According to this Google blog post the search giant has plans to crack down on intrusive ads starting in January of next year. What kind of ads does Google feel are “intrusive” you might ask? Here are a few examples:
Pages that show intrusive interstitials provide a poorer experience to users than other pages where content is immediately accessible. This can be problematic on mobile devices where screens are often smaller. To improve the mobile search experience, after January 10, 2017, pages where content is not easily accessible to a user on the transition from the mobile search results may not rank as highly.
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Source: [H]ardOCP – Google Cracking Down On Intrusive Ads
Monthly Archives: August 2016
Louisiana Floods Delay Game Release

Not every game delay is down to release scheduling or technical mishaps. Sometimes, an Act of God is to blame.
Source: Kotaku – Louisiana Floods Delay Game Release
Repair Your Relationship With Your Boss by Asking for Their Advice

If things have been a little rocky between you and your boss lately, there’s one thing that’s sure to help you begin smoothing things out: ask them for their guidance.
Source: LifeHacker – Repair Your Relationship With Your Boss by Asking for Their Advice
See 30 minutes of rare (heh) GoldenEye 007 prototype on Xbox 360
GoldenEye 007 for the Xbox 360, as captured by Rare Thief
Thanks to some serious legal gymnastics, the video game makers at Rare have been able to re-release a lot of older software they made for other companies. That includes a ton of the games made while the company was part of the Nintendo “second-party” family in the ’90s. The exceptions have been held back due to legal clearance issues and copyrighted characters, and none seems more legally thorny than the legendary GoldenEye 007. Companies like Nintendo, Activision, and MGM all have legal claims to this movie-gaming mess of licensing.
Those legal issues didn’t stop a team of Rare developers from remastering the 1997 N64 classic from the ground up and prepping it for launch on the Xbox 360. The existence of this unreleased remake has been proven out by leaked image and video snippets over the years, but we’ve never seen anything quite like Tuesday’s megadump of information: a full 30 minutes of GoldenEye 007 running on debug Xbox 360 hardware.
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Wait, wait, wait. A GoldenEye start-up screen with an ESRB online warning?!
The footage, captured and posted by gaming history site Rare Thief, contains both campaign and multiplayer gameplay. This Xbox 360 version appears to retain most of the original’s aspects, including level design, mission structure, sound effects, and low-poly geometry. The “remastered” aspect comes primarily from wholly redrawn textures and added graphical flair, such as better-looking skyboxes and extra bits of geometry. The video shows an on-the-fly graphics toggle that lets players switch between N64 graphics and redrawn graphics at any time to really see the difference; this function also appeared in both recent Halo game remasters. The other obvious improvement: a silky smooth 60 frames-per-second visual refresh that far exceeds the original game’s 20 FPS in campaign mode (and even lower performance in split-screen).
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Source: Ars Technica – See 30 minutes of rare (heh) GoldenEye 007 prototype on Xbox 360
Ash vs Evil Dead Season Two Poster Proudly Flies the Flag of Horror

Ash vs Evil Dead returns October 2, just in time for Halloween season, and also the last few weeks leading up to something even more terrifying: the 2016 election. The official season two poster dropped today with a winking nod to patriotism, and with it a reminder that the best salutes are done with chainsaws.
Source: Gizmodo – Ash vs Evil Dead Season Two Poster Proudly Flies the Flag of Horror
The Guy With The Lowest Possible Rank In Overwatch

It’s possible to hit rank zero in Overwatch’s competitive mode. Dale “Bacontotem” Brown knows. He’s done it. There’s a caveat, though: it takes a hell of a lot of work.
Source: Kotaku – The Guy With The Lowest Possible Rank In Overwatch
FBI Authorized Informants To Break The Law 22,800 Times In 4 Years
blottsie quotes a report from the Daily Dot: Over a four-year period, the FBI authorized informants to break the law more than 22,800 times, according to newly reviewed documents. Official records obtained by the Daily Dot under the Freedom of Information Act show the Federal Bureau of Investigation gave informants permission at least 5,649 times in 2013 to engage in activity that would otherwise be considered a crime. In 2014, authorization was given 5,577 times, the records show. USA Today previously revealed confidential informants engaged in “otherwise illegal activity,” as the bureau calls it, 5,658 times in 2011. The figure was at 5,939 the year before, according to documents acquired by the Huffington Post. In total, records obtained by reporters confirm the FBI authorized at least 22,823 crimes between 2011 and 2014. Unfortunately, many of those crimes can have serious and unintended consequences. One of the examples mentioned in the Daily Dot’s report was of an FBI informant who “was responsible for facilitating the 2011 breach of Stratfor in one of the most high-profile cyberattacks of the last decade. While a handful of informants ultimately brought down the principal hacker responsible, the sting also caused Stratfor, an American intelligence firm, millions of dollars in damages and left and estimated 700,000 credit card holders vulnerable to fraud.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – FBI Authorized Informants To Break The Law 22,800 Times In 4 Years
Visa-powered payment ring is now available to everyone
That Visa-based payment ring is no longer limited to athletes who made it to the Olympics in Rio. Anyone can now pre-order an NFC Ring that lets you tap to pay at many store terminals without pulling out your phone or twisting your wrist. Plunk dow…
Source: Engadget – Visa-powered payment ring is now available to everyone
How To: Ruin Somebody's Instagram Food Photos

This is a very short video of a guy demonstrating how to ruin somebody else’s Instagram food photo. It looks like it worked like a charm. Honestly, I have never taken a photo of my food in my life. Even things I’ve cooked myself and were proud of. As a matter of fact, there is zero photographic documentation of anything I’ve ever eaten except one picture each of the cakes my mom made for my fourth and fifth birthday parties (heavy machinery and dinosaur themed, respectively). Also, even if you do like taking Instagram pictures of your food to brag to your friends, that spaghetti does not look like bragging. That looks like a dead pigeon. That looks like $6 pasta at a sports bar. That caption better have read ‘Boyfriend was too cheap to take me somewhere nice #verylimitedbreadsticks #hollaolivegarden.’
Hit the jump for the video.
Source: Geekologie – How To: Ruin Somebody’s Instagram Food Photos
Remains of the Day: Prisma for iOS Now Works Offline

Prisma, the popular filter app that makes photos look like literal works of art, now works offline on iOS. Previously the app relied entirely on cloud processing, but that meant performance was dependent on occasionally bottlenecked servers, as well as your phone’s data connection.
Source: LifeHacker – Remains of the Day: Prisma for iOS Now Works Offline
Ashley Madison Security Protocols Violated Canada, Austrialia Privacy Laws
The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada said Tuesday that the Canada-based online dating and social networking service Ashely Madison used inadequate privacy and security technology while marketing itself as a discreet and secure way for consenting adults to have affairs. CBC.ca reports: “In a report Tuesday, the privacy watchdog says the Toronto-based company violated numerous privacy laws in Canada and abroad in the era before a massive data breach exposed confidential information from their clients to hackers. The hack stole correspondence, identifying details and even credit card information from millions of the site’s users. The resulting scandal cost the company about a quarter of its annual revenues from irate customers who demanded refunds and cancelled their accounts. Working with a similar agency in Australia, the privacy group says the company knew that its security protocols were lacking but didn’t do enough to guard against being hacked. The company even adorned its website with the logo of a ‘trusted security award’ — a claim the company admits it fabricated.” The report found that “poor habits such as inadequate authentication processes and sub-par key and password management practices were rampant at the company” and that “much of the company’s efforts to monitor its own security were ‘focused on detecting system performance issues and unusual employee requests for decryption of sensitive user data.'” What’s more is that Ashley Madison continued to store personal information of its users even after some of which had deleted or deactivated their account(s). These people then had their information included in databases published online after the hack.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Ashley Madison Security Protocols Violated Canada, Austrialia Privacy Laws
A Married Couple's Problems Have a Supernatural Twist in a Short That We'd Watch a Whole Series About

“House of Straw” is a short that seems to be a pretty typical relationship drama—except there are a lot of clues that the married couple’s problems have a rather unusual source.
Source: io9 – A Married Couple’s Problems Have a Supernatural Twist in a Short That We’d Watch a Whole Series About
Opera Brings Its Free and Unlimited VPN to Android

If you’ve been on the lookout for a decent VPN on Android that won’t break the bank, your wait is over. After releasing on iOS earlier this year
, Opera’s popular free and unlimited VPN is finally available for Android devices.
Source: LifeHacker – Opera Brings Its Free and Unlimited VPN to Android
Here's a Bunch of Upside Down Flying Cars Driving Down the Road


I mean, if we’re going to eventually get flying cars
(we won’t ever get flying cars, you fools
), we can technically fly them in any goddamn direction we want, right?Which means, why the hell not flip the car upside down and fly around New York with the road as your roof and the sky as the ground.
Source: Gizmodo – Here’s a Bunch of Upside Down Flying Cars Driving Down the Road
Mir 0.24 Released, Vulkan Still Not Supported
Ubuntu developers this week released version 0.24 of the Mir display server…
Source: Phoronix – Mir 0.24 Released, Vulkan Still Not Supported
Let Nate Diaz Vape

On Saturday night, UFC lightweight Nate Diaz spent 25 minutes punching and getting punched by Conor McGregor. It was a brutal fight that left both men bloodied and hobbled—McGregor broke his foot while kicking Diaz’s right leg to pieces, and Diaz earned a face full of cuts and bruises—and so it’s no great surprise that Diaz reached for something to help take the edge off after the fight.
Source: Kotaku – Let Nate Diaz Vape
Video Tour Of $1.5-Million Star Trek Home Theater

This is a video tour of Marc and Jennifer Bell’s Star Trek themed home theater and bar area. It took four years and $1.5-million to complete. The actual theater is modeled after the USS Enterprise’s bridge from The Next Generation, the doors open like real turbolift doors, 8 of the 11 chairs in the theater recline into beds, and he has an estimated $1-million of Star Trek memorabilia including original models and costumes and Spock’s ear prosthetics (previously: these two other Star Trek home theater builds). No word if Jennifer shares Marc’s love of everything Star Trek, but I’d be certainly be curious to hear what she has to say about it.
Hit the jump for the video.
Source: Geekologie – Video Tour Of .5-Million Star Trek Home Theater
Does Director Gareth Edwards Know Why His Star Wars Movie Is Titled Rogue One?

We’re not entirely sure. We’re not even sure if we know why Rogue One is called Rogue One. Does anyone?
Source: io9 – Does Director Gareth Edwards Know Why His Star Wars Movie Is Titled Rogue One?
The 7 Grossest Things the Internet Has Done to McDonald's Food

McDonald’s food is already pretty unappealing, but as a lifetime of internet consumption has taught me, the moral bottom is limitless. Here are the most repulsive secondary preparations for food ostensibly cooked by a 53-year-old clown.
Source: Gizmodo – The 7 Grossest Things the Internet Has Done to McDonald’s Food
Is This the Saddest Monkey on Earth?

His blue face and blank stare suggest a look of despair or simply disbelief. Yet, the snub-nosed monkey above and 37 other similar species just got their genomes sequenced. But this one monkey, he seems sad as hell about it.
Source: Gizmodo – Is This the Saddest Monkey on Earth?

