It really wouldn’t be. Don’t worry.
It really wouldn’t be. Don’t worry.
crypto wallet
Thank you for this piece of information. Nostr is not for me.
The way I see it, that number is a baseline figure for what their services would be offered for in exchange. If someone came up to me and said “here, I’ll give you $53 and in exchange you’ll let me surveil you for a year” I’d say no, but maybe someone else would’ve said yes. Then, as an experiment, maybe we can let the market take it from there, now that there’s a price and some form of discovery mechanism.
Probably because “installing unsigned code from an unknown source” is a mouthful. Installing implicitly means “from within the walled garden” on these devices.
The piracy bugbear has been raised as the reason why corporations aren’t selling enough since mp3 was invented back in the day. It isn’t always the case. OnlyFans is pirated but the piracy doesn’t affect their bottom line enough to drive them out of business. If you think about it, lots of pornography on the internet is free, and they’re still okay. It’s a much more nuanced discussion than “piracy is stealing” than the corporations want you to think it is.
Edit: if I had to guess, the niche they serve or the value they add on top of “just porn” is something their customers are willing to pay for.
Giving cheat authors instant feedback in terms of detection results in cheats getting better at evading detection more quickly.
It’s cat and mouse when it comes to banning, even with hwid signatures the cheaters are able to use sophisticated spoofing techniques. Also there are side effects like legitimate players buying second hand pcs that have been banned.
How would a server-only method detect esp or wallhacks, which are generally speaking client-only exploits?
Yes. It’s a matter of knowing what you trust on your pc and understanding your threat model. Programs running in user mode can also be malicious.
Why do you call anti-cheat software rootkits? Rootkits are malicious.
It’s true. Pragmatically speaking if you don’t have access to the server software you can’t play it if the servers go down, and besides reverse engineering or the goodwill of the developers I’m not aware of any games with online components that continue to be playable after their servers are taken down.
They don’t use trackers, they are not targeted and they respect your privacy.
In that case it won’t matter to anyone that I skipped them.
I haven’t tried playing PSO2 on the Steam Deck, just the original.
I rediscovered and fell in love all over again with Phantasy Star Online on the Steam Deck.
Were the hackers before not highly skilled? Moderately skilled hackers, perhaps?
The DRM was added right as the game’s 72-hour early access period started, which is included as part of Lies of P‘s Deluxe Edition.
The actual work done to integrate Denuvo was far before release, of course, but it feels a bit sneaky to disclose the DRM as late as possible. I wonder if this is how it’s disclosed for other games as well.
Epos make a couple of USB DAC/AMPs too, and the GSX 1000 is apparently reasonably well received. Haven’t used one personally but it shows up on my Amazon recommendations occasionally.
If I could only get everyone who works on the thing I work on to use a whitespace visualizer, it would be enough. We can fight about tabs or spaces after we get rid of all the unnecessary trailing ones.
It might be tolerance, this is true for me now for almost all turn based RPGs.
It’s quite a lot more than that if you count all the titles that work but aren’t verified, I imagine!