Every time I come across a locked account, I immediately wonder, "what did you say?" followed by "what did they do?!"
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Replying to @Aelkus
Yea. Matches your rolling deletion policy, too. (Which I implemented in my soon-to-be released library as, $ brittlewit privacy --clear-before 5d )
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Replying to @generativist @Aelkus
Rolling delete is a good way to 4chan twitter. Although there have been times when I wanted to link to
@Aelkus's posts for blog posts and wasn't able to. So now I just have to make sure to jot down his insights in a text file somewhere. AelkusKoans.txt1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @kaznatcheev @Aelkus
Yea. I just bookmark forgetting the rolling delete context. And, pressing webarchive is kinda fucked up for tweets unless you're a public figure. The right to forget is a good one.
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Replying to @generativist @Aelkus
Tangent: I'm surprised that twitter's internal security is sufficiently high to have prevented internal trolling of public figures accounts.
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Replying to @kaznatcheev @Aelkus
What do you mean?
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Replying to @generativist @Aelkus
For example, sneaking code into builds that backdoors a way to post what appears as tweets from a prominent account (or simply logging in to prominent accounts & posting directly).
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Ohhhh, yea, you're right. I'm constantly surprised there aren't more [delete] major account moments.pic.twitter.com/QmvtxSZCEt
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