Video Games Are Destroying the People Who Make Them

While many jobs are demanding, the conditions in the gaming industry are uniquely unforgiving. Most developers in the United States do not receive extra compensation for extra hours. Their income pales in comparison to what’s offered in other fields with reputations for brutal hours, like banking and law. The average American game developer earned $83,060 in 2013, according to a Gamasutra survey, or less than half the pay of a first-year associate at a New York law firm.



Crunch makes the industry roll — but it’s taking a serious toll on its workers. In late 2011, as he was finishing up production on the role-playing game The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, programmer Jean Simonet started feeling severe stomach pains. At first, doctors were perplexed. But on his third emergency room visit, he revealed that he’d been regularly staying at the office late and coming in on weekends to fix bugs and add features that he thought would take Skyrim from good to great, no matter how much sleep he lost along the way.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Video Games Are Destroying the People Who Make Them

Sky Store lets you scrap the DVD for a cheaper digital download

When the Sky Store’s “Buy & Keep” option first launched in 2014, it offered the best of both worlds: A digital copy of a film (and later, TV box sets) to download and watch immediately, followed by a physical DVD copy to add to your collection wh…

Source: Engadget – Sky Store lets you scrap the DVD for a cheaper digital download

Adorable Cretaceous-Era Dinosaur Sprouted Raccoon-Like Bandit’s Eyes

By analyzing the bones of a small, feathered dinosaur known as Sinosauropteryx, paleontologists have mapped its unique color patterning. Incredibly, this creature featured a bandit mask-like stripe across its eyes, similar to some mammals and birds living today.

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Source: Gizmodo – Adorable Cretaceous-Era Dinosaur Sprouted Raccoon-Like Bandit’s Eyes

Developer Shows How iPhone Apps Can Theoretically Spy on You With Basic Camera Permissions

A warning to all: On Wednesday, a developer who works for Google published a demonstration app on GitHub that he claims shows off the creepy ways a rogue iPhone app can photograph you at any time without your knowledge if you grant it camera permissions.

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Source: Gizmodo – Developer Shows How iPhone Apps Can Theoretically Spy on You With Basic Camera Permissions

Equifax Was Warned

Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai, reporting for Motherboard: Months before its catastrophic data breach, a security researcher warned Equifax that it was vulnerable to the kind of attack that later compromised the personal data of more than 145 million Americans, Motherboard has learned. Six months after the researcher first notified the company about the vulnerability, Equifax patched it — but only after the massive breach that made headlines had already taken place, according to Equifax’s own timeline. This revelation opens the possibility that more than one group of hackers broke into the company. And, more importantly, it raises new questions about Equifax’s own security practices, and whether the company took the right precautions and heeded warnings of serious vulnerabilities before its disastrous hack. Late last year, a security researcher started looking into some of the servers and websites that Equifax had on the internet. In just a few hours, after scanning the company’s public-facing infrastructure, the researcher couldn’t believe what they had found. One particular website allowed them to access the personal data of every American, including social security numbers, full names, birthdates, and city and state of residence, the researcher told Motherboard.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Equifax Was Warned

Reddit conducts wide-ranging purge of offensive subreddits

Enlarge / Instead of thinking about horrible subreddits, look at this adorable kitten instead. (credit: Joaquim Gaspar )

Reddit has long been the most permissive of the major social media sites. Whereas Facebook tries to ensure that all content on the site is suitable for a general audience, Reddit willingly hosts content that is sexually explicit, violent, or disturbing in a variety of other ways.

But even Reddit has its limits. On Wednesday, the site announced a new policy clarifying its rules against content that incites violence. “We will take action against any content that encourages, glorifies, incites, or calls for violence or physical harm against an individual or a group of people,” Reddit administrator landoflobsters wrote. Promoting harm to animals is also against the rules.

Within minutes, moderators started to ban a long list of controversial subreddits, including /r/Nazi, /r/DylannRoofInnocent, /r/SexWithDogs, /r/WhitesAreCriminals, and /r/PicsOfDeadKids.

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Source: Ars Technica – Reddit conducts wide-ranging purge of offensive subreddits

The legendary McLaren F1 designer is going to build new cars

Enlarge / A cutaway of the forthcoming TVR Griffith, showing the iStream construction.

Put yourself in Gordon Murray‘s shoes. You’ve designed some of the most successful Formula 1 cars of all time. You followed that up with a couple of road cars—the Light Car Company Rocket and the McLaren F1—that were hailed as genius but only built in tiny numbers. So what’s next?

Rethinking the entire way cars are made, obviously. Disturbed by the trend of ever-heavier vehicles and their resource- and energy-intensive manufacturing, Murray came up with iStream, which attempts to solve all of those problems at once. After several years of trying to license the system to existing car makers, he has decided to do it himself. Gordon Murray Automobiles will start off with “a return to the design and engineering principles that have made the McLaren F1 such an icon,” Murray said in a statement.

These days, most of the cars on our roads use a monocoque chassis. Most of those are usually made from steel, the stamping of which uses a lot of energy. iStream-constructed cars do it a little differently. There’s a laser-cut steel frame that provides all the mounting points for the engine, suspension, and so on. But a welded steel frame isn’t stiff enough on its own, so composite honeycomb-cored panels (which could be made from expensive composites or cheap stuff like fiberglass and cardboard) are bonded onto it, significantly boosting structural rigidity.

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Source: Ars Technica – The legendary McLaren F1 designer is going to build new cars

Netflix will stream a 'Stranger Things' aftershow for die-hard fans

It’s safe to say that the second season of Netflix’s Stranger Things is pretty eagerly anticipated, and now the streaming company is capitalizing on its popularity. Beyond Stranger Things is a new aftershow for the series hosted by Jim Rash. All seve…

Source: Engadget – Netflix will stream a ‘Stranger Things’ aftershow for die-hard fans

Bad Rabbit used NSA “EternalRomance” exploit to spread, researchers say

The Bad Rabbit ransom page.

Despite early reports that there was no use of National Security Agency-developed exploits in this week’s crypto-ransomware outbreak, research released by Cisco Talos suggests that the ransomware worm known as “Bad Rabbit” did in fact use a stolen Equation Group exploit  revealed by Shadowbrokers to spread across victims’ networks. The attackers used EternalRomance, an exploit that bypasses security over Server Message Block (SMB) file-sharing connections, enabling remote execution of instructions on Windows clients and servers. The code closely follows an open source Python implementation of a Windows exploit that used EternalRomance (and another Equation Group tool, EternalSynergy), leveraging the same methods revealed in the Shadowbrokers code release. NotPetya also leveraged this exploit.

Bad Rabbit, named for the Tor hidden service page that it directs victims to, initially landed on affected networks through a “driveby download” attack via compromised Russian media websites. Arriving disguised as an Adobe Flash update, Bad Rabbit has multiple ways of spreading itself across networks. It can exploit open SMB connections on the infected Windows system, and it can also exploit the Windows Management Instrumentation Command-line (WMIC) scripting interface to execute code remotely on other Windows systems on the network, according to analysis by EndGame’s Amanda Rousseau. And the malware has a collection of hard-coded usernames and passwords, as Rousseau and researcher Kevin Beaumont noted.

But according to Talos, Bad Rabbit also carries code that uses the EternalRomance exploit (patched by Microsoft in March), which uses an “empty” SMB transaction packet to attempt to push instructions into the memory of another Windows computer. In unpatched Windows 7 and later Windows operating systems, the exploit can use information leakage returned by the exchange to determine if it is successful; on older systems, a different version of the same exploit is used but may crash the targeted computer’s operating system in the process.

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Source: Ars Technica – Bad Rabbit used NSA “EternalRomance” exploit to spread, researchers say

Man, You Suck So Hard: Jackass Films Himself Speeding Down Highway, Crashing

idiot-driving-school.jpg

This is a video of some complete turd testing whether or not all those hours he put into Gran Turismo 6 pay off in real life by driving his BMW E46 M3 down the highway like he just robbed a bank. He didn’t just rob a bank though, he just set up a GoPro and proceeded to put the pedal to the metal. Everything about it made me angry: from his fidgeting with the camera, to his choice of getaway song, but ESPECIALLY his disregard for other motorists. I’m all for driving your car off a cliff, but don’t risk the lives of other drivers in the process. They’re just trying to get to work, they didn’t sign up for your dumbass Formula 1 fantasy. *banging gavel* License revoked indefinitely and you have to be dropped off for work at the hair gel factory every morning in a ’92 Toyota Tercel.

Keep going for the enraging video.

Source: Geekologie – Man, You Suck So Hard: Jackass Films Himself Speeding Down Highway, Crashing

San Francisco Just Took a Huge Step Toward Internet Utopia

Susan Crawford, writing for Backchannel: Last week, San Francisco became the first major city in America to pledge to connect all of its homes and businesses to a fiber optic network. I urge you to read that sentence again. It’s a ray of light. In an era of short-term, deeply partisan do-nothing-ism, the city’s straightforward, deeply practical determination shines. Americans, it turns out, are capable of great things — even if only at the city level these days. […] San Francisco’s dilemma is a compact form of the crisis in communications facing the rest of the country: Although fiber is the necessary infrastructure for every policy goal we have — advanced healthcare, the emergence of new forms of industries, a chance for every child to get an education, managed use of energy, and on and on — the private sector, left to its own devices, has no particular incentive to ensure a widespread upgrade to fiber optic connections. Comcast dominates access in the city, but has no plans to replace its cable lines — great at downloads, not so great at uploads, no opportunity to scale to the capacity of fiber thanks to the laws of physics, and expensive to subscribe to — with fiber. And its planned enhancements to its cable lines have, in other cities, resulted in a product costing $150 per month. AT&T will say it’s upgrading to fiber in San Francisco, but so far its work in many other US cities has been incremental, confined to areas where it has existing business customers to serve or where it already has fiber in place. Other, smaller providers similarly have no plans to do a city-wide upgrade, leaving San Francisco with a deeply uneven patchwork of connectivity. Just as in the rest of the country, poorer and less-well-educated San Franciscans tend not to subscribe to a wire at home, but instead rely wholly on smartphone data plans — no substitutes, given their expense and throttled capacity, for what’s possible using a wired connection.

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Source: Slashdot – San Francisco Just Took a Huge Step Toward Internet Utopia

Big hard disks may be breaking the bathtub curve

(credit: Alpha six)

Low-cost cloud backup and storage company Backblaze has published its latest set of hard disk reliability numbers for the second quarter of 2017. While the company has tended to stick with consumer-oriented hard disks, a good pricing deal has meant that it also now has several thousand enterprise-class disks, allowing for some large-scale comparisons to be drawn between the two kinds of storage. The company has also started to acquire larger disks with capacities of 10TB and 12TB.

The company is using two models of 8TB Seagate disk: one consumer, with a two-year warranty, and the other enterprise, with a five-year warranty. Last quarter, Backblaze noted some performance and power management advantages to the enterprise disks, but for the company’s main use case, these were of somewhat marginal value. The performance does help with initial data migrations and ingest, but the performance benefit overall is limited due to the way Backblaze distributes data over so many spindles.

In aggregate, the company has now accumulated 3.7 million drive days for the consumer disks and 1.4 million for the enterprise ones. Over this usage, the annualized failure rates are 1.1 percent for the consumer disks and 1.2 percent for the enterprise ones. At least for now, then, the enterprise disks aren’t doing anything to justify their longer warranty; their reliability is virtually identical. The focus now is on what happens to the consumer disks as they pass their two-year warranty period. Will they show the same reliability, or will deterioration become more apparent?

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Source: Ars Technica – Big hard disks may be breaking the bathtub curve

NVIDIA Unveils GeForce GTX 1070 Ti

You may have heard, but now it’s official: the GeForce GTX 1070 Ti is now available for pre-order at $449. It is truly a blend of the GTX 1080 and 1070, having only 128 fewer CUDA cores than the GTX 1080, a GTX 1080-like core clock and a GTX 1070-like boost clock, and 8GB of GDDR5 rather than GDDR5X.



Take on today’s most challenging, graphics-intensive games without missing a beat. The GeForce GTX 1070 Ti and GeForce GTX 1070 graphics cards deliver the incredible speed and power of NVIDIA Pascal, the most advanced gaming GPU architecture ever created. This is the ultimate gaming platform. #GameReady.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – NVIDIA Unveils GeForce GTX 1070 Ti

How the Unreal Engine Renders a Frame

A lead graphics programmer demonstrates the complexity of game development and the talents of the industry’s coders by explaining how the Unreal Engine renders a typical frame. This is a three-part technical read that provides much insight into lighting, shadows, and so on.



Unreal’s renderer appears to place an emphasis on producing high-quality images. It relies on baking of data (environment, light, volumetrics, etc.) as much as possible and uses temporal antialiasing to a great effect to improve image quality.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – How the Unreal Engine Renders a Frame

Robot That Said It Would "Destroy Humans" Becomes First Robot Citizen

Sophia, a robot designed by Hong Kong company Hanson Robotics, has been granted Saudi citizenship, making the kingdom the first country in the world to offer its citizenship to a robot. In March of 2016, Sophia’s creator, David Hanson, asked Sophia during a live demonstration at the SXSW festival, “Do you want to destroy humans?…Please say ‘no.'” With a blank expression, Sophia responded, “OK. I will destroy humans.”



“I want to live and work with humans so I need to express the emotions to understand humans and build trust with people,” she said in an exchange with moderator Andrew Ross Sorkin. Asked whether robots can be self-aware, conscious and know they’re robots, she said: “Well let me ask you this back, how do you know you are human?” “I want to use my artificial intelligence to help humans live a better life, like design smarter homes, build better cities of the future. I will do my best to make the world a better place,” she said.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Robot That Said It Would “Destroy Humans” Becomes First Robot Citizen

Verizon creates new $10 monthly charge to remove video throttling

Enlarge (credit: Verizon)

Verizon Wireless customers will soon regain the ability to stream mobile video at the highest resolution, but it’s going to cost extra. Starting November 3, Verizon Wireless customers will have the option of paying another $10 a month to remove the cap on video resolution.

This is the latest in a series of changes at Verizon related to unlimited data plans and video quality. In February, Verizon offered unlimited data plans for the first time in years, boasting that it would not impose limits on video quality (unlike some other carriers).

But that changed in August when Verizon imposed video limits on both unlimited data plans and plans with monthly data caps. This resulted in a somewhat confusing array of options.

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Source: Ars Technica – Verizon creates new monthly charge to remove video throttling