Unsealed complaint says Meta 'coveted' under-13s and deceives the public about age enforcement

An unsealed complaint in a lawsuit filed against Meta by 33 states alleges the company is not only aware that children under the age of 13 use its platforms, but has also “coveted and pursued” this demographic for years on Instagram. The document, which was first spotted by The New York Times, claims that Meta has long been dishonest about how it handles underage users’ accounts when they’re discovered, often failing to disable them when reported and continuing to harvest their data.

The newly unsealed complaint, filed on Wednesday, reveals arguments that were previously redacted when attorneys generals from across the US first hit Meta with the lawsuit last month in the California federal court. It alleges the presence of under-13s is an “open secret” at Meta. While the policies on Facebook and Instagram state a person must be at least 13 years old to sign up, children can easily lie about their age — something the lawsuit says Meta is well aware of, and has done little to stop. Instead, when Meta “received over 1.1 million reports of under-13 users on Instagram” from 2019-2023, it “disabled only a fraction of those accounts and routinely continued to collect children’s data without parental consent,” the complaint says.

Meta “routinely violates” the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA) by targeting children and collecting their information without parental consent, according to the complaint. The lawsuit also argues that Meta’s platforms manipulate young users into spending unhealthy amounts of time on the apps, promote body dysmorphia and expose them to potentially harmful content. When the lawsuit was first filed in October, a Meta spokesperson said the company was “disappointed” over the chosen course of action, stating, “We share the attorneys general’s commitment to providing teens with safe, positive experiences online.”

Meta earlier this month published a blog post calling for federal legislation to put more responsibility on parents when it comes to kids’ app downloads. Meta’s global head of safety, Antigone Davis, proposed a requirement for parents to have approval power over downloads for kids under the age of 16.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/unsealed-complaint-says-meta-coveted-under-13s-and-deceives-the-public-about-age-enforcement-231034682.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Unsealed complaint says Meta ‘coveted’ under-13s and deceives the public about age enforcement

How Python's New Security Developer Hopes To Help All Software Supply Chains

Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland writes: The Linux Foundation recently funded a new “security developer in residence” position for Python. (It’s funded through the Linux Foundation’s own “Open Software Security foundation”, which has a stated mission of partnering with open source project maintainers “to systematically find new, as-yet-undiscovered vulnerabilities in open source code, and get them fixed to improve global software supply chain security.”) The position went to the lead maintainer for the HTTP client library urllib3, the most downloaded package on the Python Package Index with over 10 billion downloads. But he hopes to create a ripple effect by demonstrating the impact of security investments in critical communities — ultimately instigating a wave of improvements to all software supply chains. (And he’s also documenting everything for easy replication by other communities…)

So far he’s improved the security of Python’s release processes with signature audits and security-hardening automation. But he also learned that CVE numbers were being assigned to newly-discovered vulnerabilities by the National Cyber Security Division of the America’s Department of Homeland Security — often without talking to anyone at the Python project. So by August he’d gotten the Python Software Foundation authorized as a CVE Numbering Authority, which should lead to more detailed advisories (including remediation information), now reviewed and approved by the responsible security response teams.

“The Python Software wants to help other Open Source organizations, and will be sharing lessons learned,” he writes in a blog post. And he now says he’s already been communicating with the Curl program about his experiences to help them take the same step, and even authored a guide to the process for other open source projects.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – How Python’s New Security Developer Hopes To Help All Software Supply Chains

What's New on Prime Video and Freevee in December 2023

December highlights on Prime Video include the second seasons of two original series and an original Christmas movie. First up is Candy Cane Lane (December 1), a comedy film starring Eddie Murphy and Tracee Ellis Ross as a couple seeking to win their neighborhood’s holiday home decorating contest by making a deal with an evil elf.

Next comes season two of sports docuseries Coach Prime, which follows Colorado head football Deion Sanders in his first full season with the Buffaloes. Two episodes of the six-part series will premiere on December 7. Finally, there’s the second season premiere of the drama Reacher (December 15), based on Lee Child’s novels and starring Alan Ritchson as the ex-military police investigator Jack Reacher.

For the sci-fi fans, Prime is also bringing five Star Trek films to its library on December 1, including Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, Star Trek: Insurrection, and Star Trek: Nemesis.

Here’s everything else coming to Prime Video and Amazon-owned, ad-supported Freevee in December.

What’s coming to Prime Video in December 2023

Arriving December 1

  • 50 First Dates (2004)

  • Baywatch (2017)

  • Candy Cane Lane (2023)

  • Click (2006)

  • Cry Macho (2021)

  • Death Rides A Horse (1969)

  • Death Warrant (1990)

  • Forces Of Nature (1999)

  • Hot Tub Time Machine (2010)

  • I Wish (2011)

  • In The Heat Of The Night (1967)

  • Kiss The Girls (1997)

  • Little Man Tate (1991)

  • Made Of Honor (2008)

  • Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)

  • Murphy’s Law (1986)

  • Picture This (2008)

  • Stardust (2007)

  • Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)

  • Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)

  • Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)

  • Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)

  • Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)

  • Support the Girls (2018)

  • Tales From the Darkside: The Movie (1990)

  • The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021)

  • The Dead Zone (1983)

  • The Dirty Dozen (1967)

  • The Machinist (2004)

  • The Magnificent Seven (1960)

  • The Proposal (2009)

  • The Ring (2002)

  • The Turkey Bowl (2019)

  • The Wonderful Country (1959)

  • 7th Heaven S1-S11 (1997)

  • My Three Sons S1-S12 (1960)

Arriving December 5

  • Barbershop: The Next Cut (2016)

  • The Melodic Blue: Baby Keem (2023)

Arriving December 7

  • Coach Prime S2 (2023)

Arriving December 8

  • Dating Santa (2023)

  • Dealing with Christmas (2023)

  • Merry Little Batman (2023)

  • World’s First Christmas (2023)

  • Your Christmas Or Mine 2 (2023)

Arriving December 12

  • Asteroid City (2023)

  • Blue’s Big City Adventure (2022)

Arriving December 15

  • Reacher S2 (2023)

Arriving December 19

  • Every Body (2023)

Arriving December 21

  • Gigolò per caso (2023)

Arriving December 25

  • The Flash (2023)

Arriving December 26

  • Sound of Freedom (2023)

Arriving December 27

  • Terminator: Genisys (2015)

Arriving December 30

  • Baby Shark’s Big Show S1 (2021)

  • Blue’s Clues S1 (1996)

  • Blue’s Clues & You S1-S2 (2020)

  • Hit The Floor S1-S4 (2013)

  • Moesha S1-S6 (1997)

  • Sister Sister S1-S6 (1994)

  • Team Umizoomi S1 (2010)

  • The Affair S1-S5 (2014)

  • Tyler Perry’s Ruthless S1-S2 (2021)

What’s coming to Freevee in December 2023

Arriving December 1

  • Earth to Echo (2014)

  • Everybody’s Fine (2009)

  • Gods of Egypt (2016)

  • Happy Christmas (2014)

  • Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard (2021)

  • Hotel Transylvania (2012)

  • Jason’s Lyric (1994)

  • Joey (1997)

  • Kick-Ass (2010)

  • Masquerade (1988)

  • Men in Black (1997)

  • Men in Black II (2002)

  • Nicholas Nickleby (2002)

  • Peter Pan (2003)

  • Repo Men (2017)

  • Sahara (1984)

  • Still of the Night (1982)

  • Tank Girl (1995)

  • Ted (2012)

  • The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension (1984)

  • The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994)

  • The American (2010)

  • The Emoji Movie (2017)

  • The Gift (2015)

  • The Hitman’s Bodyguard (2017)

  • The Night of the Hunter (1955)

  • The Purge (2013)

  • The Secret Life of Pets 2 (2019)

  • The White Buffalo (1977)

  • Think Like a Man (2012)

  • Think Like a Man Too (2014)

  • FBI True (2023)

  • The Middle S1-9 (2009)

Arriving December 3

  • Mistletoe Mixup (2021)

Arriving December 4

  • The Star (2017)

Arriving December 6

  • Hollywood Houselift with Jeff Lewis S2 (2023)

Arriving December 7

  • A Lot Like Christmas (2021)

Arriving December 8

  • The Fairy Princess & the Unicorn (2019)

Arriving December 10

  • Copshop (2021)

Arriving December 11

  • Spy Cat (2018)

Arriving December 14

  • A Christmas Star (2021)

Arriving December 15

  • Night Court S1-9 (1984)

Arriving December 20

  • When Hope Calls: Hearties Christmas Present (2021)

Arriving December 21

  • Christmas Giveaway (2021)

Arriving December 22

  • Sing 2 (2021)

Arriving December 31

  • Stillwater (2021)

  • Fringe S1-5 (2008)

  • The Waltons S1-9 (1972)



Source: LifeHacker – What’s New on Prime Video and Freevee in December 2023

Does OpenAI's Origins Explain the Sam Altman Drama?

Tech journalist Kara Swisher disagrees that Sam Altman’s (temporary) firing stemmed from a conflict between the “go-faster” people pushing for commercialization and a rival contingent wanting more safety-assuring guardrails. “He’s being talking about the problems,” Swisher said on CNN. “Compared to a lot of tech people, he’s talking about the problems. I think that’s a false dichotomy.”

At the same time, NPR argues, the firing and re-hiring of Sam Altman “didn’t come out of nowhere. In fact, the boardroom drama represented the boiling over of tensions that have long simmered under the surface of the company.”

The chaos at OpenAI can be traced back to the unusual way the company was structured. OpenAI was founded in 2015 by Altman, Elon Musk and others as a non-profit research lab. It was almost like an anti-Big Tech company; it would prioritize principles over profit. It wanted to, as OpenAI put it back then, develop AI tools that would “benefit humanity as a whole, unconstrained by a need to generate financial return.”

But in 2018, two things happened: First, Musk quit the board of OpenAI after he said he invested $50 million, cutting the then-unknown company off from more of the entrepreneur’s crucial financial backing. And secondly, OpenAI’s leaders grew increasingly aware that developing and maintaining advanced artificial intelligence models required an immense amount of computing power, which was incredibly expensive.

A year after Musk left, OpenAI created a for-profit arm. Technically, it is what’s known as a “capped profit” entity, which means investors’ possible profits are capped at a certain amount. Any remaining money is re-invested in the company. Yet the nonprofit’s board and mission still governed the company, creating two competing tribes within OpenAI: adherents to the serve-humanity-and-not-shareholders credo and those who subscribed to the more traditional Silicon Valley modus operandi of using investor money to release consumer products into the world as rapidly as possible in hopes of cornering a market and becoming an industry pacesetter… The question was, did Altman abandon OpenAI’s founding principles to try to scale up the company and sign up customers as fast as possible? And, if so, did that make him unsuited to helm a nonprofit created to develop AI products “free from financial obligations”?

Microsoft’s stock price hit an all-time high this week, reports the Wall Street Journal. (They also note that when OpenAI employees considered moving to Microsoft, CEO Satya Nadella “assured their potential colleagues that they wouldn’t even have to use Microsoft’s workplace-communications app Teams.”)

“But the ideal outcome for Microsoft was Altman going back to OpenAI as CEO, according to a person familiar with Nadella’s thinking. By opening Microsoft’s doors to the OpenAI team, Nadella increased Altman’s leverage to get his position back…”

Even after investing $13 billion, Microsoft didn’t have a board seat or visibility into OpenAI’s governance, since it worried that having too much sway would alarm increasingly aggressive regulators. That left Microsoft exposed to the risks of OpenAI’s curious structure… Microsoft has had to strike a tricky balance with OpenAI: safeguarding its investment while ensuring that its ownership stake remained below 50% to avoid regulatory pitfalls… AI is wildly expensive, and Microsoft’s spending is expected to soar as the company builds out the necessary computing infrastructure. And it’s unclear when or if it will be able to make back these upfront costs in added new revenue…
Nadella is banking on OpenAI’s independence leading to innovations that benefit Microsoft as much as humanity. But the uncertainty of the past week has shown the risks in one of the world’s most valuable companies outsourcing the future to a startup beyond its control.
When Chris Wallace asked Swisher if he should be more concerned about the dangers of AI now — and of its potential to take jobs — Swisher had a different answer. “One of the concerns you should have is the consolidation of this into bigger companies. Microsoft really want to win here…”

But she didn’t let the conversation end without wryly underscoring the potential for AI. “I’d be concerned that there’s not enough innovation… It could be a good thing, Chris. Trust me, it could be a good thing. But it could also, you know, kill you.”
Thanks to Slashdot reader Tony Isaac for sharing the article.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Does OpenAI’s Origins Explain the Sam Altman Drama?

It's Time to Take Your Winter Allergies More Seriously

Those of us with allergies have already endured a particularly brutal spring, followed by a few months of relentless hay fever symptoms. But now that the temperatures are finally dropping, we’ll be in the clear for the rest of the year, right? Well, not exactly.

Outdoor seasonal allergies may be over for people living in most parts of the country, but winter is typically the worst time of the year for indoor allergens like dust, pet dander, and mold. Our first instinct may be to write off any sniffling, sneezing, or coughing as a winter cold, but that’s not always the case. It’s time to take winter allergies seriously: Here’s where to start.

What are winter allergies?

The term “winter allergies” actually refers to indoor allergies, which exist year-round. That said, indoor allergies tend to be more problematic and noticeable during the winter. According to the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI), there are a few reasons for that:

  • We spend more time at home, and indoors in general

  • The colder weather means we’re more likely to keep our doors and windows shut: This keeps the cold out, but also seals allergens inside with us

  • Forced air heating recirculates the indoor air and any allergens it contains

  • Forced air heating may also kick up dust that had accumulated on the walls, woodwork, the tops of cabinets, and other hard and soft surfaces that aren’t cleaned regularly

Plus, as a resource from the Allergy & Asthma Network (AAN) points out, forced air heating—as opposed to the steam heating often seen in older houses and apartments—decreases the humidity level of indoor air, which can then heighten allergy symptoms. On top of that, the air can dry out our nasal membranes, leaving them cracked, sore, and more susceptible to a secondary infection.

If all that wasn’t enough, the more we’re exposed to indoor allergens, the worse our symptoms will likely get, according to the AAN. When we spend more time inside breathing in dry, recirculated, allergen-filled air, our body identifies allergens like dust and dander as invaders, then prompts our immune system to launch an attack against them. This kind of exaggerated response to an invader may involve increased mucus production, for example.

Some of the most common indoor allergens include:

  • Dust

  • Dust mites (the microscopic arachnids that feed on and live in dust; technically, we’re allergic to a combination of their waste particles and dead body fragments)

  • Mold

  • Pet dander

  • Cockroaches (technically, a combination of their feces and the shells of the deceased)

  • Dander, droppings, urine, and parasites brought inside by rodents seeking shelter from cold weather 

What are the symptoms of winter allergies?

Winter allergies can bring on the same symptoms as outdoor seasonal allergies and can present in various combinations that differ from person-to-person. Those symptoms include:

  • Sneezing

  • Watery, itchy eyes

  • Runny nose

  • Nasal congestion

  • Coughing

  • Postnasal drip 

  • Sore or itchy throat

  • Rashes or dry, itchy skin

  • Headaches

  • Disrupted sleep

  • Wheezing and shortness of breath (for those with allergic asthma)

How do you get rid of winter allergies?

While you can’t simply stop being allergic to something, there are a few ways you can manage your winter allergies. These include:

  • Stay on top of cleaning: Don’t wait until spring. Start with a deep clean to get rid of accumulations of dust, dander, mold, and other allergens, then clean, dust, and vacuum regularly.

  • Use an air purifier: In this post, Lifehacker’s Senior Health Editor Beth Skwarecki explains what to look for when purchasing an air purifier to help ease allergy symptoms

  • Change your HVAC filter regularly: Replace with filters with a MERV rating of 13 or higher

  • Minimize your pet’s dander: Whether you have cats, dogs, or another furry pet, do what you can to reduce the spread of their dander, based on what’s best for your breed. This might mean bathing them more often, bathing them less often, and/or brushing them outside.

If you’ve done what you can in your home, contact your doctor if your winter allergy symptoms are still problematic—especially if you also have asthma, or suspect your symptoms have progressed into sinusitis or another secondary infection.



Source: LifeHacker – It’s Time to Take Your Winter Allergies More Seriously

Amazon Black Friday 2023 is still going: The Elgato Stream Deck MK.2 is 20 percent off right now

Elgato’s Stream Deck MK.2 is 20 percent off as part of a Black Friday Corsair gaming sale at Amazon. The accessory is currently available for $120, which is $30 off the usual price of $150. The Stream Deck is one of our recommended accessories for streamers. It’s also useful for other creators like podcasters, as well as anyone who carries out the same tasks over and over on their desktop system.

The Stream Deck MK.2 (not to be confused with Valve’s Steam Deck) is a highly customizable desktop controller. You can set up a Stream Deck to fire up your streaming software, simultaneously start a stream and let social media followers know you’re going live, mute your mic and change your lighting. If you enjoy annoying your friends, you could use the device as a soundboard too. 

The Stream Deck is useful for other purposes as well. You can, for instance, set up macros with AutoHotkey on Windows and Shortcuts on Mac to boost your productivity across a wide range of apps. Alternatively, you can use the 15 LCD hotkeys to control music playback, set timers for focused work sessions, trigger actions through IFTTT, change your Slack status, jump into your favorite Discord channel or paste in a lengthy phrase of text that you frequently use. The possibilities are almost endless.

Meanwhile, the Stream Deck+ has dropped to an all-time-low of $170. That’s $30 off the usual price.

This model has eight LCD hotkeys and four dials that offer users more refined control over a variety of functions. You can finely adjust the volume of your headphones or mic, the brightness of connected smart lights or the zoom level of your webcam, for instance. The Stream Deck+ has a touchscreen that displays what each dial does. You can also use this to swipe between different pages of hotkey functions.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/amazon-black-friday-2023-is-still-going-the-elgato-stream-deck-mk2-is-20-percent-off-right-now-211508546.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Amazon Black Friday 2023 is still going: The Elgato Stream Deck MK.2 is 20 percent off right now

Beginner's Tutorial: Setting Up Rust Using Rustup on Linux Systems

This detailed tutorial provides a concise introduction to the Rust programming language, followed by clear instructions on how to install Rust using rustup on Linux. It also guides you through updating Rust, creating and running a sample Rust program, and finally, how to uninstall Rust from your Linux system.

Source: LXer – Beginner’s Tutorial: Setting Up Rust Using Rustup on Linux Systems

As Doctor Who Turns 60, the TARDIS Flies Again Tonight

It was November 23rd of the year 1963 that Doctor Who first premiered on the BBC. And the many years since then have wrought their changes, writes the BBC:

Events on screen and off have shaped the character’s personality, their face changing to reflect Britain itself, and every version building on what has gone before. To truly understand Who, you have to know your history…

[T]he series was originally intended to teach children history as much as thrill them… [T]he Daleks were shouty miniaturised tanks, terrifying to a nation that had lived through World War 2… Scripts by the likes of Douglas Adams (who wrote The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) leaned into the show’s inherent strangeness… Interestingly, the new specials and series involve Marvel-owner Disney, who will stream it outside the UK and Ireland, in turn helping boost the budget.
The article handily summarizes the last 60 years. (“Perhaps the most shocking revelation of [2010 showrunner Steven Moffat’s] tenure was a hitherto unseen, past version of the Doctor, played by John Hurt. Other writers would take this idea and run with it…”) The article ends with the words, “Only time will tell.”

And elsewhere another BBC article notes that today “the TARDIS is set to return to BBC One and iPlayer.”
With David Tennant as the Fourteenth Doctor and Catherine Tate reprising her role as Donna Noble the popular duo will make their spectacular return to mark the show’s 60th anniversary with three special episodes running each Saturday from the 25th November…

Neil Patrick Harris as the Toymaker [is] set to cause all kinds of mayhem. It’s going to be an unmissable cosmic adventure, all before Ncuti Gatwa gets the keys to the TARDIS over the festive season.
Thanks to Alain Williams (Slashdot reader #2,972) for sharing the article.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – As Doctor Who Turns 60, the TARDIS Flies Again Tonight

This Black Friday gaming monitor deal takes $120 off one of our favorite LG OLED displays

The biggest shopping event of the year is a great opportunity to beef up your gaming setup. As part of a Black Friday LG sale at Amazon, our pick for the very best gaming monitor has dropped to an all-time-low price. If money’s not too much of an obstacle, it’s worth taking a look at the LG 27GR95QE-B. It has dropped by $120 to $780.

This is a 27-inch OLED QHD display with a resolution of 1440p, 240Hz refresh rate and sub-1ms pixel response times. We have yet to see a dedicated gaming monitor that delivers better HDR performance. However, it’s worth noting that, at a maximum of around 200 nits, the display isn’t very bright.

It’s also worth bearing in mind the typical issues with OLED displays, such as potential burn-ins and text legibility. But if those aren’t a concern for you and you have the cash to spare, we highly recommend the LG 27GR95QE-B.

If you’d rather snap up a mid-range monitor, consider LG’s 27GL83A-B. That’s also available for an all-time-low price, albeit at a far more palatable $200. That’s $100 off.

The 27GL83A-B is one of our favorite mid-range gaming monitors. It has a 27-inch IPS display, 165Hz refresh rate and a QHD 1440p resolution. Unless you have a high-end gaming rig (say one with a GeForce RTX 4080 or 4090 GPU), this monitor should more than do the trick.

On the downside, the power supply isn’t built into the display’s housing, so you’ll have a cumbersome power brick to deal with. Also, like most LCD displays, you won’t get true HDR here. That said, you’d be hard-pressed to find a better mid-range gaming monitor for $200.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/this-black-friday-gaming-monitor-deal-takes-120-off-one-of-our-favorite-lg-oled-displays-201517396.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – This Black Friday gaming monitor deal takes 0 off one of our favorite LG OLED displays

Doctor Who: The Star Beast reminds us that money isn’t everything

The following discusses spoilers for “The Star Beast” and references transphobia.

If there’s one thing the rebooted Doctor Who always tried to do, it was avoid cliches about its predecessor’s small budget. The 1963 – 1989 run was made on a shoestring, leading to lazy gags about wobbly sets and bad visual effects. The 2005 revival was well-budgeted compared to its British TV peers, but still had to work hard to not “embarrass” itself. Now, the show is back, armed with bags of cash from Disney in exchange for its international broadcast rights. And, for the first time in possibly forever Doctor Who can boast about how rich it is.

But, much as we fans may feel inferior when comparing their love to those glossy Treks and Wars, money isn’t everything. For all those wobbly sets and dodgy effects, Doctor Who is a writer’s and actor’s medium first; great writing and acting can go a long way. It can make you believe an alien parasite consuming a person inside out is real, and not just green bubble wrap. It’s also the reason Doctor Who never succeeds when its creative team tries to ram it into the same cult-sci-fi-TV pigeonhole as its supposed American counterparts. This show thrives on taking left turns and playing on the fringes of the epic rather than aping the SyFy-industrial complex.

So what happens when Russell T. Davies returns to re-reboot the show with a big pile of Disney dollars? He writes a kitchen sink drama about a struggling family that’s thrust into the middle of an alien conflict. He writes a script that hinges not on an extended battle sequence with plenty of practical effects, or a lavish CGI moment of London being torn apart. But one where the big blockbuster moment is when Catherine Tate is locked in a tiny room across from David Tennant. This is the story of a mother who loves her daughter so much that she opts to sacrifice herself without a second thought. The Star Beast says, both in its production and dialogue, that there are better things to have than money, including love. And money was never the thing that made Doctor Who good.

The Star Beast has a difficult job, serving as a 60th anniversary special and as a jumping-on point for new viewers. Doctor Who is already a global hit, but its arrival on Disney+ means it’ll no longer be something people need to seek out in order to find. But beyond a short prologue where the Doctor explains why Donna can’t get her memories back, or else she’ll die, you’re dropped in cold. Keep up. The episode is an adaptation of the ‘70s comic of the same name, where the alien Beep the Meep lands on Earth, pursued by the Wrarth Warriors.

The Doctor (David Tennant), with his new / old face and a new sonic, arrives in Camden in time to bump into Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) and her daughter, Rose (Yasmin Finney). He’s anxious to get out of their way since, if Donna remembers him or their time together, she will die. (In the resolution to 2008’s Journey’s End, Donna absorbed a bunch of the Doctor’s regeneration energy, becoming a human-Time Lord hybrid. But in doing so, nearly burned out her own brain until the Doctor wiped her memory in order to save her life.) But while she’s packing a box of shopping, a falling spaceship streaks across the sky, crashing into a nearby steel works. The Doctor hijacks a taxi driven by Shaun (Karl Collins), Donna’s husband, and asks him to drive to the steel works while finding out what Donna has been up to in the last 15 years.

Last time we saw Donna, the Doctor handed her a winning lottery ticket as a gift to celebrate her marriage to Shaun. But beyond paying for the house they live in, she gave the rest of her £160 million windfall to good causes, leaving them on the poverty line. Rose, her daughter, has set up a sewing business selling handmade toys to rich people in Dubai, to help earn some extra money. And as they walk home Rose, who is trans, is deadnamed by a bunch of kids from her school, much to Donna’s ire.

The Doctor investigates the crashed spaceship, avoiding the UNIT soldiers who are swarming the plant. But he is spotted by Shirley Ann Bingham (Ruth Madeley), UNIT’s new scientific advisor – the 56th – the latest in a long line of advisors to follow the Doctor. Rose, meanwhile, encounters Beep the Meep (Miriam Margolyes), a cuddly alien who is on the run from some giant green bug-eyed monsters with laser gun hands. Her compassion sees her hide Beep in her sewing room in the garden shed, which is eventually discovered by Donna. And then the Doctor turns up, followed soon after by a squad of UNIT soldiers who have been hypnotized by some glowing form in the spaceship.

A pitched and lengthy battle ensues where the Doctor fashions an escape by breaking through the walls between houses to get around the warring factions. It’s here, in a set piece that drags out far too long, that you can feel the show reveling in its supersized budget. Doctor Who of old could have probably staged something like this in its late-noughties heyday but not without a lot of cutting elsewhere. But we’re allowed a moment or two of self-indulgence when you get so much money you can flip a Land Rover onto a parked car and have them both explode in flames, right?

After escaping, the Doctor pulls out a judge’s wig from inside his coat and beams in two Wrarth Warriors. He’s not so sure that the cute and cuddly Beep is as innocent as it initially claimed – as fans of the comic will already know – instead being a genocidal maniac. It was Beep that possessed the squad of UNIT soldiers, and plans to wreak more havoc on the universe as soon as their ship is repaired. Meep kills the two Wrarth Warriors and is about to do the same to everyone else but the Doctor convinces them to take them hostage instead. Marched back to the steelworks, where they’re saved by Shirley who has a set of hidden guns and a rocket launcher hidden inside her wheelchair. Beep’s spaceship is ready to go, whereby its Dagger Drive engine will burrow into London and burn the city, and its nine million or so inhabitants, to fuel its takeoff.

The Star Beast reminded me of a lengthy email, written by Russell T. Davies, in the tail end of Doctor Who: The Writer’s Tale. Towards the end of his first tenure running the show, Davies wrote to Benjamin Cook discussing his process. But the email also had the tone of someone addressing the criticisms that had perhaps dogged much of his initial tenure on the series. I’m paraphrasing, but his point was that structure was far less important to him than emotional catharsis. A Davies story is often messy and disorganized, much like life, in contrast to the Swiss Watch formalism of his successor, Steven Moffat. It should come as no surprise that The Star Beast doesn’t quite gel on the structural level, and is instead a series of big, emotionally cathartic set pieces.

But Davies’ instincts are right, and while many shows would build to a wide-frame and glossy climax, Davies shrinks it down. Catherine Tate leaps onto the spaceship to help the Doctor, willingly risking her life to save her daughter and the rest of London. Here, when it’s just David Tennant and Catherine Tate in a small, round room, separated by a glass partition, that things get intense. The whole episode, in fact, hinges on Tate’s acting as she makes the decision to die to save her family, a bigger and better moment than a thousand flipped Land Rovers.

And to fix things, the Doctor has to unlock those memories, sealed away inside Donna’s brain, of when her mind had merged with the Doctor. With it, she is able to help destroy the ship’s launch mechanism in a big moment of heroism before dying in the Doctor’s arms. But, when rescue arrives, she’s not actually dead, and it’s all thanks to Rose, who was helping outside all along. The hidden memories, and the Doctor’s power, were passed down to Rose in the womb who diluted their intensity enough not to overwhelm and kill Donna. It’s a seemingly sweet way to resolve the story, but I’m not sure if the implication the show makes is the one Davies intends. But I’m going to leave the nature of the episode’s resolution, and how it relates to Rose’s gender in the hands of infinitely better-qualified writers.

The episode ends with the Doctor and Donna cruelly preventing Rose from taking a look at the new TARDIS. Which, much like the rest of the episode, is a big money moment, with what feels like the biggest console room set ever. Again, there are probably too many beauty passes over the architecture as the show reminds everyone what it can do with some extra cash. Sadly, the coffee machine gets just one run out before Donna spills a cup all over the console and the TARDIS is engulfed in flame. Man, it feels good to be excited about the next episode of Doctor Who, and that’s a feeling I haven’t felt since March 1st, 2020.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/doctor-who-the-star-beast-reminds-us-that-money-isnt-everything-200008217.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Doctor Who: The Star Beast reminds us that money isn’t everything

Here's Amazon’s Nintendo Switch OLED Super Smash Bros Bundle Deal

Here's Amazon’s Nintendo Switch OLED Super Smash Bros Bundle Deal
Arguably the greatest handheld game system ever made, the Nintendo Switch may be nearing its end of life, but that’s actually the best time to dive into a game system. You get the final revision of the hardware with all of the improvements made across its lifetime, and you have the full game library available without having to wait for future

Source: Hot Hardware – Here’s Amazon’s Nintendo Switch OLED Super Smash Bros Bundle Deal

How to Support Local Retailers on 'Small Business Saturday'

America celebrates “Small Business Saturday” today with special celebrations everywhere from Houston, Texas to Buffalo, New York
NBC News reports:
Sandwiched between Black Friday and Cyber Monday — historically the biggest and busiest retail days of the year — there’s another standout shopping event: Small Business Saturday. Started by American Express in 2010 and co-sponsored by the U.S. Small Business Administration since 2011, Small Business Saturday aims to create awareness about the impact shoppers have when they buy “small” year round, whether they physically visit stores or shop online.

This year, 85% of consumers say they’re likely to shop “small” during the holiday season, according to the American Express 2023 Shop Small Impact Study. That represents a multibillion dollar opportunity — consumers are expected to spend an estimated $125 billion at small businesses this holiday season, up 42% from $88 billion in 2022, as reported by Intuit QuickBooks.

Like CBS News, NBC has compiled its list of small businesses that can ship their products to you — and suggests leaving positive reviews online for your favorite small businesses. (“Amazon, for example, now adds badges to product pages on its site if items are sold by small businesses.”)
They also recommend interacting with your favorite small businesses on social media — while “the American Express small-business map allows you to input your zip code so it can recommend local shops in your area and beyond. Google also has a ‘small business’ filter on desktop and mobile, and one for Google Maps on mobile.”

The UK’s “Small Business Saturday” will happen next week, on the first Saturday in December.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – How to Support Local Retailers on ‘Small Business Saturday’

Black Friday TV deals: The Samsung Frame TV is still on sale for up to $1,000 off

Samsung’s Frame TV has hit record low prices thanks to Black Friday deals at Amazon and Samsung, with discounts on every size available. The 55-inch Frame TV is $520 off — a 35 percent discount — bringing it down to just $978. If you want to go big, the 85-inch Frame is a full $1,000 off, for a sale price of $3,298. With seven different size options starting at 32 inches, there’s something for everyone. The Frame is designed to complement its surroundings when it’s not in use, displaying art rather than standing out as the black mirror eyesore we’ve become accustomed to with standard TVs.

The discounts apply to the most recent 4K QLED Frame TVs, all of which feature Samsung’s anti-reflection matte display. The Frame comes with a slim-fit wall mount so it can be hung flush with the wall, just like any painting or framed picture, and offers 100 percent Color Volume with Quantum Dot technology to make colors pop. When it’s not in use, you can put it in Art Mode, which will display the art of your choosing. The Frame is a game-changer for anyone who detests how TVs clash with their home decor.

Samsung offers 10 free artworks to choose from, or you can subscribe to the Samsung Art store for access to curated collections from its museum partners, like The Louvre. You can also upload your own images to display, and use it like a massive digital picture frame. When the TV is in Art Mode, it can be programmed to display artwork based on whether you’re in the room. With motion sensing, The Frame can identify when you’ve left and turn off the display so it isn’t projecting to an empty room. It’ll come back on when you return.

Like Samsung’s other smart TVs, The Frame is powered by Tizen, and it’ll have all the apps you need for your streaming purposes. You can also stream Xbox games to your TV through Samsung’s Gaming hub if you have Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. The Frame comes in seven sizes: 32-inch, 43-inch, 50-inch, 55-inch, 65-inch, 75-inch and 85-inch. It might normally be a bit of a splurge, but there’s potential to save hundreds of dollars with the current Black Friday sales.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/black-friday-tv-deals-the-samsung-frame-tv-is-still-on-sale-for-up-to-1000-off-193053842.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Black Friday TV deals: The Samsung Frame TV is still on sale for up to ,000 off

Top Robot Vacuum Deals Don’t Suck At Up To 77% Off

Top Robot Vacuum Deals Don’t Suck At Up To 77% Off
If you’re sick of vacuuming or mopping those dirty floors, Amazon has a plethora of deals on robot vacuums and mops that do not suck.

To kick things off, we have the iRobot Roomba 694 Robot Vacuum at $159, or an outstanding 42% off the regular price. This is the OG brand of robot vacuums, with 3-stages of cleaning power, an edge-sweeping

Source: Hot Hardware – Top Robot Vacuum Deals Don’t Suck At Up To 77% Off

Squid Game Contestants Considering Lawsuit Over Reality Show Injuries

Even before it hit Netflix earlier this week, Squid Game: The Challenge had controversy (and a weird defense) attached to it. Earlier this year, it was alleged that contestants were participating in sub-zero temperatures and that some had injured themselves during the shooting process in the UK. Add onto that that…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Squid Game Contestants Considering Lawsuit Over Reality Show Injuries

Why You Should Consider an Upflush Toilet

Finishing a basement is one of the most popular home renovation projects for some very good reasons. First and foremost, it’s one of the best ways to spend your money, with a return on investment (ROI) over 85%. Second, it’s one of the most effective ways to add living space—and thus equity—to your home.

When planning to finish a basement, a lot of folks decide to put a bathroom down there, and then discover that this can be a very complicated add-on. That’s due to two reasons: One, you might have to break a concrete slab to run plumbing under the floor, and two, your basement floor is probably below the sewer lines that service the house. Most toilets rely on gravity assisted by water pressure to get your waste into the sewer, and that just won’t work if the waste has to go uphill.

Don’t despair, though—you still have options.

Toiletry

If a toilet is going to sit below the sewer line, you have two basic options to consider: A toilet assisted by some sort of pump, or a composting toilet. Composting toilets collect the waste in a storage system, which then has to be emptied on a regular basis. These toilets are environmentally friendly and often don’t require any electricity or plumbing hookups at all, but keeping track of how, uh, full they are and emptying out the compost can be a pain.

A more convenient option is a pump-assisted toilet. Ejector pump toilets use a pump similar to a sump pump to push waste into the sewer line, but these usually require breaking the slab and installing the pump system under the basement floor, which adds to the expense and difficulty of the renovation. A better option is what’s known as an “upflush” toilet, which has a pump attached that moves the waste to the sewer line. It’s a project that you can even do yourself if you’re moderately comfortable with some basic plumbing work.

Benefits of upflush toilets

There are several reasons why an upflush toilet is often the best option for a basement renovation:

  • Easier installation. You won’t need to break up your basement floor or dig down, and you won’t need to run any plumbing. All that needs to be done is the installation of the drain line into the sewer pipe, and the installation of a vent pipe.

  • Operation. Even if a gravity toilet is an option in your basement, being so low often means more frequent backups and drainage problems. Any time the sewer lines get clogged up after storms, for example, you might have a problem flushing your toilet. An upflush toilet’s pump can overcome many of those problems.

  • Cost. Upflush toilets are more expensive than gravity toilets because of the extra apparatus involved, but since they sit entirely above ground, they often cost less to install overall.

  • Familiarity. Unlike a composting toilet, from a user perspective, an upflush toilet operates exactly the same as a traditional toilet. If you encase the pump system behind a wall, your guests might not even notice a difference.

Some upflush toilets include a “macerating” feature that grinds up the waste before pumping it out, reducing the chances of clogs and making the pumping action more efficient.

Considerations

Upflush toilets solve a very specific problem in locations where a traditional gravity toilet won’t work well. But there are a few things to consider:

  • Higher per-unit cost. While upflush toilets may be cheaper overall when you consider the plumbing work you didn’t have to do, they are usually more expensive than traditional toilets.

  • Electricity. You’ll need a GFCI plug for your upflush toilet. If there isn’t one located in the area where you want to install the toilet, you’ll need to have one wired up. Most upflush toilets don’t need a dedicated circuit, however. This also means that during power outages your upflush toilet won’t work, while gravity toilets will.

  • Maintenance. Upflush toilet pumps need to be maintained like any other motorized piece of equipment. Their tanks also need to be de-scaled every now and then to remove mineral build-up that can compromise performance and cause bad odors.

If you want to enjoy the convenience of a bathroom in your finished basement—or any area of your house that sits below the sewer lines—an upflush toilet is your best option.



Source: LifeHacker – Why You Should Consider an Upflush Toilet

The best Lego Black Friday deals on Amazon are still live: Here are our favorite deals on Marvel, Star Wars and Mario sets

For those looking to finish a bit of holiday shopping ahead of time, some of the best Lego sets remain on sale ahead of Cyber Monday. There are a few to choose from, starting with the Iron Man Armory. This 496-piece kit is suitable for children seven years and older. Normally, it costs $90, but right now it’s more than half off at $41. The set comes with five minifigures — including an appropriately smug Tony Stark – and three battle suits. Plus, you get one of Stark’s sports cars, though it’s not an Audi R8 like the one seen in Endgame.

If your kid is more of a Guardians of the Galaxy fan, the Spectacular Spaceship is also on sale. After a 40 percent discount, this $100 set is down to $60. Being slightly more complex and made up of 1108 pieces, the New Guardians’ Ship is suitable for children aged 10 and older. It comes with five minifigures from the latest movie: Mantis, Drax, Star-Lord, Nebula and Adam Warlock. The cockpit of the ship is large enough to seat three of the characters. If you download the Lego Builder app, you can access additional instructions on how to put the set together.

For the Star Wars fan in your family, consider the Millennium Falcon Rise of Skywalker set. Thanks to a 20 percent discount, it will set you back $136, instead of $170 like normal. This impressive set is made up of 1,351 pieces and comes with six minifigures representing R2D2, CP3O, Chewbacca, Lando Calrissian, Finn and Boolio. It’s also not just a display piece, with the Falcon’s turrets able to rotate. You can even lift up the top of the starship to see inside.

Last but not least, there’s the Super Mario Adventures Starter Course. At the moment, it’s 20 percent off, making it $48 instead of $60. This set is suitable for kids as young as six years old, so it’s a great option for younger children. Compared to the Lego Marvel sets, what makes the Mario ones so great is that they encourage kids to be creative by thinking up their own course designs instead of simply follow an instruction manual.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-best-lego-black-friday-deals-on-amazon-are-still-live-here-are-our-favorite-deals-on-marvel-star-wars-and-mario-sets-184535080.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – The best Lego Black Friday deals on Amazon are still live: Here are our favorite deals on Marvel, Star Wars and Mario sets

Ubuntu Budgie Switches to an Xfce Approach to Wayland

Last January the Register reported that the Budgie desktop environment was planning to switch from using GNOME to Enlightenment. But this week Budgie’s project lead David Mohammed and packaging guru Sam Lane “passed on news of a rift — and indeed possible divorce — between Budgie and Enlightenment,” the Register reported. “And it’s caused by Wayland.”

The development team of the Budgie desktop is changing course and will work with the Xfce developers toward Budgie’s Wayland future…

While Enlightenment does have some Wayland support, in the project’s own words this is “still considered experimental and not for regular end users.” Mohammed told us… “Progress though towards a full implementation currently doesn’t fit into the deemed urgent nature to move to Wayland (Red Hat dropping further X11 development, and questions as to any organisation stepping up, etc.)”

So, instead, Budgie is exploring different ways to build a Wayland-only environment. For now, as we mentioned when looking at Ubuntu’s 23.10 release, there’s a new windowing library, Magpie. Magpie 0.9 is what the project describes as “a soft-fork of GNOME’s mutter at version 43” — the term soft fork meaning it’s a temporary means to an end, rather than intended to form an on-going independent continuation.

For the future, though, Mohammed told us… “[T]he Budgie team has been evaluating options to move forward. XFCE are doing some really great work in this area with libxfce4windowing — a compatibility layer bridging Wayland and X11, allowing the move in a logical direction without needing a big-bang approach. To date, most of the current codebase has already been reworked and is ready for a Wayland-only approach without impacting further development and enhancements.”
Mohammed later told the Register, “It makes sense for the more dynamic smaller projects to work together where there are shared aims.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Ubuntu Budgie Switches to an Xfce Approach to Wayland