When Soos reports voter fraud…
When Stan reports voter fraud…
Am I the only one who read these tweets in Stan’s voice?

I’m don’t want to tell anyone what to do, but if you felt like calling this number and, say, reporting the Hamburglar, I can confirm from personal experience that it would be very funny https://t.co/GIRoHn6jAa
— Alex Hirsch (@_AlexHirsch) November 7, 2020
When Soos reports voter fraud…
I…may just do this all night pic.twitter.com/OFtKDeMBqE
— Alex Hirsch (@_AlexHirsch) November 7, 2020
When Stan reports voter fraud…
Hahaha can hear how exhausted they are already pic.twitter.com/zoa4HiLaEj
— Alex Hirsch (@_AlexHirsch) November 7, 2020
Am I the only one who read these tweets in Stan’s voice?

This isn't a "hacking" problem, this is a bad password management problem. People need to understand to use random passwords and a system to keep track of them instead of the same passwords that have been leaked long ago. @LastPass and @haveibeenpwned are key resources
— happypizza (@happypizza) December 12, 2019
These won’t keep your account from being hacked*, but it can make it harder for bad guys to break in.
*Your account can still be broken into if there’s a security exploit, or the software/online service does something stupid like store passwords in plain text. But even if the online service stores people’s passwords correctly, it’s still a good idea to change your password. Better safe than sorry. (Choosing a new password is easier if you have a password manager.)
(Also I’d like to note that people throw the word “hacking” around too lightly. If someone’s account was broken into because they have a weaksauce password, it wasn’t really hacking. Their account just had a weak password. 😐)
Okokok. This is a little late, but I only found out about it a few days ago. Luckily, despite their recent(ish) Facebook-level of noisyness:
In addition to Adblock (which lets you block tracking cookies), in Opera, you can go to Settings > Preferences > Content. You can either set up a profile for Twitter under Manage Site Preferences to have it block cookies (if you will never use it, but visit it occasionally), and have it not send referral info. ORRR under Block Sites, you can just block it entirely if you don’t ever plan on visiting it. Ever.
Disclaimer: I actually have a Twitter account. But I almost never use it, since the 140 character limit is kinda useless to me. ><;; Heck, I would prefer not to have any character limit, which is why I’m wondering if there will be an option to have longer posts in App.net.

I don’t get the drama around having an “‘always on” console. Every device now is “always on”. That’s the world we live in. #dealwithit
-Adam Orth
Hmmmm…..hmmmm…hmmmm…acting like a jerk to your client’s userbase on Twitter (which is also used for PR purposes by a lot of companies…like your client…while claiming to represent your client)?
Reasons why you might want offline capabilities: