A Movie Star Endures Hollywoodβs Dystopian Embrace of AI in This Near-Future Short Story

'Through the Machine' by P.A. Cornell evokes a 'Black Mirror' show-biz nightmare come to life.
Earlier this month, Nintendo received a lot of negative attention for an end-user license agreement (EULA) update granting the company the claimed right to render Switch consoles "permanently unusable in whole or in part" for violations such as suspected hacking or piracy. As it turns out, though, Nintendo isn't the only console manufacturer that threatens to remotely brick systems in response to rule violations. And attorneys tell Ars Technica that they're probably well within their legal rights to do so.
Sony's System Software License Agreement on the PS5, for instance, contains the following paragraph of "remedies" it can take for "violations" such as use of modified hardware or pirated software (emphasis added).
If SIE Inc determines that you have violated this Agreement's terms, SIE Inc may itself or may procure the taking of any action to protect its interests such as disabling access to or use of some or all System Software, disabling use of this PS5 system online or offline, termination of your access to PlayStation Network, denial of any warranty, repair or other services provided for your PS5 system, implementation of automatic or mandatory updates or devices intended to discontinue unauthorized use, or reliance on any other remedial efforts as reasonably necessary to prevent the use of modified or unpermitted use of System Software.
The same exact clause appears in the PlayStation 4 EULA as well. The PlayStation 3 EULA was missing the "disabling use... online or offline" clause, but it does still warn that Sony can take steps to "discontinue unauthorized use" or "prevent the use of a modified PS3 system, or any pirated material or equipment."
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Valve has been building up to this for months, first in preview, then beta, and now finally in a full stable release: a new version of SteamOS that brings brand new features to the Steam Deck and supports third-party handhelds like Lenovoβs Legion Go and Asusβs ROG Ally series.
SteamOS 3.7.8 is the first stable release to add official support for the Lenovo Legion Go S, and the first to offer an official βrecoveryβ image that lets you install SteamOS on other AMD handhelds like the ROG Ally and original Legion Go, as Valve promised us in January of this year.
Until now, those who wanted to try SteamOS on those Windows handhelds could shoehorn the Steam Deckβs original recovery image onto their device, or opt for a similar experience like Bazzite. But now, Valve explicitly provides instructions for getting that image working on a Legion Go or ROG Ally, even as it warns that βsupport for all devices that is not officially βPowered by SteamOSβ is not final.β
But even if you donβt care about rival handhelds, SteamOS 3.7 has a lot of improvements for the Steam Deck. Iβve been asking Valve to let me use my Bluetooth earbudsβ microphone since launch, and itβs finally happening in desktop mode (sadly not gaming mode yet) thanks to HFP/HSP profiles. You can turn on your Steam Deck LCD from across the room with a Bluetooth controller, a feature previously exclusive to the OLED model, which comes in handy when youβre docked to a TV.
Speaking of leaving it docked, you can now set a Battery Charge Limit to 80 percent for longevityβs sake if your handheld is always plugged in, you can frame-limit variable refresh rate displays, and control the P-state frequency of certain AMD CPUs.
Itβs all underpinned by new versions of Arch Linux, new Mesa graphics drivers, a much newer version of the Plasma desktop mode, and more. Hereβs the full SteamOS 3.7.8 changelog.
And, an updated SteamOS FAQ seems to suggest that Valve is ready to expand SteamOS beyond Lenovo and the Steam Deck. βWeβre currently working with select partners on officially licensed Powered by SteamOS devices. Please reach out to us atΒ [email protected]Β for more information about licensing SteamOS for your device,β one answer reads.
But the industry is still waiting for Valveβs other shoe(s) to drop. Rumors are still heating up that weβre close to the launch of Valveβs wireless VR headset βDeckard,β and that it might be pointing the way towards a SteamOS-powered living room console too. Valve has been moving slow and steady, but it seems like a master plan for Steam Machines could finally be coming into focus.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has officially dropped its case against Microsoftβs acquisition of Activision Blizzard. The FTC filed an order to dismiss its complaint on Thursday, just days after it lost an appeal for a preliminary injunction to prevent Microsoft from finalizing its acquisition.
βThe Commission has determined that the public interest is best served by dismissing the administrative litigation in this case,β says the FTC in its filing. The filing brings an end to the FTCβs fight to try and block Microsoftβs $68.7 billion deal, nearly two years after it originally sought a temporary restraining order and injunction from a US federal district court.
Todayβs decision is a victory for players across the country and for common sense in Washington, D.C. We are grateful to the FTC for todayβs announcement. https://t.co/nnmUI76q0l pic.twitter.com/KgLxhZppx3
β Brad Smith (@BradSmi) May 22, 2025
Microsoft won its FTC fight to buy Activision Blizzard in July 2023, and the deal was completed several months later,Β in October, nearly two years after the acquisition wasΒ first announced. The FTC had appealed the ruling nearly two years ago, but an appeals court panel affirmed the denial of an injunction earlier this month.
βTodayβs decision is a victory for players across the country and for common sense in Washington, DC,β says Microsoft vice chair and president Brad Smith. βWe are grateful to the FTC for todayβs announcement.β
Apple is moving full steam ahead with plans to release its long-rumored smart glasses by the end of 2026.Β Itβs the companyβs latest move to broaden its hardware lineup and build out its AI ecosystem. According to a new report from [β¦]
The post Apple to launch smart glasses in 2026 as part of AI push, drops plans for camera-equipped smartwatch first appeared on Tech Startups.
Material 3 Expressive was officially unveiled last week at The Android Show, with Google releasing guidance at that time. At I/O 2025, we had a βBuild next-level UX with Material 3 Expressiveβ session with another tease at upcoming Google app redesigns, like Fitbit.
moreβ¦
An outdated Meta AI model was apparently at the center of the Department of Government Efficiency's initial ploy to purge parts of the federal government.
Wired reviewed materials showing that affiliates of Elon Musk's DOGE working in the Office of Personnel Management "tested and used Metaβs Llama 2 model to review and classify responses from federal workers to the infamous 'Fork in the Road' email that was sent across the government in late January."
The "Fork in the Road" memo seemed to copy a memo that Musk sent to Twitter employees, giving federal workers the choice to be "loyal"βand accept the government's return-to-office policyβor else resign. At the time, it was rumored that DOGE was feeding government employee data into AI, and Wired confirmed that records indicate Llama 2 was used to sort through responses and see how many employees had resigned.
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