On Mon, Jun 27, 2011 at 17:44, Evan Schoenberg, M.D. <eva...@dreskin.net>wrote:

>
> On Jun 27, 2011, at 12:00 PM, Colin Barrett wrote:
>
> > While Evan was working on updating the code, he noticed this as well.
> After some digging, it appeared the application we had been using was
> disabled. So we registered it again.
>
> Further search of my spam folder shows an identical email dated 6/8/2011.
>  I do recall being randomly (it seemed) forced to change my Facebook
> password, though at that time they didn't have an informative message as to
> why or pointing me to search for an application-related email.
>
>
Me too. Was I listed as a developer on that one?

Another guess: they routinely look for 'phishing'-looking Applications, and
disable them. It's possible that they realize up until this point there
isn't an official Adium implementation using the FB API so they nail them.

Hopefully they respond to your email, if not we can try our usual methods
(blog post, Twitter) to see if we can find a contact inside FB to ease this
a bit.

Zac

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