Im surely not the only one who thinks this article is ai generated? it spams the exact same structure and has the typical smells
Xylight
I’m the developer of the Photon client. Try it out
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the linux kernel is on that list, bro it’s time to switch!
Xylight@lemdro.idto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•EA is hiring a Senior Anti-Cheat Engineer to lead development of a native ARM64 driver for their Javelin kernel anti-cheat system and start laying groundwork for Linux/Proton supportEnglish
3·1 month agogood points. yeah, client side anticheats are still vulnerable and I think they’re mostly just popular out of pure laziness. Making a good server side anticheat takes a lot of thought into what is and isn’t possible so it’s easier for a company to just slap on some slop and get 80% of the way there.
in valorant’s case, their anticheat is also a great date collection software to beam every possible identifier straight to John Data or whoever it ends up with.
Xylight@lemdro.idto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•EA is hiring a Senior Anti-Cheat Engineer to lead development of a native ARM64 driver for their Javelin kernel anti-cheat system and start laying groundwork for Linux/Proton supportEnglish
131·1 month agoi’m a proponent of server-side anticheat, but there is a few reasons games do it client side.
- server-side anticheats depend on heuristics and “checks” determining if a player is doing something “impossible”.
- one example would be checking if the player somehow has perfect accuracy on every player before even shooting, or if the player moves further than is possible in a given timespan (these are very simple examples).
- this is MUCH more difficult to make accurate, since these checks are fallible to network conditions or other hiccups.
- most online games opt for client-side anticheat since it lets the devs just “trust the client” easier. it can also detect things that would be impossible server-side, like X-ray (seeing other players through walls. this is impossible to detect server side).
Xylight@lemdro.idto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Linux gamers: Do you ever occasionally shut down your PC?English
3·1 month agoHibernation is underrated. If you don’t want to risk losing stuff you have open but want 0 energy draw, hibernation is great. As a bonus, you can store your swap file in an encrypted partition to prevent attacks possible with normal sleep mode.
I have my sleep option set to automatically switch to hibernation if it’s been asleep for 3 hours.
Xylight@lemdro.idto
Google Pixel@lemmy.world•RIP my old Pixel. Screen is toast. Is the 10A literally just a 9a in disguise?English
1·1 month agodeleted by creator
Xylight@lemdro.idto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•Having the first name of Al must be frustrating as it looks so much like AI.English
1·2 months agojoin the serif revolution
I already use librewolf on desktop which is a great experience. But Firefox on mobile is just so horribly laggy and has a dated UI, the only offering it has is ublock origin and reader mode. Brave is the only real mobile browser choice I have since it has pretty good tracker blocking and I can disable nearly all of the problems you’ve mentioned here.





@grok is this true