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Flickr yahoo login6/14/2023 ![]() Fine, let’s do the email verification.Īn email arrived and it looked like this:Īs you can see (and if not, I am telling you now) the text seems cut off and there is no code in the email. I got the option to do an email verification or answer one of my security questions. I entered this and was asked to verify once more that I am totally me and would love to see this picture that was actually not private or anything so it would warrant logging in to start with. I entered my user name and password and was asked “for security reasons” to enter animated captcha. ![]() ![]() This one redirected me to the Yahoo login. I refused to download the app and went to the “web version” instead. No thanks, I just want to see this picture, thank you very much. Instead of seeing an image as I expected I got a message that I should please download the epic Flickr app. Well, I tapped on the link and got redirected to Chrome on my Nexus 5. All in all, a kick-ass product, I loved, adored, contributed to and gave to people as a present. I could get different sizes of images and different parts of people’s pages simply by modifying the URL in a meaningful way. Twitter has also been a best-of-breed when it comes to “hackable” URLs. It has played a massive role in the mashup web, I love the people who work in there and it used to be a superb place to store and share photos without pestering people to sign up for something. ![]() Yesterday I got a link to an image on Flickr in a tweet. ![]()
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