The fascinating story behind the explosive success of Candy Crush

What does “time well spent” mean for games like Candy Crush?

If you own a smartphone, chances are you know Candy Crush and maybe even the game’s latest incarnation, Candy Crush Friends Saga. What you may not know is the story behind the franchise: How an Italian entrepreneur put all his cash on the line as a co-founder of King, the company behind the game, in the early 2000s, with an idea of how to re-invent gaming for the online world.

That person is Riccardo Zacconi. He’s guided the company through the many phases of online gaming (desktop, Facebook, mobile, and more), taking King public and eventually selling it to gaming giant Activision Blizzard in 2015. In this episode of MashTalk, Zacconi talks about that journey, his thoughts on Mark Zuckerberg, and what the future holds for mobile gaming now that people are starting to question all the time they’re spending on their devices playing games like, well, Candy Crush.

Follow @MashTalk on Twitter.

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Here’s how to tell if your Facebook account was one of the 29 million hacked

This is my repentant face.
This is my repentant face.

Image: Christophe Morin / getty

2017%2f09%2f18%2f2b%2fjackbw5.32076By Jack Morse

Twenty-nine million Facebook users had their accounts accessed by hackers

This, as it sounds, is very bad. And while the larger ramifications of the breach, announced two weeks ago, are as of yet not fully understood, Facebook claims it has a decent grasp on one important detail: Whether or not you are one of the victims. 

Here’s how to check: First, while logged into your Facebook account, head on over to the Help Center and scroll to the bottom of the page. You’ll see one of several detailed notices. 

SEE ALSO: Facebook now says 30 million affected by hack, will notify users

For starters, if you’re likely in the clear you’ll find this message: “Based on what we’ve learned so far, your Facebook account has not been impacted by this security incident. If we find more Facebook accounts were impacted, we will reset their access tokens and notify those accounts.”

Now, if your account was accessed, you’ll see a very different warning. Specifically, Facebook will tell you what info of yours it believes was scraped. If you’re on mobile, it may look like the examples the company provided on its blog. 

Fun.

Image: facebook

New York Times reporter Mike Isaac tweeted screenshots from his own account, which show that all kinds of personal data — including his address, phone number, and date of birth (among other things) — were scraped by whoever is behind this. 

now the negative: if you’ve been affected by this attack, this is the wealth of personal information they’ve accessed.

the below screen is for my personal account, which was affected. thanks Facebook! pic.twitter.com/aa7jaEepro

— rat king (@MikeIsaac) October 12, 2018

So, if Facebook says your “account has not been impacted,” are you in the clear? Probably! Well, that is, unless Facebook finds out later that you aren’t.

After all, the company based these notices on what it’s “learned so far.” It’s fair to wonder what new information the executives at Facebook will learn tomorrow. 

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Paul George: Jimmy Butler ‘Has a Very Valid Point. I’m on Jimmy’s Side’

Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jimmy Butler (23) drives against Oklahoma City Thunder forward Paul George (13) in the first quarter of an NBA basketball game Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2018, in Minneapolis. The Timberwolves defeated the Thunder 104-88. (AP Photo/Andy Clayton-King)

Andy Clayton-King/Associated Press

As Minnesota Timberwolves star Jimmy Butler continues to await a resolution on his trade request, he has found an ally in Paul George

Per ESPN’s Royce Young, George said he’s on Butler’s side because he has “a very valid point” about how things currently stand with the T-Wolves. 

Royce Young @royceyoung

Paul George says he’s talked to Jimmy Butler about what’s going on in Minnesota: “Jimmy has a very valid point. I’m on Jimmy’s side.” https://t.co/TJGWBepXcQ

Following an outburst directed at coaches, front-office personnel and teammates during Wednesday’s practice, Butler told ESPN’s Rachel Nichols he was being “brutally honest” with everyone:

“Everybody’s so scared to be honest with one another. If you didn’t like the way I handled myself in practice, one of the players come up to me. Somebody say something, anybody. I’m not gonna take it as offense, it’s not personal. ‘Jimmy, you shouldn’t have done that.’ ‘Yeah, you probably right,’ and I would’ve said, ‘I ain’t hooped in I don’t know how long. I’m passionate about it. I love the game and I love to win.’ And that’s all I was out there doing. I went into practice today and I competed.”

The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported Thursday that Butler led a players-only meeting in which his message was making it clear he’s Minnesota’s leader and will play in games with them when the regular season begins if he’s not traded. 

George was in a similar situation with the Indiana Pacers when he told them during the 2017 offseason he planned to leave as a free agent the following year. The Pacers traded him to the Oklahoma City Thunder in July 2017.

Butler’s first chance to play with his Minnesota teammates in a game will come on Oct. 17 in the regular-season opener against the San Antonio Spurs. 

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Sage, Kesha, And Chika Unite To Break The Gun-Violence Cycle In Powerful New Video



YouTube

After this year’s horrific mass shooting in Parkland, Florida left 17 dead, young new artist Sage began work on a song. Sage, then a high-school senior, brought an early version of the tune to his sister, Kesha. On the final track — released on Friday (October 12) via a gripping video made in partnership with March For Our Lives — the two team up on a powerful, memorable chorus: “I don’t wanna be brave / I just wanna be safe.”

The song’s three minutes are also highlighted by verses from rising Nigerian-American rapper Chika, whose words paint a painfully visual of the gun-violence epidemic in America. And in the accompanying video, that epidemic, and its frustrating cyclicality, is on full display.

Sage appears briefly on a television alongside talking heads discussing that very cycle, but the rest of the runtime is devoted to portraying what’s called “the most vicious cycle” — in other words, what happens after a mass shooting, when we ultimately end up exactly where we began. To illustrate this, the YouTube upload contains three runs of the same video, caught in a seemingly endless loop, as a gunman’s bullet (and the gun lobby’s deep pockets) sets off a twisted Rube Goldberg-like labyrinth of damage throughout a school.

Kesha paired her contributions on this song with a stirring op-ed in Teen Vogue, also published on October 12. “It’s sad to me that many politicians, pundits, and everyday Americans dismiss gun violence, not just mass shootings in schools, as just another part of the culture in our country,” she wrote. “I wish it wasn’t. It doesn’t have to be.”

She references her brother Sage, as well as their collaborator Chika, as fellow supporters of “candidates who support common sense gun laws in this November’s midterm elections, so that we can finally end senseless gun violence.”

“United, our voices are more powerful, and now we want to ask you to be part of this movement with us,” she ends the op-ed, calling for everyone to come together to “break the vicious cycle.” Read her full, compelling letter here, and watch the “Safe” music video above.

For more from March For Our Lives, see MTV News’s coverage from the historic rally in March 2018 below.

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DuckDuckGo, the pro-privacy search engine, hits 30 million daily searches

In an age where it seems nearly every major internet service is looking to hawk your personal data, one pro-privacy search engine is experiencing massive growth.

DuckDuckGo, which bills itself as “the search engine that doesn’t track you,” has just hit 30 million daily searches. According to the company, this is a new daily record for the search engine. DuckDuckGo makes its traffic stats publicly available in an effort to be as transparent as possible. 

SEE ALSO: A simple Google search led to the biggest scoop of the Trump tax story

This new company record is about a 50% increase from its record of over 20 million searches in 2017. DuckDuckGo’s reached this new daily search record just this past Monday.

DuckDuckGo fun fact: it took us seven years to reach 10 million private searches in one day, then another two years to hit 20 million, and now less than a year later we’re at 30 million! Thank you all 😃 #ComeToTheDuckSidehttps://t.co/qlSaz4j9ZH

— DuckDuckGo (@DuckDuckGo) October 11, 2018

As pointed out by Search Engine Journal, it’s interesting to note that DuckDuckGo’s new daily search record comes just days after news broke that Google exposed nearly 500,000 of its users’ data. 

While there’s no proof of causation, DuckDuckGo cites previous similarly ecosystem altering events in its traffic data. The privacy-focused search engine notes a rise in usage after events like Google’s privacy policy change in early 2012 and Edward Snowden’s NSA leaks.

While DuckDuckGo is a long way from competing with reigning search king Google, which receives over 3.5 billion daily search queries and makes up 77 percent of the search market share, the niche privacy-first search engine is pulling it all off with only 53 employees

In fact, DuckDuckGo has already surpassed companies in the search space that are many times its size. The Verge notes that with DuckDuckGo representing 0.18 percent of the global search market share, its now ranking ahead of AOL, a former giant in the industry.

DuckDuckGo may be a tiny operation compared to giants like Google, but its explosive growth is proof that between privacy leaks and data hacks, even the average internet users are seeking out services that value their personal information.

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Facebook now says 30 million affected by hack, will notify users

Image: brittany herbert/mashable

2016%2f09%2f16%2f8f%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.c1888By Karissa Bell

Facebook has finally shared an update on the massive hack that affected millions of accounts. 

Of the 50 million thought to be “directly affected,” Facebook now says that only 30 million accounts were impacted.

More importantly, Facebook says it plans on notifying those affected by the hack in the “coming days,” with a notice that will appear at the top of News Feeds. People can also check whether or not they were affected in Facebook’s Help Center.

The bad news it Facebook now confirms that 29 million accounts had some information lifted by hackers. Here’s a description of what was accessed, according to Facebook’s VP of Product Management, Guy Rosen:

For 15 million people, attackers accessed two sets of information – name and contact details (phone number, email, or both, depending on what people had on their profiles). For 14 million people, the attackers accessed the same two sets of information, as well as other details people had on their profiles. This included username, gender, locale/language, relationship status, religion, hometown, self-reported current city, birthdate, device types used to access Facebook, education, work, the last 10 places they checked into or were tagged in, website, people or Pages they follow, and the 15 most recent searches. For 1 million people, the attackers did not access any information.

Though Facebook confirms no passwords were compromised in the breach, the amount of personal identifying information scraped by hackers is potentially devastating. 

Your phone number, email address, birth date, relationship status, location, and employer details are all pieces of information that potential hackers could or identity thieves could use against you for years to come. 

If your password is stolen, you change your password. The damage is done and you move on.

But if all your identifying personal information is stolen? You can’t change that. It could haunt you for the rest of your life.

— Will Oremus (@WillOremus) October 12, 2018

Facebook says it will also warns people affected by the breach to be wary of suspicious emails and phone calls.

During a call with reporters Friday, Rosen said the attack appeared to be unrelated to the upcoming elections. “We have no reason to believe that this specific attack was related to the midterms,” he said.

Rosen also confirmed Facebook’s previous assessment that there is “no evidence so far” that any data from third-party apps was accessed.

Additional reporting by Jack Morse.

This story is developing…

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Yankees’ Didi Gregorius to Undergo Tommy John Surgery, Miss Start of 2019 Season

NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 21:  Didi Gregorius #18 of the New York Yankees connects on a 2-run home run in the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium on September 21, 2018 in the Bronx borough of New York City.  (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

Mike Stobe/Getty Images

New York Yankees shortstop Didi Gregorius will undergo Tommy John surgery this offseason after having an MRI on his right elbow Thursday.

The Yankees announced the news Friday, and manager Aaron Boone commented on the situation, as seen in the following video courtesy of YES Network:

YES Network @YESNetwork

BREAKING: Didi Gregorius to undergo Tommy John surgery. https://t.co/TSILShl8gr

Boone said he’s optimistic that Gregorius will be back at “some point” during the 2019 season and added that there’s a “realistic chance he plays the bulk of the season.”

He also said the team believes Gregorius suffered the injury during one of their ALDS playoff games against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park.

Gregorius enjoyed a career year in 2018. He hit .268 while posting 27 home runs, 86 RBI and a .494 slugging percentage despite missing 28 games due to injury. His 4.6 WAR ranked eighth among qualified shortstops, per FanGraphs.

Gregorius tore cartilage in his wrist while sliding into home for the winning run in a 3-2 11-inning win over the Baltimore Orioles on Sept. 22, but he still managed to return in time for the playoffs.

While New York beat the Oakland Athletics in the American League Wild Card Game, it fell to the Red Sox in four games in the ALDS.

With Gregorius set to miss the start of the 2019 season, the Yankees will be without a left-handed power bat and their most reliable infield defender.

The Yankees are fortunate to have a great deal of depth, plus they will have entire offseason to explore the trade and free-agent market.

Highly touted youngster Gleyber Torres can move from second base to shortstop if need be, and other in-house options include utility players Ronald Torreyes and Tyler Wade.

New York could also look to re-sign veterans Neil Walker or Adeiny Hechavarria after they performed well down the stretch.  

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This Snapchat filter couple’s costume is an amazing idea

If you’re still trying to figure out a couple’s costume for Halloween, look no further, for we have found the perfect couple’s costume: the filter/no filter.

SEE ALSO: Want a super easy Halloween costume idea? This ‘Jurassic World’ dinosaur mask is just $16.

A photo of the couple’s costume shared by Redditor lackingprivacy quickly gained traction on the subreddit r/funny for cleverly poking fun at the transformative powers of Snapchat filters.

In the photo, the person sporting a “#nofilter” sign, has a five o’clock shadow and is clearly sporting zero makeup, while the person sporting the “#filter” sign is expertly groomed, and sporting a butterfly headband that is now synonymous with Snapchat filters.

The costume is so well-executed that I am now reconsidering my couple’s costume idea.

And, if you’re not totally in love with this idea, or you’re dressing up solo this Halloween, you can find a bunch of other awesome costume ideas here and here.

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Gaza through the eyes of a poet

It shouldn’t be a surprise that Gaza is fertile ground for a poet.

The Israeli occupation seems surreal here. At times it can be hard to see it; unlike other parts of Palestine, there are no young Israeli soldiers patrolling the streets in olive uniforms and armoured vehicles. The tools of oppression are largely hidden from sight.

Maybe that’s why so many Gaza Palestinians seem to gaze into the distance.

There is a constant buzz of Israeli drones – many of them armed – overhead. But when you look up, all you see is a clear blue sky.

Walking along the beach I’d see people staring out to sea. The Israeli ships that help impose the blockade are out of view so all that can be seen is the beautiful Mediterranean horizon. 

I was even struck to find this trait of “looking out” at the protests organised by poet Ahmed Abu Artema, the man we followed in our film, Gaza: Between Fire and Sea. Although some young men run up to the perimeter fence, most of the crowd just stand and stare out across the barbed wire, through the smoke of burning tyres to a land once theirs. It is as though they are staring into history, staring into their dreams.

The reality of collective punishment is brutal on body and soul.

Making this film was my first trip to this sliver of land squeezed between a hostile Israel, an increasingly inhospitable Egypt and the Mediterranean Sea.

There is a constant buzz of Israeli drones – many of them armed – overhead. But when you look up, all you see is a clear blue sky.

Karim Shah, documentary filmmaker

The phrase “open prison” is often used to describe Gaza, but the reality of this concept only truly hit home once I arrived at Erez. The Erez – or Beit Hanoun – Crossing is the only entry point into the Strip from Israel. It looks like a cross between an airport and a maximum security facility. The lack of people, other than Israeli border guards, creates an eerie atmosphere. But one thing became clear – I was entering a prison.

When I met Ahmed I was struck by the seeming contradiction: a protest leader who loves little more than to spend time in a library. This quiet, patient man defied the stereotype of shouting Gazans we see on most news channels.

Filmmaker Karim Shah with Ahmed Abu Artema, the Gaza Palestinian poet and one of the lead organisers of the Great March of Return [Al Jazeera]

He was the first of many contradictions that would confront me during my month in Gaza: A prison with a beautiful beach that smells of sewage, a place where the traffic is noisy and horns beep impatiently, but the people are warm and kind, where you’ll often spot masked men wearing green headbands and armed with Kalashnikovs, but where children are the main force on the streets.

“What’s your name?’ the children would ask me. “Karim,” I’d answer. They’d stop to take in my reply. “Hmm … what’s your name?” they’d ask again, refusing to let their limited English prevent them from continuing the conversation.

There is no ambiguity about what Israel’s more than decade-long blockade of the Gaza Strip is doing. It’s killing people. After a day of visiting young men injured during the protests, most shot in the leg, their lives and those of their families devastated, my last visit was to the Shifa hospital.

I wasn’t allowed to film there but spent some time in front of the emergency wing. A group of young men were sitting on the curb, a few of them crying. I asked what had happened. Their friend had been shot dead, they said. I was confused because I knew there had been no protests that day. Perhaps he was a farmer who’d got too close to the fence? I soon found out that their young friend had shot himself in the head. Later that night my colleague confided that such acts of despair were becoming more common. Maybe that’s why some young men run up to the fence, towards the Israeli snipers, nestled in their bunkers, fingers on triggers, ready to kill with impunity?

Since Gaza’s non-violent protests began, in March 2018, nearly 200 people have been killed and 18,000 injured, many of them seriously [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

I’m used to such stories. It’s my job to help them be heard. But the most heartbreaking encounter for me was while filming some general shots on a hill in Gaza City. I focused on three teenage boys sitting together, looking out over their city. They eventually came and talked to me. They were all 14 years old; healthy and good looking, cheeky and smart. I asked them if they thought they’d ever be able to leave the Gaza Strip, even just to visit the West Bank. They laughed at me and the naivety of my question: “Of course not.”

This is why what Ahmed is doing is important. People need poetry and the peaceful protest it inspires. If they are ever going to be free, they have to let their souls and imaginations soar first. Or at least I have to believe that. It may have been going on for 70 years, but we can’t allow this oppression to become a given.

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