(g+) Gaming: Wann kommt mal wieder ein AAA-Blockbuster aus Deutschland?

Ein Assassin’s Creed oder GTA aus Deutschland – undenkbar! Golem.de zeigt, welche Aussichten es dennoch auf große Erfolgsspiele gibt. Von Peter Steinlechner (Spiele-Entwicklung, Assassin’s Creed)

Ein Assassin's Creed oder GTA aus Deutschland - undenkbar! Golem.de zeigt, welche Aussichten es dennoch auf große Erfolgsspiele gibt. Von Peter Steinlechner (Spiele-Entwicklung, Assassin's Creed)

Star Wars zum Augenauskratzen: Schlimmer als das Holiday Special – aber immerhin kürzer

Man glaubt es kaum, aber die Niederungen des Star Wars Holiday Specials können noch unterboten werden, mit Kris Kristofferson als Han Solo. Von Peter Osteried (Star Wars, Disney)

Man glaubt es kaum, aber die Niederungen des Star Wars Holiday Specials können noch unterboten werden, mit Kris Kristofferson als Han Solo. Von Peter Osteried (Star Wars, Disney)

Anzeige: Effizienzsteigerung mit Power Automate

Microsoft Power Automate transformiert die Automatisierung von Geschäftsprozessen, indem es nahtlose Integrationen ermöglicht. Ein virtueller Workshop bietet tiefgreifende Einblicke und praktische Anwendungen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Microsoft)

Microsoft Power Automate transformiert die Automatisierung von Geschäftsprozessen, indem es nahtlose Integrationen ermöglicht. Ein virtueller Workshop bietet tiefgreifende Einblicke und praktische Anwendungen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Microsoft)

New FDA-approved drug makes severe food allergies less life-threatening

Injections over several months allowed people to tolerate larger doses of trigger foods.

Peanuts

Enlarge / Peanuts (credit: Getty | CFOTO/Future Publishing)

Living with food allergies can be a fraught existence. There is no cure, and the standard management is to be ever vigilant of everything you eat and have an emergency shot of epinephrine constantly handy in case an accidental ingestion leads to a swift, life-threatening reaction. But, for the millions of people in the US who live with such allergies, a new drug may dull the threat.

On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration approved the antibody drug omalizumab (brand name Xolair) as an injection to lessen allergic reactions to foods in people ages 1 and up. In a trial of 168 children and adults with multiple food allergies, participants who received shots of omalizumab for 16 to 20 weeks were much more likely to tolerate a test dose of allergy-inducing foods at the end than those who received a placebo.

Omalizumab—which was previously approved to treat asthma, hives, and nasal polyps—works by binding to a class of antibodies in the body called immunoglobulin E (IgE) that are specifically involved in allergic responses. The monoclonal antibody drug binds IgE, blocking it from binding to its target receptor, thus preventing it from triggering the immune responses that lead to allergy symptoms.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Elon Musk’s X allows China-based propaganda banned on other platforms

X accused of overlooking propaganda flagged by Meta and criminal prosecutors.

Elon Musk’s X allows China-based propaganda banned on other platforms

Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto / Contributor | NurPhoto)

Lax content moderation on X (aka Twitter) has disrupted coordinated efforts between social media companies and law enforcement to tamp down on "propaganda accounts controlled by foreign entities aiming to influence US politics," The Washington Post reported.

Now propaganda is "flourishing" on X, The Post said, while other social media companies are stuck in endless cycles, watching some of the propaganda that they block proliferate on X, then inevitably spread back to their platforms.

Meta, Google, and then-Twitter began coordinating takedown efforts with law enforcement and disinformation researchers after Russian-backed influence campaigns manipulated their platforms in hopes of swaying the 2016 US presidential election.

Read 15 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Microsoft fixes problem that let Edge replicate Chrome tabs without permission

Edge update is first proof that this was definitely a glitch.

Microsoft fixes problem that let Edge replicate Chrome tabs without permission

Enlarge (credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft has fixed a problem that resulted in tabs from Google Chrome being imported to Microsoft Edge without user consent, as spotted by The Verge. Microsoft has kept mum on the situation, making the issued update the first time Microsoft has identified this as a problem, rather than typical behavior for the world’s third-most-popular browser.

In late January, The Verge Senior Editor Tom Warren reported experiencing the puzzling Edge issue. After updating his computer, Edge launched with the tabs that Warren most recently used in Chrome. He eventually realized that Edge has a feature you can toggle, reading: “Always have access to your recent browsing data each time you browse on Microsoft Edge.” The setting is reachable in Edge by typing “edge://settings/profiles/importBrowsingData.” Interestingly, it allows Edge to import browsing data from Chrome every time you open Edge, but data from Firefox can only be imported manually. However, Edge was seizing Chrome tabs without this setting enabled. Others reported having this problem via Microsoft's support forum and social media, as well.

Microsoft didn’t respond to The Verge’s initial request for comment, but this week it released an Edge update that seems to address matters. Microsoft's release notes from February 15 say:

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Android 15 Developer Preview brings partial screen sharing, “notification cooldown” and other changes

The first developer preview of Android 15 is now available, giving us a first very early look at what to expect from the next major version of Android, which won’t officially launch until much later this year (probably in the fall). Android 15 D…

The first developer preview of Android 15 is now available, giving us a first very early look at what to expect from the next major version of Android, which won’t officially launch until much later this year (probably in the fall). Android 15 Developer Preview 1 can be installed in an emulator or on a Google […]

The post Android 15 Developer Preview brings partial screen sharing, “notification cooldown” and other changes appeared first on Liliputing.

Wyze outage leaves customers without camera coverage overnight

Company points to “AWS partner” for cameras disappearing from users’ apps.

Wyze v3 camera pointed at viewer

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Wyze cameras have been unreliable for many users for more than nine hours today, with cameras disappearing from the Wyze app or simply reporting errors when owners try to view them.

Users started reporting issues on Down Detector just before 4 am Eastern time, and the company issued a service advisory at 9:30 am. As of 1 pm, the company stated that its "metrics show that devices are starting to recover," and later that there was "continued improvement," but it was still investigating history viewing issues. At 1:15 pm, an Ars writer was able to view his Wyze v3 camera feed and update its firmware.

Wyze attributed the issue to an "AWS partner" in an earlier update. Amazon Web Services' dashboard showed no issues or outages as of 1:30 pm Eastern. Ars reached out to Wyze for comment and will update this post with new information.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Wyze outage leaves customers without camera coverage overnight

Company points to “AWS partner” for cameras disappearing from users’ apps.

Wyze v3 camera pointed at viewer

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Wyze cameras have been unreliable for many users for more than nine hours today, with cameras disappearing from the Wyze app or simply reporting errors when owners try to view them.

Users started reporting issues on Down Detector just before 4 am Eastern time, and the company issued a service advisory at 9:30 am. As of 1 pm, the company stated that its "metrics show that devices are starting to recover," and later that there was "continued improvement," but it was still investigating history viewing issues. At 1:15 pm, an Ars writer was able to view his Wyze v3 camera feed and update its firmware.

Wyze attributed the issue to an "AWS partner" in an earlier update. Amazon Web Services' dashboard showed no issues or outages as of 1:30 pm Eastern. Ars reached out to Wyze for comment and will update this post with new information.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Android 15 Developer Preview 1 is out for the Pixel 6 and up

Low-level developer features include fs-verify support, more screen-sharing modes.

The Android 15 logo. This is "Android V," if you can't tell from the logo.

Enlarge / The Android 15 logo. This is "Android V," if you can't tell from the logo. (credit: Google)

It's that time of year again. Android is going to start its ~8-month-long beta process with the release of a new major OS version. The Android 15 Developer Preview is out today for the Pixel 6, 7, and 8, Pixel Fold, and Pixel Tablet. This release should mark the end of major OS support for the Pixel 5 and 5a series.

So what's new? It's hard to know too much with only the simple text descriptions we're getting, but we have a few bullet points. "Partial screen sharing" will let users share or record individual app windows instead of the entire screen. Phones don't have much of a difference between an app window and a full screen, but it would be nice if this blocked incoming notifications from showing up on your screen share. It would also be nice for tablets.

Android is surfacing an API that supports the Linux kernel's fs-verity feature. This will let you store a read-only file on a read-write file system and cryptographically sign it to ensure it hasn't been maliciously tampered with. Google apparently wants app developers to use this, saying, "This leads to enhanced security, protecting against potential malware or unauthorized file modifications that could compromise your app's functionality or data."

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments