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MajesticLion

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New York sues video game developer Valve, says its 'loot boxes' are gambling​



  • Summary
  • New York says Valve promotes 'quintessential gambling'
  • Attorney General Letitia James says children can be addicted
  • Lawsuit sees fine, restitution
  • Valve not available for comment

New York's attorney general sued Valve, a video game developer whose franchises include Counter-Strike, Team Fortress and Dota, accusing it of promoting illegal gambling and threatening to addict children through its use of "loot boxes."
In a complaint filed on Wednesday in a state court in Manhattan, Attorney General Letitia James said Valve's loot boxes amounted to "quintessential gambling," violating the state's constitution and penal law, with valuable items often hard to win and many items worth pennies.

Valve, based in Bellevue, Washington, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Loot boxes let players use real money to buy chances to win virtual items, such as decorations for characters and weapons, in an effort to convey status.
James said Valve generated billions of dollars of revenue by selling "keys" to open loot boxes, including in one game where the process resembled a slot machine as a wheel whirred through various items before stopping.

The attorney general said key sales advanced Valve's unusual business model of letting players sell items they won on its virtual marketplace, Steam Community Market, and on other marketplaces.

"Valve’s loot boxes are particularly pernicious because they are popular among children and adolescents," according to the complaint.

Children introduced to gambling by age 12 are four times more likely to become problem gamblers as adults, the complaint added, citing the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.

James is seeking restitution for players, plus a fine of three times Valve's alleged illegal gains.
Loot boxes for video games have been the subject of other regulatory action.
For example, in January 2025, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission fined, opens new tab Singapore-based Cognosphere, the maker of Genshin Impact, $20 million for deceiving children and others about the odds of winning valuable loot-box prizes.
Children under 16 were also blocked from buying loot boxes without parental consent. Cognosphere, doing business as HoYoverse, did not admit wrongdoing, the FTC said.
 

Mike18jj

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I'm not a expert, but today I just downloaded a Ps2, GameCube, Xbox 360 emulator on my Xbox series x and I can't believe I went this long without knowing how to do this.
 

LinusCaldwell

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Do any of yall know about the GGL? Global Gaming League? I just went to their last event on Wednesday and got mad interviews check it out on my ig. this is one of many interviews from the event. Appreciate yall support :salute:
 

MajesticLion

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Well, that's just great. :francis:



Revamping Our Membership Program​



In a world filled with marketing claims, sponsored reviews, and AI-generated content, independent and real product testing done by humans matters more than ever.
Today, we're launching an important update to our membership program, previously called Insider Access, now simply RTINGS.com Membership.
While much of RTINGS.com remains free, our full test results and in-depth product analysis are now available only to members. We'll continue to iterate on what that looks like over time as we refine the model across different product categories.
For a limited time, new members can get 30% off their first billing period, and existing members will automatically receive an equivalent credit on their next renewal.
We've had a soft paywall for a few years now, with a limited number of free pageviews on most product categories. We are now moving to a more membership-supported model to ensure RTINGS.com can remain independent, sustainable, and focused on helping you, the consumers, buy the best product for your needs.

Why We're Making This Change

RTINGS.com has historically relied heavily on organic search traffic from Google and affiliate links. That model is becoming less reliable. Fewer people click through from Google organic results than they used to. At the same time, AI actively scrapes and reuses our test results, often without attribution and without the context needed to interpret them correctly.
Meanwhile, performing lab-based and in-depth testing is expensive. We buy every product ourselves, like normal consumers (no paid or sponsored reviews), test them using standardized, repeatable methods, and publish the full results transparently.
A membership-supported model reduces our dependence on Google, limits unrestricted AI scraping of our test results, and gives us incentives that are more sustainable and aligned with consumers.


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MajesticLion

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Look how long we tell dem... :francis:





Congress Is Considering Abolishing Your Right to Be Anonymous Online​


The bipartisan push to remove anonymity from the internet is ushering in an era of unprecedented mass surveillance and censorship.



In August 2024, the Biden administration hosted hundreds of influencers at the White House for the first-ever Creator Economy Conference. Neera Tanden, a senior Biden adviser, took to the stage and bemoaned anonymity online. The influencers alongside her agreed, pushing the idea that anonymous speech on the internet is harmful, and regulation is needed to force the use of real names on social media. The audience whispered excitedly as those on stage spoke about how proposed laws like the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, could unmask every troll.

This narrative of online safety, particularly in relation to children, has become central to the bipartisan effort to censor and deanonymize the internet for everyone. Today, a package of a dozen “child online safety” bills is moving forward in the House of Representatives with bipartisan support. The laws, framed as a way to crack down on harmful content and make the internet safer, would force social media companies to enact invasive identity verification measures in order to keep children from accessing online spaces.

The problem is that there’s no way to reliably verify someone’s age without verifying who they are. A platform cannot magically discern that a user is 16 without collecting identifying information, whether through government documents such as a passport, payment information like a credit card, or other identity-disclosing data. Whether that data is stored by the platform itself or outsourced to a vendor, the result is always the same: A user’s offline identity is forever linked with their online behavior.

Stripping anonymity from the internet would constitute one of the most sweeping rollbacks of civil rights in recent history. It would allow for unprecedented levels of mass surveillance and censorship, endangering the most marginalized members of society. Whistleblowers exposing corporate wrongdoing could be tracked and fired, government employees speaking out about illegal behavior or bad policies could face prosecution, and activists organizing protests could be identified and surveilled before ever setting foot on the street.

Already, the U.S. government is flooding social media platforms with subpoenas seeking to unmask hundreds of anonymously run anti-ICE social media accounts. These laws would make it all the more easier for the government to target and prosecute those who dissent.

Vulnerable members of society will suffer most. Trans people under attack from the government could be identified and outed without their consent. Undocumented immigrants could be cut off from the ability to communicate and connect with advocates. Young people seeking abortions in states with restrictive laws might no longer have the ability to access information safely and anonymously.

Not only will a de-anonymized internet be valuable to the government as it seeks to tighten control, it will also make it easier for any corporation or bad actor to intimidate, blackmail, or exploit people by leveraging their own data against them.

The quest to remove anonymous speech from the web is not new. Conservative groups like the Heritage Foundation and the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, formerly known as Morality in Media, have long pursued these laws, arguing that online anonymity fuels pornography, exploitation, and general moral decay. In recent years, Democrats have become integral to advancing these proposals, falsely claiming that surveillance laws will crack down on Big Tech or curb social media addiction.

  • The laws will lead to more data being collected on kids, which predatory companies can then use to target them in more invasive ways.

None of these surveillance laws do any of that. In fact, the laws will lead to more data being collected on kids, which predatory companies can then use to target them in more invasive ways. Already, these bills are standing in the way of protecting kids online: Last week, the FTC said it would decline to enforce COPPA, a landmark law that mandates the protection of children’s data, in order to incentivize ID verification.

The laws would create a massive new market for third-party identification vendors, many funded by the same tech investors who backed social media giants, such as Peter Thiel, who funded ID verification platform Persona via his investment group Founders Fund. Smaller apps will be forced to shoulder the enormous cost of enacting identity verification measures, hindering their ability to operate, and making it harder to compete with Big Tech companies that are leveraging these laws to consolidate power.

It’s no surprise then that Big Tech companies are also heavily involved in lobbying for various versions of these laws. Elon Musk has endorsed KOSA. The Digital Childhood Alliance, a group that frequently posts about the dangers of “Big Tech,” is secretly funded by Meta, and has played a role in pushing the App Store Accountability Act. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently told a court that Apple and Google should verify the identity of every smartphone user at the operating system level, which would permanently end anonymous internet access for everyone.

This exact invasive scheme is being boosted by Democratic lawmakers like California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who recently signed an ID verification law for all operating systems, including Linux, and has mused about banning all social media for users under the age of 16.



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MajesticLion

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Dynamic pricing? :mjtf:








CONSOLERS.

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winb83

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I hate how they make these phones just slightly different so the old cases don't fit on them but you look at the phone and it's the same core design as the other ones. The S26 Ultra isn't meaningfully different than the previous 2-3 models but they make changes for the hell of it just so old stuff doesn't work.
 
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