Valve: “We need a credit card on file to prove you’re 18”

Me: “My account is 23 years old”

Valve: “That just proves your account is old”

Me: “A credit card just proves you know someone with a credit card”

in reply to draeath

@draeath HL1 was already a game changer for me. I started playing FPS when Doom was on a set of 1.44M floppy disks, and its pseudo-3D gameplay was real magic, running on an i286 below 20MHz clock.
HL brought a real, movie like, story, in 3D gaming. That was amazing, and it still is, if you look beyond the now pixelated screens.
The only other game that brought me adrenaline, even when standing still, is HL:Alyx, played in VR. That leaves speechless.
in reply to Security Writer

Interesting because apparently you can't report a game featured on Steam any more. This one promotes incest. I'm referring the DLC of the latest Street Fighter, which received some criticism yesterday because it features a character engaged in incest. To further make this known, the company is Capcom. There has been backlash about this, but Capcom kinda went "hehehe."
in reply to Security Writer

Being a security dick myself, I hate such organisations' "we did everything we could, even documented it" approach. Until a friend of mine (a security expert! sigh!) issued a policy analysis to our banking regulator some years back, we could get single use, limited amount CC numbers from our banks, which would have been a perfect solution for this and similar cases 🙁(((
in reply to Security Writer

One day, in 2024, a friend of mine sent me a Twitter link, I opened it and Twitter asked for my age. I had a Twitter account and my real birthday on my profile (and balloons), but they asked anyway. I was on my mobile, on a rush to access the tweet, but you only could wrote the date going back month by month (44 x 12 clics). So I just went back to the first date for a 18 yo person. And then... Twitter calculated that I was a minor @Illuminatus