image caption Technology companies Apple and Uber have more than 5. 5 million Twitter followers between them The idea Twitter has the ability to take over people's accounts no matter what security they have may shock some. But experts say it is a necessary part of any membership-based service. Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram and YouTube have been approached for comment on their security arrangements. 'High-risk accounts' But Facebook's former chief security officer Alex Stamos told BBC News all consumer-facing companies needed a way to be able to help consumers recover hacked or otherwise locked-out accounts. "The change that can be made here is that Twitter can restrict this ability for high-risk accounts to a much smaller number of users or create tools that require one person to initiate and another to approve the change, " he said. "This is, apparently, what they have already done for President Trump's account, following an incident in 2017. "They will need to vastly expand these protections. "
The tax filings also detail income Trump received from abroad during his time as president, potentially presenting conflicts of interest. The president has faced legal challenges over access to his tax returns, including a lawsuit by the House of Representatives to obtain the documents as part of congressional oversight. As he has done since launching his successful White House bid, Trump said he is unable to release his financial records because he is being audited by the Internal Revenue Service. "It's under audit. They've been under audit for a long time, " he said. "The IRS does not treat me well. "When they're not [under audit], I would be proud to show [them]. " While not furnishing any paperwork, Trump said he has paid heavily. "First of all, I paid a lot, " he said. "I paid a lot of state income taxes too. New York state charges a lot. " Trump again vowed that the information would eventually see the light of day once the audit is complete. "It'll all be revealed, " he said. "I look forward to releasing many things.
ranger is a console file manager with VI key bindings. It provides a minimalistic and nice curses interface with a view on the directory hierarchy. It ships with rifle, a file launcher that is good at automatically finding out which program to use for what file type. For mc aficionados there's also the multi-pane viewmode. This file describes ranger and how to get it to run. For instructions on the usage, please read the man page ( man ranger in a terminal). See for development-specific information. For configuration, check the files in ranger/config/ or copy the default config to ~/ with ranger --copy-config (see instructions). The examples/ directory contains several scripts and plugins that demonstrate how ranger can be extended or combined with other programs. These files can be found in the git repository or in /usr/share/doc/ranger. A note to packagers: Versions meant for packaging are listed in the changelog on the website.