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  • ok, I feel password lock would be more secure in this case then since its harder to brute force. For some that might be worth the more of a hassle unlocking

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  • password in this case, would it be the phones password, or a encryption key that uses the phones password for decryption?

    if it's the phones password, I assume if a password unlock was configured instead of a passcode, it would be significantly harder to brute force.

  • "Please keep focused for this brief ad from our sponsor, your information handling session will resume shortly"

  • I disagree. the current IVR systems in place that only take a few valid voice prompts are insufficient for more advanced queries. I think transferring it to more of an AI style setup like how the chat bots were, but having it handle transferring to the proper area instead of doing everything is a much needed improvement.

    I don't disagree with the statement that companies haven't implemented the right tech for their support though

  • Its a rust x Cohen Exiles baby with a Dune theme.

    The actual game is decent tbh, but like it's not at all what was advertised. It lacks common MMO mechanics to the point where the studio even said they were dropping the MMO theme then they used that same excuse "it's an MMO" of why they couldn't use self hosted servers and why it was forced private rented servers(which ended up being more like private homes) instead of allowing self hosting.

    The game is also very vastly empty, and combat will not be at it's best until easily hours into the game and there is a lot of walking and copy pasting of designs. Plus it's a forced PVP env, they can call it all they want, but required resources are locked to PVP only areas and end game is strictly PVP as well.

  • I can't say I blame them tbh I think I would do the same

  • A price hike, after the new Xbox PC relabel launch?? Absolute shocker I tell you

  • Rebutting criticism in my opinion is fine... if its not reflecting the OP's(OP as in the reviewer) opinion but something the OP is doing wrong game wise. Like mentioning the lack of an ability that would be super helpful (such as fast travel) but the person had missed how to actually activate it. That would be a proper response to say "Oh it is in the game you need to do X"

    Telling someone that the game isn't that hard, or just a skill issue, doesn't help anything. Same with the comments about gametime before refunding. Especially with drawn out games where it can easily take hours to actually realize the game, and by that point you have an 80$ game that you don't like.

  • it didn't used to be that way, then steam just...stopped actually caring about the quality of reviews and forums.

    Then they added the award system and its been downhill since.

  • I usually keep my comments on my reviews disabled exclusively because of the trolls. I used to keep them on because I liked hearing everyone's opinion and debates. I have zero interest in personal attacks instead of discussions of the flaws of the review.

    Dune Awakening was absolutely horrible for that almost every popular bad review is a bunch of trolls foaming at the mouth that someone dared leave a negative review of their beloved IP.

  • I fully support the shift to AI customer service as long as its being used as an assistant tech and not a full replacement. I have zero issue with an AI based IVR style system to find out where you need to go, or for something that is stupid basic. However it still needs humans for anything that is complex.

    And yes AI statements should be legally binding.

  • There was a pretty large exodus yea, especially among people who created content and the moderators who were insulted during the event.

    Being said, many didn't have a suitable replacement to go to. Lemmy became the replacement for a chunk of them but, if you can find where the rest went, you have gotten further than I did. I assume they either went to discord like Pinball said, or just stopped posting in general. It's a big reason that a lot of the more niche subs stopped having posts, and the reason that reddit as a whole is so much more toxic(interaction wise) now.

  • You opened a completed project. There's your first problem there. Status/Ticket closed = not my problem.

  • Real time ip blocking while keeping the judge requirement? Idk how real time that process is going to be unless they just keep a judge on standby for all events.

    Least I assume this system will need judicial review prior to actually sending the block out, otherwise this system is so prime for abuse it isn't even funny. They don't state penalties for abuse, they don't state how they get the data, they don't state a specific method of how to block.

    There's so much info(or lack of) that is just concerning if there isn't actually a judicial review and it's just the IP holders sounding the alarm.

  • Reddit is a platform that was plagued by its success for the longest time. It's not really a platform looking for new information. It's profiting off of the information it already has. Due to the influx of bot accounts that are on the platform, they have a bit of protection on major subs

    Basically to answer your question, it's a combination of they're trying to make the platform look decent for an IPO that they've already missed their window for. And now they're desperately trying to claw every little bit of information they want and bot accounts that are just spam or don't add interest to the platform such as a lot of copy-pasting are generally automated out of the service. This is exponentially increased if you're adding competitor links or links that Reddit has decided are malicious.

    Sadly, they're trying to get something which will never happen. But, because they're trying so hard to appeal to advertisers and that IPO,

    This issue was multiplied about a year and a half ago when reddit decided to remove free use of their API and then had massive blowback on it they doubled down, claimed their volunteer moderators were entitled and not needed which caused a mass exodus from the platform that it never recovered from. Why does this matter? well when any labor leaves, they also take experience with them which never fully recovered. Subs in order to lessen on that locked their requirements down using karma.

    these issues are dampening the future Reddit experience. So if you're not established, You end up leaving the platform again before you start trying to actually add content to it.

    as a TLDR: Reddit is actively chasing financial value that no longer exists, and the users are punished for it.

  • It's a cat and mouse game. They're constantly doing this. Just wait a little while and ublock should find a way around the block.

  • At the price of current day rugs, you better be excited buying it, because God knows your bank account ain't gonna be.

    I'm still at appliance level excited though, But I've never been excited about decorations, so chances are, I'll never hit that stage.

  • Personally speaking, intentionally not using or collecting credit in this world is dumb. It's shooting yourself in the foot for basically everything longterm wise. This can be from rental agreements to buying a house to buying a car. Anything that needs to show trustworthiness. It's stupid, but it's how this world operates.

    I would highly recommend reconsidering your mentality that you've given up on credit.

    Also regarding the fraud. Hopefully you are currently mid battle on that because it's not fair for you to have bad credit due to identity fraud and generally when proven that someone stole your identity they reverse all charges(for you) and reverse the credit score that went with it., After all, you never actually spent the money. But that's a long and lengthy battle