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17 May 2025   
  
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1000 rides and counting: Is this NZ's biggest luge fan?
Izon Grey-Epiha has made a career out of his love for the luge. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 8:05am 

Hastings: Rescue kitten faces life-or-death surgery, SPCA seeks support
Hastings miracle kitten survives alone and blind, before SPCA intervention. 
© 2025 NZ Herald 7:25am 

This new VPN technology doesn’t want to know who you are – that’s why NymVPN stands out from the crowd
A VPN is a powerful tool to browse securely and protect your information. But the service will really only be safe when it is decentralized, and no data can be traced back to you. This is what makes NymVPN unique in the market. Where many other VPNs ask you to provide email address and pay by credit card, NymVPN does just the opposite, making you completely anonymous.  Behind NymVPN is Chelsea Manning, the whistleblower from WikiLeaks. This says a lot about their level of ambition. This is not a VPN that compromises. It is a service based on the privacy technology of the future, where no one – even Nym – knows who you are.  From $4.54/month (+5 months free!) How it works  Many traditional VPNs save logs centrally. This means that your activity can be linked to you if they are hacked, or if someone forces them to disclose information. NymVPN instead uses a mixnet, a decentralized network that mixes your traffic with others in a way that makes it impossible to track what any individual has done.  This technology is especially useful in times of increased surveillance and censorship, as it makes it harder for hackers, government agencies and companies to monitor or restrict your internet use.  Nym You also do not need to register with an email address. Instead, you get an anonymous access code that becomes your unique key to the service.  Unlike other VPNs, NymVPN is the first to make your payment information completely detached from your NymVPN account, so your online activity cannot be traced back to you.  When you pay for NymVPN, it happens completely anonymously. You use a credit card or cryptocurrency that is converted to an anonymized VPN access ticket. Thanks to these so-called zero-knowledge credentials, your online activity is never linked to your payment information, and therefore is never linked to your identity. In this way, your privacy is fully preserved.  From $4.54/month (+5 months free!) VPN for everyone  NymVPN offers the same convenience as other leading VPN services. A global network of fast servers makes it easy to stream movies and shows, play online and surf without interruption.  While other VPNs can collect data about you, even if they promise not to save it, NymVPN lacks the technical ability to collect anything at all. You can watch your favorite series without buffering, protect your IP and avoid geo-blocks, and at the same time be sure that no one logs your activity in the background. It gives you full freedom online without having to reveal a single bit of personal data.  Despite the advanced technology, NymVPN is designed for ease of use. You don’t have to juggle complex settings or technical details to get started. The installation is fast and smooth. The entire experience is optimized to allow you as a user to surf, stream and work online without having to worry about what you leave behind.  NymVPN is developed by an international team of cybersecurity, cryptographics and privacy experts. Among the key figures are Chelsea Manning, known for his work in exposing irregularities and defending the right to transparency and anonymity online. Other prominent names behind the service include Ben Laurie, a pioneer in secure web development, and Professor Bart Preneel from KU Leuven, a leading researcher in cryptographics and information security. 
© 2025 PC World 7:15am 

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The empire strikes back with F-bombs: AI Darth Vader goes rogue with profanity, slurs
Fortnite AI voice trained on James Earl Jones spoke curse words and insults before patch. 
© 2025 Ars Technica 7:35am 

Do HBO’s owners have any actual idea what they’re doing with Max?
Max is changing its name back to HBO Max, and much like The Joker in one of Warner’s DC Universe films, I can’t stop laughing. Three years have passed since the mega-merger that birthed Warner Bros. Discovery and led to a new name for its flagship streaming service. The Max brand was supposed to emphasize a breadth of programming beyond the HBO catalog, but Warner’s executives now say the forthcoming rebrand (or unbrand) represents a return to quality over quantity. This would be easier to accept if HBO’s owners had any credibility left. But over the past few years, pretty much everything the Warner-Discovery merger was supposed to accomplish has failed. Now, the company can no longer articulate what it’s aiming for, other than to squeeze a little extra profit from a flailing enterprise. It’s as funny as it is sad. Max’s broken promises Let’s go back to when AT&T announced it would spin off WarnerMedia into a new company and merge it with Discovery. (The spin-off itself acknowledged that AT&T shouldn’t have bought Warner in the first place, but that’s a whole other story.) Here’s what the companies’ 2021 press release claimed the merger would accomplish: Increase investments in original programming for its streaming services. Enhance programming options “across its global linear pay TV and broadcast channels.” Create new opportunities for “under-represented storytellers and independent creators.” Give viewers “innovative video experiences and points of engagement.” Here’s what the company actually did: Became the first streamer to remove popular original programming from its catalog. Axed completed films for the sake of tax write-offs. Lost the rights to live NBA games, the crown jewel of its sports programming, starting next season. Quickly started cancelling shows that highlighted underrepresented communities. Did not deliver any notable video innovations, but did start charging extra for 4K video and will soon shake down password sharers for more money. Raised prices for ad-free streaming. Paying more for less (again) More broadly, Warner Bros. Discovery promised to deliver what CFO Gunnar Wiedenfels called a “blowout DTC (direct-to-consumer) product.” At a 2022 industry conference, Wiedenfels said this service would be “one of the most complete, sort of four quadrant, old-young-male-female products out there.” Over time, the company did take some steps to bulk up Max’s offerings. It brought in Discovery’s catalog of reality TV programming, launched a live feed of CNN programming, and added live sports from TNT and other Warner cable channels. But with the name reverting back to HBO Max this summer, Warner says completeness is no longer the goal. President and CEO of streaming JB Perrette said in a press release that HBO Max will offer “not everything for everyone in a household, but something distinct and great for adults and families.” That likely means less of what Max added over the past few years. Its sports offerings will be slim without the NBA; CNN will have its own separate subscription service, raising questions about the future of Max’s CNN programming; and cable channels such as Discovery could be spun off into a separate company. “The things subscribers want from us are HBO programming, scripted dramas, comedies, documentaries, the pay-one [licensing window] movies, library movies, and basically the Warner Bros. TV library,” CEO of HBO and Max Content Casey Bloys said. News, sports, and reality programming are conspicuously absent from that statement. While Warner hasn’t announced any immediate changes to HBO Max’s content, the likely outcome is that you’ll be paying more for less. Bad for business, too If it makes you feel any better, this hasn’t worked out for Warner Bros. Discovery’s business, either. Like other TV programmers, Warner has been leaning on profits from traditional pay TV bundles to fund its forays into streaming. The merger was supposed to help, as the combined entity would have more bargaining power to increase pay TV carriage fees. But with the loss of NBA rights and the overall trend toward hollowing out original pay TV programming, those channels have become increasingly worthless. Carriage fees for TNT are now flat or in decline, and cable companies such as Comcast and Spectrum are getting Max thrown into their TV packages at no extra charge, hurting Warner’s streaming revenues. Last August, Warner took a $9 billion write-down on the value of its TV assets and may now look to spin them off; meanwhile, the company’s stock price has fallen from $24.88 on the day of the merger to $9.05 as of this writing. All this just so we can get back to where we started, with a service supposedly focused on quality again. Given what we’ve seen over the past three years, you’d be justified in seeing this as just an excuse to cut more corners and fatten executives’ pay packages instead. Sign up for Jared’s Cord Cutter weekly newsletter to get more streaming advice every Friday 
© 2025 PC World 7:15am 

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