Twitter, OAuth and bti - I'm Persian. So Twitter finally dropped Basic authentication, and now OAuth (twitter's implementation though) is the only way to authorize clients. I'm not going to tell you how bright is the idea behind OAuth, the idea of letting an application to do things on behalf of you without letting it know your credentials, the idea of revoking the access of misbehaving application as soon as it started being fishy, the idea of letting the server to revoke the consumer's access whenever it wants, cause of course you all know these. But wasn't that application (the one service provider decided to revoke access), the one you authorized earlier on? You and hundreds of thousands of other users? Apparently it doesn't matter, after all you are not the ultimate resource owner. The shiny new twitter client (which you may have even paid for, and/or even better you got it from a distribution channel) stopped working?
Who's to blame? But is it really developer's underdo? Tor: Linux/BSD/Unix Install Instructions. Note that these are the installation instructions for running a Tor client. The easiest way to do this is to simply download the Tor Browser Bundle and you are done. Step One: Download and Install Tor The latest release of Tor can be found on the download page. We have packages for Debian, Red Hat, Gentoo, *BSD, etc there too. If you're using Ubuntu, don't use the default packages: use our deb repository instead. If you're building from source, first install libevent, and make sure you have openssl and zlib (including the -devel packages if applicable). Tor comes configured as a client by default. Step Two: Configure your applications to use Tor If you want to use Tor for anonymous web browsing, please use the Tor Browser Bundle.
For information on how to Torify other applications, check out the Torify HOWTO. If it's still not working, look at this FAQ entry for hints. Step Three: Configure it as a relay The Tor network relies on volunteers to donate bandwidth. CentOS/Fedora/OpenSUSE Instructions. Tor packages for RPM-based linux distributions. Do not use the packages in the native repositories. They are frequently out of date. That means you'll be missing stability and security fixes. You'll need to set up our package repository before you can fetch Tor.
Repositories contain i686 and x86_64 builds. Assuming yum, in /etc/yum.repos.d/, create a file called torproject.repo. Fedora 21/22 and EL6/7 packages For Fedora 21, Fedora 22, RHEL 6, RHEL 7 (and clones), use following repo file - substitute DISTRIBUTION with one of the following: fc/21, fc/22, el/6, el/7 according to your distribution. The keys' fingerprint should be (for RPM-GPG-KEY-torproject.org*asc above, yum will ask about the fingerprint, first one is the newer one): Name clash warning There is identically named 'tor' package in the EPEL and Fedora repositories. E.g. you may exclude EPEL's Tor package by putting the mentioned exclude line under [epel] section in /etc/yum.repos.d/epel.repo. Package installation and running. Three Ethical Moments in Debian by E. Gabriella Coleman. NYU - Department of Media, Culture, and CommunicationSeptember 15, 2005 Abstract: This article is a detailed examination of ethical cultivation as it occurs in the Debian project, whose volunteers produce a non-commercial distribution of the GNU/Linux OS.
Thus far, much of the literature on free and open source software (F/OSS) production has been heavily focused on the question of motivation or incentive mechanisms and has tended to ignore how hacker valuations, motivations, and commitments are transformed by the lived experiences that unfold in F/OSS projects and institutions that are mediated through project charters and organizational procedures. In this anthropological piece, I draw heavily on the work of the legal theorist Robert Cover (1992), who examines the ways in which "jurigenisis," the production and stabilization of inhabited normative and legal meanings, requires an ongoing and sometimes conflicting narrative interpretation of codified textual norms. Working papers series. Digital World Explorer - Technology.
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