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Elon Musk claims X crashed because of a massive cyberattack

Mashable - 1 hour 43 min ago

Elon Musk claimed Monday that X suffered a "massive cyberattack," which caused the site and app to crash throughout the day.

Musk quoted a post theorizing there was an attack on X, claiming that was, in fact, the case.

He wrote: "There was (still is) a massive cyberattack against 𝕏. We get attacked every day, but this was done with a lot of resources. Either a large, coordinated group and/or a country is involved. Tracing …"

This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.

Musk didn't provide evidence that X was under attack and isn't always the most reliable source of information. He previously claimed a Spaces interview with then-candidate Donald Trump suffered an attack in August of 2024, for instance, which X employees said wasn't true.

Whatever the case may be, X first crashed for many users in the early hours of Monday morning, Eastern time. According to user reports on Down Detector, it seemed to rebound and re-crash a few times throughout the day. Things appeared to be mostly fixed by Monday afternoon, Eastern time.

Musk himself was back to posting conspiracy-adjacent attacks at his perceived enemies. So things were back to normal.

Happy Face review: True crime fans, your next TV obsession has arrived

Mashable - 1 hour 55 min ago

Understanding our parents can sometimes feel impossible, staring across a generational divide and an ocean of shared memories that we see differently from each other. Now imagine how much harder coming to grips with the complexity of your parent would be if your dad was an infamous serial killer. That's the premise of Happy Face, a new true crime drama from The Good Wife creators Robert King and Michelle King. 

Annaleigh Ashford, who recently thrilled on Broadway as the murderous Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd, stars as Melissa Reed. Melissa is a wife, a mother, and a professional make-up artist — and the haunted daughter of the Happy Face Killer, Keith Jesperson (The Substance's Dennis Quaid). During the decades since he was caught, they have been estranged. That is, until he claims there was a ninth victim the cops never tied to him. But he'll only give details to his darling "Missy," who just so happens to work for a talk show that's equally eager for exclusive interviews with this serial killer.

This is a rich setup for a crime investigation thread. But what makes Happy Face a standout is how series showrunner Jennifer Cacicio balances the murder mystery with character-driven drama that is alarmingly relatable. Be warned: This show is ruthlessly gripping. 

Happy Face is based on a true crime case and a survivor's story.  Credit: Ed Araquel / Paramount+

The first episode of Happy Face details the broad strokes of Jesperson's real-life crimes. A truck driver in the 1990s, he targeted young women that he came across in his travels, sexually assaulting and then fatally strangling them. His jarring nickname came from the letters he sent to the media as taunts. These menacing missives were signed with a doodle of a happy face. 

The troubling juxtaposition of Jesperson's predilection for a cheerful exterior and a dark heart is reflected brilliantly in Happy Face through Quaid's unsettling performance. In the present-day timeline, he is downright jolly as he addresses Melissa, the grown daughter who's being morally blackmailed to reconnect with him. Yet, despite the orange jumpsuit and the shackles, he's giving off a disarming dad vibe, even as he speaks bluntly about his victims. In flashbacks to time before he was caught, he seems outwardly like any blue-collared dad, his grin paired with a plaid shirt, playful attitude, and a ball cap. However, a vicious intensity hits in bursts, as his eyes flash with panic or his smile twists with menace. Even in the present, that smile can slice like a blade.

Credit: Ed Araquel / Paramount+

Smartly, director Michael Showalter picks jaunty tunes with lyrics about having a "happy face," which not only reflects Keith's troubling duality but also play as a warning to his daughter. For years, she's worn a happy face as a mask of normalcy, protecting her husband (James Wolk) and children from her dad and the shame and recriminations from those appalled by him. But as she's pressured to wade back into their past and her own sense of guilt over the killings, songs urging to "put on a happy face" feel like they mock her — or worse — push her toward the dangerous duplicity her dad used to hide in plain sight. Basically, if you're presenting one face to the world to hide another, aren't you inherently a threat?

Over the four episodes presented to critics, Melissa grapples with the desire to do right, aiming to free a man she believes was wrongfully convicted of her dad's murder. But the show pulls inspiration Jesperson's real-life daughter, Melissa G. Moore, who made a podcast (Happy Face) and co-wrote a book (Shattered Silence) about her experience. As such, this series also digs into the psychological challenges of processing her father's truth and his crimes. What do they mean as far as who she is, who she will become, and what she owes the world? 

Happy Face explores true crime and personal accountability.  Credit: Katie Yu / Paramount+

This crime series explores regret and redemption as its heroine reconnoiters her past to save someone else's future. But in doing so, she must sacrifice the anonymity that served as protection, keeping her husband and children away from the influence of her devilishly charming father. This makes every episode a meal for Ashford, whose heroine must leap from everyday dramas like reprimanding her reckless teen daughter Hazel (Khiyla Aynne) to plunging into childhood artifacts for clues and staring down her father, while her co-workers look on. 

See, making things even more complicated for Melissa is she's the make-up artist for Dr. Greg, a Dr. Phil-like talk show that is happy to exploit her familial tragedy for ratings. The producer assigned to her is Ivy (Tamera Tomakili), who is hard-nosed when it comes to getting the story, but also at times the voice of reason Melissa needs to pull her out of a self-focused spiral. Through Ivy and the talk show, Happy Face takes a step back to take in the complicated ethics around exploitation and spectacle in true crime. The two will have frank conversations about why people are so fixated on this subject, and how societal biases impact who's cast as the heroes and villains, justly or not. 

Beyond that, Happy Face explores how Melissa's relationship with her parents compares to her relationship with her daughter. Flashbacks to Melissa's teen years are framed to be parallel to Hazel's experience with bullies, but also in the way both Melissa and her own mother are overwhelmed with the challenge of coping with the discovery of a serial killer in the family tree. Sure, few of us may be able to relate to the latter. But with the opening episode, Cacicio's writing and Showalter's direction so masterfully knit the fabric of this family — estranged and strange as they may be — as to be joltingly familiar. In casual conversations about dinner and grounding, goofy moments of getting caught off-guard while on a secretive phone call and impulsively buying treats to smooth over a rough day, Melissa's journey has enough tactile touch points for viewers that we can't help but be sucked into her story. 

For her part, Ashford is an enchanting tour guide through the show's trauma, tragedy, and sharply witty moments of release. She's no-nonsense without being stiff. Her eyes flash with the intensity of her onscreen father, but carrying an agony and earnestness absent in his. While the series' first four episodes are thoughtfully plotted with surprising twists and gnarly revelations, it's Ashford's grounded but riveting performance that makes them downright addictive. Her openness and frankness gives the air that anything could happen next. And while this is based on a true story, halfway through the first season, I can't be certain where this mystery show will end up. And that's damn exciting.

Happy Face was reviewed out its World Premiere at the 2025 SXSW Film Festival. The first two episodes will debut globally on Paramount+ on March 20, with new episodes airing each Thursday.

Eric Schmidt Joins Relativity Space as C.E.O.

NYT Technology - 2 hours 31 min ago
The former Google chief executive is taking a controlling interest in Relativity Space, which aims to build low-cost, reusable rockets to compete against Elon Musk’s SpaceX and to reach Mars.

Meta built content censorship system to break into China, report says

Mashable - 3 hours 24 min ago

Mark Zuckerberg tried to get Facebook into China, where it is blocked, for well over a decade. According to a whistleblower report, Zuckerberg and Meta considered some fairly unsavory tactics to make it happen, including a censorship system and sharing user data. 

The whistleblower in this case is Sarah Wynn-Williams, who filed a 78-page complaint with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The report, obtained exclusively by The Washington Post, alleges Facebook considered giving China’s ruling party the ability to censor content and squelch dissent. Also included in the report was Meta’s willingness to share user data with China.

The complaint from Wynn-Williams reportedly alleged that Facebook, in 2015, created a censorship tool for China that would allow it to remove content or shut down the site during “social unrest.” The complaint from Wynn-Williams, who was fired in 2017 from her job working on a team that worked on China policy, reportedly contains internal Meta documents. 

The complaint also alleges that Facebook faced pressure to store Chinese users’ data in China, which could’ve made it easier for the government to access the information. Facebook also allegedly considered weakening privacy protections for Hong Kong users in an effort to appease China.

SEE ALSO: 8 ways Mark Zuckerberg changed Meta ahead of Trump’s inauguration

Some of this information was already known. Facebook had to answer for its China-centric censorship tool after anonymous employees tipped the media about it in 2015. At the time, Meta — then Facebook — didn’t deny that the tool existed but said it had never been used. Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg told investors at the time that “we’re studying about the Chinese market, and we’ll see what happens.” Per the report, Facebook did eventually abandon its pursuit of breaking into China in 2019.

The news about sharing user data with China is new but shouldn’t be too surprising. Meta has a history of playing fast and loose with user data, most notably in the  Cambridge Analytica scandal. The company considering questionable tactics is also old news. Just last year, Facebook was caught secretly looking at user data in other apps like Snapchat, Amazon, and YouTube to better understand user behavior. 

The good news is that sharing data with China is currently off the table. As The Washington Post notes, Zuckerberg seems to have turned his attention to replacing TikTok if the Chinese social media app fails to find a buyer and gets banned again next month. Per Trump, talks of TikTok’s sale are still ongoing

Secret commands found in Bluetooth chip used in a billion devices

Mashable - 3 hours 51 min ago

A potential security issue has been discovered by cybersecurity researchers that has the capability to affect more than one billion devices.

According to researchers at the cybersecurity firm Tarlogic, a hidden command has been found coded into a bluetooth chip installed in devices around the world. This secret functionality can be weaponized by bad actors and, according to the researchers, used as an exploit into these devices.

Using these commands, hackers could impersonate a trusted device and then connect to smartphones, computers, and other devices in order to access information stored on them. Bad actors can continue to utilize their connection to the device to essentially spy on users.

The bluetooth chip is called ESP32 and is manufactured by the China-based company Espressif. According to researchers, the ESP32  is "a microcontroller that enables WiFi and Bluetooth connection." In 2023, Espressif reported that one billion units of its ESP32 chip had been sold globally. Millions of IoT devices like smart appliances utilize this particular ESP32 chip.

SEE ALSO: New 'browser syncjacking' cyberattack lets hackers take over your computer via Chrome

Tarlogic researchers say that this hidden command could be exploited, which would allow  "hostile actors to conduct impersonation attacks and permanently infect sensitive devices such as mobile phones, computers, smart locks or medical equipment by bypassing code audit controls." Tarlogic says that these commands are not publicly documented by Espressif.

Researchers with Tarlogic developed a new Bluetooth driver tool in order to aid in Bluetooth-related security research, which enabled the security firm to discover a total of 29 hidden functionalities that could be exploited to impersonate known devices and access confidential information stored on a device. 

According to Tarlogic, Espressif sells these bluetooth chips for roughly $2, which explains why so many devices utilize the component over higher costing options.

As BleepingComputer reports, the issue is being tracked as CVE-2025-27840.

How to pin a message to an Instagram DM

Mashable - 4 hours 15 min ago

Instagram released a whole host of new features for app users in February, and most of them are intended to bring messaging to the forefront. Now, you can translate messages in your DMs, schedule them ahead of time, add music, and pin messages. These features might be familiar to iMessage users and people who use Slack, but they're actually pretty new for a social media app.

"Last year, we introduced the ability to pin up to three chat threads in your DM inbox, making it easier to find important conversations," Meta said in a press release. "Now, you can pin specific messages to the top of any 1:1 or group chat to make it even easier to coordinate, connect with your friends or revisit content that makes you laugh every time."

And it's pretty simple. Here's how to pin a message to an Instagram DM:

Total Time
  • 1 min
What You Need
  • Phone
  • Instagram app

Step 1: Press on the message you want to pin

Press and hold on the message you want to pin to the top of your conversation, and you'll see eight options: "reply," "forward," "copy," "make AI image," "translate," "pin," "delete for you," and "report."

Credit: Screenshot / Instagram

Step 2: Click "pin"

Click "pin," and your message will be pinned to the top of your chat.

Credit: Screenshot / Instagram

Step 3: To unpin, hard press and click "unpin"

If you'd like to unpin the message, press and hold on the original message. When the eight options pop up, choose "unpin," and the message will be unpinned from your conversation.

Credit: Screenshot / Instagram

This feature is not yet available on desktop, but it is available on iOS and Android apps.

Tesla used car prices are cratering

Mashable - 4 hours 43 min ago

It’s a complicated time for car shoppers. President Donald Trump’s tariffs threaten to increase new car prices, and the used car prices are expected to rise in turn. That is, of course, unless you’re shopping for Teslas, which are getting more affordable versus the rest of the car market. 

Forbes reports that a used Model Y has dropped $6,000 on average over the last year. In March 2024, a Model Y with decent mileage would’ve gone for around $36,000. That price has dropped to $30,000, with a steady decrease coming since the U.S. elections in November. Forbes notes that it’s not particularly difficult to find a Tesla Model Y with under 20,000 miles for under $30,000.

This trend also affects Tesla’s other models. The Model X has dropped from around $45,000 to $41,500. Per CarGurus, Tesla vehicles, on average, have gone from $32,000 to about $29,000 over the last year. However, none of Tesla’s models were hit as hard as the Cybertruck. Just eight months ago, a used Cybertruck had a $120,000 price tag. Today, those same Cybertrucks are going for a hair over $90,000, a reduction of approximately 25 percent. 

For context, Tesla’s 10 percent drop in used car prices is much higher than most automakers. Kia, for instance, has mostly held steady over the last year, while Ford prices have gone up since 2025 started but are down around 4 percent since last March. Most automakers are around that same range. Edmunds noted last month that used car supplies are beginning to dry up, which may lead to higher used car prices later in 2025. Tesla seems to be bucking that trend for now. 

SEE ALSO: Tesla sales are reportedly falling globally. How bad it is and where.

There are numerous reasons why buyers might be hesitant to purchase a Tesla or current owners might want to ditch their cars. Some may not agree with Musk’s increasingly right-wing political views, while others may want to avoid having their cars vandalized. While there are plenty of anecdotal reports of people selling their Teslas, there isn’t much firm data to quantify exactly how many people have done so or why. After all, Tesla has also begun shipping out its new Model Y, which may be leading existing Model Y fans to trade in the old model for the new one. 

Tesla’s misfortunes in the used car market are the latest in a long string of bad press. Profits have plummeted 70 percent over the last quarter, and it’s likely not going to get better anytime soon. There are already reports of new Tesla shipments dropping 50 percent in Europe, led by Germany, where sales of new Teslas have declined by 76 percent. Public sentiment isn’t ideal, and activists are protesting Musk in Tesla showrooms across the U.S. 

On the ever-so-tiny plus side, you can get a Tesla for an outstanding price if you can stomach all of the controversy.

Death of a Unicorn review: A24s fantastical monster parable is rich in laughs and gore

Mashable - 4 hours 47 min ago

Imagine for a moment that unicorns were real, but don't resemble the fanciful fillies illustrated in children's books of Lisa Frank school supplies. Instead, they are feral creatures, with mighty muscles, sharp fangs protruding from a screaming maw, and a horn so girthy and sturdy it can run through a man's ribcage like a broadsword. These are the beasts that ferociously frolic in the wild A24 comedy Death of a Unicorn.

The directorial debut of producer Alex Scharfman (Resurrection, Blow the Man Down), Death of a Unicorn will unfold a tale of wonder, greed, and unicorn carnage (unicarnage?) with a humor broad and dark. A crackling ensemble made up of Paul Rudd, Jenna Ortega, Richard E. Grant, Téa Leoni, Will Poulter, Jessica Hynes, and Anthony Carrigan play a cast of eccentric characters, sharply painting a world of class conflicts within a remote but luxurious estate in the Canadian Rockies.

The result is a movie that's hilarious, horrorific, and strikingly sincere  — albeit uneven. 

SEE ALSO: SXSW: What are the movies and shows you need to know about? Death of a Unicorn lays down a gory and goofy anti-capitalism parable. 

What would you do if you encountered a real live (or dead) unicorn? In this strange circumstance, art history major Ridley (Ortega) drops to her knees in awe of its glowing gold horn…and oozing purple blood. Her corporate lawyer father Elliot (Rudd) goes into panic mode, hoping to cover up the unicorn's existence to save himself any hassle. But his employers, the wealthy Leopold family, look at the corpse of a mythic beast and see only dollar signs — and it's their sprawling estate on which the unicorn dies.

Like the notorious Sacklers on which they are based, the Leopolds have built their financial empire on pharmaceuticals. With their patriarch Odell (Grant) on the verge of death by cancer, they’ve called their trusted lawyer Elliot to help them map out the company’s future. But when Ridley and her dad accidentally discover that the unicorn's blood can cure their respective acne and allergies, the Leopolds practically drool at the possibilities.

Swiftly they assemble the wealthy maniac version of a unicorn chop shop, filing down the horn to see what else this extremely rare creature might yield. Consider it a metaphor for fracking, blithely destroying the natural world to build wealth for the 1%. But this was no lone unicorn, and when its paranormal parents come looking for their slain foal, all hell — and quite a lot of guts — will break loose.

While the Leopolds believe they are entitled to anything on their land, especially a unicorn corpse that could cure cancer, Ridley argues for the sanctity of the creature, begging them to surrender the baby back to its family. Meanwhile, Elliot is torn between his desire to make his daughter happy and his determination to appease his obscenely rich clients. None too subtly, Death of a Unicorn becomes a battle not only between man and beast, environmentalism and capitalism, but also for Elliot’s soul. 

Unicorn violence is wickedly fun. 

Scharfman, who also wrote the screenplay, relishes turning the beloved mythical creature into a creatively rampaging monster. Sure, the first kill is pretty straightforward, involving a well-aimed horn right through a human spine and out his belly like an Alien chestburster. But as the night goes on, these unicorns will crush, snap, gore, bite, and kick their way to revenge. Each kill is gushy with blood, offering not only sick spectacle but also some political catharsis. Here, the Haves get theirs. 

Out of its SXSW world premiere, some critics have dinged the film’s unicorn designs, not for their aesthetic, but for the clumsiness of some of the computer animation. However, detailed animatronics are also used, creating a textured monster who is glorious on the big screen. Personally, the CGI bits didn’t bother me. The rougher seams are often hidden in scenes of fog and shadow. Frankly, those that aren’t make the film feel scruffy in a way that suits its midnight movie sensibility. 

Will Poulter and Richard E. Grant are outrageous standouts in Death of a Unicorn.

The cast is stacked with rightly heralded performers. From hitman comedy series Barry, Carrigan pops up as a much yelled-at butler, who is often silent yet steadily hilarious in his reactions. As the trophy wife of the Leopolds, Leoni so revels in playing an oblivious, entitled, white woman that she might very well end up on the next season of The White Lotus. 

By sharp contrast, Ortega shakes off the stoicism that made her iconic in Wednesday and instead embraces a wide-eyed vulnerability that often results in moving tearfulness. For his part, Rudd, who plays a role written for him, seems almost too daffy dad at times. It's almost as if Elliot is in a broader comedy. But this might be design, intended to draw attention to what a clown Elliot is, constantly capering to please his wealthy patrons. Maybe his performance is supposed to feel frantically false.

Among the cast, however, Grant and Poulter provide the most steady hilarity. Grant, an Oscar nominee who’s never had a bad performance, is deliciously devilish as this profit-seeking patriarch. He is able to vacillate between frail and philosophical to rejuvenated and wrathful with ease, making his characters grizzly comeuppance all the more satisfying. (The audience at SXSW roared with excitement for this particular slaughter.) 

As for Poulter, who co-starred in Sackler-inspired TV drama Dopesick, he is electrifying. At the beginning of the film, his character Shepherd is a cheerfully bro-y and vaguely braindead heir, whose biggest concern is whether swim shorts are proper attire to view a dead unicorn in. But as new levels of greed unlock, this untalented but much encouraged douchebag grows into a megalomaniacal villain, as mesmerizing as he is infuriating. Poulter, like his onscreen father Grant, is extraordinary at balancing malevolent and madcap. Shame Scharfman's balancing of sincere and silly is not so keen. 

Where Death of A Unicorn falters is in its exposition. Inspired by The Unicorn Tapestries from the Cloisters, Scharfman creates an amusing and cheeky twist on classic unicorn lore. However, the characters go over and over information that's pretty swiftly explained in its introduction. A similar redundancy occurs in the tragic backstory of why Ridley and Elliot are estranged. While their shared trauma and eventual opening up leads to one of the film's most touching moments, the path there is full of loops that cause the momentum of the unicorn mayhem to drag. 

Still, both Death of a Unicorn and Mark Anthony Green’s recently released Opus are positive signs of A24's cinematic mission. While both are being criticized for being a bit wonky, they also offer unique and excitingly bizarre visions, blending genres fearlessly to tell stories personal and political. While not every step is solid, these journeys are nonetheless exhilarating in their originality and weird whimsy. In the end, Death of a Unicorn is a monster movie that is riotously funny, unapologetically dark, and ultimately heartwarming. 

Death of a Unicorn was reviewed out of its premiere at the 2025 SXSW Film Festival.

‘The Apprentice,’ Starring Donald Trump, Begins Streaming on Amazon

NYT Technology - 5 hours 26 min ago
The company said it would release several seasons of the reality show showcasing Donald J. Trump before he turned to politics.

Spend $50 on allergy items at Amazon and get $10 off your order — just in time for spring pollen

Mashable - 5 hours 32 min ago

SPEND $50+ AND GET $10 OFF: Stock up by spending $50 or more on eligible allergy products at Amazon and receive $10 off your order.

Opens in a new window Credit: Puffs / Allegra / Bausch + Lomb / Claritin / Breathe Right Spend $50+ on eligible allergy items at Amazon and get $10 off your order Get Deal

While we're all still in recovery mode from losing an hour of sleep during the shift to daylight savings time, we do have a few things to cushion the blow. Warmer temperatures are on the way with spring weather, bird signing sweet melodies, and beautiful flowers starting to bloom. We're so close to officially being in the spring season and those feel-good vibes that winter is finally over. However, if you deal with spring allergies, you might not be so thrilled. To help combat the sniffles, Amazon is offering a nice deal this month.

Until March 24 at 11:59 p.m. PT, spend $50 or more on eligible allergy products at Amazon to get $10 off your purchase. To score this deal, add $50 worth of product to your Amazon cart and the discount will automatically be applied at checkout.

SEE ALSO: 9 of the best air purifiers, according to experts

The allergy products deal at Amazon extends to a huge lineup of relief that ranges from soft tissues to eye drops to allergy pills and nasal sprays. Amazon also included some anti-itch products in this deal since some of us unfortunate souls are mosquito magnets.

Before this deal disappears, check your medicine cabinet to see if you're well prepared for this upcoming allergy season. If not, snag some of the included allergy products below or browse the full list.

Eligible allergy products at Amazon:

Southwests spring sale is here: Book select one-way flights for just $49

Mashable - 6 hours 41 sec ago

$49 ONE-WAY: Southwest Airlines has one-way flights from $49 to select destinations. Book by March 13 and fly in April or May.

Opens in a new window Credit: Southwest $49 one-way Restrictions and exclusions apply Learn More

If you’ve been dreaming of sandy beaches, a lakeside getaway, or a weekend trip to explore a new city, Southwest Airlines just announced its spring sale, where you can get one-way flights for as low as $49.

Of course, there’s some fine print to go over here: The discounted fares are only available for select routes and dates, so you'll need to be flexible with your travel plans. You’ll also need to book by March 13 to get the low prices, and your travel dates must fall between March 31 and June 11. Some blackout dates may also apply, so be sure to check the details carefully.

But even with the restrictions, you can’t beat $49 for a flight. Southwest flies to popular destinations all across the United States, from the beaches of Florida and California to bustling cities like Chicago, New York, and Seattle.

Its Mar10 Day at Nintendo — find all the best deals live now

Mashable - 6 hours 13 min ago

UP TO 75% OFF: It's Mar10 Day, the iconic Mario holiday that takes place every March 10. And right now, you can save up to 75% on Mario titles at Nintendo.

Opens in a new window Credit: Nintendo Mar10 Day Deals for Nintendo Switch Save up to 75% on Mario games Get Deal

This sale will have you jumping on the back of a digital Koopa turtle. Mar10 Day is a day to celebrate Mario, and Nintendo is on board with major deals on a handful of Mario games for Nintendo Switch.

Shop now to get up to 75% off Mario games. The deals include Super Mario Bros. Wonder for $41.99, saving you $18 on list price.

SEE ALSO: Nintendo Switch 2 patent seems to confirm mouse functionality for the new Joy-Cons

The Mario universe is mad up of much more than simple side scrolling jumping games. Today, games like Super Mario RPG, Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope Gold Edition, and Super Mario Maker expand the ways you can play in the Mushroom Kingdom.

Whether you're looking for fidgety fun for your commute home or deep gameplay to enjoy on your TV, this Mario sale is full of delights. As of March 10, Nintendo is offering deals on Mario games for up to 75% off.

Take advantage of this sale and lean into your inner Bowser, help Luigi out of a haunted mansion, and more.

Donald Trump says 4 groups in talks to buy TikTok

Mashable - 6 hours 37 min ago

TikTok has until April 5 to find a buyer, and President Donald Trump says that at least four are currently in the mix. The short-from video platform may need to find new ownership since the U.S. passed its sell-or-ban law last year due to security concerns. 

Per Reuters, the president spoke with reporters on Sunday about the potential sale, saying that he has been in contact with suitors leading up to the deadline. “We’re dealing with four different groups,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One. “A lot of people want it… all four are good.”

Trump didn’t specify who the four suitors were, but it could be any number of high-profile rumored bidders. Interest is high for the popular short-form video platform and includes heavy hitters like Oracle, Mr. Beast, Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary, Microsoft, and Project Liberty, a group led by former Los Angeles Dodgers owner Frank McCourt and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian. Even the U.S. government has been in and out of the rumor mill.

TikTok was formally banned in the U.S. on Jan. 19, though it lasted all of about 12 hours. Trump signed an executive order to push the ban by 75 days to give TikTok more time to find a buyer. At that time, the beleaguered streaming platform left the various app stores, only to be reinstated nearly a month later after Trump promised Google and Apple that they wouldn’t be fined for doing so. In short, it’s been a long year for TikTok and its users so far. 

SEE ALSO: As TikTok faces a ban, creators brace for an uncertain future

Despite the issues, TikTok is still going strong. It was still among the most-downloaded apps in the U.S. in 2024, and approximately half of the country’s population is among TikTok’s active users. The app is noted for its intense ability to influence trends. Heck, it even brought back ska music, and ska music hasn’t been popular in almost 30 years. 

So far, the U.S. government has been content to kick the can down the road when it comes to enforcing a TikTok ban, as it has been for the last five years. However, time may be finally running out as interest in purchasing TikTok has entered a fever pitch. 

“We have a lot of interest in TikTok,” Trump told reporters. “And China is going to play a role. Hopefully, China will approve of the deal.”

Is X Down? Users Report Intermittent Outages

NYT Technology - 6 hours 41 min ago
Several waves of reported outages affected the social media site, formerly known as Twitter, on Monday.

Instagram tests new Blend feature to share Reels with friends

Mashable - 7 hours 18 min ago

Have you ever swiped through your Instagram Reels feed and thought, "Wow, the only thing that will make this better is if someone else could also watch what I am watching and know that this is what The Algorithm thinks of me?"

Well, I have good news for you. Instagram is live testing a new feature called "Blend," which creates a private feed of recommended Reels for you and a friend. Think of it like the combined algorithm that creates your Spotify Blend playlists but for Instagram Reels instead.

The feature has been in development for some time and was spotted by reverse engineer Alessandro Paluzzi back in March 2024. At the time, Meta told TechCrunch that it wasn't being tested externally just yet — until now, it seems.

Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Mashable, but some users have reported seeing the feature on their apps. One user, @uw.3 on Threads, posted screenshots on Threads showing a pop-up encouraging users to invite their friends on DMs to blend, Social Media Today spotted. The pop-up shows three main notes: see each other's suggested reels, new reels based on the chat, and invite only.

SEE ALSO: I'm quitting Instagram. You should too. View on Threads

"See who each reel is suggested for based on each person's activity on Instagram, including the reels they watch and interact with," describes "See each other's suggested reels."

"When you join a blend, reels you send to the chat will inform and update the blend for everyone," describes "new reels based on the chat."

"Each blend is unique to the people who join. You can leave a blend at any time," reads "invite only."

This feature seems like a smart business decision for Instagram: It could keep people logged on and scrolling longer and put their dedication to Reels up front, no matter how terrible an experience Reels Blends sounds to me personally. However, perhaps the most incredible thing about this potential new feature is that it doesn't copy TikTok.

Lila Sciences Uses A.I. to Turbocharge Scientific Discovery

NYT Technology - 7 hours 20 min ago
An ambitious start-up embodies new optimism that artificial intelligence can turbocharge scientific discovery.

Trump’s Call to Scrap ‘Horrible’ Chip Program Spreads Panic

NYT Technology - 7 hours 24 min ago
The president’s attack on the key tenet of the Biden administration’s industrial policy has set off concerns that he may claw back its funding.

New NC bill would ban minors from social media

Mashable - 7 hours 29 min ago

A new bill filed in the North Carolina House of Representatives aims to ban children under 14 from social media and age-verify some sites — but not like other age-verification laws.

HB 301, called the Social Media Protections for Minors Act, was introduced last Wednesday and passed its first reading, according to North Carolina station WFMY News 2. It'll now go to a committee for further review.

SEE ALSO: Do age-verification laws work? Not according to this study.

Similar to Australia's social media ban for children under 16, this bill would prohibit anyone under 14 from creating an account on social platforms that meet certain criteria (like having 10 percent daily active users under 16 and "addictive" features like infinite scrolling). Children aged 14 to 15 would need parents' permission to make an account, though it doesn't detail how this consent would be handled.

Additionally, HB 301 calls for "anonymous" or standard age verification when viewing a site with a substantial portion (over a third) of content deemed "harmful to minors." The phrase "harmful to minors" harkens back to a Supreme Court case, Ginsberg v. New York, which concluded that content that isn't obscene (thus protected by the First Amendment) can still be "harmful to minors."

Typically, in age-verification laws, this means explicit content. This part is in line with other such laws, which require some form of age verification (such as a digital ID or facial scan) in order to visit porn sites.

Unlike other age-verification laws that have passed in the U.S. — including North Carolina's own age-verification law — this one requires these site visitors to be 16 years or older, not 18, though. In North Carolina, the age of consent is 16.

In January, the Supreme Court heard about age-verification laws in the case Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, and their ruling will likely come out this summer. Findings from a recent study on age verification laws suggest that these laws don't work at their proposed aim to keep minors away from explicit websites. This is because they can access websites that don't comply with the laws, or work around them with a VPN.

The Last of Us: What you can expect from Season 2

Mashable - 8 hours 3 min ago

Well, we endured and survived, baby girl.

The Last of Us ended its first season almost two years ago in March 2023, leaving us nothing less than emotional husks, nothing more than hungry for more deep character-based trauma in Season 2. But after that cold hard finale, I'm sure you've got as many questions as we have.

Unless you've played the game's sequel, that is. 

SEE ALSO: 'The Last of Us' salutes Ellie's favourite thing: comics

For those who haven't experienced Naughty Dog's lauded sequel The Last of Us Part II, the future is uncertain for Ellie (Bella Ramsey) and Joel (Pedro Pascal). The series, like the game, ended with Joel's polarising decision to save Ellie, sacrificing a potential cure for the Cordyceps infection and executing the entire Fireflies' medical team, including their leader, Marlene (Merle Dandridge). And now? Ellie and Joel have made it back to Jackson, where the future is uncertain.

If you're dying to know what's in store for Season 2, we're about to get spoilery with first-hand game knowledge, trailer hints, and first looks to consider some of the major plot points and characters you can expect director Craig Mazin and creator Neil Druckmann to get stuck into. We won't ruin the ending, but we will set you up with some monumental moments to uh...look forward to?

If you haven't played the The Last of Us Part II, however, you might want to turn back and consider our burning questions article instead, which is free of game (though not show) spoilers.

For everyone else, let's delve into the biggest storyline moments we can expect to see in Season 2 — including the one that HBO had better expect a riot over.

The Last of Us Season 2 means terrifying new Infected Don't breathe. Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

While The Last of Us Part II didn't completely reinvent the wheel when it comes to new Infected, there's a few additions we can't wait to see. The latest HBO trailer indicates airborne Cordyceps spores will be added as a hurdle for our protagonists, something Season 1 eliminated for on-screen practicality/Pedro Pascal visibility.

One of the most terrifying new types of Infected will be the Stalkers, who are briefly shown in the trailer scurrying about in the darkness. These stealthy trackers peep out from their hiding places and use echolocation like Clickers. But they have the ability to see who they're charging at — and boy, do they charge. Honestly, I hate them so much.

We're also keen to see if there's the possibility of a Rat King this season, the game's horrific amalgamation of Infected in one hulking mass — think The Witcher.

SEE ALSO: 'The Last of Us' Season 2 tailer: Hidden details you may have missed We're going back to Jackson Four years later... Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

It's time to head back to Jackson, Wyoming, folks. The fortified settlement where Joel and Ellie finally find his brother Tommy (Gabriel Luna) and wife Maria (Rutina Wesley) is first seen in The Last of Us Season 1, episode 6. And it's where Season 2 will likely begin.

Jackson is a key location in the second game. We don't actually visit the town in the first game at all; we just see it in the distance. But Jackson is where Season 1 of the show ends, as Joel and Ellie have a confrontation on a ridge above the town after everything that went down in Salt Lake City. And Joel lies.

It's likely Season 2 will pick up where The Last of Us Part II does, four years later. As the trailer shows, Tommy and Maria now have a young son, who doesn't exist in the game. Joel and Ellie are living in their own places in Jackson, with a major strain on their relationship. By now, Ellie is 19 and doing Infected patrols with her horse Shimmer, who made a sweet cameo in Season 1, episode 6 as a foal. And she's about to fall head over heels.

The Last of Us Season 2 will introduce Ellie's next big love Dina + Ellie 4eva 💘 Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

Ellie's tragically short romance with her best friend Riley (Storm Reid) was her first love, but certainly not her last. And in Season 1, an Easter egg had gamers abuzz, with the fleeting appearance of a character integral to Ellie's life in The Last of Us Part II.

In episode 6, when Joel and Ellie are in the Jackson food hall, there's a moment when Ellie's manners fail her and she throws a barb at a staring girl. Fans of the game surmised that this was Dina, Ellie's future love interest — and in HBO's podcast for the show, neither Mazin or Druckmann confirmed nor denied it.

Played by Madame Web's Isabela Merced in Season 2, Dina is a complex, kickass character who will play a hugely important role. In The Last of Us Part II, the game begins with one of the franchise's best scenes: a Jackson barn dance where Dina and Ellie share their first kiss. Their relationship grows with every patrol, every tragedy, every secret they share together — including Dina's major reveal. In the game, Dina's deep love for Ellie means she joins her quest for revenge: "You go, I go. End of story."

Jesse has a significant part to play. Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

Another Season 2 newbie will be Ellie's best friend Jesse, Dina's ex-boyfriend from Jackson, who is played by Beef's Young Mazino. Jesse tracks Ellie and Dina on their travels in order to help them on their quest to find the people responsible for the most shocking moment of the series.

Yep, it's gonna hurt.

The Last of Us Season 2 will do it: Joel's death Noooooooooooooooooooooooo. Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

For fans of the game, we know what's coming in Season 2. And we also know this will break fans of the show, as it did us while playing The Last of Us Part II.

I'm talking about Joel's death. It's one of the most unexpected, traumatising events I've ever encountered in a video game — the brutal murder of a protagonist you've spent literally hundreds of hours playing, understanding, and becoming attached to. You've survived so much with Joel, as has Ellie, and Naughty Dog made us watch as her beloved father figure is killed in front of her — the game mechanics literally pin Ellie (that's you) to the ground in this scene.

It will be worse than this moment in Season 1. Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

Yes, Joel's death allowed Naughty Dog to differentiate the games and introduce new character dynamics, namely moving Ellie into young adulthood. But I have a feeling this episode will be one of the most talked about, most hands-in-the-air, Red Wedding-level, how-could-they-do-this-to-us episode of Season 2. Considering the skyrocketing fame and internet worship of Pedro Pascal, this devastating moment in the narrative will be all over your feed. Prepare for several solid weeks of grieving online.

Joel's brutal death at the hands of new character Abby Anderson (more on her below) will likely be in an early episode of Season 2, rattling viewers to the core. But don't despair entirely, Pascal fans. The Last of Us Part II features many flashback scenes with the pair, including an all-important, dinosaur-related memory, scenes in involving Joel's guitar, and a major reveal about why exactly there's tension between Joel and Ellie at the beginning of the sequel. Season 2 won't be completely Pascal-free, even after his character's death.

SEE ALSO: 'The Last of Us' episode 8: Why Joel's final line is so important Bella Ramsey will have room to shine in Season 2 It's only going to get harder, Ellie. Credit: HBO

Season 2 is all about Ellie. Our protagonist's grief and rage in The Last of Us Part II will give Ramsey the challenge they deserve to take an already incredible performance even further. Pascal and Ramsey have built the same level of chemistry and bond voice actors Troy Baker and Ashley Johnson's Joel and Ellie did in the games, and it's going to break hearts to see Bellie and Pedge destroyed like this. But Ramsey will also have plenty of action scenes ahead of them too, as Ellie's fight scenes really level up this season.

The Last of Us Season 2 will focus on a shellshocked Ellie wanting only vengeance, tracking Joel's killers to their base in Seattle. Tommy goes after them himself, thinking Ellie will just sit tight in Jackson, but of course that doesn't happen. So, the events of The Last of Us Season 2 will mirror those of the first season — we're always looking for Tommy in TLOU it seems. But with the addition of Tommy and Maria's son as seen in the trailer, Tommy's decision takes on a very different light.

Oh no. They have a son... Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

So, Season 2 is another road trip, and will focus on Ellie's journey from from Wyoming to Washington. As Ellie gets more and more brutal in her hunting tactics, fuelled by grief and rage, Ramsey will have one hell of a journey on their hands. That scene from episode 8 in which Joel gets real cold and torture-y with the map trick? It rubbed off, people.

Season 2 is also all about Abby There's always another perspective. Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

The Last of Us Season 2 will introduce the game character of Abby Anderson, Joel's aforementioned killer. Kaitlyn Dever (Booksmart, Apple Cider Vinegar, Unbelievable) takes on the polarising role, who will fuel one of the most upsetting moments in the story — but remember, she is a character. And she's a character you actually play as for half the game in The Last of Us Part II, and all the uncomfortable attachment that goes with it.

The word "villain" is subjective as always for humans in this franchise, depending on your perspective. (Except David. David is a villain.) Abby's journey in Season 2 will cause viewers to reconsider what makes someone a monster in this post-apocalyptic hell. As devastating as her actions are, Abby's character expands the world of The Last of Us beyond Ellie's experience. There'll be plenty of world-building to look forward to with where Abby calls home: the WLF.

Season 2 introduces two new factions: WLF and the Seraphites WTF is the WLF? Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

Ultimately, saving Abby's life from Infected beyond the safety of the Jackson settlement will be Joel's undoing, as she's part of a Seattle militia group known as the Washington Liberation Front (WLF), aka the Wolves. Led by Isaac Dixon (brilliant casting with American Fiction's Jeffrey Wright), the Wolves are comprised of former Fireflies and recruits, and their base in Seattle is sure to be impressive set design. There's a whole cast of new characters here with their own connections and backstories, with actors Danny Ramirez, Tati Gabrielle, Ariela Barer, and Spencer Lord joining Dever.

In Season 2, we'll also meet the faction behind strange symbols and preachy graffiti, the Seraphites, also referred to as the Scars — you'll know them by their self-inflicted facial scarring. They're a cult-like group and direct rivals to the Wolves for control of Seattle. In the trailer, you'll spy them with their bows, arrows, and tendency to hang people in the forest. And within this faction, we'll meet two beloved characters, siblings Lev and Yara, who will have a major impact on Abby's life.

It's not clear whether the Rattlers, another horrific faction in The Last of Us Part II, will feature this season. Hope not? Hope so? I can't tell what I want.

Will we hear Pedro Pascal sing Pearl Jam in episode 1? *tunes guitar* Credit: Liane Hentscher / HBO

At the very beginning of The Last of Us Part II, Joel gifts Ellie a guitar and the promise of lessons, but not before he plays a little something on it. He picks Pearl Jam's "Future Days," a somber ballad that begins with the fitting lyric "If I ever were to lose you / I'd surely lose myself." This begs the question: Will we hear Pedro Pascal himself sing a little Pearl Jam in Season 2, episode 1?

The Last of Us Season 1 is now streaming on Max. Season 2 premieres on HBO and Max in 2025.

Is X down? Elon Musks social media platform crashes.

Mashable - 8 hours 4 min ago

X appeared to have crashed on Monday. Elon Musk's website wouldn't load for users in the early hours of Monday, either on desktop or mobile.

Down Detector showed a sharp spike in user-reported issues with X starting around 9:30 a.m. ET on Monday. (Full disclosure: Down Detector is owned by Ziff Davis, the same parent company as Mashable.)

I tried to load X on my computer and through the mobile app on my phone, but neither would update or bring in new posts. Folks on other sites, like Bluesky, also posted about the site being down.

And on the morning of NFL Free Agency... X is down.

— Andrew Siciliano (@andrewsiciliano.bsky.social) March 10, 2025 at 6:02 AM

Is Twitter/X down? I'm panicking, lol.

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) March 10, 2025 at 6:06 AM

This story is developing and will be updated...

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