*follows
News Image A new PS5 update is here to address Final Fantasy XVI bugs

On Friday morning, Sony released a system update for the PlayStation 5 that may help with graphical bugs and crashes reported by Final Fantasy XVI players after the last PS5 firmware update. Sony says today’s update (version 24.06-10.01.00) simply improves “system software performance and stability” and doesn’t mention any specific fixes for the game. But a post shared on the official Final Fantasy XVI X account earlier today says it’s been released “in response to the crashes and graphical bugs” reported by players. [Notice] PlayStation®5 version of FF16In response to the crashes and graphical bugs that were occurring on the PlayStation®5 version of FINAL FANTASY XVI, SIE have released a new system update. Please try downloading and...

Entertainment Read on The Verge
News Image A record of the Earth’s temperature covering half a billion years

The cycle of building and breaking up of supercontinents seems to drive long-term climate trends. , a burst of sudden warming about 55 million years ago, but few events that old are nearly as well understood. Now, researchers have used a combination of proxy records and climate models to reconstruct the Earth's climate for the last half-billion years, providing a global record of temperatures stretching all the way back to near the Cambrian explosion of complex life. The record shows that, with one apparent exception, carbon dioxide and global temperatures have been tightly linked. Which is somewhat surprising, given the other changes the Earth has experienced over this time.

Environment Read on Ars Technica
News Image The Amazon Echo Show 8 Can Be Your Very Own Sous Chef for 30% off

Save 30% on the third generation smart home hub from Amazon and revolutionize your home experience.

Business Possible ad Read on Gizmodo
LinkedIn has stopped grabbing UK users’ data for AI

The U.K.’s data protection watchdog has confirmed that Microsoft-owned LinkedIn has stopped processing user data for AI model training for now. Stephen Almond, executive director of regulatory risk for the Information Commissioner’s Office, wrote in a statement on Friday: “We are pleased that LinkedIn has reflected on the concerns we raised about its approach to training […]

Business Read on TechCrunch
News Image Win a pair of Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones from The Verge

We’ve got a new pair of our favorite noise-canceling headphones, and we’re giving them away to celebrate the recent relaunch — err, refresh? — of our weekly deals newsletter. All you have to do is sign up for the new and improved Verge Deals, which continues to serve as a free weekly summary of some of the best tech deals on the web. The headphones we’re gifting are none other than the Sony WH-1000XM5 (a $399.99 value), which feature excellent active noise cancellation, a comfy fit for lengthy listening sessions, and detailed, balanced sound. Unsurprisingly, they have been a mainstay of our holiday gift guides since they launched in the middle of 2022, and they remain one of our top picks when it comes to noise-canceling headphones to...

Entertainment Possible ad Read on The Verge Tech
News Image Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft‘s New Trailer Shows That Sometimes Lara Just Really Needs Some Guns

The latest trailer for Netflix's new Tomb Raider animated series is leaps and bounds better than the first one.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
SignalFire, CapitalG, and Comprehensive.io coming to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

As the startup landscape evolves, so do hiring strategies. With Big Tech downsizing and the labor market tightening, founders must navigate a conservative job market to attract and retain top talent.  The hiring landscape in 2025 will offer challenges and opportunities for those who can adapt. Founders now hold increased leverage, but respect for staff […]

Business Read on TechCrunch
Explosive attacks, abduction in Netherlands linked to cocaine robbery in Antwerp

The authorities are investigating a possible link between a rip deal in Antwerp, in which 1,200 kilograms of cocaine was stolen, and explosions in Rotterdam and The Hague and an abduction

Crime and Courts Read on NL Times
News Image Rivian is now shipping its Gen 2 R1T and R1S EVs with tri-motor powertrains

Rivian is now shipping its electric trucks and SUVs with a tri-motor configuration, adding an extra power boost over the dual-motor version. The new 850 horsepower powertrain uses Rivian’s new in-house Enduro motors, with one in the front axle and two in the rear axle. The new tri-motor setup underpins Rivian’s newly redesigned Gen 2 models, which launched earlier this year in just a dual-motor configuration. As reported by Inside EVs, these 2025 Rivian models are the first from the company to get a tri-motor setup, as the previous generation only came in dual and quad-motor setups. Rivian will start shipping its Gen 2 quad-motor version early next year.

Business Read on The Verge
News Image The Supreme Court is about to decide whether to interfere in the election again

Editor’s note, September 20, 10:30 am: The Supreme Court denied the Green Party’s request to be placed back on the Nevada ballot. No justice publicly announced their dissent, and the Court did not explain why it ruled the way it did. The original story, published September 18, follows. Earlier this month, Nevada’s Supreme Court ruled that the Green Party must be removed from that state’s 2024 ballot because of a paperwork error.  Nevada law requires people who collect petition signatures seeking to place a “minor party” on the ballot to “verify that they believe each person signing the petition is a registered voter in the county of his or her residence.” The Greens did not comply with this requirement, so a majority of the state supreme court ruled that they cannot appear on the ballot this year. There is, however, a slight complication. When the Green Party originally submitted documents to the Nevada secretary of state’s office announcing its intention to start gathering signatures, they were given improper instructions. An employee of the Secretary of State responded to this submission, and said the party should use a specific form to gather signatures. Unfortunately, this employee attached the wrong signature collection form to that email — the attached form was the form that is used to collect signatures for a ballot initiative (that is, a vote to change Nevada law), not to collect signatures to place a minor party on the ballot. And so the Green Party is now in the US Supreme Court, claiming that their constitutional rights were violated because they complied with this employee’s instructions, and were later removed from the ballot because they did so. The case in the Supreme Court is known as Nevada Green Party v. Aguilar.  Notably, the Greens are represented in the Supreme Court by Jay Sekulow, a former lawyer to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. Sekulow is one of the better lawyers in Trump’s orbit — he’s argued a dozen cases in the Supreme Court, mostly on behalf of Christian Right causes — and his presence on this case suggests that Republicans are eager to put the Greens back on the ballot in a key swing state. And why wouldn’t they be? The Green Party is largely a vehicle for leftier-than-thou candidates who rarely garner even one percent of the popular vote. To the extent that the Green Party matters at all, it’s because they might attract enough voters who would otherwise support Democrats to swing a very close election. (And the race in Nevada is expected to be very close: Polling averages currently have the presidential candidates separated by less than a percentage point.) For this reason, it probably won’t surprise anyone to learn that the plaintiff in the lawsuit that kicked the Greens off the Nevada ballot was the state’s Democratic Party. Both major parties are quite aware of the potential that a Green Party presidential candidate could act as a spoiler in this November’s election. The Republicans want to help make that happen; the Democrats want to avoid it at all costs. But what does the law actually say about the Green Party’s bid to appear on Nevada’s ballot? The short answer is that, if there were no procedural obstacles to the Supreme Court ruling in the Greens’ favor, then they would have a plausible — but not, exactly, airtight — case. In his brief to the justices, Sekulow cites some precedents which are helpful to the Green Party, but that hardly compel the conclusion that the party has a right to appear on Nevada ballot. That said, there are many procedural obstacles in this case that could prove fatal to the Green Party’s claims. Among other things, Nevada is racing to meet a September 21 deadline to mail ballots to overseas military personnel — a deadline that is set by federal law. If the Supreme Court orders Nevada to change those ballots so close to this deadline, it will probably be impossible for the state to meet it. Still, it’s always dangerous to bet that this Supreme Court, with its 6-3 Republican supermajority, will rule against the interests of Donald Trump. This is, after all, the same Court that recently said that Trump has sweeping immunity from prosecution for crimes he committed using the official powers of the president — a form of immunity that has no basis in the Constitution. Sekulow’s strongest argument is that the Green Party cannot be removed from the ballot for complying with a state employee’s instructions. In an email to the Green Party, Sekulow claims, a state employee told them to “Please use the documents attached to begin collecting signatures.” The Green Party then used the attached document to collect signatures, only to discover later that they’d used the wrong form. This argument has some superficial appeal — it does, at the very least, seem unfair to punish a party that complied with a government employee’s instructions. Many of the Supreme Court’s past decisions, however, cut against Sekulow’s argument. As the Court said in Heckler v. Community Health Services (1984), “those who deal with the Government are expected to know the law, and may not rely on the conduct of Government agents contrary to law.” Sekulow does cite two cases that suggest that someone cannot be charged with a crime if they acted consistently with the government’s instructions. But the Green Party is not accused of criminal activity. The only issue in this case is whether it may appear on the 2024 ballot in Nevada. At best, in other words, Sekulow is asking the Supreme Court to extend these two criminal cases to a new context, and hold that the Constitution also protects political parties that comply with a government employee’s instructions regarding ballot access from being kicked off the ballot. But there are several very good reasons why the Court should not extend those precedents in this case. One is that, while the state did provide the Green Party with the wrong form, it should have been obvious to the party that it was sent this form by mistake. The correct form requires petition circulators to certify that they believe each signatory is a registered voter in the county where they live. The form that the Green Party actually used, by contrast, was the correct form to collect signatures for ballot initiatives and referendums. It requires circulators to attest that signatories “had an opportunity before signing to read the full text of the act or resolution on which the initiative or referendum is demanded.” It appears, in other words, that the Green Party’s petition circulators all attested, under penalty of perjury, that their petition signatories had an opportunity to read the full text of a ballot initiative that doesn’t actually exist. Additionally, there are procedural reasons why the Green Party’s request to be put back on Nevada’s ballot should fail. One is the Supreme Court’s conclusion in Purcell v. Gonzalez (2006) that federal courts should be cautious about altering a state’s election rules as the election draws close, out of concern that late-breaking changes to those rules could foster confusion about how the election should be conducted. This Court has not always applied Purcell consistently — frankly, it has historically applied it much more aggressively when lower court decisions benefit Democrats than it has when they benefit Republicans — but it’s hard to imagine a more compelling case for invoking Purcell than the Nevada Green Party case.  Nevada is trying to make a Saturday deadline, set by federal law, to deliver ballots to overseas military personnel. It’s now Wednesday. If the Supreme Court gets involved now, it will almost certainly be impossible for Nevada to meet its obligation under federal law. Indeed, according to Nevada Secretary of State Francisco Aguilar, at least one Nevada county has already mailed out military ballots that do not include the Green Party. There’s also another, closely related reason why the Supreme Court should rule against the Green Party. The Court has long held that a party forfeits certain relief, even if it otherwise would be entitled to it, if it shows a “lack of diligence” in asserting its rights, such as by waiting so long to assert a legal claim that the delay itself harms the opposing party. Yet the Green Party waited an entire week from the Nevada Supreme Court’s September 6 order removing it from the ballot to file its case in the US Supreme Court, rather than doing so immediately.  Thus, one of the reasons why it would likely be impossible for Nevada to comply with both the federal deadline governing military ballots, and a US Supreme Court order requiring it to place the Green Party on the ballot, is that the Green Party ran out the clock before seeking relief from the justices. All of which is a long way of saying that, while the Nevada employee’s misleading instructions to the Green Party should raise some eyebrows, a Supreme Court order putting the Green Party on the ballot would be inappropriate.

Crime and Courts Read on Vox
News Image When You Call a Restaurant, You Might Be Chatting With an AI Host

Restaurants field a high volume of phone calls from inquisitive tourists or diners running late. Increasingly, voice chatbots are picking up on the other end of the line.

Business Read on WIRED Artificial Intelligence
Ticket Reboot Week: TechCrunch Disrupt 2024’s last sale has begun

We’ve rebooted regular ticket prices for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, giving you one last chance to save big before the event. Enjoy up to $600 off individual tickets until September 27. Disrupt 2024 is the ultimate startup hub, taking place at Moscone West in San Francisco from October 28-30. Join 10,000 startup, tech, and VC leaders; […]

Business Possible ad Read on TechCrunch
News Image Anker recalls MagSafe iPhone batteries over fire risk

Anker has issued a recall notice for its Anker 334 MagGo Battery (PowerCore 10K, model number A1642), Anker Power Bank (model number A1647), and Anker MagGo Power Bank (model number A1652). The company says a manufacturing defect can cause the power banks’ lithium-ion batteries to overheat and potentially cause a fire risk. It’s the same issue that triggered a recall in June for another Anker power bank. The company says only a small number of batteries were affected by the defect but that it’s recalling all of the portable chargers “out of an abundance of caution.” T...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
News Image Microsoft Deal Will Bring Nuclear Power Back to Three Mile Island

As AI ramps up carbon emissions, Microsoft is going nuclear.

Environment Read on Gizmodo
News Image What to Expect From Meta Connect 2024

There’s hints we’ll see a new pair of actual AR glasses, plus the budget Meta Quest 3S.

Business Read on Gizmodo
News Image Former Snap Spectacles engineer says the new glasses are ‘obviously bad’

Snap’s latest generation of augmented reality Spectacles have been lambasted by one of the engineers who helped to create them. The glasses, revealed earlier this week, were described as “a disaster” by Sterling Crispin, a former design engineer for Snap. “I worked on these for about a year at Snap, and I have a million negative things to say about the experience and the device, but I think the product speaks for itself and is obviously bad,” Crispin said on X in response to the new Spectacles being unveiled. “I hate these things.” While Crispin noted that AR and VR devices all face conflicting limitations around things like size, weight, performance, battery life, and production scale, he criticized the balance of features offered by...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
She sat down during the COVID lockdown and started coding — now she’s taking on Bolt

Sitting in Athens during the first COVID-19 lockdown, entrepreneur Rania Lamprou watched online e-commerce exploding because of social distancing. But merchants still struggled with low conversion rates because their checkout processes were complicated, and they had to integrate multiple providers for payments, shipping, and loyalty programs. “I knew there had to be a better way […]

Business Read on TechCrunch
News Image Seamless Connectivity Awaits: Upgrade to Wi-Fi 7 With the Amazon Eero Max 7 Mesh Router for 25% off

Save $150 on the latest generation Wi-Fi router by Amazon and transform your network.

Business Possible ad Read on Gizmodo