Engadget Podcast: Microsoft gets closer to buying Activision Blizzard

It looks like Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard is trucking along, following a court rejection of the FTC’s injunction attempt. This week, Cherlynn and Devindra chat with Jordan Minor, a Senior Analyst at PCMag covering games, about this massive deal and what it means for the gaming industry. Will further consolidation end up being harmful for consumers (as we’ve been saying for a while), or will Microsoft actually help the beleaguered Activision? Also, we dive into our experiences with the latest Apple betas: iOS 17, iPadOS 17, macOS Sonoma and watchOS 10.

Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you’ve got suggestions or topics you’d like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcasts, the Morning After and Engadget News!

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Topics

Microsoft is (mostly) cleared to buy Activision Blizzard for $69 billion – 00:56

Our previews of the iOS 17, iPad OS 17, macOS Sonoma, and WatchOS 10 betas – 21:55

Meta’s Threads hits 100m users, Elon is not happy about it – 47:58

Microsoft confirms Chinese hackers used 365 email exploit to access US government accounts – 51:32

Google’s Bard can now speak 40 languages – 52:29

Around Engadget: Sam Rutherford’s ROG ally review and Katie Malone on why passkeys are suddenly everywhere – 1:01:46

Working on – 1:05:47

Pop culture picks – 1:07:06

Credits
Hosts: Cherlynn Low and Devindra Hardawar
Guest: Jordan Minor
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/engadget-podcast-microsoft-activision-blizzard-deal-123058754.html?src=rss 

Elle Macpherson, 59, Rocks Sexy Brown Bikini & Goes Makeup-Free For Gorgeous Mirror Selfie

Elle ‘The Body’ Macpherson is still slaying! The 59-year-old looked stunning going makeup-free in a brown bikini as she posed for a mirror selfie.

Elle ‘The Body’ Macpherson is still slaying! The 59-year-old looked stunning going makeup-free in a brown bikini as she posed for a mirror selfie. 

Riley Keough Seen In First Photos Since Mom Lisa Marie Presley’s Cause Of Death Was Revealed

Riley Keough looked somber as she ran errands in Los Angeles on the same day that her mom’s cause of death was revealed.

Riley Keough looked somber as she ran errands in Los Angeles on the same day that her mom’s cause of death was revealed. 

The Morning After: Virgin Galactic’s first private passenger spaceflight will launch next month

Virgin Galactic, having flown its first commercial spaceflight in late June, is ready to take civilians to the edge of space, briefly. The company plans to launch its first private passenger flight, Galactic 02, as soon as August 10th. Virgin isn’t yet revealing the names of everyone involved, but there will be three passengers aboard, alongside crew.

The company says it’s establishing a “regular cadence” of flights – and it needs that. Virgin Galactic has operated at a loss for years and lost $500 million in 2022 alone. The business won’t recoup all those losses anytime soon, even at $450,000 per ticket. But the focus is pretty clear: make the case for space tourism… at least for the one-percenters.

– Mat Smith

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Twitter finally begins paying some of its creators

Blue subscribers will need a significant following to get a cut.

Twitter’s ad-revenue sharing program for creators has officially launched — and it’s reportedly already begun paying eligible Blue subscribers. Elon Musk announced the initiative in February, but with scant details about how it would work, nobody knew quite what to expect. However, some high-profile users report they’ve received notifications about incoming deposits. The bar is high to receive a transfer from the Musk-owned social media company. The support post says the revenue-sharing system applies to Twitter Blue or Verified Organizations subscribers with at least five million post impressions in each of the past three months. One user claims they’re set to receive over $24,000. Going to need more to get into space, my friend.

Continue reading.

Sony’s $90 PS5 accessibility controller arrives December 6th

The highly customizable Access controller comes with several buttons and stick caps.

Sony

Sony’s Access controller will be available worldwide on December 6th. It costs $90 and pre-orders open July 21st. The new accessibility-focused controller comes with four 3.5mm aux ports, enabling players to connect external buttons, switches and other accessories. The box includes 19 button caps and three stick caps to help you find a configuration that works best for you. You can even pair up to two Access controllers and one DualSense together to create a “single virtual controller.” That means two or even three people could control the same character, granting friends and family members the option to lend a helping hand.

Continue reading.

Farewell ‘FIFA’: ‘EA Sports FC 24’ will hit consoles and PC September 29th

It’ll bring women’s players to Ultimate Team for the first time.

EA’s long-standing partnership with FIFA ended after FIFA 23, marking a new era for EA’s flagship soccer series. EA Sports FC 24 will hit PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch and PC on September 29th. EA says more than 19,000 authentic players, 30-plus leagues and over 100 stadiums will be represented in the new game. The company has also secured exclusive deals with the English Premier League and UEFA to use their branding and retain access to competitions like the Champions League.

Continue reading.

AP and OpenAI enter two-year partnership to help train algorithmic models

It’s a major news-sharing agreement.

The Associated Press (AP) and ChatGPT parent company OpenAI have reached a news-sharing agreement, but it doesn’t involve AI chatbots quickly churning out content but enabling better training of OpenAI’s algorithmic models. It looks like AP will receive access to OpenAI’s proprietary technology as part of the exchange. AP doesn’t use generative AI to write articles, but it already uses similar technologies to automate corporate earnings reports and cover local sporting events.

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-morning-after-virgin-galactics-first-private-passenger-spaceflight-will-launch-next-month-111540932.html?src=rss 

UK competition regulator extends Microsoft-Activision investigation by six weeks

The saga over whether regulators will allow Microsoft to purchase Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion will last at least a little longer. Citing insufficient time, the United Kingdom’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has given itself an additional six weeks to consider Microsoft’s “detailed and complex submission” arguing for the merger. The CMA will now provide a decision by August 29th, though it aims to do so earlier.

Microsoft first announced its plan to buy Activision Blizzard for $95 per share in January 2022. The CMA opened an investigation into the merger last fall, and, this April, it released an inquiry report detailing the “substantial lessening of competition” (SLC) in cloud gaming services the UK could face if Microsoft proceeded with the purchase. “The prohibition of the Merger would be the only effective and proportionate remedy to the SLC and any adverse effects which have resulted from, or may be expected to result from, the SLC,” the regulatory agency stated

This latest development comes shortly after the CMA and Microsoft pressed pause on their legal battle in hopes of negotiating a compromise. “While we ultimately disagree with the CMA’s concerns, we are considering how the transaction might be modified in order to address those concerns in a way that is acceptable to the CMA,” Microsoft president Brad Smith shared in a July tweet

Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley also recently denied the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) preliminary injunction in the US, which would’ve led Microsoft and Activision Blizzard to abandon the deal. The FTC has since filed an appeal to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals requesting a pause of the acquisition. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/uk-competition-regulator-extends-microsoft-activision-investigation-by-six-weeks-103541516.html?src=rss 

Cloud gaming platform Antstream Arcade brings over 1,000 retro games to Xbox

Antstream Arcade is offering over 1,300 retro game titles on Xbox One and Series X/S, with notable titles such as Space Invaders, Metal Slug and Bubble Bobble. The company says these titles will be playable instantly without additional downloads or installation via its cloud gaming platform, with more titles being added every week. This is notable as Antstream will be the first third-party game streaming service on Xbox.

The service will support cloud-based game saves, an online scoreboard and the ability to pick up your game from multiple devices. Antstream Arcade is already available on Mac, PC, Linux, Android TV, Firestick and Samsung TVs, but this marks the first time it is coming to a game console.

Antstream says that it is using its “unique technology” to mod original games, allowing the company to create new mini-game challenges for both new and returning players. For example, you could play a modified Pac-Man map where the main objective is to avoid collecting the dots. Players will be able to enter tournaments, challenge other players to duels or compete for the highest score.

Antstream

Microsoft already has its own Xbox Cloud Gaming streaming service, and that’s available as a native app on Android, Windows, Samsung smart TVs and select VR headsets. It’s also available on iOS and Mac but you’ll need to use a web browser to access it. Though, Xbox Cloud Gaming is more focused on playing modern titles away from your console, while Antstream Arcade is solely focused on tugging those nostalgic heart strings.

Antstream Arcade on Xbox will be available for pre-order starting today on the Xbox store. Pricing will start at $29.99 annually with a one-time lifetime purchase option for $79.99. The company says all future games and new features will be included, regardless of which purchase option you decide to go with.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cloud-gaming-platform-antstream-arcade-brings-over-1000-retro-games-to-xbox-070057648.html?src=rss 

Twitter sues four unknown entities for ‘unlawful data scraping’

Twitter — or more precisely, its parent company X Corp. — has sued four John Does who have allegedly “engaged in widespread unlawful scraping of data” from the website. They were described as “unknown persons or entities” in the lawsuit, which only mentioned their IP addresses. The lawsuit accused them of flooding Twitter with automated requests far exceeding “what any single individual could send to a server in a given period” aimed at scraping data. In a response to a tweet about the lawsuit, Elon Musk said these entities tried to scrape the entirety of Twitter in a short period of time and blamed them for the rate limits the website implemented earlier this month.

Several entities tried to scrape every tweet ever made in a short period of time. That is why we had to put rate limits in place.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 13, 2023

Musk announced in early July that the website was putting a strict cap on how many tweets users can read each day “to address extreme levels of data scraping [and] system manipulation.” Unverified accounts were limited to 600 posts a day, while verified (and, hence, paid) accounts were allowed to see 6,000 tweets. The defendants for this lawsuit were apparently to blame for those limits. “These requests have severely taxed X Corp.’s servers and impaired the user experience for millions of X Corp.’s customers,” the company wrote in its complaint. 

X Corp. also described the defendants’ activities in the lawsuit as “unlawfully scraping data associated with Texas residents.” But as CNBC notes, the US Ninth Circuit of Appeals ruled in 2022 that the scraping of data that’s publicly available online doesn’t violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA). It was a landmark ruling that brought a long-running lawsuit by LinkedIn to a close. The business-focused social media platform filed a complaint in an attempt to block its rival companies from scraping information visible on users’ public profiles.

“Data scraping companies profit off the innovation of companies like X Corp. while harming X Corp. and compromising user data,” the company also said in its lawsuit. Twitter is now seeking $1 million in damages to make up for the defendants’ actions. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/twitter-sues-four-unknown-entities-for-unlawful-data-scraping-063302786.html?src=rss 

Jonah Hill Goes Surfing In Malibu After His Ex Accuses Him Of ‘Emotional Abuse’: Photo

Jonah Hill took to the waves in Malibu, several days after an ex-girlfriend leveled accusations of emotional abuse against him.

Jonah Hill took to the waves in Malibu, several days after an ex-girlfriend leveled accusations of emotional abuse against him. 

RHONY’s Jessel Taank Speaks Out After Vomiting At The Show’s Premiere Party: ‘I Wish I Was Drunk’

Jessel Taank claims she wished she’d been drunk instead of ill after it was reported that she vomited at a ‘RHONY’ premiere party.

Jessel Taank claims she wished she’d been drunk instead of ill after it was reported that she vomited at a ‘RHONY’ premiere party. 

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