I have this. About once a month, in the early morning hours, I hear a hard to describe, "internal" sound, as if a hard object hit my cranium. Extremely loud, but painless. 20 years ago it was distressing but now it barely wakes me up.
Actually not because a server with multiple PSUs definitely knows when one loses power. It’s made to raise alerts about a power rail failing. So this makes it harder because you need to keep power on both to not raise any alarm
Why oh why haven't they pushed an update that made it easy to identify and change passwords that were leaked. They have the feature to identify weak or compromised passwords ALREADY.
Instead a user still has to create a folder for compromised secrets, change them and move them out of the folder one by one. Best of all, users would hit a bug where moving entries to/from shared folders would destroy the entry.
Edit: at least let the user (or entreprise admin) mark a vault as compromised. Must have been an absolute nightmare to get corp users to rotate their passwords.
Sounds like they're banking on uneducated users not finding out about the breach and continuing to pay them - although I don't use the product, so I'm not 100% on that.
Creator gets 55% of ad revenue, and 70% of direct contributions like superchats. Premium revenue is shared as well. Ad-blocked views count for analytics but not in ad impressions.
I'm not super familiar with YouTube terminology, is "YouTube Partner Program" something that applies to anyone who has ads on their YouTube channel? Seems to me something you need to apply to, and also only available in Canada, South Korea, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, and the United States which probably excludes more than 50% of popular channels on YouTube.
It seems to me that YouTube would serve ads on any channel, not just those part of the YouTube Partner Program, but the % revenue share isn't published for non-partners it seems.
Partners are everyone with monetization (revenue sharing) [1]. It's available in many many countries [2]. The countries you are listing are the early access to newer features like superchats, merch store, etc [3]
I'm not basing anything I say here on rumors or hearsay, I'm simply reading the content on Google's own websites regarding this, as I personally have no experience about it.
From the first link:
> I'm not a YouTube partner, so why am I seeing ads on my videos?
> YouTube may also place ads on videos in channels not in the YouTube Partner Program.
Doesn't this mean that YouTube is earning money from ads placed on videos where people don't get anything from the revenue?
2 - You need to add a phone number and receive a SMS challenge, before setting up any other 2FA method
3 - With the Authy app installed on your phone, the token is instead instantly added to your account upon reception of the SMS. This cannot be disabled. Use a very particular combination of steps in the account settings to convince it to let you use a simple offline TOTP app instead.
4 - Use your recovery code every month and repeat the whole thing because somehow all other 2FA methods break simultaneously for all Twilio accounts set up with that phone number.
The experience was so awful I had to delete the App and the account.
Their process is ridiculous and is matched only by the insane password requirements that they recently implemented (I think they required a 18 character password ? Or 24 ?)
However, I am entwined in their ecosystem for all of my texting and calling and message management, etc., so I am forced to deal with it.
In fact, their clownish requirements were the impetus behind the 2FA Mule[1] experiment which I now use across almost all services.
Stress does seem to increase occurrences for me.