Jul 13
simrook writes, “Many people filed privacy complaints with the ESRB over Blizzard’s recent (and afterward recanted) move to require the display of users’ real life names on Blizzard’s official forums. 961 of those complainants had their email addresses exposed in the ESRB’s response.” The response itself didn’t go into the organization’s thoughts on Blizzard’s plan, but they explained to the Opposable Thumbs blog that anonymity isn’t a huge concern to them, as long as users are given the opportunity to opt out.
“The role of the ESRB Privacy Online program is to make sure that member websites—those that display our seal on their pages — are compliant with an increasingly complex series of privacy protection laws and are offering a secure space for users to interact and do business online. … But online privacy protection doesn’t necessarily mean the same thing as anonymity. It’s about making sure that websites collecting personal information from users are doing so not only in accordance with federal regulations but also with best practices for protecting individuals’ personal information online.”


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written by Soulskill
\\ tags: Games, Video Games
May 01
An anonymous reader writes “A California steel contractor spent 2,200 total hours over the last three years racking up a high score in Bejeweled 2. He exceeded the 2^31-1 maximum score programmed for the score display, proving that there is, in fact, an end to the game. I suppose congratulations or condolences are in order.”


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written by Soulskill
\\ tags: Games, Video Games
Jan 03
theodp writes “In a blog post, venture capitalist Fred Wilson gives his thoughts on ripe areas for tech investment in 2010 — mobile, gaming, new forms of commerce/currency, Cloud platforms/APIs, education and energy/environment. Asked to comment on scams and social gaming (he is an investor in Zynga), Wilson defended Zynga’s Farmville: ‘Zynga makes almost all of its revenue on virtual goods. I said in my etsy/san telmo post the other day that more tractors are sold every day in Farmville than are sold in the US every year. That’s where the money is in social gaming. The “scammy ads” thing is total red herring that everyone got excited about but is almost entirely irrelevant.’”

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written by Soulskill
\\ tags: Games, Video Games