Month: May 2024
Destiny 2: The Final Shape Leak Gives Up Spoilers Ahead of Next Week’s Launch – CNET
Leaks about the expansion’s content spread online after the new expansion appeared almost a week too soon.
Leaks about the expansion’s content spread online after the new expansion appeared almost a week too soon.
Washing machine chime scandal shows how absurd YouTube copyright abuse can get
Samsung’s catchy end-of-cycle jingle gets caught up in YouTube copyright drama.
YouTube’s Content ID system—which automatically detects content registered by rightsholders—is “completely fucking broken,” a YouTuber called “Albino” declared in a rant on X (formerly Twitter) viewed more than 950,000 times.
Albino, who is also a popular Twitch streamer, complained that his YouTube video playing through Fallout was demonetized because a Samsung washing machine randomly chimed to signal a laundry cycle had finished while he was streaming.
Apparently, YouTube had automatically scanned Albino’s video and detected the washing machine chime as a song called “Done”—which Albino quickly saw was uploaded to YouTube by a musician known as Audego nine years ago.
‘Deadpool and Wolverine’ popcorn bucket aims to outdo ‘Dune: Part 2’s sandworm stunner
Ryan Reynolds reveals NSFW merch from Marvel’s bad boy as part of a promotion for “Deadpool and Wolverine.”
Deadpool & Wolverine is looking to shake off our superhero fatigue with an R-rated threequel that’s raunchier and more violent than anything Disney has ever dared produce. But Marvel’s Merc with a Mouth isn’t stopping there. He’s also looking to top Dune: Part Two — at least when it comes to obscene popcorn buckets.
Earlier this year, the internet went wild over the sandworm design for Dune: Part Two‘s popcorn bucket. And Mashable was not immune. We went on a hunt for the bucket as soon as we heard they’d surfaced in New York City. We did a blind touch test, traumatizing our co-workers in their pursuit of popcorn. We ate non-popcorn stuff out of it. We even took you inside of it.
Not to be outdone, Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige promised out of CinemaCon 2024 to best their competitor in NSFW bucketry.
As reported by The Pop Verse, Feige said, “We have asked Deadpool himself to design a popcorn bucket for Deadpool & Wolverine,” adding, “There are some movies that inadvertently make crude and lewd popcorn buckets, and then there are popcorn buckets designed by Deadpool.”
Well, today’s the day we learn what that means.
What does the Deadpool & Wolverine popcorn bucket look like?
The Deadpool & Wolverine popcorn bucket comes in the shape of Wolverine’s head, masked up in his signature yellow and black mask and caul. His mouth is wide open but toothless, waiting to be stuffed with popcorn. “Designed by Deadpool” is scrawled in messy red text on the side of the bucket.
Deadpool & Wolverine star Ryan Reynolds’ Instagram and X (formerly Twitter) accounts shared a teasing look at the movie’s popcorn bucket with a video, captioned:
Years from now they will look back at 2024 as the year the War of the Popcorn Buckets began. #history #DeadpoolAndWolverine ❤️💛
In the video, the theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey is employed for the big reveal (a choice that’s perhaps a little less daring since Barbie did this homage for its teaser back in 2022). Meanwhile, Deadpool’s gloved hand strokes the bucket lovingly, as popcorn spills into its opened mouth and butter rolls suggestively down its face.
Deadpool has never been a character or a franchise known for its subtlety. But does hammering the sex toy joke of the Dune: Part Two bucket home make this superhero-themed merch the winner?
We’ll see if the online fandom goes wild for this one.
Corporations Invested in Carbon Offsets That Were ‘Likely Junk’, Analysis Says
Some of the world’s most profitable — and most polluting corporations — have invested in carbon offset projects that have fundamental failings and are “probably junk,” suggesting industry claims about greenhouse gas reductions were likely overblown, according to new analysis. From a report: Delta, Gucci, Volkswagen, ExxonMobil, Disney, easyJet and Nestle are among the major corporations to have purchased millions of carbon credits from climate friendly projects that are “likely junk” or worthless when it comes to offsetting their greenhouse gas emissions, according to a classification system developed by Corporate Accountability, a non-profit, transnational corporate watchdog. Some of these companies no longer use CO2 offsets amid mounting evidence that carbon trading do not lead to the claimed emissions cuts — and in some cases may even cause environmental and social harms.
However, the multibillion-dollar voluntary carbon trading industry is still championed by many corporations including oil and gas majors, airlines, automakers, tourism, fast-food and beverage brands, fashion houses, banks and tech firms as the bedrock of climate action — a way of claiming to reduce their greenhouse gas footprint while continuing to rely on fossil fuels and unsustainable supply chains. Yet, for 33 of the top 50 corporate buyers, more than a third of their entire offsets portfolio is “likely junk” — suggesting at least some claims about carbon neutrality and emission reductions have been exaggerated according to the analysis. The fundamental failings leading to a “likely junk” ranking include whether emissions cuts would have happened anyway, as is often the case with large hydroelectric dams, or if the emissions were just shifted elsewhere, a common issue in forestry offset projects.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Some of the world’s most profitable — and most polluting corporations — have invested in carbon offset projects that have fundamental failings and are “probably junk,” suggesting industry claims about greenhouse gas reductions were likely overblown, according to new analysis. From a report: Delta, Gucci, Volkswagen, ExxonMobil, Disney, easyJet and Nestle are among the major corporations to have purchased millions of carbon credits from climate friendly projects that are “likely junk” or worthless when it comes to offsetting their greenhouse gas emissions, according to a classification system developed by Corporate Accountability, a non-profit, transnational corporate watchdog. Some of these companies no longer use CO2 offsets amid mounting evidence that carbon trading do not lead to the claimed emissions cuts — and in some cases may even cause environmental and social harms.
However, the multibillion-dollar voluntary carbon trading industry is still championed by many corporations including oil and gas majors, airlines, automakers, tourism, fast-food and beverage brands, fashion houses, banks and tech firms as the bedrock of climate action — a way of claiming to reduce their greenhouse gas footprint while continuing to rely on fossil fuels and unsustainable supply chains. Yet, for 33 of the top 50 corporate buyers, more than a third of their entire offsets portfolio is “likely junk” — suggesting at least some claims about carbon neutrality and emission reductions have been exaggerated according to the analysis. The fundamental failings leading to a “likely junk” ranking include whether emissions cuts would have happened anyway, as is often the case with large hydroelectric dams, or if the emissions were just shifted elsewhere, a common issue in forestry offset projects.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Swiss company develops CPUs from lab-grown human brains & the internet is horrified – Dexerto
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Europe Banned Russia’s RT Network. Its Content Is Still Spreading.
A study found that hundreds of sites, many without obvious Kremlin links, copied Russian propaganda and spread it to unsuspecting audiences ahead of the E.U. election.
A study found that hundreds of sites, many without obvious Kremlin links, copied Russian propaganda and spread it to unsuspecting audiences ahead of the E.U. election.
Instagram is training AI on your data. It’s nearly impossible to opt out
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submitted by /u/online-reputation
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Meta says deceptive content about Israel-Hamas war was ‘likely AI-generated’
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submitted by /u/isaac-get-the-golem
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