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UK Retailers Band Together to Sue Amazon for Alleged Data Misuse, Demanding £1.1B in Damages

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BIRA also takes aim at Amazon’s “Buy Box,” claiming that Amazon manipulated which retailers were selected for the coveted placement. BIRA and its legal team say that the claim is the biggest ever collective action to be launched by retailers in the country. Making itself a must use for retailers, Amazon has then proceeded to cause damage and financial loss to retailers by misusing their confidential data that Amazon was entrusted to keep safe and by preferencing its own retail operations. Retailers in the U.K. were entitled to be treated better and fairly by Amazon. The U.K. is its largest international market, where it made $33.6 billion in revenues in 2023 (out of $575 billion in global revenues).

“Mastering Your iPhone: Playing Pokémon and Other Game Boy Classics”

Pokemon On Iphone
Apple finally updated its App Store guidelines to allow global developers to host retro game emulators on iOS. Now, at long last, Testut has released a Game Boy emulator directly into the iOS App Store, where it’s already climbed to #1 on the entertainment charts. Delta, the emulator, even supports DS, N64, SNES and NES games, in addition to Game Boy Color and Game Boy Advance games. If you’re a Paladin-esque rule follower, you can use a tool like Epilogue’s GB Operator, which can rip .ROM files directly from the Game Boy games that you already own. So, now that you have legally obtained your .ROM file, how do you get it onto your phone?

“Alleged Hacking Incident Leaves AnyCubic 3D Printer Owners Vulnerable to Security Breach, According to Reports by Users”

Anycubic Hacked Machine
Anycubic users say their 3D printers were hacked to warn of a security flawAnycubic customers are reporting that their 3D printers have been hacked and now display a message warning of an alleged security flaw in the company’s systems. Feel free to disconnect your printer from the internet if you don’t wanna get hacked by a bad actor! You have not been harmed in any way.”The text file described an unspecified vulnerability in Anycubic’s MQTT service, which allegedly allows the ability to “connect and control” customer 3D printers that are connected to the internet. The person who authored the text file claimed they sent the message to 2.9 million Anycubic 3D printers. “Disconnect your printer from the internet until anycubic patches this issue,” the text file reads.