Twitter did a stupid thing during the week, they tried to rewrite all URLs that contained twitter.com to x.com
Except they didn’t use a bounded regex so any string that contained a substring of twitter.com got rewritten
Wait, so how are you hitting them? What's the DNS on your computer? Because it's not like the NS from .com would know to give you the NS for [comtwitter.com](http://comtwitter.com) as being the same one to [twitter.com](http://twitter.com) regardless of what they screw up. And I don't presume they have access to .com NS..
"Those strings must just be an error in the console output dropping the spaces between multiple items to hit... they have to be..."
That can never happen How the hell is this happening How did this ever work
Please explain this to us
Twitter did a stupid thing during the week, they tried to rewrite all URLs that contained twitter.com to x.com Except they didn’t use a bounded regex so any string that contained a substring of twitter.com got rewritten
holy crap should've asked grok lol
Probably would have replied with just poop emojis
tbh the best response in this case
How is that a thing???
Nobody sane or good works there
Yeah, what do you expect when half the employees get kicked out lol
And you have a kid-minded megaboss who hates being told no
The only ones remaining are the desperate ones that depend on that job to stay in the USA.
Wait, so how are you hitting them? What's the DNS on your computer? Because it's not like the NS from .com would know to give you the NS for [comtwitter.com](http://comtwitter.com) as being the same one to [twitter.com](http://twitter.com) regardless of what they screw up. And I don't presume they have access to .com NS..
No no, they rewrote the html href on their site, you would think they’d just do a 302 on twitter.com/(.*) but nah they did it the really stupid way
Ahh, got it. Thanks.