Super Nintendo World Japan’s Donkey Kong Country area opens this spring

Super Nintendo World Japan will soon become a hotter ticket for many fans. Universal Studios has revealed that a Donkey Kong Country area will open in Spring 2024. Nintendo and Universal (which hosts the theme park at its Osaka location) haven’t shown off actual footage of the new zone yet. Instead, they opted to make the announcement with an animated trailer.

Perhaps the main attraction of the new area is a ride called Mine Cart Madness, named after the best level in the 1994 SNES game Donkey Kong Country. After being blasted out of a barrel cannon, you’ll take a mine cart ride through the jungle that includes a “leap across a collapsed track.”

SUPER NINTENDO WORLD at Universal Studios Japan is leveling up with an all-new Donkey Kong Country area opening in Spring 2024, featuring a thrilling family coaster, Mine-Cart Madness! More exciting details revealed at:https://t.co/Wh1eOLlENx #USJ https://t.co/4I0tujliaw pic.twitter.com/lHvPqB2Zwd

— Universal Studios Hollywood (@UniStudios) December 5, 2023

According to Universal, fans will also be able to try a play experience that prompts them to use their whole body. Of course, food and merchandise will be available too.

Nintendo confirmed in 2021 that the Donkey Kong Country area was under construction at Universal Studios Japan. It’s said to expand the overall size of Super Nintendo World by 70 percent. The new area will open to the public two years after visitors started exploring the first Mushroom Kingdom-themed zone. Meanwhile, the Orlando version of Super Nintendo World isn’t expected to open until 2025.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/super-nintendo-world-japans-donkey-kong-country-area-opens-this-spring-175610023.html?src=rss 

The UK could require facial scans or photo IDs to view online porn

Ofcom, the UK’s Office of Communications, has published a draft of age-restriction guidelines for online services that host explicit sexual content. The (not yet finalized) recommendations are a step toward cementing enforcement for the recently passed Online Safety Act, which requires platforms displaying or publishing pornography in the UK to ensure children are “not normally able to encounter” adult content on their sites or apps. It’s the UK’s latest attempt to enforce age verification after it bailed on a similar plan in 2019. As before, not everyone is convinced the measures will adequately protect user privacy.

The agency cites studies showing the average age children are introduced to online porn is 13, with 27 percent viewing it by age 11 and 10 percent by age nine. In addition, it says 79 percent of children have seen violent pornography (defined as content “depicting coercive, degrading or pain-inducing sex acts”) before their 18th birthday. Ofcom shared a survey indicating 87 percent of women and 77 percent of men in the UK are “broadly supportive” of measures preventing children from easily accessing porn.

Ofcom says sites or apps hosting adult content in the UK must introduce “age assurance” through direct verification, age estimation using facial scans or a combination of both. It stressed that “weaker” measures — self-declarations, online payment methods that don’t require a person to be 18 and general disclaimers or warnings — won’t cut it.

Should a company disregard the guidelines, the UK could fine it up to £18 million or 10 percent of its global revenue (whichever is higher). That gives platforms like Pornhub a significant financial incentive to comply.

Suggested safeguards

One of Ofcom’s suggested safeguards is asking users to consent to sharing banking information to confirm they’re over 18. (It stresses that the user’s full date of birth won’t be shared.) Photo ID matching is another possibility: Users would upload a legal identification document and take a live capture of their face to ensure they match. Facial age estimation, which scans the user’s face and algorithmically estimates their age, is another approved method. However, that approach would have to offer additional verification methods for adults whose faces look young enough to pass for underage teens.

Wireless carriers’ age checks (blanket blocks on age-restricted content) are another approved method in the draft. Ofcom notes, “Users can remove this restriction by proving to their mobile provider that they are an adult, and this confirmation is then shared with the online pornography service.”

Since UK credit card providers are required to ensure applicants are over 18 before approval, Ofcom gives the green light to users providing credit card details. (Banks would then verify the card is valid before the user’s porn viewing request is approved.) Finally, sharing digital identity wallets, which use various methods (including those already listed) to confirm a user’s age, are also on the agency’s approved list.

Ofcom expects to publish its final guidance in early 2025. Enforcement would follow soon after.

Privacy concerns

Assisting with the draft guidance was the privacy watchdog Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which Ofcom cites as a privacy reassurance. But some say that isn’t enough reassurance.

“It is very concerning that Ofcom is solely relying upon data protection laws and the ICO to ensure that privacy will be protected,” Abigail Burke, program manager at UK digital rights organization Open Rights Group, said in an interview with The Verge. “The Data Protection and Digital Information Bill, which is progressing through parliament, will seriously weaken our current data protection laws, which are in any case insufficient for a scheme this intrusive.”

“The potential consequences of data being leaked are catastrophic and could include blackmail, fraud, relationship damage, and the outing of people’s sexual preferences in very vulnerable circumstances,” Burke added in a separate interview with the BBC

Aylo, owner of Pornhub (which has a financial stake in the matter), told the BBC it supports age verification but only if safety and privacy are assured. “Any regulations that require hundreds of thousands of adult sites to collect significant amounts of highly sensitive personal information is putting user safety in jeopardy,” it said.

Perhaps the most obvious loophole in Ofcom’s guidelines is using a VPN to spoof a location outside the UK. The BBC noted that demand for VPNs in Louisiana and Utah surged after similar laws were enacted in the US states early this year.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-uk-could-require-facial-scans-or-photo-ids-to-view-online-porn-182019566.html?src=rss 

Multiple game developers announce layoffs, including EA-owned Codemasters

A trio of game developers have just announced layoffs, adding to the chaos that is the tech industry in 2023. It starts with developer New World Interactive, who are behind the Insurgency series and Day of Infamy, among others. There’s no word as to how many employees were let go, but parent company Saber Interactive says work will continue on Insurgency: Sandstorm, according to The Verge.

Saber Interactive has its own parent company, Embracer Group, which has had a rough year. Embracer conducted mass layoffs back in June and canceled multiple projects. Things are so bad, as a matter of fact, that the company’s looking to sell Gearbox Software, the developer behind Borderlands.

Indie publishing stalwart Tinybuild also announced a round of layoffs, according to Game Developer. The company gives the usual reason for the layoffs, cost restructuring, though the number of impacted employees remains unknown. Some of the blame has been placed on subsidiary Versus Evil, which delayed a number of titles into 2024, thus impacting revenue. Tinybuild has published a number of notable games, like Graveyard Keeper, Party Hard, Potion Craft, Mr. Shifty and dozens more.

The EA-owned Codemasters, which is one of the world’s most renowned racing game developers, issued its own set of layoffs, as reported by IGN. Just like the aforementioned companies, EA and Codemasters are being cagey regarding the number of laid off workers. An EA spokesperson said that the layoffs are due to “small-scale organizational changes that align our teams and resources to meet evolving business needs and priorities.” Okay, cool. Thanks for that useful information. EA bought Codemasters, who are behind the racers Dirt and F1, in 2021 for a whopping $1.2 billion.

These firings are just the latest bit of bad news for the games industry. Last month, Ubisoft Montreal laid off nearly 100 people and Epic Games let go of 16 percent of its workforce in September, in addition to selling Bandcamp to a seemingly predatory music-licensing company. The first half of the year saw layoffs by CD Projekt Red, among others.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/multiple-game-developers-announce-layoffs-including-ea-owned-codemasters-183318247.html?src=rss 

Angelina Jolie’s Health: Everything to Know About Her Bell’s Palsy Diagnosis & More

Angelina Jolie was diagnosed with Bell’s palsy during her stressful split from Brad Pitt. Learn more about the Oscar winner’s health here.

Angelina Jolie was diagnosed with Bell’s palsy during her stressful split from Brad Pitt. Learn more about the Oscar winner’s health here. 

Alyson Hannigan’s Husband: Get to Know Alexis Denisof & Their 20-Year Marriage

As the ‘American Pie’ actress competes in the ‘Dancing With The Stars’ season 32 finale, find out everything you need to know about her husband Alexis Denisof.

As the ‘American Pie’ actress competes in the ‘Dancing With The Stars’ season 32 finale, find out everything you need to know about her husband Alexis Denisof. 

23andMe hack now estimated to affect over half of customers

A hack that targeted DNA testing kit company 23andMe back in October is estimated to have exposed significantly more profiles than previously reported. The personal information of about 6.9 million customers is now the current projection for the number of profiles exposed in the breach, according to a report by the BBC. The incident was previously thought to have only exposed the personal information of 14,000 individuals, just a fraction of its 14 million customer base.

The data breach was allegedly executed using compromised customer usernames and passwords, which exposed sensitive personal information that included things relevant to ancestry trees, birthdays and general geographic locations. In some cases, the company said that the hack could have exposed the pictures and display names of affiliated family members also using the company’s services through the accounts that were primarily breached. 23andMe insists that no actual genetic material or DNA records were exposed.

Legally, 23AndMe is obligated to inform all impacted customers and in October, 23andMe asked all of its users to reset their passwords. Last month, the company said it has required all new and existing users to login into the 23andMe website using two-step verification and that will remain the standard going forward. The emphasis on account security comes after the completion of an internal investigation, which 23andMe says was conducted with the help of third-party forensics experts but it has yet to release a report detailing their findings. The company did, however, say it expects to incur at least $1 to $2 million in expenses related to the hack.

23andMe does more than give customers reports about their family trees: It offers genetic health risk tests for chronic diseases and cancers, and it also has a research arm where customers can opt into clinical research programs. Questions about how 23andMe handles data privacy and protects its digital assets could impact the company’s bottom line and if customers shy away from using the services that involve more sensitive medical information.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/23andme-hack-now-estimated-to-affect-over-half-of-customers-165314743.html?src=rss 

Discord overhauls its mobile app with new tabs, messaging features and more

Discord bluntly describes the mobile app it launched in 2015 as a squished-down version of its desktop platform. But that acknowledgment comes with an announcement that said app is getting a complete redesign that’s an “independent experience” from its computer-based counterpart. It includes a new set of navigation tabs prominently displayed at the bottom of your screen: Servers, Messages, Notifications and You. 

While Discord considered changes like a horizontal layout, the Servers tab looks very similar to before — just no direct messaging option. Instead, a Messaging tab replaces the existing Friends one, displaying all your one-on-one and group messages in one place instead of having to click through multiple pages. You can also favorite a conversation so it stays at the top of your chats and use a search bar to find a message, file, pin or attachment across all discussions — same as WhatsApp or general messaging. Also new in conversations is the ability to swipe left on a message to reply to it, rather than having to hold it down. You might have noticed that Discord already changed the formatting of picture messages to show in a gallery style versus one by one.

Engadget

The Notifications tab will now include server events, friend requests and message replies, all of which you can click to reach the source immediately. Plus, notifications should now auto-clear instead of requiring you to remove them. Rounding out the now four tabs on the bottom (bye search) is still the You page. The Friends tab has been integrated here, alongside features like changing your status or profile picture. This is also still the tab for accessing account settings but with a bit more convenience. You can double-tap the You tab to go directly to account settings and, once there, there’s a search bar to find whatever information you need. One tool you can access there is the new Midnight theme, providing a pure black background that should rest your eyes a bit.

The app’s functioning has also improved, with Discord claiming that opening the app will take you 55 percent less time on Android and 43 percent less on iOS — apparently using four times less data while doing so. Android users’ crash rate has also been reduced by half over the past year. Plus, voice and video calls have improved functioning, with an updated UI allowing for “more intuitive interactions.” 

Discord also shared that it’s working on other requested updates, such as quick access to a server’s member list, better search filters, more customization options for viewing messages, and overall app performance improvements. You can use the feedback forum at any point to express things you’re unhappy with or that you’d like to see changed.

Notably, Discord got itself in a bit of hot water recently with the US Senate Judiciary Committee. The company refused to have its CEO, Jason Citron, testify about children’s safety online, wouldn’t accept an electronic subpoena and merited an office visit by US Marshals to hand deliver one. Citron will speak with the committee about protecting kids — and Discord’s “failures” to do so — alongside the CEOs of Meta, X, TikTok and Snap on January 31, 2024, at 10 AM ET.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/discord-overhauls-its-mobile-app-with-new-tabs-messaging-features-and-more-170035917.html?src=rss 

Beeper says it reverse-engineered iMessage into an Android app

The universal chat app Beeper just got a lot more, well, universal. The company just unveiled the Beeper Mini app, which makes the bold claim to bring true iMessage support to Android devices. Even bolder? It seems to actually work, according to users who have tried it. This isn’t done in a strange hacky way that could compromise privacy and security, like Nothing’s beleaguered attempt to play nice with iOS devices.

Instead, the code has been reverse-engineered from the ground up, so it’s basically the official iMessage protocol. The texts are even sent to Apple’s servers before moving on to their final destination, just like a real iMessage created by an iPhone. Even weirder? All of this high-tech wizardry was created by a 16-year-old high school student.

Once you open the app, it goes through all of your text message conversations and flags the ones from iMessage users. The system then switches them over to blue bubble conversations via Apple’s official platform. From then on, every time you talk to that person, the bubbles will be bluer than a clear spring day. You also don’t need an Apple ID to login, alleviating many of the security concerns that plagued rival offerings.

Beeper co-founder Eric Migicovsky was contacted by the talented high-schooler and was blown away by the tech. “No one on Earth had done that,” he told The Verge. “No one had put all the pieces together.”

It’s worth reiterating. This platform isn’t hacking the iMessage experience so it works on Android. It is the iMessage experience working on Android, as it’s sending actual iMessages. The tech was created by jailbreaking iPhones to get a good look at how the operating system handles iMessages, before recreating the software.

Beeper is being really transparent here, and the company knows it’s potentially skating on thin ice with regard to how Apple will respond. Apple has never been especially friendly to those it deems to be infringing on company secrets, but it did just announce forthcoming support for the RCS messaging standard. This will allow for greater interoperability between Android and iOS devices, so maybe it’ll let Beeper Mini slide for now. Being as how the app actually recreates Apple code, however, it likely wouldn’t be difficult to put the kibosh on Beeper from its end.

Migicovsky says Beeper’s iMessage code will be open source to ensure there will be no security or privacy lapses. As for potential legal hurdles, the co-founder says his company is on the right side of the law, noting there’s no actual Apple code in Beeper Mini, just custom-made recreated code. Also, he cites legal precedence in copyright law that has sided with those who reverse engineer code. In any event, Beeper Mini is available, for now, and it’s free to download, though it does feature in-app purchases.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/beeper-says-it-reverse-engineered-imessage-into-an-android-app-172250419.html?src=rss 

Kenan Thompson Reveals He Almost Quit ‘SNL’: ‘I Had No Idea if I Was Doing a Good Job’

In his new memoir, Kenan Thompson reveals he developed ‘depressive feelings’ from making ‘rookie mistakes’ during his early years on ‘Saturday Night Live.’

In his new memoir, Kenan Thompson reveals he developed ‘depressive feelings’ from making ‘rookie mistakes’ during his early years on ‘Saturday Night Live.’ 

Macaulay Culkin’s Girlfriend History: From Ex-Wife Rachel Miner to Welcoming Kids With Brenda Song

The ‘Home Alone’ star has had several high-profile relationships throughout his life and career. Find out more about his romantic history here.

The ‘Home Alone’ star has had several high-profile relationships throughout his life and career. Find out more about his romantic history here. 

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