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IIRC Violentacerz modded like 50 different porn subreddits, and he did a goob job by moderation standards so he was appreciated by the admins for being the overseer of the porny side of reddit.


How are you getting this information?


Well that makes choosing Google Drive a lot easier


Last time I checked Google Drive's client was a few steps behind Dropbox's. Is this still the case? I think at some point Google did not have a Linux client and I know the UI for OSX didn't look or feel as native as Dropbox did. However it has been a long time since I tried it out.


Still no Linux client but Gnome can mount your Google Drive much like an NFS or SMB mount.


It's not very powerful, but pretty nice entry-level machine.


Comments are one of the main ways you're going to foster a community.

An alternative would be to allow comments to be shown privately or to have a messaging/mail system.

Hiding them by default is a big mistake.


agreed, we'll be adding public comments to the site soon (in addition to private feedback)


A startup waiting to happen! ;)


The problem is you don't need fast physical deliveries of short messages that often. For example, a few days ago I was pondering how to reach a particular person on very short notice; I had an address, but nothing else, so I couldn't call them, and while I could spend like $50-100 on international mail, it wouldn't get there faster than 3 days from sending. Ultimately, the best solution I could find was... telegrams. Specifically, their modern email+courier incarnation. It would cost like $70 and probably get to the person in a day or two.

I thought this sounded outrageous, but then it occurred to me: when was the last time anyone ever used telegrams? There can't be many uses of them - I've never used one in my entire life - and all the regular costs of a business still need to be paid and the couriers have to be paid and so on.


Japan spends far in excess of $500 million on telegrams a year, the overwhelming majority of it because it is traditional to send one if you're invited to a wedding and cannot attend.

There exist a variety of circumstances where a business has to put a piece of paper in someone's hand within about 24 hours. It's doable between virtually any two endpoints in the first world. It also costs whatever FedEx/DHL/etc think they can get out of a business which needs to have a document hand delivered on the other side of the world immediately, which is "a lot." (e.g. It's presently midnight on Wednesday in NYC. I can walk next door to a store in Tokyo and hand FedEx a letter. It will arrive at the New York Stock Exchange before the opening bell on Thursday. That will cost ~$125 but it will almost certainly actually work.)


The amazing observation in your example, for me, is that it's one of the few things you can get cheaply, fast, and reliably. The holy trifecta of impossible requirements.

Some 60-70 years ago, you could not get it done for any sum of money. Maybe the military could do it, on a good day. A few years later, it's not just possible, but cheap.


I did not know that about Japan, but apparently here, as with the fax machine, Japan is an exception. Japan may spend $500m on telegrams (which incidentally, doesn't seem like very many telegrams per person per year - if each is cheaper than I was quoted by quite a bit, say $50 total, and there's 127m people, then that's one a month on average. I'm also not sure they spend that much since I can't find any quick hits in Google discussing it recently; perhaps you could blog about it sometime.), but nevertheless what delivery services in Japan do or people do in Japan is not that useful, in terms of amortizing fixed costs and realizing economies of scale, to American or Australian delivery costs, nor is it informative about how often Americans or Australians send telegrams.

I also didn't bother to check Fedex/DHL because I figured while they probably did have faster deliveries than USPS, they always charge way more and we were unsure we really needed within a day delivery (which is the only place on the Pareto frontier the private companies would be for general document delivery).

As it happened, we were unsatisfied with our options so we kept digging and eventually came up with what we think are the phone number & email address of the person we need to reach, so hopefully it all turned out to be moot.


Ubergram


I imagine it's a lot easier to DDoS a smaller company than it would to DDoS Google?


My old Homejoy login doesn't work on that site, and doing "forgot your password" gives an error of "user does not exist" for the email I used with Homejoy.


They're probably not porting over accounts by default, but rather waiting for users to express interest by clicking the link in the marketing email.

From the original post:

> Worst still, as I navigated around the site I realized the email link I clicked logged me into “My Account”. This screen had lots of my personal information, home address, email, even my credit card number.


So hold on... If we can work out how they encoded those activation URLs, or someone intercepts the email then they can get full access to anyone's account?

I have zero sympathy for HomeJoy. They failed, which is something I can gave sympathy for. But they sold all their customer's private data without notifying them of this fact, and caused major security concerns in the process!


We don't actually know what happened here. It could have been just one founder doing something shady; it could have been a hack; it could be something we can't imagine yet.

Let's not break out the pitchforks until we know who to point them at.


Actually, I'm breaking out the pitchforks. One of the requirements for PCI compliance is that you do NOT hold credit card data for any longer than absolutely required. Given HomeJoy was not doing any more billing of credit cards, these should have been removed from their system.


Of course it's their fault, it's their own product?


RIP


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