AtGoogle Cloud, we built the Google Cloud Marketplace based on the core principles of delivering customer choice, innovation, and trust. Today, we are excited to introduce Marketplace Channel Private Offers, enabling channel partners to maintain their relationships with customers as partner of choice. This comprehensive program allows customers, ISV partners, and channel partners to efficiently transact private offers via channel-partner-initiated sales of third-party solutions listed on the Google Cloud Marketplace. This builds on the capabilities we introduced last year, allowing ISV partners on the Google Cloud Marketplace to extend discounts to select resellers.
Based on extensive feedback, Marketplace Channel Private Offers is delivering a suite of business model innovations that will benefit customers and partners. We aim to deliver efficient ways to help customers discover, transact, and deploy the right technologies from the right solution providers. Partners, meanwhile, can leverage the Google Cloud Marketplace as a route-to-market to deliver more products, reach new customers, and realize business opportunities faster.
Today, customers benefit from purchasing solutions through the Google Cloud Marketplace in several ways. First, organizations of all sizes can access a growing selection of industry-leading data, AI, DevOps, infrastructure, security, and business applications from our partner ecosystem that have been validated to run on Google Cloud. In fact, in the past two years, we have doubled the number of third-party listings on the Marketplace. We remain committed to delivering an open cloud that supports the freedom to choose the right solutions for the right use case, whether that be a Google Cloud or partner solution on our Marketplace.
ISV partners can expand and scale reach to more customers by bringing their channel partners of choice to the Google Cloud Marketplace. With Marketplace Channel Private Offers, ISV partners have a privileged environment through which to create private offer plans that can be transacted through channel partners, with the flexibility to establish discounting at the parent billing account, customer sub-billing account, and opportunity level that resell partners can readily review and proceed with making private offers to end-customers.
With Marketplace Channel Private Offers we continue to evolve the Google Cloud Marketplace as a platform that enables customers to discover the right solutions and for partners to transact and accelerate time-to-value for customers more efficiently.
I had the same issue which didn't let me do anything related to snap. It turns out the computer's clock was the problem (which was showing the wrong time). When I corrected the time by selecting 'automatically from the internet', it let me do sudo snap install core and others.Hope this helps.
I've run into an odd issue with port aggregation where I decided to remove a port from a port channel and put it into another but in my SNMP tool it still belongs to the old port channel and the new simultaneously.
I would say that this is related to the snmp tool, once you remove the port from the previous channel and added to the new it will belong to that one only, there is no way that an interface will below to 2 different port channels.
This does seem most plausible. I did try removing the switch and rrd-data from observium although this did not change the report of double port-channel membership when device was added again. When I have more time I will try moving it to another snmp tool to see if it changes.
We are now dealing with a new threat of bot accounts. These accounts sit lurking in channel, possibly logging info of either streamers or chatters. They may be using this info for giveaway sniping, or possible future bot attacks, including viewer bots, follower bots, and even spam bots. They sit there and do nothing, they follow us to other streams we host/raid. We ban them, not like they ever say anything, but to prevent them from spreading, we need a way to KICK THEM OFF THE CHANNEL.
Recently had a run in with "Opentwitchbot" whom acknowledges that they are running a bot in other's channels, but never requested permission to do so, instead, they want us to run THEIR command in our channels to make them leave, which isn't possible on our bots, because our bots are not design for that command, nor is it a Twitch command. I don't know what their command is doing, and I certainly don't trust it. When confronting them on the fact that their bot is breaking ToS, they reported me for reporting them. I requested and stated to them several times, their bot is not welcomed in my channel, and they refused to remove themselves until the end of my stream, waiting for me to host someone and latch on to them, thus spreading.
We've all been noticing another set of bots possibly working together, Faegwent ThisIsMyDevAccount and chatdb, they never speak, but they have hundreds if not thousands of followers, they never broadcast, etc etc, what are they doing sitting in our chat? sending info to these followers? that's against ToS. We the broadcasters need an option to kick them from the page, doesn't have to be permanent, they might have an option to hop back on, but I think we should have some sort of captcha security so they can PROVE they are human, and not a bot when rejoining the page!
Banning doesn't do enough if they can still read the chat and gather the info. Reporting seems to do nothing for the past 2 months of reporting them, from MULTIPLE witnesses/reporters. It's about time we have some control over the unwelcome bot accounts.
To effectively remove unwanted users or bots from a channel completely, administrators typically employ a combination of measures. This includes using robust moderation tools to swiftly identify and ban offending accounts, implementing strict verification here -bistro-menu-garden-8-and-other-branches-in-egypt/ processes for new members, and regularly monitoring for suspicious activities. Additionally, educating channel members about security practices and encouraging reporting of unauthorized users or bots can help maintain a safe and secure community environment.
This tool lets you remove followers from your Twitch account.
You can filter followers by follow date, account creation date, time between account creation and follow and username.
It is very powerful and can, if wanted, clear your follower list completely.
There is no way to restore a follow, even for Twitch. Only the user itself can re-follow (if you didn't also block)."
Continuing to post for documentation. It is now March 2023. Years of an issue being known, documented, and reported with seemingly no plans for a fix , regardless of the 'planned' marker added 4 years ago.
The confirmed bot list is ever-growing. More and more malicious links are being spread via spam bots and lurk bots. Lurk bots have solid documentation of being in tens of thousands of channels at once. Verification requirement settings have helped stop some, but not all follow bottings and hate raids.
Just an updated reminder, Twitch just gotten an influx of 4 million+ accounts within 24hrs as of September 25th 2022, (yesterday of this post), and most likely are all bots for possible hate raids, or follow botting. I already went through an banned 209k+ known bot accounts that have been on twitch for the past 5 years alone (still active accounts as far as I know of), and that takes me 6 days to run on each channel I moderate for, ain't no one got time to go through 4 million accounts to figure out what needs banning or blocking. Twitch has never cared, they only care about money, Never been about creators or their safety or the viewers safety (if these bots are also around monitoring people's activities to gather info about them). Justin.tv was a great site in its day and had a lot of potential, and Twitch (specifically Amazon) has completely blown it.
So I'm the one that posted this back in May 2017... want an update on how well Twitch cares? I put together a list of all bot names from Oct 2021 to June 2022, after removing invalid names and safe bots (like Nightbot, etc, or at least all the safe bots I know) I barely managed to bring that list down To this day, there are still these bots active and I haven't started July's list yet. want to know the number? 190,058 bots are STILL active accounts on twitch... These are just the bots! They don't contribute to views, they tend to be malicious in hate raids, or they are collecting people's info. They have been linked to targeted attacks by investigating easy targets to follow and spread, these are bots that in anywhere from 50+ channels (no normal person is going to sit in 50+ channels for no reason, if they can't even contribute to Twitch's views to support streamers), all the way up to almost 76k channels at a time.
This request wasn't just about bots too! It was to also ban unwanted viewers (stalkers, harassers, people with mal-intentions, twitch streamers have been known to be stalked and threatened, especially those in minority groups, females, and other cases, twitch doesn't do ****, the police don't do ****, how would you feel if you been swatted because someone you banned was still getting info on who you were and where you are by lingering in the channel, a ban should also be a block, and it should also remove their ability of even finding that channel for protecting creators and other viewers!) I've been in moderating positions for over 15 years in different platforms and games and communities. This is absolutely atrocious and just Greed talking from Twitch's end, they don't care, if they cared, something would have been done years ago, I've been around since the
justin.tv years back in 2010. The pure frustration with talking to anyone on twitch staff is real, because they just don't care.
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