Accessing the SnapCloud In a Snap! project will get you permanently banned

Does Snap! Cloud include all urls with domain snap.berkeley.edu?

same

Thats why it exists

It also includes all subdomains, like forum.snap.berkeley.eduand cloud.snap.berkeley.edu.

its the same snap?

You can wrap the scratchblocks in html p tags to make no formatting appear

[scratchblocks] (url [https://snap.berkeley.edu/] :: sensing) [/scratchblocks]

It may not be the best way (as it has to be on it's own line), but it works.

You can also find more info here Snap [scratchblocks] Tutorial (Part 1)

I too am changing the background of my pfp to the ukrainian flag

edit: yessir regular trust level
image

I don't believe this. I barely see any projects that

I think @jens has to delete these kinds of posts and projects asap...

I got a PM about this saying I did this! I don't even understand what a proxy is, and I'm being told I'm using one on Snap!, and I'm not. I'm really confused.

I've noticed a lot of computer programs going wrong lately. I don't know if these security flaws are just more noticeable on sites, or there's a actual increase in problems.

I'm sure this post was created because of me.

I don't understand what's going on and I don't want to be banned :frowning_face: :frowning_face: :frowning_face:

A proxy I think is like a relay of sorts, you're able to get past barriers and blocked websites and such to get to a link that is normally inaccessible by using a different IP so that it is no longer blocked. A VPN for example is a proxy.

Okay, maybe that's why I got that message. I saw a new icon on my Chromebook for VPN and I thought it made the site faster or something so I put in the Snap! URL address. Huh.

@mr_owlssssnap2 I think you're talking about getting banned on the forums. I'm talking about getting banned from the entirety of Snap!.

You should be more careful then when using VPNs.

It sounds to me like, in addition to saving projects early and often into the cloud, students (and all users) should backup a little less frequently (once a day? once an hour for critical projects such as AP test programs?) by exporting as XML

And as far as I can understand how Snap! works, 'banned' still allows anybody to go to the snap website without logging in, create or upload projects, run them, export to save locally. So probably no students will be prevented from completing AP projects even if banned. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong.

(In my experience) when you get banned you get a white screen with black text saying that "Your IP has been banned from the system"

OK thx for info. Students doing AP tests should not do bad things then!

But even good students should still probably backup with local file export occasionally as well

whats snapcloud

If any of your students get banned, you can download snap to use offline, although they will not get any of their projects saved on the cloud.