Bungie & Teenage Destiny 2 Cheat Settle Differences With $500K Permaban

A teenager who reportedly cheated in Destiny 2, evaded multiple bans, threatened Bungie employees, and generally made the developer’s life a nightmare, has reached a settlement with the gaming company. In addition to a laundry list of restrictions moderating his future behavior, the teenager has accepted Bungie’s $500,000 offer to put this matter behind them.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Destiny 2Bungie’s copyright infringement-based lawsuits against cheat makers, sellers, and those who use them, have divided opinion in unexpected ways.

While David vs. Goliath battles tend to have the masses cheering for the little guy, many videogame fans have grown tired of their enjoyment being spoiled by people who intentionally set out to spoil it.

The fact that many of these individuals pay out significant sums of money to gain an imaginary upper hand only serves to rub salt in the wounds. In one particularly malicious case, Bungie had clearly seen more than enough.

Familiar Case, Unusual Features

In July 2022, another Bungie lawsuit came to light. It targeted an individual who had deployed cheats in Destiny 2 and as a result, now faced claims of breaching security mechanisms controlling access to a copyrighted work.

For each violation of the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions, Bungie sought $2,500. For modifying the Destiny 2 game, thereby creating an unauthorized derivative work, Bungie was able to demand another $150,000. While complicated enough already, it soon transpired that Bungie had unwittingly sued ‘L.L.’ – a 17-year-old minor.

Luckily for Bungie, the details of the case quickly dispersed any sympathy for the teenager; DMCA claims found themselves overshadowed by allegations of a long-running harassment campaign against Bungie employees. L.L.’s decision to mount a particularly robust defense, absent of any remorse, was completely logical and looked absolutely terrible.

At least in the short term, it wasn’t particularly effective either.

Bungie and Teenage Nemesis Eventually Agree

In a proposed consent judgment and permanent injunction filed at a Washington court early this month, Bungie systematically repeats many of its original allegations, with the defendant quietly nodding along.

The defendant used software to cheat in Destiny 2. That software displayed a graphical overlay in the copyrighted Destiny 2 audiovisual work and injected code to facilitate cheats, thereby creating an unauthorized derivative work, in breach of copyright. The software circumvented Bungie’s technological measures in breach of the DMCA, with each use of that software representing an independent circumvention violation.

Further breaches of the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provision took place every time a new account was opened to evade a Bungie ban, and each unlicensed download of Destiny 2 was yet another breach of Bungie’s copyrights. All told, the parties agree that Bungie is entitled to $300,000 in statutory damages for copyright infringement, and a further $200,000 for 100 acts of circumvention at $2,000 each.

Grand total: $500,000 in damages

Permanently cease-and-desist

To ensure no repeat of the defendant’s alleged behavior, a wall of text in the proposed judgment restrains L.L. from having anything to do with any cheat software targeting Bungie-owned properties, having anything to do with any Bungie-related game assets, or interacting with any Bungie game, ever again.

Also prohibited is the direct or indirect harassment of Bungie or its employees, or anyone who plays Bungie games. The defendant cannot travel within 1,000 feet of Bungie’s offices, nor knowingly travel within 1,000 feet of any home of any Bungie employee, “except as is incidental to travel on public highways and roadways for purposes other than to make contact with or otherwise harass” Bungie employees.

L.L. is also required to embark on a comprehensive account deletion mission.

bungie cease and desist

“This permanent injunction is binding against the Defendant worldwide, without regard to the territorial scope of the specific intellectual property rights asserted in the Complaint of the above-captioned case and may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction wherever Defendant or their assets may be found,” the consent judgment continues.

With that the parties request that judgment is entered in accordance with the outlined terms, including an award for $500,000 in damages in favor of Bungie. With all necessary lessons learned, the judge’s signature will bring the matter to a close. In theory, at least.

Related documents are available here (1,2, pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

AYA Neo Flip handheld gaming PC with clamshell design and thumb keyboard is coming this year

The AYA Neo Flip is a handheld gaming PC with a 7 inch, 120 Hz LCD display and a clamshell-style design that makes it look like a tiny laptop or Nintendo DS when closed, and like… nothing else, really when open. That’s because lifting the …

The AYA Neo Flip is a handheld gaming PC with a 7 inch, 120 Hz LCD display and a clamshell-style design that makes it look like a tiny laptop or Nintendo DS when closed, and like… nothing else, really when open. That’s because lifting the lid reveals a compact QWERTY keyboard designed for thumb typing, positioned […]

The post AYA Neo Flip handheld gaming PC with clamshell design and thumb keyboard is coming this year appeared first on Liliputing.

Dealmaster: Garmin watches, Lenovo ThinkPads, Apple MacBooks, and more

From wearables to laptops, there are plenty of savings in this latest Dealmaster.

A user loads spotify on their garmin venu 2

Enlarge (credit: Garmin)

We're at the tail end of summer, but that doesn't mean your fitness goals have to end after Labor Day. Now that Garmin has launched its latest Venu 3 and Venu 3S smartwatches, select models of the company's older and still excellent Venu 2 series are now on sale. Given Garmin's great track record of bringing new features to older wearables through future software updates, the older Venu 2 will likely gain access to the more accurate sleep-tracking capabilities of the newer watch models. So if you don't need hardware-specific features, like a built-in microphone to take Bluetooth calls on your wrist, going with some of Garmin's older sports watches could save you money. In addition to Garmin wearables, we also have deals on Lenovo laptops and mobile workstations, Apple MacBooks, and more in this post-Labor Day Dealmaster.

Smartwatch and sports watch wearables

(credit: Garmin)

  • Garmin Venu 2S GPS Smartwatch 40 mm for $298 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Garmin fēnix 7X Sapphire Solar GPS Smartwatch 51 mm for $900 (was $1,000) at Best Buy
  • Garmin fēnix 7 Sapphire Solar GPS Smartwatch 47 mm for $800 (was $900) at Best Buy
  • Garmin fēnix 7S Solar GPS Smartwatch 42 mm for $700 (was $800) at Best Buy
  • Garmin vívoactive 4 GPS Smartwatch 45 mm for $298 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Garmin vívoactive 4S GPS Smartwatch 40 mm for $298 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Garmin Instinct 2 Smartwatch 45 mm for $300 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Garmin - Instinct Solar Smartwatch 45 mm for $276 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Garmin Forerunner 745 GPS Smartwatch 30 mm for $425 (was $500) at Best Buy
  • Garmin epix (Gen 2) GPS Smartwatch 47 mm for $700 (was $1,000) at Best Buy
  • Garmin Forerunner 45S GPS Smartwatch 39 mm for $145 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • Garmin Forerunner 945 GPS Smartwatch 30 mm for $425 (was $499) at Best Buy
  • Garmin Forerunner 45 GPS Smartwatch 42 mm for $155 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • Garmin Venu Sq Music Edition GPS Smartwatch 33 mm for $213 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Garmin quatix 7X Solar Edition 51 mm for $1,100 (was $1,200) at Best Buy
  • Garmin quatix 7 Standard Edition Marine GPS Smartwatch 47 mm for $600 (was $700) at Best Buy

Health and personal care

  • Beurer Insect Bite Healer for $23 (was $30) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Upper Arm Blood Pressure Monitor for $25 (was $35) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Bluetooth Body Fat Scale for $44 (was $50) at Best Buy
  • Hypervolt 2 Pro for $279 (was $329) at Hyperice
  • Venom 2 Back for $199 (was $249) at Hyperice
  • Hyperice X for $349 (was $399) at Hyperice
  • Theragun Pro 4th Generation for $399 (was $599) at Therabody
  • Theragun Mini 2nd Generation for $179 (was $199) at Therabody
  • Theragun Elite 4th Generation for $329 (was $399) at Therabody
  • Theragun Prime 4th Generation for $229 (was $299) at Therabody
  • PowerDot 2.0 Duo for $299 (was $349) at Therabody
  • PowerDot 2.0 Uno for $169 (was $199) at Therabody
  • RecoveryTherm Hot Vibration Back and Core for $199 (was $249) at Therabody
  • Wave Roller for $129 (was $149) at Therabody
  • Wave Duo for $89 (was $99) at Therabody
  • Wave Solo for $69 (was $79) at Therabody

Apple MacBook, iPad, AirTag, and AirPods

  • Apple 2020 MacBook Air Laptop M1 for $750 (was $999) at Amazon
  • Apple 2023 MacBook Air Laptop with M2 for $1,099 (was $1,299) at Amazon
  • Apple 2023 MacBook Pro Laptop M2 Pro for $2,249 (was $2,499) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Air (5th Generation) for $559 (was $599) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad (9th Generation) for $270 (was $329) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Mini (6th Generation) for $400 (was $499) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Pro 12.9-inch (6th Generation) for $1,024 (was $1,099) at Amazon
  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation) Wireless Earbuds for $199 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $470 (was $549) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods (3rd Generation) Wireless Earbuds for $149 (was $169) at Amazon

Steelcase and Tempurpedic office chairs

(credit: Steelcase)

  • Steelcase Gesture for $1,165 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Siento from $2,199 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Series 2 Air from $591 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Think from $919 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Leap from $1,104 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Amia from $884 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Series 2 from $708 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase
  • Steelcase Series 1 from $449 after 15 percent discount at Steelcase

Lenovo laptops

  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,619 (was $2,789) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P14s Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,969 (was $3,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 6 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1185G7) for $899 (was $3,649) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad 1 (15-inch, AMD Athlon Gold 7220U) for $220 (was $400) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,711 (was $3,229) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS and RTX 4050) for $890 (was $1,270) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 6 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $555 (was $860) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch, Intel Core i5-1235U) for $855 (was $1,499) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Pro 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500HX and RTX 4050) for $1,100 (was $1,480) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Tab P11 Pro Gen 2 (11-inch, MediaTek Kompanio 1300T) for $340 (was $430) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P14s Gen 4 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 7840U) for $1,579 (was $2,719) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Tab P11 Gen 2 (11-inch, MediaTek Helio G99) for $217 (was $290) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 5 Gen 8 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7640HS and RTX 4050) for $1,050 (was $1,330) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Tab M9 (9-inch, MediaTek Helio G80) for $135 (was $150) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3i Chromebook (14-inch, Intel Core i3-N305) for $350 (was $550) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3i (15-inch, Intel Core i3-1315U) for $410 (was $660) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $731 (was $1,219) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $755 (was $1,259) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $773 (was $1,289) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 4 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 5625U) for $792 (was $1,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1235U) for $800 (was $1,404) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 13s Gen 4 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1240P) for $820 (was $1,439) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 7i (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $825 (was $1,100) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $845 (was $1,409) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E146 Gen 1 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $869 (was $1,449) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 13s Gen 4 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1240P) for $900 (was $1,579) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 4050) for $1,050 (was $1,350) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1355U) for $1,145 (was $1,909) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Z16 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 6850H and Radeon RX 6500M) for $1,167 (was $2,919) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,458 (was $2,859) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A2000) for $2,549 (was $4,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i9-13980HX and RTX A4000) for $3,919 (was $6,759) at Lenovo

Amazon Fire TV

  • Amazon Fire TV Cube for $120 (was $140) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick with Alexa Voice Remote for $25 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max streaming device for $27 (was $55) at Amazon

Headphones

  • Sony WH-1000XM4 Wireless Premium Noise Canceling Overhead Headphones for $278 (was $348) at Amazon | $272 at Walmart
  • Sony-INZONE H7 Wireless Gaming Headset for $128 (was $229) at Amazon
  • Sony-INZONE H9 Wireless Noise Canceling Gaming Headset for $246 (was $300) at Amazon

Home and office tech and gear

  • Energizer Alkaline Power C Batteries (12 Pack) for $18 (was $26) at Amazon
  • Energizer 24 Max AA Batteries and 24 Max AAA Batteries for $27 (was $39) at Amazon
  • Energizer AA Batteries (32 pack) for $15 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Energizer AAA Batteries (32 Pack) for $16 (was $23) at Amazon
  • Energizer Rechargeable AA Batteries (16 pack) for $41 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Energizer Alkaline Power 9 Volt Batteries (8 Pack) for $20 (was $29) at Amazon
  • eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system (3 pack) for $240 (was $300) at Amazon
  • eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi System (3 pack) for $440 (was $550) at Amazon | $390 at Walmart
  • TP-Link Deco Powerline Mesh WiFi 6 System (Deco PX50) 3 pack for $270 (was $300) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AX3000 WiFi 6 Mesh System (Deco X55) 3 pack for $200 (was $230) at Amazon
  • Tempur-Adapt topper starting at $191 with TOPPERS40 code (was $319) at Tempurpedic
  • SOOPII 100 W Right Angle USB C to USB C Cable, 4-foot Zinc Alloy Braided Type-C Cable with LED Display for $8 (was $10) at Amazon
  • Anker USB C Charger, 735 Charger (Nano II 65 W) for $34 (was $40) at Amazon
  • UGREEN 100 W USB C Charger, Nexode 4-Port GaN Foldable Compact Wall Charger for $45 (was $75) at Amazon
  • UGREEN 200 W USB C Charger, Nexode 6 Ports GaN Desktop Charging Station for $130 (was $200) at Amazon
  • UGREEN 145 W Power Bank 25000 mAh Portable Charger USB C 3-Port PD3.0 Battery Pack Digital Display for $93 (was $150) at Amazon

Shark robot vacuums

  • Shark AI Robot Vacuum & Mop for $241 (was $480) at Amazon
  • Shark AV2501S AI Ultra Robot Vacuum for $370 (was $550) at Amazon
  • Shark IQ Robot Vacuum AV970 for $220 (was $400) at Amazon

Kitchen and organization

  • Iris USA 12 Pack 17 Quart Plastic Storage Bin for $72 (was $85) at Amazon
  • Iris USA 19 Quart Stack & Pull 6 pack for $48 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Iris USA 2 Pack Medium 3 Drawers Desktop Storage for $31 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Iris Large Bin, 8 Pack for $40 (was $44) at Amazon
  • Iris USA 4-Tier Shelving Unit for $30 (was $33) at Amazon
  • Iris USA 4-Drawer Storage Cart with Organizer Top for $40 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Iron Flask Sports Water Bottle - 40 Oz for $24 (was $37) at Amazon
  • KitchenAid Classic Series 4.5 Quart Tilt-Head Stand Mixer K45SS for $280 (was $330) at Amazon
  • KitchenAid 3.5-Cup Food Chopper for $50 (was $60) at Amazon
  • KitchenAid Stand Mixer Attachment, Food Processor with Commercial Dicing Kit KSM2FPA for $160 (was $250) at Amazon
  • KitchenAid Artisan Series 5 Quart Tilt Head Stand Mixer with Pouring Shield KSM150PS for $380 (was $460) at Amazon
  • KitchenAid KFP0718CU Food Processor, 7 Cup for $80 (was $100) at Amazon

Games

(credit: Mark Walton)

  • The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild for $49 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Legend of Zelda Link's Awakening for $50 (was $60) at Amazon

DeWalt and Greenworks tools

  • DeWalt 20V MAX XR Multi-Tool Kit for $149 (was $269) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Hammer Drill and Impact Driver for $259 (was $409) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Impact Wrench with Brushless Motor for $249 (was $349) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX XR Drill/Driver for $123 (was $169) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX XR Hammer Drill Kit for $249 (was $399) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Angle Grinder and Die Grinder for $299 (was $409) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Drill / Driver Kit for $99 (was $179) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Drill and Impact Driver for $160 (was $239) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX XR Impact Driver, Brushless for $96 (was $149) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Impact Wrench for $188 (was $279) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Drill Combo Kit for $150 (was $271) at Amazon
  • DeWalt Atomic 20V MAX* Cordless Drill, 1/2-Inch, Tool Only for $73 (was $119) at Amazon
  • DeWalt Xtreme 12V MAX* Impact Driver Kit, 1/4-Inch for $97 (was $159) at Amazon
  • Greenworks 170 mph 730 CFM Cordless Handheld Blower for $180 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 16-inch Cutting Diameter Brushless Straight Shaft Grass Trimmer for $170 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 26-inch Cordless Brushless Hedge Trimmer for $180 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 18-inch 80 Volt Cordless Brushless Chainsaw for $300 (was $400) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 42-inch CrossoverZ Electric Zero Turn Riding Lawn Mower for $4,500 (was $5,500) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 12-inch Pro 80 Volt Cordless Brushless Snow Shovel for $304 (was $350) at Best Buy

Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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A time-slipping Loki struggles to fix the timeline(s) in new Loki S2 teaser

“What I’m about to tell you is going to be hard to believe. Again.” 

New teaser for Loki S2 provides new footage ahead of the season's October premiere.

Anticipation is mounting among Marvel fans for the October debut of the second season of Loki, starring Tom Hiddleston as everyone's favorite Norse god of mischief. We now have a new teaser showcasing a time-slipping Loki seemingly caught in an endless cycle of shuttling between the past, present, and future as he tries to restore order to the multiverse.

(Spoilers for S1 below.)

As I wrote in my review, the first season of Loki was "an excellent mix of action, surprising twists, canny exposition, and intimate character moments, all leading up to the final reveal: what is the TVA's true nature and purpose, and is there someone (or something) else behind the scenes pulling the strings of the sacred trio of Time Keepers?" The puppet master turned out to be none other than Kang the Conqueror (Jonathan Majors, who reprised the role for this year's Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania)—or rather, a Kang Variant known as He Who Remains.

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Google Nest Cameras get a 25%-33% subscription price hike

Nest Cam users will have to pay a higher monthly fee to record video.

Google Nest Cameras get a 25%-33% subscription price hike

Enlarge (credit: Google)

Google has been raising the price of nearly all its subscriptions lately, and the latest service to get a price boost is the Nest Aware subscription for Nest cameras. 9to5Google reports prices are going up 25–33 percent, depending on which tier you're currently subscribed to. Judging by the (very unhappy) posts in the Nest subreddit, many users are getting emails detailing exactly how the price increase is affecting their current setup.

Nest Aware, if you're not aware, is a monthly subscription attached to Nest cameras that allows them to save video to the cloud. Most camera packages would consider this a core functionality, but with a Nest camera, a lot of basic recording functionality is locked behind a monthly subscription. If you're not paying the monthly fee, Nest Cams will only livestream video and allow you to view three hours' worth of "event" video—that's video where motion is detected, not 24/7 recording.

The basic "Nest Aware" tier is going from $6 a month, or discounted to $60 annually, to $8 a month/$80 annually, for a 25 percent increase. This gives you 30 days of event video history and facial recognition but still doesn't include any form of 24/7 video recording. For that you'll need "Nest Aware Plus," which is going up from $12 a month/$120 annually to $15 a month/$150 annually, or a 33 percent price increase. This gets you 60 days of event history and, finally, 10 days of 24/7 video recording.

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As X bleeds cash, Musk threatens Anti-Defamation League with defamation lawsuit

Musk claimed that ADL could be “on the hook” for $22B in X losses.

As X bleeds cash, Musk threatens Anti-Defamation League with defamation lawsuit

Enlarge (credit: Anadolu Agency / Contributor | Anadolu Agency)

Last month, X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, sued a group of hate speech researchers in the United Kingdom, claiming that they had instigated advertiser boycotts that allegedly lost the platform "tens of millions" of dollars. Now, X owner Elon Musk has threatened to sue another group advocating against hate speech, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which Musk claimed did even more damage—allegedly causing X to lose billions in ad revenue.

Musk spent the long weekend posting on X about his concerns with the ADL. He claimed that the ADL "has been trying to kill this platform by falsely accusing it and me of being anti-Semitic," saying that "based on what we’ve heard from advertisers, the ADL seems to be responsible for most" of X's revenue loss.

"Our US advertising revenue is still down 60 percent, primarily due to pressure on advertisers by @ADL (that’s what advertisers tell us), so they almost succeeded in killing X/Twitter!" Musk posted on X.

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Four-person crew returns to Earth aboard SpaceX’s Dragon capsule

SpaceX has now completed its original commercial crew contract with NASA.

SpaceX's Crew Dragon Endeavour spacecraft splashes down in the Atlantic Ocean early Monday off the coast of Jacksonville, Florida.

Enlarge / SpaceX's Crew Dragon Endeavour spacecraft splashes down in the Atlantic Ocean early Monday off the coast of Jacksonville, Florida. (credit: NASA TV)

A SpaceX Dragon capsule with a crew of four returning from the International Space Station streaked through the atmosphere over Florida and splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean early Monday, closing out the company's initial commercial crew contract with NASA.

But SpaceX has at least eight more space station crew rotation missions under contract with the US space agency, plus additional flights for private customers using the Crew Dragon spacecraft. The first of the crew rotation missions covered in the NASA contract extension launched on August 26, and the spacecraft is currently docked at the ISS.

The mission that launched last month, designated Crew-7, is SpaceX's seventh operational crew rotation flight to the space station. The four-person crew that arrived at the station on Crew-7 will live and work aboard the orbiting outpost until February, replacing the Crew-6 mission that returned to Earth early Monday.

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European official on Ariane 6 debut: “Please allow me to not speculate at this time”

“The price? It’s better to speak about them with our customers.”

The Ariane 6 rocket's upper stage undergoes hot fire testing on September 1.

Enlarge / The Ariane 6 rocket's upper stage undergoes hot fire testing on September 1. (credit: ESA/DLR/ArianeGroup)

Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket is reaching its decisive phase of testing, officials said this week. This includes a short and long-duration firing of the rocket's first stage at European launch facilities in French Guiana, tests that could occur today and about one month from now.

"They are really the decisive moments when we see how the engines operate under full throttle," the director general of the European Space Agency, Josef Aschbacher, said during a press briefing on Monday.

Aschbacher declined to specify a launch target for the new medium-lift rocket, the development of which began in 2014, and which was originally due to make its debut in 2020. The European Space Agency and the rocket's prime contractor, ArianeGroup, are now working toward a launch in 2024.

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MINISFORUM HX77G is a compact PC with Ryzen 7 7735HS and Radeon 6600M

The MINISFORUM Neptune HX77G is a small desktop computer with the guts of a gaming laptop. It measures 205 x 203 x 69mm (8.1″ x 8″ x 2.7″) and houses an AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS processor, AMD Radeon RX 6600M discrete graphics, and support…

The MINISFORUM Neptune HX77G is a small desktop computer with the guts of a gaming laptop. It measures 205 x 203 x 69mm (8.1″ x 8″ x 2.7″) and houses an AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS processor, AMD Radeon RX 6600M discrete graphics, and support for up to 64GB of RAM and two PCIe 4.0 NVMe […]

The post MINISFORUM HX77G is a compact PC with Ryzen 7 7735HS and Radeon 6600M appeared first on Liliputing.