I remember when it was common for ISPs to give you web hosting as a standard feature. I think my first ISP included 5MB, which was a lot considering most people were still on dial-up.
Breve
They spelled "violate" wrong.
DEJA VU!
Well if Meta is the "industry leader" of tools designed to prevent this yet it's still happening at a large scale, then he's basically admitting that there is no way the industry can solve this. I hope they get legislated into the ground.
The article also considers people buying a new place instead of renting. Yeah rent has also spiked, but that $1.5m still pays for 25 years of renting a condo for $5,000/month.
Article title should be "people who treated a basic need as an investment crying that they cannot realize the overinflated value of their investment without becoming homeless". 🙄
Every time you need to pay someone who's pro-life any amount of money, give them a nickle and tell them that if they put it in their bank account it will eventually grow to reach the amount of money you owe them, therefore you've just paid them in full. Easy.
Yes, microwaves are non-ionizing radiation. I would not suggest sticking your head in your microwave while it's running though.
Yup, very true. There's even the possibility of hardware level cheats, just like that new MSI monitor that analyzes the screen with AI. Imagine that but instead it's a KVM switch like device that can "see" everything happening on the screen as well as the keyboard and mouse inputs. You could train it to recognize and track enemies in an FPS then add in some extra inputs to correct the aim every time you fire, or activate abilities in a MOBA automatically in response to enemy actions. I think this is what Gameshark might be trying to do. Short of requiring cryptographically secure input devices, the only way to detect this type of cheating would be behavioural.
I mean I'm not going to jump to the conclusion that they are definitely actively doing this, but more that if they openly admitted that their anti-cheat software has the ability to invisibly monitor everything on your computer from your browser to your password manager, then people would be way less accepting of it just because of the potential risk.
It's frustratingly hypocritical that the defense of the pronoun and name rule is justified by "parental rights" when the rules banning medical interventions like puberty blockers actually take away the rights of parents who want to support their child's gender identity.