

“Why I got a bird hand? Why I got a bird hand? Oh…”
“Why I got a bird hand? Why I got a bird hand? Oh…”
Yeah, it sits at this very satisfying cusp where it is clearly saying something, once you get over the “look at this upsetting thing I’m showing you” level, but I can also totally believe people coming to totally different conclusions about what it is saying. It’s wild.
Updates are usually automatic (at least in the modern days with Steam), and DLCs are optional.
Okay so by that definition, this one is a free DLC. Glad we got that cleared up lol, that was why I described it as a DLC.
I don’t think of DLC as having an explicit connotation of either free or paid, it can be either. Whatever. I’ve now edited the title again to what I should have titled it in the first place. Hopefully everyone can put this to bed and move on to some other equally urgent internet disputes now.
IDK what is the panic about the distinction between a game update and a game DLC. I posted it because I played it and it was awesome and I wanted to let people know. In any case, I edited the title to say “update,” hope you’re okay with that phrasing.
What in your mind is the difference between a free update, which you can download, that adds some content, and free DLC?
It is excellent. It is brilliant. Everyone’s different, surely there are people who won’t like it, but for me it was top notch.
I get what you’re saying, people have been arrested after using Tor when that’s not true of Mullvad. My point is that the domains are just not the same. It’s like saying “body armor isn’t as good as just wearing a baseball hat” because a higher percentage of people get shot wearing body armor than while wearing a baseball hat.
Compare the amount of arrest of Mullvad users versus Tor users
Okay. There are half a million total account numbers on Mullvad over the entire lifetime of the service. Tor has about 1.8 million daily users. That’s part of why I trust Tor a lot more, is that it’s been actively used for flagrantly illegal activities for long enough and by enough people to have developed an understanding of what the risks are (and it becomes news if someone gets busted.) Ring me up the next time a major drug ring is keeping its whole operation secure behind Mullvad, and the cops are helpless because they raided it and found no logs and so they had to pursue some other kind of operation to take down the ring.
I dunno dude. I’ll take “there are some research papers about theoretical attacks, speculation that similar techniques were used by law enforcement when after great effort they were able to take down a bunch of sites that were literally some of their highest priorities at the time because they were openly and flagrantly committing felonies in the open for years, and some vulnerabilities fixed in 2014 that might have been related” over “they would have to send a subpoena” any day.
When did they break Tor? Are you sure they didn’t just exploit vulnerabilities on an onion site that was hosted on Tor or something?
Fucking Jesus Christ, if someone is buying government email addresses on the dark web and then using a VPN to protect themselves against getting busted, they deserve what they get. Either use Tor or relay it through some compromised machine somewhere, or both. Or something. I don’t really know how it works but definitely don’t use a consumer VPN.
I mean it might be fine in the modern day, since anything in US law enforcement that might be subpeonaing the VPN company might no longer be functioning. But I still wouldn’t really take the chance.
This interview is really phenomenal. Among other things, they talk about why it took so many years to release the game.
This is, of course, what work is supposed to be. But we have lost the way.