Telegram X Vs Telegram

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Cre Wallace

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Jul 11, 2024, 9:04:44 AM7/11/24
to dextheforko

Good day
I am using node red contrib telegram but i have been stocked at this error "polling error " on the telegram nodes i have looked online but i cant seem to fine a way out please some one help. I have connected it to my bot on my phone but it cant work.

I've had the same problem with errors on a few flows that report status changes/updates to me via telegram I've just had to restart the flows for a second time in 24hr's. Hopefully it is just a telegram network issue that'll be rectified, as the errors have been 400's.

telegram x vs telegram


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FYI: I just ran into this and I think the issue was I had two diferent devices on my network both running NR and talking to the same bot. Took the telegram bot out of the flows in one NR and the problem seems to have gone away.

I currently not needing to use those flows and have turned them off. I will check next time I have a play with NR, I'm fairly certain I had a seperate bot for each flow though as they were both monitoring looking and reporting on different status changes.

The few people complaining on GitHub (me being one) all seem to be running RPi, so it may even be something crazy like an under-voltage issue with the RPi causing a hiccup in network services. Although that wouldn't explain why the connection doesn't re-establish itself.

I have an iPhone SE (2nd gen) and an iPhone SE (3rd gen) on which both the Telegram app and the Norton 360 app are installed. The Norton 360 app had been installed 24-48 hours when I got the notification (while using Telegram and all other apps were closed) on the 2nd gen iPhone. To this point, I have not received a similar notice on the 3rd gen iPhone. The Norton 360 app was installed while a Norton agent was on the phone with me, walking me through the setup.

I have used the Telegram app daily (a minimum of 8 hours a day, 7 days a week) for at least 3 years, and I belong to several channels and groups that I interact with the other members of the groups/chats. I am owner of several groups, both public and private. I have never had reason to believe that anyone has had an unsafe experience when using Telegram. I posted the attached 3 screenshots in several of my groups to see if anyone else had received an "Unsafe" notice about Telegram. So far, the response has been "No."

So I would like for Norton to share with me and my fellow Telegram users why Norton recommends that we not use Telegram. If it is truly unsafe, I need to alert my online friends, but if there is no evidence pointing to a possible security risk by using the app, I don't believe anyone will take this one notification seriously.

As you are only seeing this on the older phone, one thing that might be involved is the iOS versions on the two phones. I believe the older iPhone SE (2nd gen) is stuck on iOS 15.x.x while the 3rd gen SE would be on iOS 16.x.x. What Norton may be detecting on the older OS is some security issue with the older iOS that has since been resolved in the latest iOS versions.

There is nothing in your screenshots that indicates this is a warning about the Telegram app. The warning is about a web page that an app you are using, or if you are using Safari to view some web site, that appears to have a malformed ad. The URL definitely looks like an ad. If it were the Telegram app itself accessing online content, the URL would include something like telegram.com. Why did this only show on one of your devices? The ad services rotate ads all the time, and it depends on when you access the app or web site as to what ads you would get delivered with the web content.

Thanks for the explanation.

I was looking at my Telegram list of chats/groups I follow, when the warning popped up at the top of the screen. I attempted to get a screen shot, but the warning disappeared too quickly, so I had to look for it in the Notification Center, and that is where I took the screen shot.

As I may have said previously, I rarely ever (and definitely not since the hacking incident a few weeks ago) use either iPhone for surfing the web (Safari), so I'm not sure where the ad would have come from. TG does not insert ads into feeds/chats (the way twitter & FB do). Is there any way to reverse the "allowing" of the ad that I did?

It would be very helpful, especially for non-techie ppl such as myself, for alerts/warnings to avoid a particular website to actually include the name/url of the website/ad to avoid, don't you think?

To reverse the permission you granted, you will need to uninstall 360 from the phone, restart the phone and reinstall 360. Unfortunately, in iOS there is no option to just remove an app's data. Reinstalling takes care of that.

As to where it came from, I can only suggest that something in one of the messages you received had some unwanted code in it that tried to access the ad. Also in one of your images it shows a Twitter notification. If Twitter was running in the background at the time you got this warning, it could have come from there.

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This telegram, written by German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmermann, is a coded message sent to Mexico, proposing a military alliance against the United States. The obvious threats to the United States contained in the telegram inflamed American public opinion against Germany and helped convince Congress to declare war against Germany in 1917.

Between 1914 and the spring of 1917, the European nations engaged in a conflict that became known as World War I. While armies battled in Europe, the United States remained neutral. In 1916 Woodrow Wilson was elected President for a second term, largely because of the slogan "He kept us out of war." Events in early 1917 would change that hope.

In January of 1917, British cryptographers deciphered a telegram from German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the German Minister to Mexico, von Eckhardt, offering United States territory to Mexico in return for joining the German cause. To protect their intelligence from detection and to capitalize on growing anti-German sentiment in the United States, the British waited to present the telegram to President Wilson. Meanwhile, frustration over the effective British naval blockade caused Germany to break its pledge to limit submarine warfare. In response, the United States severed diplomatic relations with Germany in February.

On February 24 Britain released the Zimmermann telegram to Wilson, and news of the telegram was published widely in the American press on March 1. The telegram had such an impact on American opinion that, according to David Kahn, author of The Codebreakers, "No other single cryptanalysis has had such enormous consequences." It is his opinion that "never before or since has so much turned upon the solution of a secret message." On April 6, 1917, the United States Congress formally declared war on Germany and its allies. The Zimmermann telegram clearly had helped draw the United States into the war and thus changed the course of the war, which ended with an armistice, an agreement in which both sides agree to stop fighting, on November 11, 1918.

This document is available on DocsTeach, the online tool for teaching with documents from the National Archives. Find teaching activities that incorporate this document, or create your own online activity.

"We intend to begin on the first of February unrestricted submarine warfare. We shall endeavor in spite of this to keep the United States of America neutral. In the event of this not succeeding, we make Mexico a proposal or alliance on the following basis: make war together, make peace together, generous financial support and an understanding on our part that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territory in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. The settlement in detail is left to you. You will inform the President of the above most secretly as soon as the outbreak of war with the United States of America is certain and add the suggestion that he should, on his own initiative, invite Japan to immediate adherence and at the same time mediate between Japan and ourselves. Please call the President's attention to the fact that the ruthless employment of our submarines now offers the prospect of compelling England in a few months to make peace." Signed, ZIMMERMANN.

On March 1, 1917, the American public learned about a German proposal to ally with Mexico if the United States entered the war. Months earlier, British intelligence had intercepted a secret message from German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the Mexican government, inviting an alliance (along with Japan) that would recover the southwestern states Mexico lost to the U.S. during the Mexican War of 1846-47.

What led to the proposal of alliance to Mexico? Zimmermann sent the telegram in anticipation of resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare, an act the German government expected would likely lead to war with the U.S. Zimmermann hoped tensions with Mexico would slow shipments of supplies, munitions, and troops to the Allies if the U.S. was tied down on its southern border.

Some suspected the telegram might be a forgery to manipulate America into the war. However, on March 29, 1917, Zimmermann gave a speech in the Reichstag confirming the text of the telegram and so put an end to all speculation as to its authenticity.

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