We’ve shipped a security-guidance plugin for Claude Code that helps identify and fix vulnerabilities as you’re writing code.
Available for all Claude Code users. Install from the plugin marketplace (/plugins).
Humanity, created by God in all its grandeur, is today facing a pivotal choice: either to construct a new Tower of Babel or to build the city in which God and humanity dwell together. In Jesus Christ, this humanity in its grandeur becomes the Way, the Truth and the Life, opening the path for each of us to grow toward fullness. #MagnificaHumanitas
https://t.co/6i9MWs6LJl
The last ~month, Anthropic really behaves like it was bought by private equity:
1. Raises prices without offering anything meaningful in return (Opus 4.7 tokenization)
2. Poor customer support for paying customer (silent bans of a few 50+ seat corp accounts)
3. Shady growth hacks that go against the company's previously stated values on integrity (eg silent updates on the pricing page, removing Claude Code from $20/month packages)
I am a paying customer, not a prompt engineer for your broken chatbot. Then out of nowhere, a €150 credit appears in my account. No email. No breakdown. No explanation. The plan is €230 with VAT. How did you get to €150?
Tried to reach support. There is no support. Just a broken AI bot — that had the nerve to argue with me that what @AnthropicAI did was CORRECT. I had to walk it through a step-by-step scenario before it admitted they were wrong.
@GergelyOrosz If you are looking for one single company that actually do not care about their customers it’s @AnthropicAI talking about AI safety for the good of humanity. Can you at least invest in proper customer support for your paying customer.
Today, we're open sourcing our email editor.
Announcing React Email 6.0
- embed in your app
- style with your brand
- build custom extensions
- export to html
@paystack And the craziest part of all, which I didn’t expect from @paystack is that if you give a Paystack doc link to an LLM they just get 403. Really? It’s 2026 guys. Your documentation pages should be accessible to LLMs.
Did something happen to @paystack or have I just been unfortunate this past few weeks.
1. Doc pages consistently trying to verify that I am not a bot on the same browser, the same tab.
2. Doc pages consistently throw gateway timeout error.
3. Multiple links on doc pages are unresponsive when you click, unless you open in a new tab. And some just 404
4. New account verification, taking more than 14 days with zero communication.
Did @paystack layoff their best people. I used to love this company.
@rauchg@raghavsethi@rauchg can you at least make the user experience better? If you can already detect that the phone number I tried using is connected to another account maybe provide a way for me to verify using that account.
My dear front-end developers (and anyone who’s interested in the future of interfaces):
I have crawled through depths of hell to bring you, for the foreseeable years, one of the more important foundational pieces of UI engineering (if not in implementation then certainly at least in concept):
Fast, accurate and comprehensive userland text measurement algorithm in pure TypeScript, usable for laying out entire web pages without CSS, bypassing DOM measurements and reflow
@Pinterest moved to native CSS carousels to replace legacy JS across their entire platform → https://t.co/xF1kTX6IQA
Using CSS primitives like scroll markers and snap, they achieved:
📉 90% code reduction (2k JS → 200 CSS)
🚀 15% faster page loads
✨ Smoother, interactive UI
Today, we're releasing shadcn/cli v4. It packs a ton of features: shadcn/skills, presets, dry-run, monorepo and more.
If you're using shadcn/ui with coding agents or need better control over the defaults, this is for you.
Here's everything new:
Be honest, when was the last time a bio link impressed you?😏
Your link should showcase your work, sell, book clients, and help you grow.
That’s why we built LEENKIES, one powerful all-in-one link.
Start for free via the link in our bio.
#contentips#smallcreatorsupport#bio
Your clients shouldn’t have to DM you to book a session.🤌🏼
Leenkies lets them book directly from your bio link, and every contact goes straight to your CRM.
See how it works — link in bio👆
#creatorlink#ugc#linkinbio#contentcreator#creatortips
Please allow me to provide a slight different perspective. I don’t think the problem is ignorance, or lack of exposure. Let me begin with the ones on top.
Most of the people wrecking Nigeria, and many of the idiot aides defending them online, have travelled widely. Some shuttle in and out of London, Dubai, Paris, Berlin with enviable regularity. They know exactly what functional airports look like. They have used steady electricity. They have enjoyed public transport that works. They have tasted what it means to live in a place where the state does its basic job.
And yet they return home perfectly comfortable reproducing dysfunction.
Now this is the same with those at the bottom. Even for them the issue is not that they don’t know what a good country looks like. There is social media, or they have relatives who probably live abroad. They know it is possible. It is that many people, even poor people, but especially those close to power, are deeply uninterested in true equality, uninterested in reducing our violent hierarchies, uninterested in living in a society where there is no one beneath them. It sounds harsh but I really do think that even on a cultural level, Nigerians do not desire equality. They just don't want to be at the bottom of the ladder. But you see that ladder, too many people want, even need it. In Hausa we say, duniya kwandon dankali - Manya kan kanana -- the world, a basket of potatoes, the big ones piled on top of the small ones. (You know like how those people who sell tomatoes or potatoes on highways hide the small of bad tomatoes or tomatoes at the bottom of the basket🤣). We love that basket arrangement. We just don't want to be the rotten tomato or small potato at the bottom.
The middle class madam does not want to sit in the same train as her housemaid, even if she is happy to sit next to people she is richer than in public transport abroad. The junior political aide, who has narrowly escaped extreme poverty and begun to put on flesh since leaving his village to work for a politician, does not want shared amenities either. He wants to go back to the village and be bowed to. Be called oga. Have people kneel.
How many Nigerians genuinely want their children in the same schools as their drivers’ children? How many want to use the same hospitals as their gatekeepers as the women braiding their hair in the market? How many want public goods so good that private alternatives become unnecessary?
So airlifting everyone abroad, like the Devil took Jesus to a high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world, will not magically produce consensus for reform. Exposure alone does not create virtue.
What many people actually want is the ability to escape, not the obligation to fix. They want to travel abroad occasionally, take photos in Cape Town or Joburg or Seychelles, and return home to lord those images over people who cannot leave. Mobility becomes a status weapon. Dysfunction becomes useful.
I remember a moment in Kaduna that clarified this for me. NEPA took light. It was getting dark. A young girl shouted to their gateman: Maigadi, bambamta mu da saura!—“Gateman, distinguish us from the others.” She wanted the generator turned on. She was delighted at the idea of being the only house glowing on a pitch-dark street.
That sentence contains a political philosophy.
This is why Nigerian elites are comfortable building vulgar mansions surrounded by potholes, shanties, hunger, and decay. Wealth means nothing without visible poverty to frame it. Power requires contrast. Hierarchy needs spectators.
If everyone had access to dignity—reliable electricity, clean water, functional transport—how would big men be worshipped? How would pastors promise what governments should provide? How would politicians and traditional leaders maintain relevance? How would people (even average Nigerians) find poor people's children to turn into slaves, aka housemaids? How else would someone have the temerity to beat his chest and ask: do you know who I am?
So the problem is not that Nigerians don’t know better. Many know. They just don’t want a society where dignity is common. They want one where it is scarce—and personally controlled.
That is a harder problem than ignorance. And it cannot be solved by excursions.
The biggest takeaway from the unfortunate events of the last few days is simple, many of you should not be taken seriously. You stand for nothing, and it would be okay if you didn’t try to bully people who disagree with you.
I’ve always known that “right” and “wrong” on this app depend entirely on who is speaking, but watching people flip-flop in real time, abandoning the same values they use to crucify others, has been unpleasant to witness.
It should make you rethink how you behave here, and the grace you so easily withhold from others simply because you don’t know them personally or dislike them.
Human beings are far too complex and layered to be reduced to a single label. This is why the refusal to apply nuance, and the eagerness to cast aspersions over one tweet you dislike, will always be seen as foolish to me.
You called women expressing their opinions “pick me,” only to be caught in 4K auditioning to be picked, and being treated as less than human by questionable men, all for the cheap price of validation and proximity, while loudly claiming to “decenter men.” Meanwhile, the women you brand as “pick me” or “patriarchy princesses” have never been seen stooping that low. It’s painful to imagine working so hard to be your own woman only to end up profiled as a groupie to a questionable man😪
Watching this spectacle, hasn’t just been entertainment for me. It’s also forced me to think about how easily we ascribe credibility to tweets that give us the dopamine hit we crave and how much we worship money and access. It would make sense if we were willing to work for it, but the allure of what seems easy is too hard to resist, especially in a country like Nigeria.
Look inward, all of you, men and women alike. You don’t need a humiliating spectacle to force a reset. What has happened in the last few days should be more than enough.