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    ArsTechnica

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      Someone made a CAPTCHA where you play Doom on Nightmare difficulty

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025

    People have been complaining for a while that passing a CAPTCHA is too difficult, but developer and tech CEO Guillermo Rauch has made one of the hardest yet: a fully playable CAPTCHA based on the classic PC game Doom .

    It's been a long-running joke that developers will make Doom run on absolutely anything, so it's not much of a surprise that it's now running inside something that resembles a CAPTCHA.

    The app essentially amounts to a small Doom level that is playable with keyboard controls (arrow keys to move, space bar to shoot) within a CAPTCHA-like presentation. You must kill three enemies to pass the test.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Someone made a CAPTCHA where you play Doom on Nightmare difficulty

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025

    People have been complaining for a while that passing a CAPTCHA is too difficult, but developer and tech CEO Guillermo Rauch has made one of the hardest yet: a fully playable CAPTCHA based on the classic PC game Doom .

    It's been a long-running joke that developers will make Doom run on absolutely anything, so it's not much of a surprise that it's now running inside something that resembles a CAPTCHA.

    The app essentially amounts to a small Doom level that is playable with keyboard controls (arrow keys to move, space bar to shoot) within a CAPTCHA-like presentation. You must kill three enemies to pass the test.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Someone made a CAPTCHA where you play Doom on Nightmare difficulty

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025

    People have been complaining for a while that passing a CAPTCHA is too difficult, but developer and tech CEO Guillermo Rauch has made one of the hardest yet: a fully playable CAPTCHA based on the classic PC game Doom .

    It's been a long-running joke that developers will make Doom run on absolutely anything, so it's not much of a surprise that it's now running inside something that resembles a CAPTCHA.

    The app essentially amounts to a small Doom level that is playable with keyboard controls (arrow keys to move, space bar to shoot) within a CAPTCHA-like presentation. You must kill three enemies to pass the test.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly taggaming taggaming taggaming tagai tagai tagai tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagcaptcha tagdoom tagdoom tagdoom tagwebassembly tagwebassembly tagwebassembly

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    • Ar chevron_right

      USB-C gets a bit more universal as the EU’s mandate goes into effect

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025 • 1 minute

    "It's time for THE charger," the European Commission posted to X on December 28, 2024. While the sentiment only applies to one continent (and not all of it) and only certain devices, the Common Charger Directive now in effect in the European Union suggests that far fewer gadgets will foist barrels, USB-micro, or proprietary plugs onto their owners.

    The Common Charger Directive demands that a "USB-C receptacle" be equipped on "radio equipment" that is "equipped with a removable or embedded rechargeable battery" and "can be recharged via wired charging." If it has a battery and can be powered by up to 100 watts through a USB-C connection, it's generally subject to the EU's USB-C requirements. The directive applies to devices "placed on the market"—sent to a distributor or buyer—after December 28, even if they were initially designed and sold before that date.

    Laptops get until April 2026 to comply, but most other things—phones, tablets, handheld gaming devices, computer accessories, and wireless headphones—will have to be powered by USB-C to be sold inside the EU from now on. Drones, for the time being, are largely unaddressed by the directive, but the EU will likely get around to them.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery

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    • Ar chevron_right

      USB-C gets a bit more universal as the EU’s mandate goes into effect

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025 • 1 minute

    "It's time for THE charger," the European Commission posted to X on December 28, 2024. While the sentiment only applies to one continent (and not all of it) and only certain devices, the Common Charger Directive now in effect in the European Union suggests that far fewer gadgets will foist barrels, USB-micro, or proprietary plugs onto their owners.

    The Common Charger Directive demands that a "USB-C receptacle" be equipped on "radio equipment" that is "equipped with a removable or embedded rechargeable battery" and "can be recharged via wired charging." If it has a battery and can be powered by up to 100 watts through a USB-C connection, it's generally subject to the EU's USB-C requirements. The directive applies to devices "placed on the market"—sent to a distributor or buyer—after December 28, even if they were initially designed and sold before that date.

    Laptops get until April 2026 to comply, but most other things—phones, tablets, handheld gaming devices, computer accessories, and wireless headphones—will have to be powered by USB-C to be sold inside the EU from now on. Drones, for the time being, are largely unaddressed by the directive, but the EU will likely get around to them.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery

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    • Ar chevron_right

      USB-C gets a bit more universal as the EU’s mandate goes into effect

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025 • 1 minute

    "It's time for THE charger," the European Commission posted to X on December 28, 2024. While the sentiment only applies to one continent (and not all of it) and only certain devices, the Common Charger Directive now in effect in the European Union suggests that far fewer gadgets will foist barrels, USB-micro, or proprietary plugs onto their owners.

    The Common Charger Directive demands that a "USB-C receptacle" be equipped on "radio equipment" that is "equipped with a removable or embedded rechargeable battery" and "can be recharged via wired charging." If it has a battery and can be powered by up to 100 watts through a USB-C connection, it's generally subject to the EU's USB-C requirements. The directive applies to devices "placed on the market"—sent to a distributor or buyer—after December 28, even if they were initially designed and sold before that date.

    Laptops get until April 2026 to comply, but most other things—phones, tablets, handheld gaming devices, computer accessories, and wireless headphones—will have to be powered by USB-C to be sold inside the EU from now on. Drones, for the time being, are largely unaddressed by the directive, but the EU will likely get around to them.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple tagapple tagapple tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tagcharging cables tageu tageu tageu tageuropean commission tageuropean commission tageuropean commission taglightning taglightning taglightning tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c pd tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery tagusb-c power delivery

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Siri “unintentionally” recorded private convos; Apple agrees to pay $95M

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025

    Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that its voice assistant Siri routinely recorded private conversations that were then sold to third parties for targeted ads.

    In the proposed class-action settlement —which comes after five years of litigation—Apple admitted to no wrongdoing. Instead, the settlement refers to "unintentional" Siri activations that occurred after the "Hey, Siri" feature was introduced in 2014, where recordings were apparently prompted without users ever saying the trigger words, "Hey, Siri."

    Sometimes Siri would be inadvertently activated, a whistleblower told The Guardian , when an Apple Watch was raised and speech was detected. The only clue that users seemingly had of Siri's alleged spying was eerily accurate targeted ads that appeared after they had just been talking about specific items like Air Jordans or brands like Olive Garden, Reuters noted .

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Siri “unintentionally” recorded private convos; Apple agrees to pay $95M

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025

    Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that its voice assistant Siri routinely recorded private conversations that were then sold to third parties for targeted ads.

    In the proposed class-action settlement —which comes after five years of litigation—Apple admitted to no wrongdoing. Instead, the settlement refers to "unintentional" Siri activations that occurred after the "Hey, Siri" feature was introduced in 2014, where recordings were apparently prompted without users ever saying the trigger words, "Hey, Siri."

    Sometimes Siri would be inadvertently activated, a whistleblower told The Guardian , when an Apple Watch was raised and speech was detected. The only clue that users seemingly had of Siri's alleged spying was eerily accurate targeted ads that appeared after they had just been talking about specific items like Air Jordans or brands like Olive Garden, Reuters noted .

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Siri “unintentionally” recorded private convos; Apple agrees to pay $95M

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 2 January 2025

    Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that its voice assistant Siri routinely recorded private conversations that were then sold to third parties for targeted ads.

    In the proposed class-action settlement —which comes after five years of litigation—Apple admitted to no wrongdoing. Instead, the settlement refers to "unintentional" Siri activations that occurred after the "Hey, Siri" feature was introduced in 2014, where recordings were apparently prompted without users ever saying the trigger words, "Hey, Siri."

    Sometimes Siri would be inadvertently activated, a whistleblower told The Guardian , when an Apple Watch was raised and speech was detected. The only clue that users seemingly had of Siri's alleged spying was eerily accurate targeted ads that appeared after they had just been talking about specific items like Air Jordans or brands like Olive Garden, Reuters noted .

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagapple tagapple tagapple tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcisa tagcisa tagcisa tagsiri tagsiri tagsiri tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagtargeted ads tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagvoice assistant tagwiretap act tagwiretap act tagwiretap act

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