Instead of using spaces to separate the words, maybe the word boundary separator \b would have been better. It matches on the first character, and also when it's followed by a special character (like at the end of a sentence).
I think that the tweet at 3:11 was not hidden because "the" was actually the very first word in the tweet with no leading whitespace, so it didn't really match the regex
Wow, for some reason I expected IppSec to be a much older person with white beard and long white hair hahaha. Good to finally put a face to a name! Thanks IppSec
Instead of surrounding with spaces, using \b (match word boundary) could be better. It also works with tweet beginning/end and other types of whitespace
Ha. Part of me does, but I don’t need to be using Twitter on my phone. If my experience is better on the PC than mobile, I’ll slowly stop using mobile and be much happier haha
i think "tha" has not hidden because you filtered " the " with space before and after word and almost "the" came on the beginning description so we lost the space before word and we don't show same issue about "or" and "and" because in this case no twite starts with them so always we have space in right way
This might would work better: (?:\b(?:the|or|and)\s|\s(?:the|or|and)|\.\s*(?:the|or|and)\b|\b(?:the|or|and)\.\s*)i might work better for folks who don't use spaces between periods, and xeets starting off with the|or|and - when you changed your regex at 2:41 - that's the reason it failed finding one Xeet that starts with "The " = btw, super kwell.
I'd actually be interested to know how to fill your Twitter feed with useful information at all. I always avoided social media because I just didn't care. Now however I am required to keep up with breaking technology news, and I am having huge trouble finding out who to follow at all without exposing myself to lots of useless junk, with the algorithms generally favoring engagement over quality. (I pull RSS feeds from some notable websites, but I feel like most recent info unfortunately is on Twitter and the like)
I forget the term, but pretty sure you can follow lists. There’s probably a few list that have popular cyber people. So follow those, then filter for words to show. So you avoid their non-tech posts
Instead of using spaces to separate the words, maybe the word boundary separator \b would have been better. It matches on the first character, and also when it's followed by a special character (like at the end of a sentence).
TIL, thanks. Pinned the comment
I think that the tweet at 3:11 was not hidden because "the" was actually the very first word in the tweet with no leading whitespace, so it didn't really match the regex
you are correct. good catch.
I was just ab to comment this! Nice catch.
As always, valuable content thanks ippsec
Love that I saw you post this on Twitter, and I was like wait it can do that? Now the expanded explanation. Keep it up!
Wow, for some reason I expected IppSec to be a much older person with white beard and long white hair hahaha. Good to finally put a face to a name! Thanks IppSec
Thank you for the membership. 🖖
Love the diversity of the content!
Never looked into making my own filter with ublock origin. That's pretty cool.
Instead of surrounding with spaces, using \b (match word boundary) could be better. It also works with tweet beginning/end and other types of whitespace
Good call
thanks!
Push!
Thanks for sharing
Thank you for the vid. I wish we could do that on the app 😂
Ha. Part of me does, but I don’t need to be using Twitter on my phone. If my experience is better on the PC than mobile, I’ll slowly stop using mobile and be much happier haha
i think "tha" has not hidden because you filtered " the " with space before and after word and almost "the" came on the beginning description so we lost the space before word and we don't show same issue about "or" and "and" because in this case no twite starts with them so always we have space in right way
Is it haircut time? heh...
Got another couple weeks left most likely. Still cold here
@@ippseclol... don't miss the cold.
This might would work better:
(?:\b(?:the|or|and)\s|\s(?:the|or|and)|\.\s*(?:the|or|and)\b|\b(?:the|or|and)\.\s*)i might work better for folks who don't use spaces between periods, and xeets starting off with the|or|and - when you changed your regex at 2:41 - that's the reason it failed finding one Xeet that starts with "The " = btw, super kwell.
Beauty
ok
preg_match("/\bAdmin\b|\bAdministrator\b/i", "ipsecc") just like this Lol.
I'd actually be interested to know how to fill your Twitter feed with useful information at all. I always avoided social media because I just didn't care. Now however I am required to keep up with breaking technology news, and I am having huge trouble finding out who to follow at all without exposing myself to lots of useless junk, with the algorithms generally favoring engagement over quality.
(I pull RSS feeds from some notable websites, but I feel like most recent info unfortunately is on Twitter and the like)
i guess you could do the opposite, but only have tweets that include words? ha
@@ippsecJust follow everyone and do pure client side content filtering? That would be great for privacy I guess!
I forget the term, but pretty sure you can follow lists. There’s probably a few list that have popular cyber people. So follow those, then filter for words to show. So you avoid their non-tech posts
any one know how to remove "for you " tab it is kinda annoying
Woah, watching an ippsec video and I see a post of my wifi attack tool on his twitter feed?
crazy
Haha small world.