I'm no OAuth expert, but did you make sure your system time is properly
synchronized with a regional NTP server?
Pascal
On Feb 12, 2011, at 3:13 AM, Winson wrote:
Hi there.
Using WP 3.0.5and WP to Twitter 2.2.6 on a CentOS server, which I
don't manage at all. I've got the error OAuth
Is there any documentation which I could read which describes the lifecycle
of site streams connections?
I can set them up and respond to what I receive but there are a few things I
am puzzled about.
What am I supposed to do with a track limitation notice in site streams? I
can't reduce the
Please read the error and post.
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 4:44 AM, raj kar rajkar2...@gmail.com wrote:
We are working on Twitter part of this proposed project. we are trying
to access twitter from stand alone java application, but got stuck in
between. Here is the action flow that we followed.
http://dev.twitter.com/pages/rate-limiting#whitelisting
Ryan, Taylor, Matt, I know changing mistakes in the docs has been
impossible in the past. My guess is that someone lost the password for
these pages. But leaving the whitelisting statement in the docs and
the whitelisting form online is a
On Feb 7, 2011, at 5:25 PM, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
On Mon, 07 Feb 2011 15:25:59 +0100, Tom van der Woerdt i...@tvdw.eu wrote:
I'd prefer London or some other West-European city.
I'm guessing it will be in SFO, given how closely the Twitter team worked
with the developers last year.
Sorry Adam, missed this document among the many -- it's fixed now. The form
itself and its text are immutable at the moment.
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 5:26 AM, Adam Green 140...@gmail.com wrote:
http://dev.twitter.com/pages/rate-limiting#whitelisting
Ryan, Taylor, Matt, I know changing
Damn! I had 120 days in the pool. :)
Thanks, Taylor.
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 11:29 AM, Taylor Singletary
taylorsinglet...@twitter.com wrote:
Sorry Adam, missed this document among the many -- it's fixed now. The form
itself and its text are immutable at the moment.
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at
Whoa, does that mean twitter is no longer whitelisting??
Guys, I spent nearly two years working on the app - it's nearly ready,
whitelisting is essential to us.
Please advice,
Jan
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 5:29 PM, Taylor Singletary
taylorsinglet...@twitter.com wrote:
Sorry Adam, missed this
Release early. Release often.
Hopefully, folks have learned an important lesson ...
On 2/12/11 11:37 AM, Jan Paricka wrote:
Guys, I spent nearly two years working on the app - it's nearly ready,
whitelisting is essential to us.
--
Dossy Shiobara | do...@panoptic.com |
I don't see the connection to twitter chronically ignoring my whitelist
requests
http://beepl.com/jan is the app
Jan
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 6:53 PM, Dossy Shiobara do...@panoptic.com wrote:
Release early. Release often.
Hopefully, folks have learned an important lesson ...
On
Hi, When i try to create an application
the server throws me a 403 Forbidden: The server understood the request,
but is refusing to fulfill it.
Reason Please?
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Is it possible to get PIN via e-mail? How long Auth Link lives?
My desktop app will send clients authorization link
Thet will click the link and get PIN e-mailed back to me
What process to execute and data I need to store to finish
authorization and get the keys?
Thanks.
--
Twitter developer
There's simple workaround for that. Just think about it and you'll
figure it out ;-)
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list
Jan, yes twitter have said they're removing whitelisting for new
requests, see here :
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/browse_thread/thread/1acd954f8a04fa84
On Feb 12, 5:37 pm, Jan Paricka jpari...@gmail.com wrote:
Whoa, does that mean twitter is no longer whitelisting??
Cool. I am weeks from launch and I am fucked. Without whitelisting, my app
won't sustain more than 15 users. Thank you twitter, thank you very much.
Btw, I really hoped to launch at @geekn'rolla
Jan
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 6:33 PM, mabujo jaa...@gmail.com wrote:
Jan, yes twitter have said
won't sustain more than 15 users
Why not? If you have 15 users, you can spread the API calls over them
and the last time I checked, 15*350 gives you 5250 API calls.
Tom
On 2/12/11 7:24 PM, Jan Paricka wrote:
Cool. I am weeks from launch and I am fucked. Without whitelisting, my
app won't
The app I am working on is assisting these users - also importing (and
semantically analyses) their contacts, replicate their follow structure, etc
etc By importing these, I'm also building an index of the twitter
experts
It's the invisible part to the project that won't work. The
Some metrics:
I just reran some tests to compare results for both the polling search
api + geocode and the steaming api statuses/filter + locations using
San Francisco as the geolocation.
Basically, the polling search api+geocode returns approximately 30x
more results than the steaming api
Just out of curiosity why can't DM's be limited by the hour instead if having
this cap of 250/day? I think if this was an option most of the issues
expressed by other developers including myself would be resolved.
Trevor Dean | Director
big time design communication Inc.
647 234 8198
Visit
Hi.
I'm using python-oauth2 to handle the authentication with the REST and
user stream APIs. I'm using the same code to sign the request in both
cases, and send the oauth credentials as authentication header.
While everything works perfectly with REST requests, I'm getting 401
responses with the
Any one Twitter account that sends 250 DM's in a 24 hour period is
DOIN' IT RONG.
DM spamming your followers is JUST NOT OK.
On 2/12/11 2:31 PM, Trevor Dean wrote:
Just out of curiosity why can't DM's be limited by the hour instead if having
this cap of 250/day? I think if this was an option
I disagree, Abraham. I requested whitelisting for my app because I
needed more than 250 DMs per day. Twitter granted my request and my
limit was increased considerably.
This may be that Twitter did not increase DMs as a default. But at one
time, if requested and justified, they would. This is why
Dossy:
Don't be so quick to condemn. I have an app that uses DMs and ALL DM
traffic is generated by users and they know it--so there is no
spamming. There are legitimate uses of DMs that users are OK with that
push an app beyond 250/day.
Think of it this way, if an application has 300 followers
Actually, the limit is 250 per account, not 250 DMs per IP.
Tom
On 2/12/11 9:10 PM, DaveH wrote:
Dossy:
Don't be so quick to condemn. I have an app that uses DMs and ALL DM
traffic is generated by users and they know it--so there is no
spamming. There are legitimate uses of DMs that users
Change the message so that it can go into their activity stream
instead of a DM. It may be that you have less information, but a
@storeowner, You just received an order is better than nothing.
Granted with DM you could include more information, but at least a
generic message would suffice to have
On Sat, 12 Feb 2011 14:46:33 -0500, Dossy Shiobara do...@panoptic.com
wrote:
Any one Twitter account that sends 250 DM's in a 24 hour period is
DOIN' IT RONG.
DM spamming your followers is JUST NOT OK.
Putting multiple Trending Topics on a tweet with porn links is not OK
either, but that
Whitelisting does not remove the daily update and follower
limits associated with POST requests; these limits are managed on a per user
basis.
Elevated DM limits are separate from the REST API whitelisting. It is
possible that Twitter is no longer providing access to elevated DM limits as
well
On Sat, 12 Feb 2011 11:29:09 -0500, Brainewave Consulting
i...@brainewave.com wrote:
On Feb 7, 2011, at 5:25 PM, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
On Mon, 07 Feb 2011 15:25:59 +0100, Tom van der Woerdt wrote:
I'd prefer London or some other West-European city.
I'm guessing it will be in SFO,
It's an unfortunate reality, but for every one legitimate application of
DM's, there's 100 projects being posted to rent-a-coder asking for an
auto DM script ...
As developers that use the Twtiter API, we're all collateral damage to
the scammers and spammers. Yes, it sucks, but there's no other
On Sat, 12 Feb 2011 15:29:23 -0500, Dossy Shiobara do...@panoptic.com
wrote:
It's an unfortunate reality, but for every one legitimate application
of
DM's, there's 100 projects being posted to rent-a-coder asking for an
auto DM script ...
As developers that use the Twtiter API, we're all
I have one question? what is DM?
From: M. Edward (Ed) Borasky zn...@borasky-research.net
To: twitter-development-talk@googlegroups.com
Sent: Sat, February 12, 2011 12:25:27 PM
Subject: Re: [twitter-dev] Re: Is there going to be another Chirp?
On Sat, 12 Feb
Indeed, if you figure someone can send a customized DM once per 15
seconds, and an hour at Turk costs you $0.05/hour, you can consume 250
DM's/day in 62.5 minutes - you're talking less than $0.10/day to have
someone send DM's on Twitter for you, personalized by a human ...
If a script off
On 2/12/11 3:59 PM, Brian Pegues wrote:
I have one question? what is DM?
--
Dossy Shiobara | do...@panoptic.com | http://dossy.org/
Panoptic Computer Network | http://panoptic.com/
He realized the fastest way to change is to laugh at your own
folly -- then you can let go
Rofl thanks Dossy.
Cheers,
Dean Collins
http://www.LiveBasketballChat.com http://www.livebasketballchat.com/
From: twitter-development-talk@googlegroups.com
[mailto:twitter-development-talk@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dossy
Shiobara
Sent:
On Sat, 12 Feb 2011 16:28:43 -0500, Dossy Shiobara do...@panoptic.com
wrote:
Indeed, if you figure someone can send a customized DM once per 15
seconds, and an hour at Turk costs you $0.05/hour, you can consume
250
DM's/day in 62.5 minutes - you're talking less than $0.10/day to have
someone
I agree, don't be so quick to judge. We have an opt-in based service and out
clients have thousands of customers that explicitly say yes send me direct
messages. The information we send is requested by the end user and is not
spam. So you can imagine that a client with a large user base
On Sat, 12 Feb 2011 17:07:36 -0500, Trevor Dean trevord...@gmail.com
wrote:
I agree, don't be so quick to judge. We have an opt-in based service
and out clients have thousands of customers that explicitly say yes
send me direct messages. The information we send is requested by
the
end user
The error message which Twitter provides is very important
for us
to proceed further.
- Mohan
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker:
Can you tell us exactly what it is that you are looking for?
This is the Twitter API development group where we discuss
issues faced by developers.
- Mohan
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
This is the message I received yesterday from Twitter Support:
sutorius, Feb-11 10:40 am (PST):
Hey Brian,
In the short amount of time since you've written in, our director of
Platform, Ryan Sarver, has posted an update on whitelisting and that
we will no longer be approving such requests:
Brian, Taylor,
Thanks very much for your quick responses. I'll send a message to the
above once I can think it through more precisely -- or decide that
what I was thinking of doing isn't needed after all. (FWIW, the issue
is not so much a shouldn't but more of a gray area that I'm not sure
the
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