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Zkuq said:
JEMC said:

Well, as long as you don't install the 24H2 update, you should be fine. Meanwhile, you may wanna know how to update the firmware of your drive, because I fear that may be the fix we'll get from this situation.

And with that quote, we have them all. You all know your videogame quotes.

Who cares about knowing when Googl... I mean any decent search engine exists? Speaking of, Google is absolutely terrible for searching anything non-trivial these days. Search engine optimization and AI have killed Google.

Tell me about it.

I looked for info on a couple of mice since mine is failing after less than a year, and even after three pages I couldn't find anything moer tham store links, a couple of sites repeating constantly and zero useful stuff. And it's not only Google, as Bing was the same.

So well, if anyone has info about the Logitech M500S (had two of the original ones that started giving problems with the left button after roughly 2 years, but I don't know if the S fixed that or they only changed the sensor) or the Razer Deathadder Essential, I'd appreciate the help.

Conina said:

JEMC said:

SOFTWARE & DRIVERS

Steam has taken down 'over 260 materials containing illegal content' from its Russian store, brags the country's media censorship agency
https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/steam-has-taken-down-over-260-materials-containing-illegal-content-from-its-russian-store-brags-the-countrys-media-censorship-agency/
Russian media agency Interfax (via The Moscow Times) reports that Steam has complied with a request from Roskomnadzor—Russia's media regulator—to remove "all materials forbidden in the Russian Federation."
Steam has, says The Moscow Times, around 9.5 million users in Russia (and all of them have gotten angry at me in Counter-Strike). No doubt the Russian state's rapidly growing interest in clamping down on western tech and developing its own national "digital sovereignty" has led it to pay close attention to the US-headquartered service.
"Steam has complied with the law's demands regarding the removal of prohibited information," Roskomnadzor told Russian media. "Links to 11 internet pages, included earlier on the Registry[of prohibited information] will be excluded from it" over last week. In total, says the regulator, Steam has removed "over 260 materials containing illegal content" in Russia.

Only "over 260"? Russia, no reason to brag!

In four weeks, Steam will comply with a request from the German government and take down up to 23,000 games from its German store:

https://steamcommunity.com/groups/steamworks/announcements/detail/4678768276768588864

Well, removing games because they lack an age rating isn't the same as whatever reason the russians do to remove games, don't you think?

But well, that also puts things in context. "Over 260", isn't a lot of content, it's just the reason they're being removed that sucks (like the russian government).



Please excuse my bad English.

Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070

Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet    Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.