Categories
Australia

Bennetts Lane development reveals CBD’s archaeological treasures

“This is totally unexpected and out of the blue,” said University of Melbourne historian, Professor Andrew May.

“Look around, we’re in a modern 21st century metropolis here, so to actually still be finding these sorts of blocks that can tell us things about the history of Melbourne – early settlement, the landscape – that we didn’t know before is extraordinary.”

Visitors to the site can see the remnants of two bluestone pre-gold rush era cottages built in the 1840s, complete with cesspits and backyards where cows and chickens were raised and vegetables were grown.

Both cottages have two almost perfectly preserved red brick fireplaces. Beyond the homes, thousands of artifacts have been found including belt buckles, bottles, cosmetics, pipes, toys, dishes and animal bones.

Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung traditional owners have also been involved in identifying a small number of Indigenous cultural remnants as stone silcrete flakes.

A large number of bottles were found buried in the site.

A large number of bottles were found buried in the site.Credit:eddie jim

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After the original cottages were demolished and filled in at the order of the council, tenement blocks sprang up on the site in the 1850s and became home to some of the city’s poorest residents, as well as artisans such as a Chinese cabinetmaker, whose possessions have also been unearthed.

By 1913, most of the buildings except one on the site were demolished after being condemned as ‘slums’. They were eventually replaced by warehouses and workshops, which remained until a few years ago when the demolition for the new Bennetts Lane office building began.

“Probably it was migrant populations that may have come in during the gold rush, and then found themselves in other occupations within the growing city of Melbourne as the rush calmed down,” said Ian Travers, the chief of Extent Heritage, which undertook the excavation on behalf of the developers.

An aerial image of the dig site.

An aerial image of the dig site.Credit:Extend Heritage

“The socio-economic state of this part of the city [is] probably one of the reasons that we’ve got such good preservation of archeology because there wasn’t much development pressure.”

The public has only about another month to walk past and see the site while the excavation is being completed, before all artifacts are ripped up and put in storage to make way for the several foundations of the new office tower.

Some of the bluestone and timber found will be showcased on the ground floor of the new building, but the rest will be stored with Heritage Victoria, which has floated the possibility of recreating a cottage elsewhere.

A render image of the Bennetts Lane development, a 20-floor, 12,000sqm office building on the corner of Little Lonsdale and Bennetts Lane.

A render image of the Bennetts Lane development, a 20-floor, 12,000sqm office building on the corner of Little Lonsdale and Bennetts Lane.Credit:Perri Projects & Pellicano

Heritage Victoria chief archeologist, Jeremy Smith, said the discoveries came too late to put a heritage protection to save the site as a dig – or require it to be preserved under glass in the foyer of the new building. But he said he hoped other “buried blocks” in the future could be physically preserved in some way.

“It’s challenging but it’s not impossible,” he said.

Free public tours of the site and a pop-up artefact display will be open to the public on August 6 and 13. Bookings can be made here.

Categories
US

New Mexico: several arrested after SUV drives into Native American parade | new Mexico

Police have arrested several people who were in a large SUV that drove through a Native American celebration in New Mexico, causing multiple injuries along a parade route crowded with families. Two local police officers were among those hurt.

Videos show the large brown vehicle speeding down a main street in Gallup, close to the border with Arizona, against the direction of the parade.

Children performing traditional dances at the parade, to celebrate the town’s 100th annual inter-tribal ceremony, appear to have been among the first to see the vehicle rushing toward them.

They ran to the side as people screamed and families scrambled to get out of the way.

The vehicle then swerved on to a side street and pulled into a parking spot before trying to pull out again, hitting a police car. Officers then converge on the vehicle, pulling at least two people out and handcuffing them on the pavement.

Lt Mark Soriano of the state police said no one was killed, but could not elaborate on the extent of the injuries, the Albuquerque Journal reported.

New Mexico state police said on Twitter the driver was in custody.

“Multiple people, including two Gallup police officers, injured and are being treated on scene,” the tweet said.

The parade and celebration were founded in 1922 to honor Native American and Indigenous heritage.

Categories
Technology

Your Phone Could Soon Let You Block Access to Personal Data

  • Samsung Galaxy phones in South Korea are getting a new Repair Mode functionality via a software update.
  • The new mode will help lockdown personal data on the device, enabling just enough access for the techs to fix it.
  • Security experts welcomed the feature but asked Samsung to share more details about its implementation before rolling it out more widely.

Carol Yepes/Getty Images



Samsung is rolling out a new update that’ll help people overcome the uneasiness we all feel every time we hand over our phones for repairs.


The company is debuting a new Galaxy phone feature in South Korea. Called Repair Mode, it hides users’ data to prevent its theft when a device is turned over for repair. According to a translated version of the Korean press release, repair mode will block access to photos, messages, and account information when activated.


“This feature allows users to protect data, photos, attachments, contacts, and other data so that prying eyes cannot access information while a device is out for repair,” Stephanie Kurtz, Lead Faculty for the College of Information Systems and Technology at the University of Phoenix, told Lifewire over email “This is a great new feature for users with no other options to lock down the data they have stored on a device.”



Limited Access

In an email discussion, Dimitri Shelest, founder and CEO of OneRep, an online privacy company that helps people remove their sensitive information from the internet, told Lifewire that the feature makes very good sense as many people store personal and often very sensitive data on their devices, from passwords and pin codes to financial accounts and credit card details.


The press release mentions scant details about the new feature, saying it’s being rolled out via a software update, will reboot the device when activated, and can be turned off only using the owner’s pattern or biometric recognition.



This is why Shelest, while welcoming the feature, stressed that to build trust, Samsung must be absolutely transparent about what this protection entails and how it is provided to ensure no consumer information is compromised.


“Consumers, on their end, should be more curious about how devices and apps installed on them handle their data and adopt the privacy-first approach that helps to avoid breaches, identity theft, and other privacy issues that may cause financial damage and other far -reaching consequences,” said Shelest.



Be Your Own Watchdog

While the feature sounds useful, Kurtz said it doesn’t absolve people from taking care of what they manage, store, and send from personal devices. She cautioned against long-term storage of personally identifiable information (PII) on mobile devices.


“Beyond repair incidents, data can be exfiltrated off of mobile devices through unsecure applications and are a target for bad actors now that mobile payments have become more common,” said Kurtz. “Ensure you set up security, passwords, virus scanning, and offload data that is no longer in use.”


Kurtz praised Samsung for facilitating end-user security but also cautioned people that the repair mode should not be used as an excuse to avoid backing up data on the device before bringing it in for repairs.


But know that the ultimate end-user security is your responsibility.

“Remember, just because a device is locked down does not mean that the device might [not] need a reset due to failures,” said Kurtz. “Avoid the potential data loss by backing up if you can before allowing any repair work to take place.”


The repair mode is being rolled out on the Galaxy S21 series within South Korea. In the release, Samsung noted that the feature will be added to more models over time, though it didn’t mention if and when the feature will be available in other countries.


However, experts think the feature should definitely be more generally available. “So many things seem to be absolutely essential after they have come into our lives that we wonder how we ever functioned before,” said Shelest.


He believes Repair Mode has the potential to become one of those essential features that’ll make us wonder how we ever lived without it. However, the bigger takeaway for him is the fact that privacy and data protection are becoming the focus of many people and companies. This he argued will lead to a flurry of new products and features centered around data safety.


“I love that Samsung is thinking about end-user security,” said Kurtz. “But know that the ultimate end-user security is your responsibility. Make sure to consider what you store, manage and maintain on your device and how to protect your personal information.”

Categories
Australia

Brandon Fabris bailed after knifing ex-Mongols bikie Kimura Davidson at Northbridge’s Millennium karaoke bar

A man accused of slashing an ex-Mongol bikie’s face and neck during a violent fight at a Northbridge karaoke bar has denied he rang the venue from jail to get them to delete CCTV footage of the attack.

Brandon Fabris, who was granted bail in court on Friday just over 24 hours after the bloody attack, also claims he had no idea his alleged victim Kimura Davidson, 29, had former ties to an outlaw motorcycle gang.

His lawyer Roisin Keating told Perth Magistrate’s Court the 12cm cut her client is alleged to have inflicted on Mr Davidson was not as serious as it appeared, despite it requiring surgery, and suggested the charge of grievous bodily harm police had laid in the hours after Thursday’s attack would likely be downgraded.

“It’s not how the injury looks it’s what the injury actually is,” she said on Friday, adding that her client was in no way connected to the alleged victim and hadn’t even known Mr Davidson’s name until seeing it on the charge sheet that morning.

After opposing bail, police prosecution said investigators did not believe the incident was linked to outlaw motorcycle gang activity.

A man has been arrested after allegedly stabbing a man in the neck in Northbridge Thursday morning
Camera IconA man accused of slashing an ex-Mongol bikie’s face and neck during a violent fight at a Northbridge karaoke bar has denied he rang the venue from jail to get them to delete CCTV footage of the attack. Credit: michael wilson/supplied

The revelation came after responding officers were seen securing a bundle of $50 and $100 notes believed to have been found near where the bloody attack unfolded at Millennium.

Photos taken of the crime scene show forensic officers scouring the area around Francis Street, focusing their interest on a restaurant, two karaoke clubs and a side alley.

The court was told the violent attack happened about 2.45am on Thursday, when multiple men, amongst whom was Mr Davidson, approached Mr Fabris at Millennium’s bar.

It was alleged that what started as a verbal argument between the group quickly escalated when a man not identified in court threw a punch.

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Categories
US

US library defunded after refusing to censor LGBTQ authors: ‘We will not ban the books’ | libraries

A small-town library is at risk of shutting down after residents of Jamestown, Michigan, voted to defund it rather than tolerate certain LGBTQ+-themed books.

Residents voted on Tuesday to block a renewal of funds tied to property taxes, Bridge Michigan reported.

The vote leaves the library with funds through the first quarter of next year. Once a reserve fund is used up, it would be forced to close, Larry Walton, the library board’s president, told Bridge Michigan – harming not just readers but the community at large. Beyond books, residents visit the library for its wifi, he said, and it houses the very room where the vote took place.

“Our libraries are places to read, places to gather, places to socialize, places to study, places to learn. I mean, they’re the heart of every community,” Deborah Mikula, executive director of the Michigan Library Association, told the Guardian. “So how can you lose that?”

“We are champions of access,” she added, including materials that might appeal to some in the community and not others. “We want to make sure that libraries protect the right to read.”

The controversy in Jamestown began with a complaint about a memoir by a nonbinary writer, but it soon spiraled into a campaign against Patmos Library itself. After a parent complained about Gender Queer: a Memoir, by Maia Kobabe, a graphic novel about the author’s experience coming out as nonbinary, dozens showed up at library board meetings, demanding the institution drop the book. (The book, which includes depictions of sex, was in the adult section of the library.) Complaints began to target other books with LGBTQ+ themes.

One library director resigned, telling Bridge she had been harassed and accused of indoctrinating kids; her successor of her also left the job. Though the library put Kobabe’s book behind the counter rather than on the shelves, the volumes remained available.

“We, the board, will not ban the books,” Walton told the Associated Press on Thursday.

The library’s refusal to submit to the demands led to a campaign urging residents to vote against renewed funding for the library. A group calling itself the Jamestown Conservatives handed out flyers condemning a library director who “promoted the LGBTQ ideology” and called for making the library “a safe and neutral place for our children.” On Facebook, the group says it exists to “keep our children safe, and protect their purity, as well as to keep the nuclear family intact as God designed”.

Residents ultimately voted 62% to 37% against a measure that would have raised property taxes for roughly $24 in order to fund the library, even as they approved similar measures to fund the fire department and road work. The library was one of just a few in the state to suffer such a loss, Mikula said: “Most passed with flying colors, sometimes up to 80%.”

The vote comes as libraries across the US face a surge in demands to ban books. The American Library Association identified 729 challenges to “library, school and university materials and services” last year, which led to about 1,600 challenges or removals of individual books. That was up from 273 books the year before and represents “the highest number of attempted book bans since we began compiling these lists 20 years ago”, the ALA president, Patricia Wong, said in a press release.

“We’re seeing what appears to be a campaign to remove books, particularly books dealing with LGBTQIA themes and books dealing with racism,” Deborah Caldwell-Stone, head of the ALA’s office for intellectual freedom, told the Guardian last year. Celebrated books by Toni Morrison, Alison Bechdel and Ibram X Kendi are among those facing bans.

“I’m not quite sure what instigated the culture wars that we’re seeing, but libraries are certainly at the front end,” Mikula said. Indeed, as states across the US move to deny LGBTQ+ rights, the ALA’s No 1 “most challenged” book last year was Gender Queer.

“When you remove those books from the shelf or you challenge them publicly in a community, what you’re saying to any young person who identified with that narrative is, ‘We don’t want your story here,’” Kobabe told the New York Times in May.

Each library chooses its own collection, Mikula noted, an intensive process that involves staying abreast of what’s new, listening to what’s being requested, and “weeding out” selections that are rarely on loan.

“Our librarians are qualified. They have advanced degrees,” she said. “We want to make sure that the people who have been hired to do this work are trusted and credible, and that they’re making sure that the full community is represented within their library. And that means having LGBTQ books.”

If community members oppose the inclusion of certain books, there are formal means of requesting their removal, involving a review committee and ascertainment that the person making the appeal has actually read the book in question. But recently, she said, people have been “going to board meetings, whether it’s a library board meeting or a school board meeting and saying, ‘Here’s a list of 300 books. We want them all to be removed from your library.’ And that’s not the proper channel, but they’re loud and their voices carry.”

Categories
Technology

Super Mario 64 Becomes First-Person Horror Game In Fan Project

A guy gets a mysterious letter from his girlfriend, arrives at a castle to find her missing, and loads of rooms full of monsters… It’s the setup to 1996’s classic Super Mario 64sure, but it’s also very much also a survival horror pitch, which is why this new fan-made project is such a perfect fit.

Via nintendo lifethis is Another Princess Is In Our Castle“a Super Mario 64 inspired Horror Experience, where you “decide to come back to Peach’s castle a few years after the princess’ death, but something isn’t quite right…”

While this looks like a first-person mod, it’s actually an entirely fan-made project from the ground up, designed with the perspective in mind. While it’s currently just a short playable demo, its creator Claudio Mondin hopes to eventually flesh it out into something more substantial.

Here’s a trailer made by Mondin:

Another Princess is in our Castle – Super Mario 64 Horror Game Trailer

And here’s some gameplay footage, showing how the main point is to sneak around the castle collecting items, all the while trying to avoid a Princess who is definitely not peachy:

Like Mondin says, it’s pretty much just a demo, so don’t go expecting too much out of it, outside of some sneaking (and the very cool novelty of it). I’m going to play some more later today though, just to see what the promised mystery really is though (hopefully the ghost is just upset that her cake turned out dogshit).

You can download the demo and play it yourself here. I don’t wanna hear anything about lawyers in the commentseither, just go and enjoy something cool that a fan made.

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Categories
Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese calls for greater ABC voice in the Pacific to protect national security

The Prime Minister says it is a matter of national security that the ABC makes more content that projects Australian values ​​and interests to the Indo-Pacific region.

Anthony Albanese delivered an address at the ABC in Sydney on Friday night to celebrate the broadcaster’s 90th anniversary.

The event was attended by ABC Chair Ita Buttrose, Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland, Opposition spokesperson for communications Sarah Henderson and award-winning actor David Wenham.

Current and former ABC luminaries were also in attendance, including former host of 7.30 Kerry O’Brien and former host of Lateline and parliamentary secretary Maxine McKew.

Anthony Albanese with ABC reporters
Anthony Albanese with past and present ABC identities (L-R) Fran Kelly, Jonathan Holmes, Kerry O’Brien and Maxine McKew.(Supplied: James Alcock)

The PM stressed the importance of a strong Australian voice in the Pacific in order to keep other influences out.

“When the ABC voice was removed from the Pacific, guess what nation moved in? Simple as that, a major mistake of foreign policy.”

He said Australia’s “identity, values ​​and interests” must be projected to the Pacific.

“On top of every other consideration, it is a prudent investment in our national security as well as our national interest.

“[This] was undervalued by the previous government, even trivialized. That was a mistake.”

Mr Albanese reaffirmed his government’s commitment to an Indo-Pacific broadcasting strategy, which increases ABC International funding so Australian content can be boosted in the region.

Since taking office in May, Mr Albanese has vowed to counter China’s rising assertiveness in the Pacific region and restore Australia as the partner of choice.

Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong has already made four trips to the Pacific, and both she and Mr Albanese have met with the Solomon Islands Prime Minister, who signed a security pact with China in April.

Ita Buttrose stands at a reading
Ita Buttrose said the ABC was an essential contributor to Australian democracy.(Supplied: James Alcock)

Mr Albanese reiterated previous promises to restore $83.7 million in funding to the ABC, as well as five-year funding terms and options for financial sustainability which safeguard against political interference.

He appeared to aim at the former Morrison government, saying no government should ever fear the ABC “unless it fears the truth.”

“A government that chooses to attack a public broadcaster [is] motivated by either ideology or fear — or a toxic cocktail of the two,” he said.

“A government confident of its own ideas and principles should embrace independent questioning as crucial to the democracy it purports to uphold.”

He described the ABC as a “beacon of trust” and an “insurance policy” against misinformation and disinformation.

The organisation, he said, would play an important role in the discussions about an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.

He also made a small jibe at ABC critics who claim the broadcaster is too focused on “inner-city elites.”

“We’ve all heard the mantras about the ABC as a haven of inner-city elites, repeated with straight faces by critics based in our inner cities.

“I hope those commentators take note of the 48 regional ABC bureaus spread in a great constellation across the country, and the continued existence of Landline.”

Anthony Albanese holds hands with human-size Bluey characters
Anthony Albanese poses with Bluey and Bingo from the hit ABC TV show Bluey.(Supplied: James Alcock)

Ms Buttrose, who once described the broadcaster’s relationship with the Morrison government as “strained”, implored Mr Albanese to keep defending the ABC even if that meant intense pressure on his government.

“Prime Minister, I have no doubt that our brilliant journalists will occasionally irritate your government. Let us all be grateful for it,” she said.

“This process strengthens the Australian democracy we all love.”

Ms Buttrose, who paid special tribute to the ABC’s focus on arts and culture, hit back at critics who have suggested the broadcaster does not represent “mainstream” Australians.

“Can you be any more mainstream than reaching 20 million Australians each week? I don’t think so,” she said.

ABC managing director David Anderson said the government’s commitment to the ABC was “reassuring” and public broadcasters should never be taken for granted.

“We will continue to hold the highest editorial standards and remain fully accountable to the Australian people,” he said.

“As global giants offer more news and entertainment choices, and commercial investment in Australian content declines, the ABC will need to play an even bigger role in sharing and promoting Australian stories and culture.”

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Categories
US

Alex Jones Trial Live Updates: Jury to Consider Punitive Damages

AUSTIN, Texas — A Texas jury on Thursday awarded the parents of a child killed in the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School more than $4 million in compensatory damages from the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, the first time he has been held financially liable for defaming the victims’ parents by spreading lies that they were complicit in a government plot to stage the shooting as a pretext for gun control.

The decision was the first in a series of potential awards against Mr. Jones. On Friday the jury will consider evidence of Mr. Jones’s net worth to determine how much, if anything, to award the parents, Scarlett Lewis and Neil Heslin, in punitive damages.

Two other trials by Sandy Hook parents seeking damages from Mr. Jones have been scheduled for next month, though they may be delayed because his company filed for bankruptcy last week.

Mr. Jones has become increasingly emblematic of how misinformation and false narratives have gained traction in American society. He has played a role in spreading some of recent history’s most pernicious conspiracy theories, such as Pizzagate — in which an Infowars video helped inspire a gunman to attack a pizzeria in Washington, DC — as well as coronavirus myths and “Stop the Steal” falsehoods about election fraud before the Capitol assault on Jan. 6, 2021.

The verdict came after several days of emotional testimony, including 90 minutes on Tuesday when Ms. Lewis personally addressed Mr. Jones, asking him why he knowingly spread lies about the death of her child, Jesse, 6, who died along with 19 other first graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

“Jesse was a real boy. And I am a real mom,” Ms. Lewis told Mr. Jones. Later she admonished him: “Alex, I want you to hear this. We’re more polarized than ever as a country. Some of that is because of you.”

But the most explosive revelation came Wednesday, when the family’s lawyer, Mark Bankston, revealed that Mr. Jones’s legal team had mistakenly sent him the entire contents of Mr. Jones’s cellphone, including at least two years’ worth of incriminating text messages now of interest. to the House committee investigating the attack on the Capitol. The committee is scrutinizing Mr. Jones’s role in planning events surrounding the insurrection, and Mr. Bankston is now seeking the judge’s approval to deliver the text records to prosecutors and the Jan. 6 committee.

Ms. Lewis and Mr. Heslin had requested $150 million in damages, and Mr. Bankston said he was optimistic about what the jury would award on Friday. “You can probably imagine that if a jury returns a verdict exceeding $4 million for these plaintiffs in compensatory damages, I think punishment is probably going to be in that range or higher,” Mr. Bankston said. “I think it’s perfectly expected that we’re going to see an over nine-figure judgment against Mr. Jones.”

He added: “It’s been a long journey, and it’s really, really nice to able to turn and look at my clients, and say ‘he can’t get off scot-free for this. He can not. You had a defendant who went into that courtroom and said, ‘I think I should have to pay them a dollar.’ And this jury said no.”

Mr. Jones said in his bankruptcy filing that he had paid $15 million so far in legal costs for the Sandy Hook litigation. Citing the damages that Ms. Lewis and Mr. Heslin had requested, Mr. Jones called the award a “major victory” in a video posted on Infowars on Thursday night, even as he urged viewers to buy products from his website to stave off what I have portrayed financial ruin.

“I admitted I was wrong,” he said. “I admitted it was a mistake. I admitted that I followed disinformation but not on purpose. I apologized to the families. And the jury understood that.”

Mr. Jones lost a series of Sandy Hook defamation suits by default last year after repeatedly failing to provide court-ordered documents and testimony. Those rulings set the stage for the trial this summer.

More important than money, the Sandy Hook families have said, is society’s verdict on a culture in which viral misinformation damages lives and destroys reputations.

“Speech is free, but lies you have to pay for,” Mr. Bankston told the jury last week. “This is a case about creating change.”

At the heart of the trial was a June 2017 episode of NBC’s “Sunday Night With Megyn Kelly” that profiled Mr. Jones. In the broadcast, Mr. Heslin protested Mr. Jones’s denial of the shooting. He recalled his last moments of him with Jesse, saying, “I held my son with a bullet hole through his head of him.”

Afterward, Mr. Jones and Owen Shroyer, an Infowars host, aired shows implying that Mr. Heslin had lied.

“Will there be a clarification from Heslin or Megyn Kelly?” Mr. Shroyer said on Infowars. “I wouldn’t hold your breath.”

During the trial, Mr. Jones’s lawyer, F. Andino Reynal, said that Mr. Jones was essentially running his own defense. After much uncertainty about whether the conspiracy broadcaster would testify, he was adamant that he would appear as the sole witness in his defense of him.

Mr. Heslin and Ms. Lewis deployed a variety of experts. The trial opened with testimony from Dan Jewiss, a retired Connecticut State Police investigator who led the Sandy Hook case; a forensic psychiatrist and the psychologist who treated Mr. Heslin and Ms. Lewis; and several Infowars employees, whose dubious statements allowed the family’s lawyers to submit evidence that was damaging to Mr. Jones, including a televised version of the full interview with Ms. Kelly, in which Mr. Jones advanced incendiary false claims.

Mr. Jones’s audience and corresponding revenues have risen sharply, to more than $50 million annually, in the decade since Sandy Hook.

His defense of the Second Amendment after the mass shooting brought attention from mainstream news organizations. But it was Mr. Jones’s alliance with former President Donald J. Trump, who appeared on Infowars in December 2015, that moved him from the far-right fringes to the center of Republican Party populism.

Mr. Jones and Mr. Trump have often echoed the same incendiary false claims, including the racist “birther” lie that President Barack Obama was not born in the United States; that Muslims in the New York area “celebrated” the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks; and the 2020 election falsehoods that brought violence to the Capitol last year.

Categories
Technology

Square Enix’s Reason For Selling Crystal Dynamics And Eidos Makes No Sense

Yesterday, on a Square Enix earnings call, the company explained its recent sale of Crystal Dynamics and Eidos to Embracer Group, which was at the fire sale price of $300 million for the pair of them.

Their explanation is…bizarre to say the least, and according to Square Enix, the sale was “driven by concerns that the titles cannibalized sales of the rest of the group and so it could improve capital efficiency”

Asanalyst David Gibson explained in a thread about the call, this makes little sense, especially when by the time the sale is over, Square Enix has tons of cash on hand, more than enough to fund games and studios, and the real reason appears to be making itself a more attractive target for acquisition, but they refuse to say that.

At baseline, the notion that Crystal Dynamics or Eidos games are cannibalizing other Square Enix games makes little sense to anyone. First of all, Square Enix is ​​constantly complaining that games from those studios are underperforming and not selling. enoughso how could they be significantly cannibalizing Square Enix’s other games?

Then of course, the scheduling of releases and the genres of the games have literally nothing to do with each other. There’s no coherent argument about what Tomb Raider, Avengers, Deus Ex or Guardians of the Galaxy games are “cannibalizing.” The only thing I can even remotely think of here is the release of Avengers and Outriders in the same window, two live service looters, albeit if anything Avengers got the worse end of that stick, and Outriders has been extolled by Square Enix as a success and important IP for their future. But what do any CD/Eidos games have to do with “cannibalizing” other big Square Enix series like Final Fantasy or Dragon Quest?

Again, the overwhelmingly common theory here is that Square Enix and Crystal Dynamics/Eidos have not been a good fit for years, and they wanted to offload them in order to become a slimmed down, more desirable target for acquisition by someone like Sony. While nothing official has been announced, an eventual Sony acquisition, given the history between the two companies and the current state of the market where all independent publishers are getting snapped up by megacorps, would be less than a surprising development. But the fact that Square Enix is ​​being this disingenuous about what’s really happening here is somewhat tiresome and corporate speak at its worst.

Meanwhile, Crystal Dynamics is still making Avengers content, helping Microsoft with Perfect Dark and starting a new Unreal Engine 5 Tomb Raider game for Embracer. Eidos is working on a number of secretive UE5 projects, and we could see the return of IPs like Thief or Legacy of Kain from them. Square Enix, meanwhile, is set to release its highest profile game in a long while, Final Fantasy XVI, next year.

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Pick up my sci-fi novels the hero killer series and The Earthborn Trilogy.

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Categories
Sports

Fifteen Australians targeted by UAE Twenty20 league

As many as 15 Australian players have been offered contracts worth up to $700,000 a year to abandon the Big Bash League and play in the UAE Twenty20 tournament in January.

The scale of the attempted raid on Australian players, revealed to The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald by senior cricket sources, goes far beyond the threat of losing one player – David Warner – to the UAE because he does not have a BBL deal.

UAE contract sizes so far above and beyond what has been on offer in the BBL have placed Cricket Australia and the Australian Cricketers Association under pressure to reassure players that they are not being left behind the rest of the world by remaining loyal to the game in this country.

As many as 15 Australian players have been offered big money contracts to abandon the BBL for the UAE.

As many as 15 Australian players have been offered big money contracts to abandon the BBL for the UAE.Credit:AP

Chris Lynn, who lost his lucrative deal with the Brisbane Heat, is eager to sign on with the UAE league, but is also weighing up reaching terms with the Adelaide Strikers. Signing a BBL deal would make it contractually difficult for Lynn to also play in the UAE.

While CA is in talks with Warner about finding a way to get him back into the BBL this summer, the governing body’s chief executive Nick Hockley and his player union counterpart Todd Greenberg have been fielding countless calls from players about the offers.

Greenberg said he had been talking to players about the need for the group to take part in the BBL this summer, in some cases on inferior money to the market rates being offered elsewhere, in order to secure the best possible pay deal with CA when the current memorandum of understanding expires next year, and a richer cut of the next broadcast agreement to be signed in 2024.

“I’ve been really heartened by the maturity of the players in response, because after a discussion and communication and a bit more context, they’re not just thinking about the short-term,” Greenberg said.

“They do have this genuine sense of care about the game – if they didn’t, they would be mercenaries and take what’s in front of them. But they’re not, they’re actually taking a mature, considered approach to this and trying to be part of the solution. This comes down to establishing trust with your own players and the relationships you develop with them.

“Sometimes when you work closely with players, you’ve got to tell them what they need to hear, not what they want to hear. We’re not in the business of being sycophants – occasionally you need to square them up, talk to them as adults, and give them proper information and let them make some informed decisions with a long-term focus.”