If you're using Amazon SES to send email from an Amazon EC2 instance, you might also need to request that the throttle be removed from port 25 on your Amazon EC2 instance. For more information, see How do I remove the throttle on port 25 from my EC2 instance? in the AWS Knowledge Center.
Each person you want to invite must first provide you with a unique user code. To get the user code, the other person must go to -code and sign in with an existing or new Amazon account based on a work email address. For amazon.co.jp accounts, go to -code. A multi-factor authentication process is required. A user code appears that the other person should provide to you.
I went through and deleted (using the UI EDIT: and the lifecycle rule) a bunch of objects, and I was able to verify that the Life Cycle rule did permanently remove the original objects after the interval of 1 day, but their delete markers (which are now technically expired object delete markers) have remained. It has been 5 days and the delete markers still remain. Is there anything further I need to do in order for the delete markers to be permanently removed as well?
I had deleted 100TB worth of data, so it generated quite a bit of expired object delete markers - so it took AWS > 1 week to kick in and remove them. After receiving customer support - they mentioned some things that were helpful in understanding this, emphasis mine:
The above script is configurable. The most important thing is to specify the document titles you want to remove in the 4th line (the one with TITLES). WORK_ON_PAGE option switches to nth page of the document manager. It's very useful when you have a lot of documents which don't match removal criteria on the first page.
It's possible that you can cycle through all pages with pageList.gotopage before removing anything so you can gather info about all documents you want to remove and remove them in once pass. That would be awesome, however I haven't checked that option because I discovered it so late.
The ecs tag currently links to amazon-ecs. Unity's new ECS compoment system is currently in preview and will be stable at some point in the near future. As the ECS system is very different from the traditional Unity workflow, it makes sense to have a separate unity-ecs tag and to remove the ecs=>amazon-ecs synonym.
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the world needs to remove roughly 1 trillion tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere over the course of this century to keep global warming below the 1.5 degrees Celsius limit set by the Paris Agreement. Achieving this goal will require organizations to both evolve their operations, deploying technologies to reduce or eliminate emissions, and to capture CO2 that has already been emitted. While restoring natural systems can contribute significantly to this undertaking, technological solutions like DAC will also be required to capture and remove large volumes of CO2 from the air.
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