its not my reply dear
i want the complete api and code to share my website images to my twitter
account
thanking you
On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 3:16 AM, Daniel Ribeiro wrote:
> It would be nice to have something that make things clearer to the
> user that the requesting app is requesting write
My opinion is that twitter is trying to keep it intentionally simple for the
benefit of apps.
for Joe Regular, more options than allow / deny is going to create confusion
and apps will suffer.
Its pretty clear that if you tweet on behalf of users without consent there
will be confusion/anger and
What I'd actually like to see is some granularity in the oAuth
permissions that go beyond binary "has complete access: DENY|ALLOW",
and this would also solve this problem.
Surprising users when an app auto-tweets is one thing, but I'm more
concerned about a given app reading my DM's, for example (
+1 ... see previous email ... although I don't think Twitter
necessarily needs to do that - it's really the app developer's
responsibility to document what it's supposed to do and how to tell
when it's misbehaving.
--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
http://borasky-research.net http://twitter.com/znme
It would be nice to have something that make things clearer to the
user that the requesting app is requesting write rights. Like a big
red warning on the Deny/allow page.
On Aug 18, 6:17 pm, Tom van der Woerdt wrote:
> +1
>
> On 8/18/10 10:55 PM, Eric Marden - API Hacker wrote:
>
> > On behalf o