com/hankgreen
    .@YouTube needs to allow creators to ban specific advertisers and I will go to the mat for that. I have tried my hardest to ban all political advertisements and I fail and fail and fail. Advertisers can pick creators, but creators can't pick advertisers, and that's fucked.
    Portland, Oregon • 60°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 5:05pm +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 10:32am -07:00)
  • nov matake https://twitter.com/nov   •   Jun 1
    "The email address however, should only be toggled between the user’s real address or the generated proxy address."

    No, a user can have multiple "real addresses" in Apple world.
    Aaron Parecki
    That's true, I noticed I have multiple me.com addresses on my account when I was making the screenshots and forgot to update this text to match. Still, the point is the same.
    Portland, Oregon • 56°F
    1 like
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 9:38am -07:00
  • 2020 Vision https://twitter.com/yoyomorena
    Who is @tinysubversions? Assuming he’s not a bot, he seems smart.
    Portland, Oregon • 50°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 9:46am +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 6:43am -07:00)
  • Shaun Scott🌹🤝 https://twitter.com/eyesonthestorm
    wait i forgot, are we under disease curfew or racism curfew
    Portland, Oregon • 50°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 12:20am +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 6:38am -07:00)
  • Gary https://twitter.com/every_daydad
    To those that have followed me in recent weeks thanks to my new computers for creatives based content.

    If you think you've joined a sane community where I will stay loyal to one brand or even piece of equipment for longer than two weeks.

    ....you better buckle up.

    🤣
    Portland, Oregon • 50°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 12:05pm +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 6:35am -07:00)
  • Dima Postnikov https://twitter.com/dima_postnikov
    Great article by @aaronpk on why you should never roll your own authentication.
    https://aaronparecki.com/2020/05/31/30/the-real-cause-of-the-sign-in-with-apple-zero-day
    #cybersecurity #datasecurity #privacy #authentication #consumerdataright #openbanking
    Portland, Oregon • 50°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 8:18am +00:00 (liked on Mon, Jun 1, 2020 6:31am -07:00) #cybersecurity #datasecurity #privacy #authentication #consumerdataright #openbanking
  • fluffy 💜 https://twitter.com/fluffy
    There is something very surreal about watching a live news event on TV while also hearing it outside your window.
    Portland, Oregon • 60°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 3:00am +00:00 (liked on Sun, May 31, 2020 8:08pm -07:00)
  • 👩‍💻 DynamicWebPaige @ 127.0.0.1 🏠 https://twitter.com/DynamicWebPaige
    I can't stop thinking about this picture, and this reality: safely barricaded from protests, spectating and not engaging, continuing with brunch as usual.
    Portland, Oregon • 62°F
    Mon, Jun 1, 2020 2:01am +00:00 (liked on Sun, May 31, 2020 7:05pm -07:00)
  • Chris Aldrich https://boffosocko.com/
    The overall idea to make it easier to subscribe to a personal website is certainly a laudable one.

    Sadly the general concept presented here, while it sounds potentially useful, is far too little and misdirected. Hopefully better potential solutions are still not too late.

    First, let’s step back a moment. The bigger problem with feeds was that website designers and developers spent far too long in the format wars between RSS and Atom while the social media giants focused on cleaner and easier UI. This allowed the social silos to dramatically close the gap in functionality and usability. While website owners were spending time on formats and writing long articles about what RSS was, how it worked, and how to use it, the public lost interest. We need something really dramatic to regain this ground and /feeds just is not going to cut it.

    The first problem I see with this is that on it’s face /feeds both looks and sounds like code. No user really wants to interact with code if they don’t have to. Why not simply have a page or button called something much more user friendly like “subscribe” or “follow”? Almost every major social silo has a common pattern like this and has a simple “follow” button on every user’s page. A quick click and one is done with the transaction!

    Instead the solution offered here is to have not only yet-another-page but one that needs to be maintained. (As good as the /now idea may seem, the fact that it needs to be regularly and manually updated makes it a failure out of the gate. I’ll bet that less than half the /now pages out there have been updated in the last 6 months. I know mine hasn’t.) Worse, suppose I click over to a /feeds page, as an average person I’m still stuck with the additional burden of knowing or learning about what a feed reader is, why I’d need or want one, and then knowing what RSS is and how I might use that. I might see a one click option for Twitter or Mastodon, but then I’m a mile away from your website and unlikely to see you again in the noise of my Twitter feed which has many other lurking problems.

    One of the best solutions I’ve seen in the past few years is that posited by SubToMe.com which provides a single, customizable, and universal follow button. One click and it automatically finds the feeds hidden in the page’s code and presents me with one or more options for following it in a feed reader. Once I’ve chosen a reader, it remembers my choice and makes the following pattern easier in future transactions. This is a far superior option over /feeds because it takes away a huge amount of cognitive burden for the user. As a developer, I’ve got a browser bookmarklet that provides this functionality for sites that don’t provide it for me. How nice would it be if browsers went back and offered such a one button collection mechanism?

    Want to give this a try? I’ve got a “Follow Me” button in the side bar of my website. And if that doesn’t float your boat, I’ve tinkered with other methods of subscribing to my content that you can find at my subscribe page. Some developers might not be too scared of what’s on my subscribe page (a /feed page by a slightly friendlier name), but less technically minded people are sure to have a dramatically different perspective.

    The other piece here that I might take umbrage with is the offering to provide feeds to subscriptions to alternate services like Twitter and Mastodon. (This doesn’t take into any account that RSS feeds of social services are positively atrocious, not to mention that attempting to access Marcus’ Twitter feed in RSS Box returns the interminable error message: “There was a problem talking to Twitter. Please try again in a moment.”)

    Ideally I see a future in which every person has the ability to own both their own domain name and their content in a simple manner. If this happens and it’s easier to subscribe to the sites of my friends, then I don’t need corporate social media to intermediate the transactions on my behalf. I also don’t need them to intermediate what I’m actually seeing with their blackbox algorithmic feeds either. Friends, family, and colleagues could simply come to my website and subscribe to all or portions of my content in which they’re interested. While I still presently syndicate some of my content to silos like Twitter and Mastodon for the ease of friends or family who don’t know about the technical side of potential solutions, I post everything on my website first where one can subscribe in a feed reader or by email. Subscriptions in Twitter or Mastodon, while nice to have, are just a poor simulacrum of the real things being served by my site in better ways with more context and a design that better reflects what I’d like to portray online. A /feed page is going to be a failure from the start if you’re going to cede all the subsequent power directly to Twitter, Mastodon, and others anyway.

    While I like the volume of the reactions to the post (indicating that there’s not only a readership, but a desire for this sort of functionality), I’m disheartened that so many designers and developers think that the idea of /feeds is “enough” to stem the tide.

    For those who might be truly interested in designing our way out of this problem, I’d recommend looking at some of the design and development work of the IndieWeb community which is trying (slowly, but surely) to improve these sorts of technical hurdles. Their wiki has large number of examples of things that do and don’t work, discussion of where problems lie, and a community conversing about how to potentially make them better through actual examples of things that are currently working on peoples’ websites.

    A good example of this is the increasing improvement of social readers that allow one to subscribe to a variety of sources in a reader which also allows one to respond to posts in-line and then own that content on one’s website. If I can subscribe to almost anything out there in one interface and sort and filter it in any way I’d like, that’s far better than having twenty different feed readers named Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, Soundcloud, etc. which I have to separately and independent manage and check. Now I’ve yet to see an IndieWeb reader with a one click SubToMe-type of solution for adding feeds to it, but I don’t think it will be very long before that’s a reality. The slowly improving Microsub spec that splits some of the heavy lifting needed to build and design a stand alone feed reader is certainly helping to make some massive headway on these issues.

    Maybe we’ll soon have an easy way for people to post who they’re following on their own websites, and their readers will be able to read or parse those pages and aggregate those followed posts directly into a nice reading interface? Maybe someone will figure out a way to redesign or re-imagine the old blogroll? Maybe we’ll leverage the idea of OPML subscriptions so that a personal blogroll (maybe we rename this something friendlier like a following page or personal recommendations, subscriptions, etc.) can feed a person’s subscriptions into their social reader? There are certainly a lot of solid ideas being experimented on and in actual use out there.

    We obviously still have a long way to go to make things better and more usable, not only for ourselves as designers and developers, but for the coding averse. I feel like there’s already a flourishing space out there doing this that’s miles ahead of solutions like /feeds. Why don’t we start at that point and then move forward?

    Portland, Oregon • 64°F
    Sun, May 31, 2020 5:26pm -07:00 (liked on Sun, May 31, 2020 5:32pm -07:00) #feedreaders #Microsub #OPML #OPMLsubscription #RSS #socialreaders #UI #webdesign
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Hi, I'm Aaron Parecki, Director of Identity Standards at Okta, and co-founder of IndieWebCamp. I maintain oauth.net, write and consult about OAuth, and participate in the OAuth Working Group at the IETF. I also help people learn about video production and livestreaming. (detailed bio)

I've been tracking my location since 2008 and I wrote 100 songs in 100 days. I've spoken at conferences around the world about owning your data, OAuth, quantified self, and explained why R is a vowel. Read more.

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