Blizzard shows off Overwatch 2 Transformers skins in animated trailer

Blizzard and Hasbro have revealed the Transformers skins for Overwatch 2’s upcoming collaboration with the popular mecha toy franchise. The two companies released an animated trailer on the Overwatch YouTube channel today, showing off the skins based on three Autobots and a Decepticon.

The trailer shows that the Transformers skins are assigned to Reinhardt, Bastion, Illari and Ramratta — four characters that were already robots or humans wearing armor to begin with. Reinhardt will be cosplaying Optimus Prime, the fearless leader of the Autobots; Bastion will be Bumblebee; Illari will be pretty in pink as Arcee; and Ramratta will be the fearsome Decepticon leader, Megatron. Many Overwatch 2 players are anticipating how well the Transformers skins will fit with the game’s aim-and-click, collection, and respawn mechanics in actual gameplay.

The Transformers crossover comes on the heels of the game’s collaboration with Porsche back in May, which transformed (pun entirely intended) the newest models of the German company’s cars into souped-up skin for D.Va and Pharah. Earlier this year, players got to dress up Cassidy as Spike Siegel and Ashe as Faye Valentine during the Cowboy Bebop collaboration, among other characters from the classic anime. Last year, fans put Doomfist in a skin based on Saitama from another hit anime, One-Punch Man.

The Overwatch 2 x Transformers collaboration begins tomorrow. Blizzard didn’t put a price tag on the Transformers skins nor mention whether they’ll be obtained as free rewards via gameplay. For reference, the Cowboy Bebop and Porsche skins cost a pretty penny, so you may be expected to spend big on the Transformers skin you like the best. Regardless, this crossover may appeal to players who played with Transformers action figures and watched the animated series when they were kids.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/overwatch-2-shows-off-transformers-skins-in-animated-trailer-222358657.html?src=rss

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

LG Electronics has announced the acquisition of an 80% stake in Athom, a Dutch company renowned for its smart home platform, Homey. LG plans to acquire the remaining 20% over the next three years. This move aims to enhance LG’s ThinQ smart home platform, positioning it to better compete with Samsung’s SmartThings, a leading player in the smart home market.

Homey, established in 2014, supports over 50,000 smart home devices from various brands such as Aqara, Honeywell, IKEA, Netatmo, Philips Hue, Samsung, and Sonos; It is compatible with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. Homey Pro, a central hub, supports multiple connectivity standards including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Zigbee, Z-Wave Plus, Infrared, Matter, and Thread.

Homey is favored by users seeking privacy and extensive customization options through features like Advanced Flow and HomeyScript.

Following the acquisition, LG plans to integrate Homey’s capabilities into its ThinQ smart home appliances and app — Existing Homey users will soon be able to manage LG ThinQ-compatible devices through the Homey app. Despite the acquisition, Athom will maintain its independent operations, branding, and team, with its founders continuing as executives to uphold their vision for an improved smart home experience.

While the exact financial details of the deal were not disclosed, the Korea Economic Daily estimates the acquisition at around KRW 85 billion (approximately $61 million). This strategic acquisition mirrors Samsung’s 2014 purchase of SmartThings for $200 million, which has since been integrated into Samsung’s product lineup, including refrigerators, soundbars, and TVs.

This acquisition represents LG’s commitment to expanding its smart home ecosystem and offering enhanced compatibility with third-party devices. The integration of Homey is expected to bolster ThinQ’s competitiveness against established platforms like SmartThings, providing users with a more comprehensive and customizable smart home experience.

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Hackers reverse-engineer Ticketmaster’s barcode system to unlock resales on other platforms

Scalpers have used a security researcher’s findings to reverse-engineer “nontransferable” digital tickets from Ticketmaster and AXS, allowing transfers outside their apps. The workaround was revealed in a lawsuit AXS filed in May against third-party brokers adopting the practice, according to 404 Media, which first reported the news.

The saga began in February when an anonymous security researcher, going by the pseudonym Conduition, published technical details about how Ticketmaster generates its electronic tickets. If you aren’t already familiar with how modern e-ticketing systems work, Ticketmaster and AXS lock ticket resales inside their platforms, preventing transfers on third-party services like SeatGeek and StubHub. (For higher-priority events, they often take it a step further by prohibiting transfers to other accounts on the same platform.)

Although the companies claim the practice is strictly a security measure, it also conveniently allows them to control how and when their tickets are resold. (Yay, capitalism?)

Side-by-side phone screenshots of the Ticketmaster app showing event barcodes.
Ticketmaster

Ticketmaster and AXS create their “nontransferable” tickets using rotating barcodes that change every few seconds, preventing working screenshots or printouts. On the back end, it uses similar underlying tech similar to two-factor authentication apps. In addition, the codes are only generated shortly before an event starts, limiting the window for sharing them outside the apps. Without interference from outside parties, the platforms get to lock ticket buyers into their own resale services, giving them vertical control of the entire ecosystem.

That’s where the hackers come in. Using Conduition’s published findings, they extracted the platforms’ secret tokens that generate new tickets, using an Android phone with its Chrome browser connected to Chrome DevTools on a desktop PC. Using the tokens, they create a parallel ticketing infrastructure that regenerates genuine barcodes on other platforms, allowing them to sell working tickets on platforms Ticketmaster and AXS don’t allow. Online reports claim the parallel tickets often work at the gates.

According to 404 Media, AXS’ lawsuit accuses the defendants of selling “counterfeit” tickets (even though they usually work) to “unsuspecting customers.” The court documents allegedly describe the parallel tickets as “created, in whole or in part by one or more of the Defendants illicitly accessing and then mimicking, emulating, or copying tickets from the AXS Platform.”

AXS’ lawsuit claims the company doesn’t know how the hackers are doing it. The promise of essentially jailbreaking Ticketmaster is so lucrative that several brokers have reportedly tried hiring Conduition to help them build their own parallel ticket-generating platforms. Services already operating on the researcher’s findings go by names like Secure.Tickets, Amosa App, Virtual Barcode Distribution and Verified-Ticket.com.

404 Media’s entire story is worth reading. More technically minded folks may take an interest in Conduition’s earlier findings, which illustrate what the ticketing behemoths are doing on their back ends to keep the entire ecosystems in their clutches.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/hackers-reverse-engineer-ticketmasters-barcode-system-to-unlock-resales-on-other-platforms-194826061.html?src=rss

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

LG Electronics has announced the acquisition of an 80% stake in Athom, a Dutch company renowned for its smart home platform, Homey. LG plans to acquire the remaining 20% over the next three years. This move aims to enhance LG’s ThinQ smart home platform, positioning it to better compete with Samsung’s SmartThings, a leading player in the smart home market.

Homey, established in 2014, supports over 50,000 smart home devices from various brands such as Aqara, Honeywell, IKEA, Netatmo, Philips Hue, Samsung, and Sonos; It is compatible with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. Homey Pro, a central hub, supports multiple connectivity standards including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Zigbee, Z-Wave Plus, Infrared, Matter, and Thread.

Homey is favored by users seeking privacy and extensive customization options through features like Advanced Flow and HomeyScript.

Following the acquisition, LG plans to integrate Homey’s capabilities into its ThinQ smart home appliances and app — Existing Homey users will soon be able to manage LG ThinQ-compatible devices through the Homey app. Despite the acquisition, Athom will maintain its independent operations, branding, and team, with its founders continuing as executives to uphold their vision for an improved smart home experience.

While the exact financial details of the deal were not disclosed, the Korea Economic Daily estimates the acquisition at around KRW 85 billion (approximately $61 million). This strategic acquisition mirrors Samsung’s 2014 purchase of SmartThings for $200 million, which has since been integrated into Samsung’s product lineup, including refrigerators, soundbars, and TVs.

This acquisition represents LG’s commitment to expanding its smart home ecosystem and offering enhanced compatibility with third-party devices. The integration of Homey is expected to bolster ThinQ’s competitiveness against established platforms like SmartThings, providing users with a more comprehensive and customizable smart home experience.

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Hackers reverse-engineer Ticketmaster’s barcode system to unlock resales on other platforms

Scalpers have used a security researcher’s findings to reverse-engineer “nontransferable” digital tickets from Ticketmaster and AXS, allowing transfers outside their apps. The workaround was revealed in a lawsuit AXS filed in May against third-party brokers adopting the practice, according to 404 Media, which first reported the news.

The saga began in February when an anonymous security researcher, going by the pseudonym Conduition, published technical details about how Ticketmaster generates its electronic tickets. If you aren’t already familiar with how modern e-ticketing systems work, Ticketmaster and AXS lock ticket resales inside their platforms, preventing transfers on third-party services like SeatGeek and StubHub. (For higher-priority events, they often take it a step further by prohibiting transfers to other accounts on the same platform.)

Although the companies claim the practice is strictly a security measure, it also conveniently allows them to control how and when their tickets are resold. (Yay, capitalism?)

Side-by-side phone screenshots of the Ticketmaster app showing event barcodes.
Ticketmaster

Ticketmaster and AXS create their “nontransferable” tickets using rotating barcodes that change every few seconds, preventing working screenshots or printouts. On the back end, it uses similar underlying tech similar to two-factor authentication apps. In addition, the codes are only generated shortly before an event starts, limiting the window for sharing them outside the apps. Without interference from outside parties, the platforms get to lock ticket buyers into their own resale services, giving them vertical control of the entire ecosystem.

That’s where the hackers come in. Using Conduition’s published findings, they extracted the platforms’ secret tokens that generate new tickets, using an Android phone with its Chrome browser connected to Chrome DevTools on a desktop PC. Using the tokens, they create a parallel ticketing infrastructure that regenerates genuine barcodes on other platforms, allowing them to sell working tickets on platforms Ticketmaster and AXS don’t allow. Online reports claim the parallel tickets often work at the gates.

According to 404 Media, AXS’ lawsuit accuses the defendants of selling “counterfeit” tickets (even though they usually work) to “unsuspecting customers.” The court documents allegedly describe the parallel tickets as “created, in whole or in part by one or more of the Defendants illicitly accessing and then mimicking, emulating, or copying tickets from the AXS Platform.”

AXS’ lawsuit claims the company doesn’t know how the hackers are doing it. The promise of essentially jailbreaking Ticketmaster is so lucrative that several brokers have reportedly tried hiring Conduition to help them build their own parallel ticket-generating platforms. Services already operating on the researcher’s findings go by names like Secure.Tickets, Amosa App, Virtual Barcode Distribution and Verified-Ticket.com.

404 Media’s entire story is worth reading. More technically minded folks may take an interest in Conduition’s earlier findings, which illustrate what the ticketing behemoths are doing on their back ends to keep the entire ecosystems in their clutches.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/hackers-reverse-engineer-ticketmasters-barcode-system-to-unlock-resales-on-other-platforms-194826061.html?src=rss

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

LG Electronics has announced the acquisition of an 80% stake in Athom, a Dutch company renowned for its smart home platform, Homey. LG plans to acquire the remaining 20% over the next three years. This move aims to enhance LG’s ThinQ smart home platform, positioning it to better compete with Samsung’s SmartThings, a leading player in the smart home market.

Homey, established in 2014, supports over 50,000 smart home devices from various brands such as Aqara, Honeywell, IKEA, Netatmo, Philips Hue, Samsung, and Sonos; It is compatible with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. Homey Pro, a central hub, supports multiple connectivity standards including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Zigbee, Z-Wave Plus, Infrared, Matter, and Thread.

Homey is favored by users seeking privacy and extensive customization options through features like Advanced Flow and HomeyScript.

Following the acquisition, LG plans to integrate Homey’s capabilities into its ThinQ smart home appliances and app — Existing Homey users will soon be able to manage LG ThinQ-compatible devices through the Homey app. Despite the acquisition, Athom will maintain its independent operations, branding, and team, with its founders continuing as executives to uphold their vision for an improved smart home experience.

While the exact financial details of the deal were not disclosed, the Korea Economic Daily estimates the acquisition at around KRW 85 billion (approximately $61 million). This strategic acquisition mirrors Samsung’s 2014 purchase of SmartThings for $200 million, which has since been integrated into Samsung’s product lineup, including refrigerators, soundbars, and TVs.

This acquisition represents LG’s commitment to expanding its smart home ecosystem and offering enhanced compatibility with third-party devices. The integration of Homey is expected to bolster ThinQ’s competitiveness against established platforms like SmartThings, providing users with a more comprehensive and customizable smart home experience.

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Hackers reverse-engineer Ticketmaster’s barcode system to unlock resales on other platforms

Scalpers have used a security researcher’s findings to reverse-engineer “nontransferable” digital tickets from Ticketmaster and AXS, allowing transfers outside their apps. The workaround was revealed in a lawsuit AXS filed in May against third-party brokers adopting the practice, according to 404 Media, which first reported the news.

The saga began in February when an anonymous security researcher, going by the pseudonym Conduition, published technical details about how Ticketmaster generates its electronic tickets. If you aren’t already familiar with how modern e-ticketing systems work, Ticketmaster and AXS lock ticket resales inside their platforms, preventing transfers on third-party services like SeatGeek and StubHub. (For higher-priority events, they often take it a step further by prohibiting transfers to other accounts on the same platform.)

Although the companies claim the practice is strictly a security measure, it also conveniently allows them to control how and when their tickets are resold. (Yay, capitalism?)

Side-by-side phone screenshots of the Ticketmaster app showing event barcodes.
Ticketmaster

Ticketmaster and AXS create their “nontransferable” tickets using rotating barcodes that change every few seconds, preventing working screenshots or printouts. On the back end, it uses similar underlying tech similar to two-factor authentication apps. In addition, the codes are only generated shortly before an event starts, limiting the window for sharing them outside the apps. Without interference from outside parties, the platforms get to lock ticket buyers into their own resale services, giving them vertical control of the entire ecosystem.

That’s where the hackers come in. Using Conduition’s published findings, they extracted the platforms’ secret tokens that generate new tickets, using an Android phone with its Chrome browser connected to Chrome DevTools on a desktop PC. Using the tokens, they create a parallel ticketing infrastructure that regenerates genuine barcodes on other platforms, allowing them to sell working tickets on platforms Ticketmaster and AXS don’t allow. Online reports claim the parallel tickets often work at the gates.

According to 404 Media, AXS’ lawsuit accuses the defendants of selling “counterfeit” tickets (even though they usually work) to “unsuspecting customers.” The court documents allegedly describe the parallel tickets as “created, in whole or in part by one or more of the Defendants illicitly accessing and then mimicking, emulating, or copying tickets from the AXS Platform.”

AXS’ lawsuit claims the company doesn’t know how the hackers are doing it. The promise of essentially jailbreaking Ticketmaster is so lucrative that several brokers have reportedly tried hiring Conduition to help them build their own parallel ticket-generating platforms. Services already operating on the researcher’s findings go by names like Secure.Tickets, Amosa App, Virtual Barcode Distribution and Verified-Ticket.com.

404 Media’s entire story is worth reading. More technically minded folks may take an interest in Conduition’s earlier findings, which illustrate what the ticketing behemoths are doing on their back ends to keep the entire ecosystems in their clutches.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/hackers-reverse-engineer-ticketmasters-barcode-system-to-unlock-resales-on-other-platforms-194826061.html?src=rss

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

LG Electronics has announced the acquisition of an 80% stake in Athom, a Dutch company renowned for its smart home platform, Homey. LG plans to acquire the remaining 20% over the next three years. This move aims to enhance LG’s ThinQ smart home platform, positioning it to better compete with Samsung’s SmartThings, a leading player in the smart home market.

Homey, established in 2014, supports over 50,000 smart home devices from various brands such as Aqara, Honeywell, IKEA, Netatmo, Philips Hue, Samsung, and Sonos; It is compatible with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. Homey Pro, a central hub, supports multiple connectivity standards including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Zigbee, Z-Wave Plus, Infrared, Matter, and Thread.

Homey is favored by users seeking privacy and extensive customization options through features like Advanced Flow and HomeyScript.

Following the acquisition, LG plans to integrate Homey’s capabilities into its ThinQ smart home appliances and app — Existing Homey users will soon be able to manage LG ThinQ-compatible devices through the Homey app. Despite the acquisition, Athom will maintain its independent operations, branding, and team, with its founders continuing as executives to uphold their vision for an improved smart home experience.

While the exact financial details of the deal were not disclosed, the Korea Economic Daily estimates the acquisition at around KRW 85 billion (approximately $61 million). This strategic acquisition mirrors Samsung’s 2014 purchase of SmartThings for $200 million, which has since been integrated into Samsung’s product lineup, including refrigerators, soundbars, and TVs.

This acquisition represents LG’s commitment to expanding its smart home ecosystem and offering enhanced compatibility with third-party devices. The integration of Homey is expected to bolster ThinQ’s competitiveness against established platforms like SmartThings, providing users with a more comprehensive and customizable smart home experience.

LG Acquires Homey To Boost ThinQ And Rival Samsung SmartThings

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Samsung Unpacked 2024: How to watch Samsung unveil the Galaxy Ring, Galaxy Z Fold and more

Samsung’s summer event is nearly here. Unpacked 2024 will stream live on Wednesday, July 10, at 9AM ET. You can watch it on Samsung’s YouTube channel, Newsroom website and homepage.

The company is holding the shindig in Paris ahead of the Olympics, kicking off there later this month. Perhaps it wants to set the tone for a fashion tie-in with its Galaxy Ring launch. Samsung has already shown what it looks like, and the company wrote in a court filing that it plans to start shipping the ring “in or around August.”

Foldables are expected to be a marquee attraction, with the Galaxy Fold 6 and Galaxy Z Flip 6 rumored to feature heavily at the event. Their updates could be minor, as alleged leaks suggest the Z Flip 6 will have a boosted battery, RAM option and a new Snapdragon chip. Similar iterative update rumors have floated around for the flagship Galaxy Z Fold 6.

The Galaxy Watch 7 is also rumored to be on tap, with better performance and power efficiency. The Galaxy Watch Ultra could be a beefy wearable with a dial. Meanwhile, the Galaxy Buds 3 and Galaxy Buds 3 Pro could make an appearance with richer audio, longer battery life and adaptive noise control in the high-end model.

The tech world’s current trajectory makes new AI features practically inevitable at the showcase. Samsung launched new AI tools with its Galaxy S24 series in January, and it sounds like a safe bet to expect more on Wednesday.

For more on the event, you can check out Engadget’s Samsung Unpacked 2024 in-depth rumor roundup.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/samsung-unpacked-2024-how-to-watch-samsung-unveil-the-galaxy-ring-galaxy-z-fold-and-more-141053068.html?src=rss

Early Prime Day deals bring the third-gen AirPods back down to $140

Amazon Prime Day is on the horizon but there’s plenty of sales you can already explore. One of the best early Prime Day deals currently running is a 17 percent discount on Apple’s third-generation AirPods. The earbuds are back down to their record-low price of $140, from $169. However, this deal doesn’t include AppleCare+ — you’ll have to pay another $29 for that. 

Apple’s third-gen AirPods came out in 2021 as a massive improvement to their predecessor. We gave them an 88 in our review thanks to features like a more comfortable design and way better audio quality. A lot of this comes down to their shorter, more contoured shape — the improved design also allows sound to more directly enter your ear. 

The AirPods and their case have IPX4 sweat and water resistance so you can more comfortably use them while doing activities like exercise. Plus, they offer always-on Siri and six hours of battery life (30 hours total with the case). 

If you’re just looking for relatively cheap, solid earbuds then check out the 38 percent discount on Apple’s second-generation AirPods. They’re currently down to $80 from $120 when not opting for AppleCare+. They offer five hours of continual battery or 24 hours with the case. 

Your Prime Day Shopping Guide: See all of our Prime Day coverage. Shop the best Prime Day deals on Yahoo Life. Follow Engadget for Prime Day tech deals. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Amazon Prime Day deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Prime Day sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/early-prime-day-deals-bring-the-third-gen-airpods-back-down-to-140-135052490.html?src=rss