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in reply to solrize

I got an extra 30% battery life after switching to GrapheneOS. I'm guessing whatever is saving my battery, would also bring down the load on the system.

I did notice my phone heats up much less after switching to GrapheneOS.

in reply to dudesss

Just here to confirm this comment from personal experience.
in reply to dudesss

I've been runnnng GrapheneOS with charge capped at 80%. Phone has not emulated thermite.

I haven't found any discussion about the battery issues at GrapheneOS yet.

in reply to pHr34kY

Meaning you charge till 80% full, or at 80% max charging speed? just curious.
in reply to tamal3

80% full. It drastically helps extend battery life
in reply to CeeBee_Eh

Is this done manually , or there’s a system thing for it ?
in reply to stellargmite

In GrapheneOS, Settings -> Battery -> Charging Optimization.
in reply to stellargmite

Many phones support it. My old mid range Samsung galaxy phone from 2020 had it, as does my Pixel 9a.
in reply to CeeBee_Eh

Yep. It's the capacity.

Anyone can cap the charging speed by using a garbage $2 700mA charger from 2008.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to dudesss

plan to buy a pixel just to put Graphene on. Which one do you have and any problems?
in reply to mazzilius_marsti

I have no recommendations for versions. Depends in your case.

Although I'll mention that some people don't like that Pixel by default doesn't include the bottom menu on the screen, and uses other swiping features on the screen to do the same thing.

However in your system settings you can change the UI to gave the navigation menu at the bottom of the screen similar to Samsung.



UK Government responded to the "Repeal the Online Safety Act" Petition.


Source.

::: spoiler Long Response

I would like to thank all those who signed the petition. It is right that the regulatory regime for in scope online services takes a proportionate approach, balancing the protection of users from online harm with the ability for low-risk services to operate effectively and provide benefits to users.

The Government has no plans to repeal the Online Safety Act, and is working closely with Ofcom to implement the Act as quickly and effectively as possible to enable UK users to benefit from its protections.

Proportionality is a core principle of the Act and is in-built into its duties. As regulator for the online safety regime, Ofcom must consider the size and risk level of different types and kinds of services when recommending steps providers can take to comply with requirements. Duties in the Communications Act 2003 require Ofcom to act with proportionality and target action only where it is needed.

Some duties apply to all user-to-user and search services in scope of the Act. This includes risk assessments, including determining if children are likely to access the service and, if so, assessing the risks of harm to children. While many services carry low risks of harm, the risk assessment duties are key to ensuring that risky services of all sizes do not slip through the net of regulation. For example, the Government is very concerned about small platforms that host harmful content, such as forums dedicated to encouraging suicide or self-harm. Exempting small services from the Act would mean that services like these forums would not be subject to the Act’s enforcement powers. Even forums that might seem harmless carry potential risks, such as where adults come into contact with child users.

Once providers have carried out their duties to conduct risk assessments, they must protect the users of their service from the identified risks of harm. Ofcom’s illegal content Codes of Practice set out recommended measures to help providers comply with these obligations, measures that are tailored in relation to both size and risk. If a provider’s risk assessment accurately determines that the risks faced by users are low across all harms, Ofcom’s Codes specify that they only need some basic measures, including:

  • easy-to-find, understandable terms and conditions;
  • a complaints tool that allows users to report illegal material when they see it, backed up by a process to deal with those complaints;
  • the ability to review content and take it down if it is illegal (or breaches their terms of service);
  • a specific individual responsible for compliance, who Ofcom can contact if needed.

Where a children's access assessment indicates a platform is likely to be accessed by children, a subsequent risk assessment must be conducted to identify measures for mitigating risks. Like the Codes of Practice on illegal content, Ofcom’s recently issued child safety Codes also tailor recommendations based on risk level. For example, highly effective age assurance is recommended for services likely accessed by children that do not already prohibit and remove harmful content such as pornography and suicide promotion. Providers of services likely to be accessed by UK children were required to complete their assessment, which Ofcom may request, by 24 July.

On 8 July, Ofcom’s CEO wrote to the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology noting Ofcom’s responsibility for regulating a wide range of highly diverse services, including those run by businesses, but also charities, community and voluntary groups, individuals, and many services that have not been regulated before.

The letter notes that the Act’s aim is not to penalise small, low-risk services trying to comply in good faith. Ofcom – and the Government – recognise that many small services are dynamic small businesses supporting innovation and offer significant value to their communities. Ofcom will take a sensible approach to enforcement with smaller services that present low risk to UK users, only taking action where it is proportionate and appropriate, and will focus on cases where the risk and impact of harm is highest.

Ofcom has developed an extensive programme of work designed to support a smoother journey to compliance, particularly for smaller firms. This has been underpinned by interviews, workshops and research with a diverse range of online services to ensure the tools meet the needs of different types of services. Ofcom’s letter notes its ‘guide for services’ guidance and tools hub, and its participation in events run by other organisations and networks including those for people running small services, as well as its commitment to review and improve materials and tools to help support services to create a safer life online.

The Government will continue to work with Ofcom towards the full implementation of the Online Safety Act 2023, including monitoring proportionate implementation.

Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
:::

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Pro

Time to start a global strategy to stop reliance on government and corporate equipment, to switch to open source, no intellectual property, decentralized infrastructure.

The key weakpoint to our entire global society is reliance on outside forces that can influence and manipulate us.

Anyone who's played plague.inc knows already what to do. Once people have their own food, energy, shelter, and software, they will not be pleased to let them be taken unjustly by a conquering force, creating a natural buffer.

You literally don't have to do anything illegal, you can easily go under the radar for quite a while.

in reply to Pro

"We are not interested in the voters position."


UK Government responded to the "Repeal the Online Safety Act" Petition.


Source.

::: spoiler Long Response

I would like to thank all those who signed the petition. It is right that the regulatory regime for in scope online services takes a proportionate approach, balancing the protection of users from online harm with the ability for low-risk services to operate effectively and provide benefits to users.

The Government has no plans to repeal the Online Safety Act, and is working closely with Ofcom to implement the Act as quickly and effectively as possible to enable UK users to benefit from its protections.

Proportionality is a core principle of the Act and is in-built into its duties. As regulator for the online safety regime, Ofcom must consider the size and risk level of different types and kinds of services when recommending steps providers can take to comply with requirements. Duties in the Communications Act 2003 require Ofcom to act with proportionality and target action only where it is needed.

Some duties apply to all user-to-user and search services in scope of the Act. This includes risk assessments, including determining if children are likely to access the service and, if so, assessing the risks of harm to children. While many services carry low risks of harm, the risk assessment duties are key to ensuring that risky services of all sizes do not slip through the net of regulation. For example, the Government is very concerned about small platforms that host harmful content, such as forums dedicated to encouraging suicide or self-harm. Exempting small services from the Act would mean that services like these forums would not be subject to the Act’s enforcement powers. Even forums that might seem harmless carry potential risks, such as where adults come into contact with child users.

Once providers have carried out their duties to conduct risk assessments, they must protect the users of their service from the identified risks of harm. Ofcom’s illegal content Codes of Practice set out recommended measures to help providers comply with these obligations, measures that are tailored in relation to both size and risk. If a provider’s risk assessment accurately determines that the risks faced by users are low across all harms, Ofcom’s Codes specify that they only need some basic measures, including:

  • easy-to-find, understandable terms and conditions;
  • a complaints tool that allows users to report illegal material when they see it, backed up by a process to deal with those complaints;
  • the ability to review content and take it down if it is illegal (or breaches their terms of service);
  • a specific individual responsible for compliance, who Ofcom can contact if needed.

Where a children's access assessment indicates a platform is likely to be accessed by children, a subsequent risk assessment must be conducted to identify measures for mitigating risks. Like the Codes of Practice on illegal content, Ofcom’s recently issued child safety Codes also tailor recommendations based on risk level. For example, highly effective age assurance is recommended for services likely accessed by children that do not already prohibit and remove harmful content such as pornography and suicide promotion. Providers of services likely to be accessed by UK children were required to complete their assessment, which Ofcom may request, by 24 July.

On 8 July, Ofcom’s CEO wrote to the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology noting Ofcom’s responsibility for regulating a wide range of highly diverse services, including those run by businesses, but also charities, community and voluntary groups, individuals, and many services that have not been regulated before.

The letter notes that the Act’s aim is not to penalise small, low-risk services trying to comply in good faith. Ofcom – and the Government – recognise that many small services are dynamic small businesses supporting innovation and offer significant value to their communities. Ofcom will take a sensible approach to enforcement with smaller services that present low risk to UK users, only taking action where it is proportionate and appropriate, and will focus on cases where the risk and impact of harm is highest.

Ofcom has developed an extensive programme of work designed to support a smoother journey to compliance, particularly for smaller firms. This has been underpinned by interviews, workshops and research with a diverse range of online services to ensure the tools meet the needs of different types of services. Ofcom’s letter notes its ‘guide for services’ guidance and tools hub, and its participation in events run by other organisations and networks including those for people running small services, as well as its commitment to review and improve materials and tools to help support services to create a safer life online.

The Government will continue to work with Ofcom towards the full implementation of the Online Safety Act 2023, including monitoring proportionate implementation.

Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
:::

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Mastercard and Visa face backlash after hundreds of adult games removed from online stores Steam and Itch.io


Collective Shout, a small but vocal lobby group, has long called for a mandatory internet filter that would prevent access to adult content for everyone in Australia. Its director, Melinda Tankard Reist, was recently appointed to the stakeholder advisory board for the government’s age assurance technology trial before the under-16s social media ban comes into effect in Australia in December.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to themachinestops

"Face backlash" = about 160,000 people signed a petition saying they disagreed with it, then went about their daily lives and totally, 100% without a doubt continued using their Visa or Mastercard credit cards.

They don't care, there are no alternatives. They can do whatever they want.

in reply to n1ckn4m3

Exactly. We need thousands of people calling them non stop disturbing them for hours on end, not just signing petitions.
in reply to ipkpjersi

You mean like exactly what's been happening over the past few days?
in reply to themachinestops

Yet 1000 weirdos in Australia will have more sway, curiously.


How much electricity do data centers use, and can they run on renewables?


  • Data centers need a constant source of electricity. Data centers often run on solar and wind from the grid, but the intermittency of solar and wind means that it’s difficult to power data centers using these renewables alone.
  • When data centers aren’t connected to the grid today, they’re often powered by diesel generators. However, a growing number of data centers are relying on solar and wind systems backed up by battery storage.
  • Exact figures on data center electricity usage are difficult to find, because the tech companies who operate data centers don’t tend to release detailed statistics.
  • The numbers we do have suggest that data centers consume about 1.5% of global electricity, and that this number is rapidly rising. It’s expected to reach 3 to 6% by 2030.
  • However, data centers tend to be concentrated in particular places, like Virginia and Ireland. In these locations, they may account for a significantly higher proportion of a particular region’s electricity.




Are people actually complying with Age Verification laws?


Are there people really whipping out their ID prior to scrolling Reddit or masturbating?

This Is a joke right? Pretend VPNs don't exist. How are citizens in these areas responding and navigating these laws in Texas or the UK?

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)

Technology reshared this.




‘The matter is in his hands alone’: president of Sierra Leone urged to ban FGM as court rules it tantamount to torture


The Ecowas court of justice has ordered the West African country to criminalise female genital mutilation after hearing the case of a woman brutally forced to undergo the practice


Archived version: archive.is/newest/theguardian.…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.



ICE’s Budget Is Set to Triple Next Year


Donald Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill funnels tens of billions of additional dollars to Immigration and Customs Enforcement — meaning the agency will have three times as much to spend next year as it did this year.
#USA


Just Banning Minors From Social Media Is Not Protecting Them


By publishing its guidelines under Article 28 of the Digital Services Act, the European Commission has taken a major step towards social media bans that will undermine privacy, expression, and participation rights for young people that are already enshrined in international human rights law.




A Judge’s Conflict of Interest Over Jeffrey Epstein Documents


A judge who sealed a slew of Jeffrey Epstein–related documents that could implicate others is the same Chevron-connected judge who threw the book at Steven Donziger. She has another potential conflict of interest when it comes to the Epstein files.
#USA



'Something Is Really Working': New Numbers Show Massive Reach of Mamdani's Campaign


New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani's viral campaign videos are reaching millions on Instagram and TikTok, showcasing his cheerful populism and positive vision for the city.
#USA
in reply to BrikoX

This just highlights everything the Democrats did wrong during 2024. They really need to start taking notes, here.
in reply to Archangel1313

Ha, good one. They prefer to blame everyone else.

The DNC, the New York Times reported, will “mostly steer clear of the decisions made by the Biden-turned-Harris campaign and will focus more heavily instead on actions taken by allied groups.”


nymag.com/intelligencer/articl…




Kneecap: On Palestine, History Will Stand by Us


Irish hip-hop trio Kneecap talks to Jacobin about attempts to punish the band for its vocal stance on Palestine: “[The censors] won’t stop us from speaking out.”


'Unequivocal': Israeli Human Rights Orgs Describe Gaza Assault as 'Genocide' for the First Time


As death and starvation intensify, two Israeli human rights groups became the first in the nation to call their country's military campaign a "genocide," citing Israel's "coordinated, deliberate action to destroy Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip."


Archived version: commondreams.org/news/israeli-…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.



US | Faith Groups Sue Trump Admin Over Immigration Raids at Houses of Worship


Religious organizations sue DHS over policy targeting parishioners at houses of worship. Lawsuit alleges violation of First Amendment rights.


Case file: democracyforward.org/wp-conten…



US | Trump admin. is muffling CDC’s flagship health journal, report finds


CDC’s MMWR is publishing much less, and sources say studies now require RFK Jr.’s sign-off.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/arstechnica.…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.



Refuting Netanyahu's Lie, Trump Acknowledges 'Real Starvation' in Gaza


"Trump and Congress must decide: Will you continue to support the starvation of children, or are you willing to use all possible U.S. leverage to stop this horrific humanitarian disaster?" said Sen. Bernie Sanders.
#USA



How Meta keeps its AI hardware reliable


#AII


You Went to a Drag Show—Now the State of Florida Wants Your Name


If you thought going to a Pride event or drag show was just another night out, think again. If you were in Florida, it might land your name in a government database.
#USA


Progressive Group Takes Aim at Four Texas Republicans Who Voted to Cut Medicaid in New Ads


The progressive group Unrig Our Economy has rolled out a new $2 million ad blitz to target four Texas Republicans in the House, who backed the GOP megabill that guts Medicaid and other healthcare subsidies.
#USA



in reply to Pro

I support this but I find it fascinating the steam this can build and quick activism with guides and yet I never see any of this stuff when it comes to political policies
in reply to happydoors

Threats to the bottom line is the thing that motivates companies faster than anything else.
in reply to Pro

Here's a list of MasterCard's toll-free phone numbers in various countries: mastercard.fi/content/dam/publ…

And here's the same for Visa: visa.fi/content/dam/VCOM/downl…

And the content of that file, in case that they might remove that link:

Mastercard Global Service™

Local Toll-Free Telephone Numbers

  • American Samoa 1-1-800-307-7309
  • Japan 00531-11-3886
  • Anguilla 1-800-307-7309
  • Korea, Republic of 0079-811-887-0823
  • Antigua and Barbuda 1-800-307-7309
  • Liechtenstein 0800-89-7092
  • Argentina 0800-555-0507
  • Luxembourg 800-2-4533
  • Australia 1800-120-113
  • Malaysia 1-800-804594
  • Austria 0800-07-06-138
  • Mexico 001-800-307-7309
  • Bahamas 1-800-307-7309
  • Monaco 0-800-90-1387
  • Bahrain 8000-0087
  • Montserrat 1-800-307-7309
  • Barbados 1-800-307-7309
  • Netherlands 0800-022-5821
  • Belgium 0800-1-5096
  • New Zealand 800-441-671
  • Bermuda 1-800-307-7309
  • Norway 800-12697
  • Bolivia 800-10-0172
  • Panama 001-800-307-7309
  • Bonaire 001-800-307-7309
  • Peru 0800-77-476
  • Brazil 0800-891-3294
  • Philippines 1-800-1-111-0061
  • Cambodia 800-881-001 then 877-288-3891*
  • Poland 0-0800-111-1211
  • Canada 1-800-307-7309
  • Portugal 800-8-11-272
  • Cayman Islands 1-800-307-7309
  • Puerto Rico 1-800-307-7309
  • Chile 1230-020-2012
  • The Russia 8-800-555-02-69
  • China 10-800-110-7309**
  • Saba 1-800-307-7309
  • China 2 10-800-711-7309***
  • St. Eustatius 1-800-307-7309
  • Colombia 01-800-912-1303
  • St. Maarten 1-800-307-7309
  • Costa Rica 0-800-011-0184
  • St. Kitts-Nevis 1-800-307-7309
  • Curacao 001-800-307-7309
  • Saipan (N. Marianas) 1-800-307-7309
  • Cyprus 080-90569
  • San Marino 800-870-866
  • Czech Republic 800-142-494
  • Saudi Arabia 800-844-9457
  • Denmark 8001-6098
  • Singapore 800-1100-113
  • Dominica 1-800-307-7309
  • South Africa 0800-990418
  • Dominican Republic 1-800-307-7309
  • Spain 900-822-756
  • Finland 08001-156234
  • Sweden 020-791-324
  • France 0-800-90-1387
  • Switzerland 0800-897-092
  • Germany 0800-071-3542
  • Taiwan 00801-10-3400
  • Greece 00-800-11-887-0303
  • Thailand 001-800-11-887-0663
  • Grenada 1-800-307-7309
  • Trinidad and Tobago 1-800-307-7309
  • Guam 1-800-307-7309
  • Turkey 00-800-13-887-0903
  • Guatemala 1-800-999-1480
  • Turks and Caicos 01-800-307-7309
  • Hong Kong 800-966677
  • United Arab Emirates 800-0444-3895
  • Hungary 06800-12517
  • United Kingdom 0800-96-4767
  • India 000-800-100-1087
  • United States 1-800-307-7309
  • Indonesia 001803-1-887-0623
  • Vatican City State 800-870-866
  • Ireland 1-800-55-7378
  • Venezuela 0800-1-002902
  • Israel 180-941-8873
  • Vietnam 120-11576
  • Italy 800-870-866
  • Virgin Islands, 1-800-307-7309
  • Jamaica 0800-307-7309
  • Virgin Islands, U.S. 1-800-307-7309

Last Updated 31 January 2019

The contents of the file for Visa's phone numbers:

Δ Await second dial tone

  • Anguilla 1-800-847-2911
  • Antigua 1-800-847-2911
  • Argentina 0800-666-0171
  • Aruba 800-1518
  • Australia 1-800-125-440
  • Austria 0 800-200-288Δ800-892-8134
  • Bahamas 1-800-847-2911
  • Bahrain 800-006
  • Barbados 1-800-847-2911
  • Belgium 0800-1-8397
  • Belize 811 or 555Δ800-847-2911
  • Bermuda 1-800-847-2911
  • Bolivia 800-10-0188
  • Bonaire* 001-800-847-2911
  • Brazil 0800-891-3680
  • British Virgin Islands 1-800-847-2911
  • Bulgaria 00-800-0010Δ888-557-4446
  • Cambodia 1-800-881-001Δ888-710-7783
  • Canada 1-800-847-2911
  • Cayman Islands 1-800-847-2911
  • Chile 1230-020-2136
  • Mainland China (South) 10-800-110-2911
  • Mainland China (North) 10-800-711-2911
  • Colombia 01-800-912-5713
  • Costa Rica 0-800-011-0030
  • Croatia 0-800-220-111Δ866-654-0125
  • Curacao* 001-800-847-2911
  • Czech Republic 800-142-121
  • Denmark 80-010277
  • Dominica 1-800-847-2911
  • Dominican Republic 1-800-847-2911
  • Ecuador 1-999-119 or 1-800-225-528Δ800-847-2911
  • Egypt (Cairo only) 2510-0200Δ866-654-0128
  • Egypt (outside Cairo) 02-2510-0200Δ866-654-0128
  • El Salvador 800-6921
  • Estonia 800-12001Δ800-406-9982
  • Finland 0800-11-0057
  • France 0800-90-1179
  • Germany 0800-000-6510
  • Gibraltar 8800-877-3745966
  • Greece 00-800-11-638-0304
  • Grenada 1-800-847-2911
  • Guam 1-800-847-2911
  • Guatemala 1-800-999-0115
  • Guyana 159Δ1-855-477-1390
  • Honduras 800-0123Δ800-847-2911
  • Hong Kong 800-96-7025
  • Hungary 06-800-17682
  • India 000-800-100-1219
  • Indonesia 001-803-1-933-6294
  • Ireland, Republic of 1-800-55-8002
  • Israel 1-80-941-1605
  • Italy 800-819-014
  • Jamaica 0-800-847-2911
  • Japan 00531-11-1555
  • Jordan 1-880-0000Δ888-557-4442
  • Kazakhstan 8 800-121-4321Δ888-557-4447
  • Kenya 866-654-0162
  • Latvia 8000-02288
  • Lebanon 01-426-801Δ866-654-0130
  • Liechtenstein 0800-89-4732
  • Luxembourg 0800-2012
  • Macedonia 0800-94288Δ888-557-4458
  • Malaysia 1800-80-0159
  • Mauritius 01-120Δ866-654-0165
  • Mexico 001-800-847-2911
  • Monaco 0800-90-1179
  • Montserrat 1-800-847-2911
  • Morocco 002-11-0011Δ866-654-0163
  • Netherlands 0800-022-3110
  • Nevis 1-800-847-2911
  • New Zealand 0800-44-3019
  • Norway 800-12052
  • Panama 001-800-111-0016
  • Paraguay 008-11-800Δ800-599-1137
  • Perú 001-800-890-0623
  • Philippines 1-800-1-111-9015
  • Poland 0-0-800-111-1569
  • Portugal 800-8-11-824
  • Puerto Rico 1-800-847-2911
  • Romania 0 808-03-4288Δ888-557-4416
  • Saba* 1-800-847-2911
  • Saint Eustatius* 1-800-847-2911
  • Saint Kitts 1-800-847-2911
  • Saint Lucia 800-238-5517
  • Saint Maarten* 1-800-847-2911
  • San Marino 800-819-014
  • Saudi Arabia 1-800-10Δ866-654-0129
  • Senegal 800-103-072Δ888-557-4451
  • Singapore 800-110-0344
  • Slovakia 0 800-000-101Δ800-406-9970
  • South Africa 0800-990-475
  • South Korea 00798-11-00-908-12
  • Spain 900-99-1124
  • Sweden 020 160 4293
  • Switzerland 0800-89-4732
  • Taiwan 00801-10-3008
  • Thailand 001-800-11-535-0660
  • Trinidad and Tobago 1-800-847-2911
  • Turkey 00-800-13-535-0900
  • Turks and Caicos 0-1-800-847-2911
  • Ukraine 800-502-886Δ888-557-4445
  • United Arab Emirates 8000-021Δ866-654-0112
  • United Kingdom 0800-89-1725
  • United States 1-800-847-2911
  • Uruguay 00-0411-940-7915
  • U.S. Virgin Islands 1-800-847-2911
  • Venezuela 0800-1-002167
  • Vietnam 1 201-0288Δ888-710-7781
  • Updated 1/10/2023
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


France's warship builder Naval Group investigates 1TB data breach


France's state-owned defense firm Naval Group is investigating a cyberattack after 1TB of allegedly stolen data was leaked on a hacking forum.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/frances-warship-builder-naval-group-investigates-1tb-data-breach/

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)

in reply to return2ozma

I don't use Google Wiretap, but I use google assistant on my watch to control the smarthome, and I would be very, very disappointed if it was dead
in reply to return2ozma

so glad i use google home as a sirius speaker and speaking to it is the only way i can control it /s


[Announcement] Path of Exile 2 Boss Rush Event at PAX West


The Path of Exile 2 Boss Rush Event is coming to PAX West on August 29! Kill as many bosses as you can in 20 minutes, and win some cool prizes.

Choose between 7 preconstructed character builds, one for each class, then see how many bosses you can kill. Before each boss are a few packs of monsters so you can test out your skills, before getting to the main event. Then throw yourself at the boss for as many attempts as it takes to bring it down.

After you kill the boss, a portal will open up to the next arena, and the level of all subsequent bosses will increase. There are 15 bosses in all, we highly doubt you can kill them all!

Above the booth will be a live leaderboard featuring the top Exiles able to kill the most bosses in the shortest period of time.

If you're planning to visit the expo - in between playing the new content update for Path of Exile 2 launching the same weekend - make sure to check out our booth! All visitors will have the chance to earn Path of Exile 2 merchandise prizes depending on how many bosses you can kill.

PAX West

  • When - August 29 - September 1
  • Where - Booth#2309

Good luck, Exiles!



Gamers Bombard Visa & MasterCard With Emails and Calls Over Steam and itch.io Censorship


Cheat Sheet Source
- Main Thread.
- Second Thread.
- Another Thread.

Strategy in Practice:

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Gamers Bombard Visa & MasterCard With Emails and Calls Over Steam and itch.io Censorship


Cheat Sheet Source
- Main Thread.
- Second Thread.
- Another Thread.

Strategy in Practice:

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Gamers Bombard Visa & MasterCard With Emails and Calls Over Steam and itch.io Censorship


Cheat Sheet Source
- Main Thread.
- Second Thread.
- Another Thread.

Strategy in Practice:

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Gamers Bombard Visa & MasterCard With Emails and Calls Over Steam and itch.io Censorship


Cheat Sheet Source
- Main Thread.
- Second Thread.
- Another Thread.

Strategy in Practice:

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Tea app leak worsens with second database exposing user chats


The Tea app data breach has grown into an even larger leak, with the stolen data now shared on hacking forums and a second database discovered that allegedly contains 1.1 million private messages exchanged between the app's members.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/tea-app-leak-worsens-with-second-database-exposing-user-chats/

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in reply to return2ozma

How many red flags do you need to collect before you get a free cat?


Billionaire Peter Thiel backing first privately developed US uranium enrichment facility in Paducah


A California-based company with ties to billionaire investor and Trump ally Peter Thiel announced plans Friday to build America’s first U.S.-owned, privately developed facility to enrich uranium in far western Kentucky.

In an email sent to WKMS, General Matter said that the company intends to make a “historic investment in American nuclear infrastructure” by restoring a shuttered facility in Paducah. The gaseous diffusion plant in McCracken County, which ceased operations in 2013, was built by the U.S. government in the 1950s to bolster national defense efforts – and later to generate fuel for nuclear power plants.


Oh wow, good to see California and Kentucky working so closely together these days on so many important things.

Massie, Khanna hammer Republican leadership for thwarting Epstein transparency push

It just goes to show that no matter who you are, Republican or Democrat, Conservative or Liberal, we can all come together over as ~~recipients of Thiel money~~ Americans.

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in reply to Basic Glitch

I would treat the Billionaires like Iran...control their access to nukes.