FYI The IFTTT SMS integration is already using Twilio under the hood (enable here): https://ifttt.com/sms/settings
However, this uses IFTTT's Twilio Account. If you want to use your own Twilio Account then I think the API request is the best approach. Here's an example of the URL and parameters you would need to pass: https://www.twilio.com/docs/sms/send-messages?code-sample=code-send-an-sms-message&code-language=curl&code-sdk-version=json
That could mean the error is actually in the line before it. I don't know python so can't help much, but if you install a decent code editor it will point out syntax errors and assist in fixing them.
Visual Studio Code is good, and it's free.
https://code.visualstudio.com/
Install an addon for python (just search for python and usually the one with the most installs is the best -- or spend a minute googling for what people recommend)
Here's the instruction on how to integrate Twilio with the shortening service to send bulk SMS that contain short links. https://short.cm/support/Connected%20Apps%20&%20Services/zapier-twilio/
const functions = require('firebase-functions')
const admin = require('firebase-admin')
admin.initializeApp(functions.config().firebase)
// // Create and Deploy Your First Cloud Functions
// // https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/write-firebase-functions
//
// exports.helloWorld = functions.https.onRequest((request, response) => {
// response.send('Hello from Firebase!')
// })
exports.receiveText = functions.https.onRequest((request, response) => {
request.body.timestamp = new Date().getTime()
const message = {
lastMessage: request.body.Body,
timestamp: request.body.timestamp,
unread: true
}
admin.firestore().collection('messages').doc(request.body.From).set(message, {
merge: true
})
admin.firestore().collection('messages').doc(request.body.From).collection('messages').add(request.body)
response.status(200).send()
})
I feel like this is possible, but am not quite getting your use case. Can you draw an image or flow of this? Either a flow chart or just something on a whiteboard like Miro.
The studio flow suggestion seems to be viable, but I'm not sure I perfectly understand the context of your use case and why you need to change the "to" and "from" numbers (which you can totally do, but depends on what infrastructure you have set up already).
Hope you enjoy :). If you have any questions or comments feel free to email me at .
I'm using the Dark Sky API to pull weather data, and doing my automation + scheduling via Heroku and NodeJs. My frontend is built in Angular2 + Auth0 for user management
While you can technically build this with Autopilot, I'd actually recommend using Dialogflow here because it has quick replies built in at the intent level. I don't believe that Dialogflow messenger has out-of-the-box support for quick replies though.
The bot that you see on twilio.com is actually a Drift bot.
Work on getting better at detecting and isolating synthetic traffic. Use a layered approach that combines fingerprinting (botd is a decent place to start) and ip address intelligence (i've had success using the ipinfo.io proxy/vpn detection solution).
Flip the script. You could, in theory, rely on an alternate approach where users text a specific six-digit code to a specific phone number - and only then will the phone number be associated with the account being created. If these attacks are truly sinking your fleet, pivot to this - it doesn't sacrifice any of the validity of the verification.
We do have a couple of Postman collections, but not for making calls yet. You can see the collections here: https://www.postman.com/twilio?tab=collections
The collection does give you a good idea of how to set things up, the auth should be Basic Auth and the username is your Twilio Account Sid and the password is your Auth Token. The send an SMS request is then very similar to making a call. It will show you where to put the URL and how to interpolate your Account Sid using a path variable. It also shows how to add parameters in the body of the request. Hopefully that helps a bit! Otherwise, /u/Stunning_Reach_3884's suggestions are great too.
Pretty sure WhatsApp business allows it. There are requirements to how you engage, only being able to respond for 24 hours, and not just spamming people.
I would say just give it a try w/ that disabled and compare. It might be also an issue w/ registration interval or something of the sort. I just know for reliability my 3cx soft-phone sucks when i'm on my PureVPN service.