• Campfire Cabal returns after being shuttered by Embracer

    Campfire Cabal returns after being shuttered by Embracer
    Studio says it was "never shut down" and has been working on the next instalment of the Expedition series

    Image credit: Campfire Cabal

    News

    by Sophie McEvoy
    Staff Writer

    Published on May 22, 2025

    THQ Nordic's studio Campfire Cabal has returned after being shuttered in 2023.
    Announcing the news in a blog post, the developer said it had "never shut down" despite closing as part of THQ Nordic's parent company Embracer's restructuring efforts.
    "We are finally ready to reveal that Campfire Cabal was never shut down," it said.
    "Though we did have to say goodbye to many of our colleagues, the studio survived and a compact team continued the project we had started in 2022."
    This project is the next game in the Expedition series, and by the end of March 2025 it had been "given the green light to scale back up and transition into full production."
    Campfire Cabal also confirmed that it patched Expeditions: Rome in 2024 despite being "radio silent" since the studio's initial closure.
    "If you follow the insider news, you are aware that it's been a rough couple of years in the game industry," the developer continued. "Investment dried up, studios shut down, countless developers lost their jobs, and games were cancelled left and right.
    "We are extremely grateful that there were people within the group who fought to keep us alive through the turmoil, and that we can now emerge on the other side with renewed vigour."
    THQ Nordic launched Campfire Cabal in September 2022, comprised of veterans from the Expeditions franchise.
    By August 2023, Embracer informed THQ Nordic needed to close Campfire Cabal due to restructuring.
    "We want to make it clear that our management and the rest of the team have not given up on Campfire Cabal yet, and neither have our friends at THQ Nordic," the developer wrote on LinkedIn at the time.
    "We are still pursuing our options for finding a good resolution to this situation, and THQ Nordic has been very supportive throughout this difficult time."
    It concluded: "This does not mean that it's over for us as a studio. We're extremely proud of how our team has come together to keep the campfire burning, and of the commitment and camaraderie everyone has demonstrated since the news broke."
    #campfire #cabal #returns #after #being
    Campfire Cabal returns after being shuttered by Embracer
    Campfire Cabal returns after being shuttered by Embracer Studio says it was "never shut down" and has been working on the next instalment of the Expedition series Image credit: Campfire Cabal News by Sophie McEvoy Staff Writer Published on May 22, 2025 THQ Nordic's studio Campfire Cabal has returned after being shuttered in 2023. Announcing the news in a blog post, the developer said it had "never shut down" despite closing as part of THQ Nordic's parent company Embracer's restructuring efforts. "We are finally ready to reveal that Campfire Cabal was never shut down," it said. "Though we did have to say goodbye to many of our colleagues, the studio survived and a compact team continued the project we had started in 2022." This project is the next game in the Expedition series, and by the end of March 2025 it had been "given the green light to scale back up and transition into full production." Campfire Cabal also confirmed that it patched Expeditions: Rome in 2024 despite being "radio silent" since the studio's initial closure. "If you follow the insider news, you are aware that it's been a rough couple of years in the game industry," the developer continued. "Investment dried up, studios shut down, countless developers lost their jobs, and games were cancelled left and right. "We are extremely grateful that there were people within the group who fought to keep us alive through the turmoil, and that we can now emerge on the other side with renewed vigour." THQ Nordic launched Campfire Cabal in September 2022, comprised of veterans from the Expeditions franchise. By August 2023, Embracer informed THQ Nordic needed to close Campfire Cabal due to restructuring. "We want to make it clear that our management and the rest of the team have not given up on Campfire Cabal yet, and neither have our friends at THQ Nordic," the developer wrote on LinkedIn at the time. "We are still pursuing our options for finding a good resolution to this situation, and THQ Nordic has been very supportive throughout this difficult time." It concluded: "This does not mean that it's over for us as a studio. We're extremely proud of how our team has come together to keep the campfire burning, and of the commitment and camaraderie everyone has demonstrated since the news broke." #campfire #cabal #returns #after #being
    Campfire Cabal returns after being shuttered by Embracer
    www.gamesindustry.biz
    Campfire Cabal returns after being shuttered by Embracer Studio says it was "never shut down" and has been working on the next instalment of the Expedition series Image credit: Campfire Cabal News by Sophie McEvoy Staff Writer Published on May 22, 2025 THQ Nordic's studio Campfire Cabal has returned after being shuttered in 2023. Announcing the news in a blog post, the developer said it had "never shut down" despite closing as part of THQ Nordic's parent company Embracer's restructuring efforts. "We are finally ready to reveal that Campfire Cabal was never shut down," it said. "Though we did have to say goodbye to many of our colleagues, the studio survived and a compact team continued the project we had started in 2022." This project is the next game in the Expedition series, and by the end of March 2025 it had been "given the green light to scale back up and transition into full production." Campfire Cabal also confirmed that it patched Expeditions: Rome in 2024 despite being "radio silent" since the studio's initial closure. "If you follow the insider news, you are aware that it's been a rough couple of years in the game industry," the developer continued. "Investment dried up, studios shut down, countless developers lost their jobs, and games were cancelled left and right. "We are extremely grateful that there were people within the group who fought to keep us alive through the turmoil, and that we can now emerge on the other side with renewed vigour." THQ Nordic launched Campfire Cabal in September 2022, comprised of veterans from the Expeditions franchise. By August 2023, Embracer informed THQ Nordic needed to close Campfire Cabal due to restructuring. "We want to make it clear that our management and the rest of the team have not given up on Campfire Cabal yet, and neither have our friends at THQ Nordic," the developer wrote on LinkedIn at the time. "We are still pursuing our options for finding a good resolution to this situation, and THQ Nordic has been very supportive throughout this difficult time." It concluded: "This does not mean that it's over for us as a studio. We're extremely proud of how our team has come together to keep the campfire burning, and of the commitment and camaraderie everyone has demonstrated since the news broke."
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  • Embracer is spinning off Coffee Stain Group and rebranding its remaining business

    Chris Kerr, Senior Editor, NewsMay 22, 20252 Min ReadImage via Embracer GroupEmbracer Group has detailed how the next stage in its plan to split into three standalone, publicly-listed companies will unfold.Last year, the Swedish conglomerate ended a period of studio closures, divestments, and layoffs by announcing it would partition its business into three units: Asmodee, Coffee Stain & Friends, and Middle-earth Enterprises & Friend.After carving out Asmodee and saddling it with debt, the company has confirmed it intends to spin off Coffee Stain Group and rename its remaining business Fellowship Entertainment."Embracer today announces its intention to spin-off Coffee Stain Groupinto a standalone group of community-driven game developers and publishers by the end of calendar year 2025," reads an investor update."The shares in Coffee Stain Group will be distributed to the shareholders of Embracer, and are intended to be listed on the Nasdaq First North Premier Growth Market in Stockholm. At the same time, Embracer Group AB are planned to be renamed Fellowship Entertainment."Embracer pledges to create "unforgettable experiences" after cutting ties with thousands of workersCoffee Stain Group will consist of over 250 game developers and publishers such as Coffee Stain, Ghost Ship, and Tuxedo Labs. It will also house certain studios from Amplifier Game Invest.Related:Coffee Stain CEO and co-founder Anton Westbergh will lead the group and become the steward of popular franchises including Deep Rock Galactic, Goat Simulator, Satisfactory, Valheim, Teardown, and Welcome to Bloxburg.Embracer's remaining business will be renamed Fellowship Entertainment and intends to unite top creators and intellectual properties to "build unforgettable experiences" for players.Fellowship will comprise 4A Games, Aspyr Media, CrazyLabs, Crystal Dynamics, Dambuster Studios, Dark Horse, Deca Games, Eidos-Montréal, Flying Wild Hog, Gunfire Games, Limited Run Games, Middle-earth Enterprises, Milestone, PLAION, Tarsier Studios, THQ Nordic, Tripwire Interactive, Vertigo Games, Warhorse Studios, and more than 40 other companies.In total, the rebranded business unit will employ roughly 6,000 people in over 30 countries. The group will control the commercial rights to The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings and game franchises like Kingdom Come Deliverance, Dead Island, Tomb Raider, and over 300 other IPs.Embracer Group CEO Lars Wingefors will continue to oversee all three business entities by establishing a privately held holding company called Embracer AB that will "act as an active and supportive long-term shareholder" of Asmodee Group, Coffee Stain Group, Fellowship Entertainment, and "potentially other companies."Related: about:Embracer GroupAbout the AuthorChris KerrSenior Editor, News, GameDeveloper.comGame Developer news editor Chris Kerr is an award-winning journalist and reporter with over a decade of experience in the game industry. His byline has appeared in notable print and digital publications including Edge, Stuff, Wireframe, International Business Times, and PocketGamer.biz. Throughout his career, Chris has covered major industry events including GDC, PAX Australia, Gamescom, Paris Games Week, and Develop Brighton. He has featured on the judging panel at The Develop Star Awards on multiple occasions and appeared on BBC Radio 5 Live to discuss breaking news.See more from Chris KerrDaily news, dev blogs, and stories from Game Developer straight to your inboxStay UpdatedYou May Also Like
    #embracer #spinning #off #coffee #stain
    Embracer is spinning off Coffee Stain Group and rebranding its remaining business
    Chris Kerr, Senior Editor, NewsMay 22, 20252 Min ReadImage via Embracer GroupEmbracer Group has detailed how the next stage in its plan to split into three standalone, publicly-listed companies will unfold.Last year, the Swedish conglomerate ended a period of studio closures, divestments, and layoffs by announcing it would partition its business into three units: Asmodee, Coffee Stain & Friends, and Middle-earth Enterprises & Friend.After carving out Asmodee and saddling it with debt, the company has confirmed it intends to spin off Coffee Stain Group and rename its remaining business Fellowship Entertainment."Embracer today announces its intention to spin-off Coffee Stain Groupinto a standalone group of community-driven game developers and publishers by the end of calendar year 2025," reads an investor update."The shares in Coffee Stain Group will be distributed to the shareholders of Embracer, and are intended to be listed on the Nasdaq First North Premier Growth Market in Stockholm. At the same time, Embracer Group AB are planned to be renamed Fellowship Entertainment."Embracer pledges to create "unforgettable experiences" after cutting ties with thousands of workersCoffee Stain Group will consist of over 250 game developers and publishers such as Coffee Stain, Ghost Ship, and Tuxedo Labs. It will also house certain studios from Amplifier Game Invest.Related:Coffee Stain CEO and co-founder Anton Westbergh will lead the group and become the steward of popular franchises including Deep Rock Galactic, Goat Simulator, Satisfactory, Valheim, Teardown, and Welcome to Bloxburg.Embracer's remaining business will be renamed Fellowship Entertainment and intends to unite top creators and intellectual properties to "build unforgettable experiences" for players.Fellowship will comprise 4A Games, Aspyr Media, CrazyLabs, Crystal Dynamics, Dambuster Studios, Dark Horse, Deca Games, Eidos-Montréal, Flying Wild Hog, Gunfire Games, Limited Run Games, Middle-earth Enterprises, Milestone, PLAION, Tarsier Studios, THQ Nordic, Tripwire Interactive, Vertigo Games, Warhorse Studios, and more than 40 other companies.In total, the rebranded business unit will employ roughly 6,000 people in over 30 countries. The group will control the commercial rights to The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings and game franchises like Kingdom Come Deliverance, Dead Island, Tomb Raider, and over 300 other IPs.Embracer Group CEO Lars Wingefors will continue to oversee all three business entities by establishing a privately held holding company called Embracer AB that will "act as an active and supportive long-term shareholder" of Asmodee Group, Coffee Stain Group, Fellowship Entertainment, and "potentially other companies."Related: about:Embracer GroupAbout the AuthorChris KerrSenior Editor, News, GameDeveloper.comGame Developer news editor Chris Kerr is an award-winning journalist and reporter with over a decade of experience in the game industry. His byline has appeared in notable print and digital publications including Edge, Stuff, Wireframe, International Business Times, and PocketGamer.biz. Throughout his career, Chris has covered major industry events including GDC, PAX Australia, Gamescom, Paris Games Week, and Develop Brighton. He has featured on the judging panel at The Develop Star Awards on multiple occasions and appeared on BBC Radio 5 Live to discuss breaking news.See more from Chris KerrDaily news, dev blogs, and stories from Game Developer straight to your inboxStay UpdatedYou May Also Like #embracer #spinning #off #coffee #stain
    Embracer is spinning off Coffee Stain Group and rebranding its remaining business
    www.gamedeveloper.com
    Chris Kerr, Senior Editor, NewsMay 22, 20252 Min ReadImage via Embracer GroupEmbracer Group has detailed how the next stage in its plan to split into three standalone, publicly-listed companies will unfold.Last year, the Swedish conglomerate ended a period of studio closures, divestments, and layoffs by announcing it would partition its business into three units: Asmodee, Coffee Stain & Friends, and Middle-earth Enterprises & Friend.After carving out Asmodee and saddling it with debt, the company has confirmed it intends to spin off Coffee Stain Group and rename its remaining business Fellowship Entertainment."Embracer today announces its intention to spin-off Coffee Stain Group (previous working name Coffee Stain & Friends) into a standalone group of community-driven game developers and publishers by the end of calendar year 2025," reads an investor update."The shares in Coffee Stain Group will be distributed to the shareholders of Embracer, and are intended to be listed on the Nasdaq First North Premier Growth Market in Stockholm. At the same time, Embracer Group AB are planned to be renamed Fellowship Entertainment (previous working name Middle Earth & Friends)."Embracer pledges to create "unforgettable experiences" after cutting ties with thousands of workersCoffee Stain Group will consist of over 250 game developers and publishers such as Coffee Stain, Ghost Ship, and Tuxedo Labs. It will also house certain studios from Amplifier Game Invest.Related:Coffee Stain CEO and co-founder Anton Westbergh will lead the group and become the steward of popular franchises including Deep Rock Galactic, Goat Simulator, Satisfactory, Valheim, Teardown, and Welcome to Bloxburg.Embracer's remaining business will be renamed Fellowship Entertainment and intends to unite top creators and intellectual properties to "build unforgettable experiences" for players.Fellowship will comprise 4A Games, Aspyr Media, CrazyLabs, Crystal Dynamics, Dambuster Studios, Dark Horse, Deca Games, Eidos-Montréal, Flying Wild Hog, Gunfire Games, Limited Run Games, Middle-earth Enterprises, Milestone, PLAION, Tarsier Studios, THQ Nordic, Tripwire Interactive, Vertigo Games, Warhorse Studios, and more than 40 other companies.In total, the rebranded business unit will employ roughly 6,000 people in over 30 countries. The group will control the commercial rights to The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings and game franchises like Kingdom Come Deliverance, Dead Island, Tomb Raider, and over 300 other IPs.Embracer Group CEO Lars Wingefors will continue to oversee all three business entities by establishing a privately held holding company called Embracer AB that will "act as an active and supportive long-term shareholder" of Asmodee Group, Coffee Stain Group, Fellowship Entertainment, and "potentially other companies."Related:Read more about:Embracer GroupAbout the AuthorChris KerrSenior Editor, News, GameDeveloper.comGame Developer news editor Chris Kerr is an award-winning journalist and reporter with over a decade of experience in the game industry. His byline has appeared in notable print and digital publications including Edge, Stuff, Wireframe, International Business Times, and PocketGamer.biz. Throughout his career, Chris has covered major industry events including GDC, PAX Australia, Gamescom, Paris Games Week, and Develop Brighton. He has featured on the judging panel at The Develop Star Awards on multiple occasions and appeared on BBC Radio 5 Live to discuss breaking news.See more from Chris KerrDaily news, dev blogs, and stories from Game Developer straight to your inboxStay UpdatedYou May Also Like
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  • Details leak about Jony Ive’s new ‘screen-free’ OpenAI device

    The mysterious device that OpenAI is cooking up with former Apple designer Jony Ive will be pocket-size, contextually aware, screen-free, and isn’t eyewear. Ive and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman revealed details about the project in an internal staff call reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, after announcing the billion acquisition of Ive’s AI hardware startup, io.Altman suggested that the acquisition could increase OpenAI’s value by trillion, and envisioned a “family of devices” being born from the partnership. Information about the first device, which Altman is aiming to release by late 2026, has been kept tightly under wraps since its development was confirmed last year over concerns that competitors will set about trying to copy the product before it’s launched to the public. Altman dropped some hints during the call that shape our expectations, however, including that it will be unobtrusive, fully aware of a user’s life and surroundings, and will serve as a “third core device” a person would put on a desk after a MacBook Pro and an iPhone. OpenAI is already predicting that the device will be popular, with Altman saying that it will ship “faster than any company has ever shipped 100 million of something new before.”The leaked call also gave some insight into what the device likely won’t be — Altman said that it isn’t a pair of glasses, and that Ive wasn’t keen to make something you’d need to wear on the body, having recently slammed the Humane AI Pin. Altman has also denied rumors that OpenAI is developing a phone. The Journal previously reported that Ive and Altman wanted to wean users away from screens, with Ive saying in a recent interview that his next product is driven by owning the “unintended consequences” associated with the iPhone.Altman told OpenAI employees on the call that they have “the chance to do the biggest thing we’ve ever done as a company here.” The Journal reports that Ive referred to the project as “a new design movement,” and harkened back to his Apple career that saw him work closely with Steve Jobs before his passing in 2011. Now teamed up with Altman, Ive said, “the way that we clicked, and the way that we’ve been able to work together, has been profound for me.”See More:
    #details #leak #about #jony #iveampamp8217s
    Details leak about Jony Ive’s new ‘screen-free’ OpenAI device
    The mysterious device that OpenAI is cooking up with former Apple designer Jony Ive will be pocket-size, contextually aware, screen-free, and isn’t eyewear. Ive and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman revealed details about the project in an internal staff call reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, after announcing the billion acquisition of Ive’s AI hardware startup, io.Altman suggested that the acquisition could increase OpenAI’s value by trillion, and envisioned a “family of devices” being born from the partnership. Information about the first device, which Altman is aiming to release by late 2026, has been kept tightly under wraps since its development was confirmed last year over concerns that competitors will set about trying to copy the product before it’s launched to the public. Altman dropped some hints during the call that shape our expectations, however, including that it will be unobtrusive, fully aware of a user’s life and surroundings, and will serve as a “third core device” a person would put on a desk after a MacBook Pro and an iPhone. OpenAI is already predicting that the device will be popular, with Altman saying that it will ship “faster than any company has ever shipped 100 million of something new before.”The leaked call also gave some insight into what the device likely won’t be — Altman said that it isn’t a pair of glasses, and that Ive wasn’t keen to make something you’d need to wear on the body, having recently slammed the Humane AI Pin. Altman has also denied rumors that OpenAI is developing a phone. The Journal previously reported that Ive and Altman wanted to wean users away from screens, with Ive saying in a recent interview that his next product is driven by owning the “unintended consequences” associated with the iPhone.Altman told OpenAI employees on the call that they have “the chance to do the biggest thing we’ve ever done as a company here.” The Journal reports that Ive referred to the project as “a new design movement,” and harkened back to his Apple career that saw him work closely with Steve Jobs before his passing in 2011. Now teamed up with Altman, Ive said, “the way that we clicked, and the way that we’ve been able to work together, has been profound for me.”See More: #details #leak #about #jony #iveampamp8217s
    Details leak about Jony Ive’s new ‘screen-free’ OpenAI device
    www.theverge.com
    The mysterious device that OpenAI is cooking up with former Apple designer Jony Ive will be pocket-size, contextually aware, screen-free, and isn’t eyewear. Ive and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman revealed details about the project in an internal staff call reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, after announcing the $6.5 billion acquisition of Ive’s AI hardware startup, io.Altman suggested that the acquisition could increase OpenAI’s value by $1 trillion, and envisioned a “family of devices” being born from the partnership. Information about the first device, which Altman is aiming to release by late 2026, has been kept tightly under wraps since its development was confirmed last year over concerns that competitors will set about trying to copy the product before it’s launched to the public. Altman dropped some hints during the call that shape our expectations, however, including that it will be unobtrusive, fully aware of a user’s life and surroundings, and will serve as a “third core device” a person would put on a desk after a MacBook Pro and an iPhone. OpenAI is already predicting that the device will be popular, with Altman saying that it will ship “faster than any company has ever shipped 100 million of something new before.”The leaked call also gave some insight into what the device likely won’t be — Altman said that it isn’t a pair of glasses, and that Ive wasn’t keen to make something you’d need to wear on the body, having recently slammed the Humane AI Pin. Altman has also denied rumors that OpenAI is developing a phone. The Journal previously reported that Ive and Altman wanted to wean users away from screens, with Ive saying in a recent interview that his next product is driven by owning the “unintended consequences” associated with the iPhone.Altman told OpenAI employees on the call that they have “the chance to do the biggest thing we’ve ever done as a company here.” The Journal reports that Ive referred to the project as “a new design movement,” and harkened back to his Apple career that saw him work closely with Steve Jobs before his passing in 2011. Now teamed up with Altman, Ive said, “the way that we clicked, and the way that we’ve been able to work together, has been profound for me.”See More:
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  • Why the “Most Hated” Paint Color in America Deserves a Second Chance

    It takes a lot to make a paint color one of the most popular paint colors of all time—not every shade can be a Swiss Coffee or Pink Ground, after all. As Country Living’s Senior Homes & Style Editor, I am always on the hunt for what’s trending in the color world, so when I received an email from storied paint company Sherwin-Williams with data on their least popular paint color, I was intrigued. For the second year in a row, Sherwin-Williams is announcing their “Loneliest Color of the Year.” This year’s winner is Radiant Lilac. Throughout 2024, Radiant Lilac was Sherwin-Williams’ least tinted color. In fact, out of the millions of gallons of paint they create—a process known as tinting—this shade had less than 1,000 gallons tinted. For Some of Our Favorite Paint Colors:A true lilac, this shade is a softer take on the popular muddy plum, which appeared in our 2025 paint trend report after being named a color of the year by both Benjamin Moore and Glidden. “Purple can feel like a bold commitment—it’s not always the first color people reach for, especially if they’re unsure about how to bring it into their space,” says Sherwin-Williams Director of Color Marketing Sue Wadden. “Radiant Lilac sits in that in-between space: it’s not a neutral, but it’s not an overwhelming statement either, which can make it feel a little uncertain for some.”As part of the announcement that this soft purple is the company’s least popular shade, Sherwin-Williams teamed up with one of the most popular basketball players in recent years, Paige Bueckers, who was the first pick in the 2025 WNBA draft and won the 2025 NCAA College Basketball Championship with her alma mater, the University of Connecticut. Paige, who now plays for the Dallas Wings, is known for her love of purple and recently wore an iconic Radiant Lilac-colored custom suit created in collaboration with legendary designer Dapper Dan and Sherwin-Williams. Amy Sussman//Getty ImagesWNBA star Paige Bueckers at the 2024 ESPYS in a custom Radiant Lilac-colored suitIf Paige’s love for purple doesn’t have you convinced that the shade is worth trying, its cozy, universally flattering undertones should. “It’s that perfect balance between red and blue, so it feels grounded and calming, yet expressive,” says Sue. If you want to make a statement, use the color to highlight architectural features or statement furniture, Sue advises. She also recommends pairing it with moodier shades such as Roycroft Bronze Green or Rookwood Dark Red. But if you’re in the mood for something lighter, Sue recommends trying Cool Beige or Ice Cube. So, what do you think? Is it time for lilac to make a comeback? For More Paint Colors You’re Sure To Love:Anna LoganSenior Homes & Style EditorAnna Logan is the Senior Homes & Style Editor at Country Living, where she has been covering all things home design, including sharing exclusive looks at beautifully designed country kitchens, producing home features, writing everything from timely trend reports on the latest viral aesthetic to expert-driven explainers on must-read topics, and rounding up pretty much everything you’ve ever wanted to know about paint, since 2021. Anna has spent the last seven years covering every aspect of the design industry, previously having written for Traditional Home, One Kings Lane, House Beautiful, and Frederic. She holds a degree in journalism from the University of Georgia. When she’s not working, Anna can either be found digging around her flower garden or through the dusty shelves of an antique shop. Follow her adventures, or, more importantly, those of her three-year-old Maltese and official Country Living Pet Lab tester, Teddy, on Instagram.
     
    #why #most #hated #paint #color
    Why the “Most Hated” Paint Color in America Deserves a Second Chance
    It takes a lot to make a paint color one of the most popular paint colors of all time—not every shade can be a Swiss Coffee or Pink Ground, after all. As Country Living’s Senior Homes & Style Editor, I am always on the hunt for what’s trending in the color world, so when I received an email from storied paint company Sherwin-Williams with data on their least popular paint color, I was intrigued. For the second year in a row, Sherwin-Williams is announcing their “Loneliest Color of the Year.” This year’s winner is Radiant Lilac. Throughout 2024, Radiant Lilac was Sherwin-Williams’ least tinted color. In fact, out of the millions of gallons of paint they create—a process known as tinting—this shade had less than 1,000 gallons tinted. For Some of Our Favorite Paint Colors:A true lilac, this shade is a softer take on the popular muddy plum, which appeared in our 2025 paint trend report after being named a color of the year by both Benjamin Moore and Glidden. “Purple can feel like a bold commitment—it’s not always the first color people reach for, especially if they’re unsure about how to bring it into their space,” says Sherwin-Williams Director of Color Marketing Sue Wadden. “Radiant Lilac sits in that in-between space: it’s not a neutral, but it’s not an overwhelming statement either, which can make it feel a little uncertain for some.”As part of the announcement that this soft purple is the company’s least popular shade, Sherwin-Williams teamed up with one of the most popular basketball players in recent years, Paige Bueckers, who was the first pick in the 2025 WNBA draft and won the 2025 NCAA College Basketball Championship with her alma mater, the University of Connecticut. Paige, who now plays for the Dallas Wings, is known for her love of purple and recently wore an iconic Radiant Lilac-colored custom suit created in collaboration with legendary designer Dapper Dan and Sherwin-Williams. Amy Sussman//Getty ImagesWNBA star Paige Bueckers at the 2024 ESPYS in a custom Radiant Lilac-colored suitIf Paige’s love for purple doesn’t have you convinced that the shade is worth trying, its cozy, universally flattering undertones should. “It’s that perfect balance between red and blue, so it feels grounded and calming, yet expressive,” says Sue. If you want to make a statement, use the color to highlight architectural features or statement furniture, Sue advises. She also recommends pairing it with moodier shades such as Roycroft Bronze Green or Rookwood Dark Red. But if you’re in the mood for something lighter, Sue recommends trying Cool Beige or Ice Cube. So, what do you think? Is it time for lilac to make a comeback? For More Paint Colors You’re Sure To Love:Anna LoganSenior Homes & Style EditorAnna Logan is the Senior Homes & Style Editor at Country Living, where she has been covering all things home design, including sharing exclusive looks at beautifully designed country kitchens, producing home features, writing everything from timely trend reports on the latest viral aesthetic to expert-driven explainers on must-read topics, and rounding up pretty much everything you’ve ever wanted to know about paint, since 2021. Anna has spent the last seven years covering every aspect of the design industry, previously having written for Traditional Home, One Kings Lane, House Beautiful, and Frederic. She holds a degree in journalism from the University of Georgia. When she’s not working, Anna can either be found digging around her flower garden or through the dusty shelves of an antique shop. Follow her adventures, or, more importantly, those of her three-year-old Maltese and official Country Living Pet Lab tester, Teddy, on Instagram.   #why #most #hated #paint #color
    Why the “Most Hated” Paint Color in America Deserves a Second Chance
    www.countryliving.com
    It takes a lot to make a paint color one of the most popular paint colors of all time—not every shade can be a Swiss Coffee or Pink Ground, after all. As Country Living’s Senior Homes & Style Editor, I am always on the hunt for what’s trending in the color world, so when I received an email from storied paint company Sherwin-Williams with data on their least popular paint color, I was intrigued. For the second year in a row, Sherwin-Williams is announcing their “Loneliest Color of the Year.” This year’s winner is Radiant Lilac. Throughout 2024, Radiant Lilac was Sherwin-Williams’ least tinted color. In fact, out of the millions of gallons of paint they create—a process known as tinting—this shade had less than 1,000 gallons tinted. For Some of Our Favorite Paint Colors:A true lilac, this shade is a softer take on the popular muddy plum, which appeared in our 2025 paint trend report after being named a color of the year by both Benjamin Moore and Glidden. “Purple can feel like a bold commitment—it’s not always the first color people reach for, especially if they’re unsure about how to bring it into their space,” says Sherwin-Williams Director of Color Marketing Sue Wadden. “Radiant Lilac sits in that in-between space: it’s not a neutral, but it’s not an overwhelming statement either, which can make it feel a little uncertain for some.”As part of the announcement that this soft purple is the company’s least popular shade, Sherwin-Williams teamed up with one of the most popular basketball players in recent years, Paige Bueckers, who was the first pick in the 2025 WNBA draft and won the 2025 NCAA College Basketball Championship with her alma mater, the University of Connecticut. Paige, who now plays for the Dallas Wings, is known for her love of purple and recently wore an iconic Radiant Lilac-colored custom suit created in collaboration with legendary designer Dapper Dan and Sherwin-Williams. Amy Sussman//Getty ImagesWNBA star Paige Bueckers at the 2024 ESPYS in a custom Radiant Lilac-colored suitIf Paige’s love for purple doesn’t have you convinced that the shade is worth trying, its cozy, universally flattering undertones should. “It’s that perfect balance between red and blue, so it feels grounded and calming, yet expressive,” says Sue. If you want to make a statement, use the color to highlight architectural features or statement furniture, Sue advises. She also recommends pairing it with moodier shades such as Roycroft Bronze Green or Rookwood Dark Red. But if you’re in the mood for something lighter, Sue recommends trying Cool Beige or Ice Cube. So, what do you think? Is it time for lilac to make a comeback? For More Paint Colors You’re Sure To Love:Anna LoganSenior Homes & Style EditorAnna Logan is the Senior Homes & Style Editor at Country Living, where she has been covering all things home design, including sharing exclusive looks at beautifully designed country kitchens, producing home features, writing everything from timely trend reports on the latest viral aesthetic to expert-driven explainers on must-read topics, and rounding up pretty much everything you’ve ever wanted to know about paint, since 2021. Anna has spent the last seven years covering every aspect of the design industry, previously having written for Traditional Home, One Kings Lane, House Beautiful, and Frederic. She holds a degree in journalism from the University of Georgia. When she’s not working, Anna can either be found digging around her flower garden or through the dusty shelves of an antique shop. Follow her adventures, or, more importantly, those of her three-year-old Maltese and official Country Living Pet Lab tester, Teddy, on Instagram.  
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  • Log your weight in Apple Health quickly and cheaply with this iPhone-compatible smart scale

    After my last WiFi-enabled smart scale broke and refused to connect to the Internet anymore, I sought something simpler and cheaper to replace it. The old scale had all sorts of fancy service integrations that I never used. I just wanted something that would track my weight and report the measurements to the Health app on my iPhone.
    The Eufy C20 smart scale is what I landed on and I’m very happy with it — and it’s pretty cheap too. Here’s how it works …

    Firstly, the scale works completely independently of any other electronic device or service. The iPhone Apple Health integration is an optional extra, but is not required, and there’s no associated subscriptions or other upsells.
    The C20 scale has a relatively small footprint, measuring under 27cm square, so you can tuck it away in your bathroom without it taking up too much space. But what’s nice is on top of the scale, you get a pretty large and bright 3.3-inch color screen.

    When you step on the scale, it will take your weight and measure other metrics like body fat and muscle mass at the same time. These numbers are easily glanceable on the big screen, and it will show you a little graphic visualising change over time compared to your last reading. Eufy says the scale is accurate with a variance of ~50g, and it seemed accurate in my testing.
    Optionally, you can turn on heart rate tracking too, but this requires you to stand on the scale for a few more seconds each time you go to take a reading.
    To get all these stats added to Apple Health, you pair the scale using the eufy Life app. It uses Bluetooth to communicate. Crucially, data is only sent to the iPhone when the Eufy app is open and you activate the scale by standing on it. So to sync your measurements with the Health app, next time you go stand on the scale, you just take your iPhone with you and open the Eufy app on it nearby.
    Almost instantly, it will connect to the scale and your weight will be logged inside eufy Life, which then also sends it to the Apple Health database. You don’t have to press any buttons, just have the app open, so it’s pretty painless. A Bluetooth symbol appears on the screen of the scale to confirm it is connected.
    The eufy Life app interface is certainly not the best designed app you’ve ever seen, but it doesn’t matter. You don’t have to use it, and I don’t. You just open it so it connect to the scale, and then you can close it again and check your data in Health or any third-party app that talks to the HealthKit database.

    You also don’t need to remember to bring your phone with you every time you go to the bathroom to weigh in. The scale has onboard memory and tracks the last few weeks of metrics. If you step on the scale with no phone connected, it just shows the information on its screen and saves it for later. When you next do step on with the iPhone present, it will sync the full history of metrics.
    It’s that easy, with no fuss. Now I have all of the following metrics being recorded and saved to Health app: Weight, Body Fat Percentage, Body Mass Index, Height, and Lean Body Mass. It could send Heart Rate readings too, but I disabled that feature on the scale in lieu of using my Apple Watch, as doing it on the scale means waiting around for a good five-to-ten additional seconds. If you don’t have a Watch, you may find that useful but for me that particular feature ended up just being an inconvenience.
    The only other gotcha to be aware of is multi user support. If you have multiple members of your family, you can add each person as a separate profile on the scale to track metrics independently, up to 16 users. These are attributed appropriately in the eufy Life app, but there’s not a good way of syncing each profile’s data to each person’s phone for storage in Apple Health. ALthough there are some workarounds, the Health integration is clearly designed for single user operation.
    It’s not the fanciest smart scale on the market but it does what I need. It’s fast, reliable and gets out of your way. And it is pretty inexpensive for a smart scale.
    You can get the Eufy Smart Scale C20 for right now on Amazon. That’s a 33% discount compared to its normal list price of Disclosure: We earn commission from the affiliate links above. This review is partnered with Eufy through the Amazon Creator Connections marketing program.

    Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. 

    FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
    #log #your #weight #apple #health
    Log your weight in Apple Health quickly and cheaply with this iPhone-compatible smart scale
    After my last WiFi-enabled smart scale broke and refused to connect to the Internet anymore, I sought something simpler and cheaper to replace it. The old scale had all sorts of fancy service integrations that I never used. I just wanted something that would track my weight and report the measurements to the Health app on my iPhone. The Eufy C20 smart scale is what I landed on and I’m very happy with it — and it’s pretty cheap too. Here’s how it works … Firstly, the scale works completely independently of any other electronic device or service. The iPhone Apple Health integration is an optional extra, but is not required, and there’s no associated subscriptions or other upsells. The C20 scale has a relatively small footprint, measuring under 27cm square, so you can tuck it away in your bathroom without it taking up too much space. But what’s nice is on top of the scale, you get a pretty large and bright 3.3-inch color screen. When you step on the scale, it will take your weight and measure other metrics like body fat and muscle mass at the same time. These numbers are easily glanceable on the big screen, and it will show you a little graphic visualising change over time compared to your last reading. Eufy says the scale is accurate with a variance of ~50g, and it seemed accurate in my testing. Optionally, you can turn on heart rate tracking too, but this requires you to stand on the scale for a few more seconds each time you go to take a reading. To get all these stats added to Apple Health, you pair the scale using the eufy Life app. It uses Bluetooth to communicate. Crucially, data is only sent to the iPhone when the Eufy app is open and you activate the scale by standing on it. So to sync your measurements with the Health app, next time you go stand on the scale, you just take your iPhone with you and open the Eufy app on it nearby. Almost instantly, it will connect to the scale and your weight will be logged inside eufy Life, which then also sends it to the Apple Health database. You don’t have to press any buttons, just have the app open, so it’s pretty painless. A Bluetooth symbol appears on the screen of the scale to confirm it is connected. The eufy Life app interface is certainly not the best designed app you’ve ever seen, but it doesn’t matter. You don’t have to use it, and I don’t. You just open it so it connect to the scale, and then you can close it again and check your data in Health or any third-party app that talks to the HealthKit database. You also don’t need to remember to bring your phone with you every time you go to the bathroom to weigh in. The scale has onboard memory and tracks the last few weeks of metrics. If you step on the scale with no phone connected, it just shows the information on its screen and saves it for later. When you next do step on with the iPhone present, it will sync the full history of metrics. It’s that easy, with no fuss. Now I have all of the following metrics being recorded and saved to Health app: Weight, Body Fat Percentage, Body Mass Index, Height, and Lean Body Mass. It could send Heart Rate readings too, but I disabled that feature on the scale in lieu of using my Apple Watch, as doing it on the scale means waiting around for a good five-to-ten additional seconds. If you don’t have a Watch, you may find that useful but for me that particular feature ended up just being an inconvenience. The only other gotcha to be aware of is multi user support. If you have multiple members of your family, you can add each person as a separate profile on the scale to track metrics independently, up to 16 users. These are attributed appropriately in the eufy Life app, but there’s not a good way of syncing each profile’s data to each person’s phone for storage in Apple Health. ALthough there are some workarounds, the Health integration is clearly designed for single user operation. It’s not the fanciest smart scale on the market but it does what I need. It’s fast, reliable and gets out of your way. And it is pretty inexpensive for a smart scale. You can get the Eufy Smart Scale C20 for right now on Amazon. That’s a 33% discount compared to its normal list price of Disclosure: We earn commission from the affiliate links above. This review is partnered with Eufy through the Amazon Creator Connections marketing program. Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed.  FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel #log #your #weight #apple #health
    Log your weight in Apple Health quickly and cheaply with this iPhone-compatible smart scale
    9to5mac.com
    After my last WiFi-enabled smart scale broke and refused to connect to the Internet anymore, I sought something simpler and cheaper to replace it. The old scale had all sorts of fancy service integrations that I never used. I just wanted something that would track my weight and report the measurements to the Health app on my iPhone. The Eufy C20 smart scale is what I landed on and I’m very happy with it — and it’s pretty cheap too. Here’s how it works … Firstly, the scale works completely independently of any other electronic device or service. The iPhone Apple Health integration is an optional extra, but is not required, and there’s no associated subscriptions or other upsells. The C20 scale has a relatively small footprint, measuring under 27cm square, so you can tuck it away in your bathroom without it taking up too much space. But what’s nice is on top of the scale, you get a pretty large and bright 3.3-inch color screen. When you step on the scale, it will take your weight and measure other metrics like body fat and muscle mass at the same time. These numbers are easily glanceable on the big screen, and it will show you a little graphic visualising change over time compared to your last reading. Eufy says the scale is accurate with a variance of ~50g (0.1bs), and it seemed accurate in my testing. Optionally, you can turn on heart rate tracking too, but this requires you to stand on the scale for a few more seconds each time you go to take a reading. To get all these stats added to Apple Health, you pair the scale using the eufy Life app. It uses Bluetooth to communicate. Crucially, data is only sent to the iPhone when the Eufy app is open and you activate the scale by standing on it. So to sync your measurements with the Health app, next time you go stand on the scale, you just take your iPhone with you and open the Eufy app on it nearby. Almost instantly, it will connect to the scale and your weight will be logged inside eufy Life, which then also sends it to the Apple Health database. You don’t have to press any buttons, just have the app open, so it’s pretty painless. A Bluetooth symbol appears on the screen of the scale to confirm it is connected. The eufy Life app interface is certainly not the best designed app you’ve ever seen, but it doesn’t matter. You don’t have to use it, and I don’t. You just open it so it connect to the scale, and then you can close it again and check your data in Health or any third-party app that talks to the HealthKit database. You also don’t need to remember to bring your phone with you every time you go to the bathroom to weigh in. The scale has onboard memory and tracks the last few weeks of metrics. If you step on the scale with no phone connected, it just shows the information on its screen and saves it for later. When you next do step on with the iPhone present, it will sync the full history of metrics. It’s that easy, with no fuss. Now I have all of the following metrics being recorded and saved to Health app: Weight, Body Fat Percentage, Body Mass Index, Height, and Lean Body Mass. It could send Heart Rate readings too, but I disabled that feature on the scale in lieu of using my Apple Watch, as doing it on the scale means waiting around for a good five-to-ten additional seconds. If you don’t have a Watch, you may find that useful but for me that particular feature ended up just being an inconvenience. The only other gotcha to be aware of is multi user support. If you have multiple members of your family, you can add each person as a separate profile on the scale to track metrics independently, up to 16 users. These are attributed appropriately in the eufy Life app, but there’s not a good way of syncing each profile’s data to each person’s phone for storage in Apple Health. ALthough there are some workarounds, the Health integration is clearly designed for single user operation. It’s not the fanciest smart scale on the market but it does what I need. It’s fast, reliable and gets out of your way. And it is pretty inexpensive for a smart scale. You can get the Eufy Smart Scale C20 for $39.99 right now on Amazon. That’s a 33% discount compared to its normal list price of $59.99. Disclosure: We earn commission from the affiliate links above. This review is partnered with Eufy through the Amazon Creator Connections marketing program. Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed.  FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • FBI and Europol Disrupt Lumma Stealer Malware Network Linked to 10 Million Infections

    May 22, 2025Ravie LakshmananMalware / Cybercrime

    A sprawling operation undertaken by global law enforcement agencies and a consortium of private sector firms has disrupted the online infrastructure associated with a commodity information stealer known as Lumma, seizing 2,300 domains that acted as the command-and-controlbackbone to commandeer infected Windows systems.
    "Malware like LummaC2 is deployed to steal sensitive information such as user login credentials from millions of victims in order to facilitate a host of crimes, including fraudulent bank transfers and cryptocurrency theft," the U.S. Department of Justicesaid in a statement.
    The confiscated infrastructure has been used to target millions across the world through affiliates and other cyber criminals. Lumma Stealer, active since late 2022, is estimated to have been used in at least 1.7 million instances to steal information, such as browser data, autofill information, login credentials, and cryptocurrency seed phrases. The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigationhas attributed around 10 million infections to Lumma.
    The seizure impacts five domains that serve as login panels for Lumma Stealer's administrators and paying customers to deploy the malware, thereby preventing them from compromising the computers and stealing victim information.
    "Between March 16 and May 16, 2025, Microsoft identified over 394,000 Windows computers globally infected by the Lumma malware," Europol said, adding the operation cuts off communications between the malicious tool and victims. The agency described Lumma as the "world's most significant infostealer threat."

    Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit, in partnership with other cybersecurity companies ESET, BitSight, Lumen, Cloudflare, CleanDNS, and GMO Registry, said it took down approximately 2,300 malicious domains that formed the backbone of Lumma's infrastructure.
    Spread of Lumma Stealer malware infections across Windows devices
    "The primary developer of Lumma is based in Russia and goes by the internet alias 'Shamel,'" Steven Masada, assistant general counsel at DCU, said. "Shamel markets different tiers of service for Lumma via Telegram and other Russian-language chat forums. Depending on what service a cybercriminal purchases, they can create their own versions of the malware, add tools to conceal and distribute it, and track stolen information through an online portal."
    The stealer, marketed under a malware-as-a-servicemodel, is available on a subscription basis for anywhere between to The developer also offers a plan that grants customers access to source code and the right to sell it to other criminal actors.
    Weekly counts of new C2 domains
    "Lower tiers include basic filtering and log download options, while higher tiers offer custom data collection, evasion tools, and early access to new features," ESET said. "The most expensive plan emphasizes stealth and adaptability, offering unique build generation and reduced detection."
    Over the years, Lumma has become something of a notorious threat, being delivered via various distribution vectors, including the increasingly popular ClickFix method. The Windows maker, which is tracking the threat actor behind the stealer under the name Storm-2477, said its distribution infrastructure is both "dynamic and resilient," leveraging a combination of phishing, malvertising, drive-by download schemes, abuse of trusted platforms, and traffic distribution systems like Prometheus.
    Lumma C2 selection mechanism
    Cato Networks, in a report published Wednesday, revealed that suspected Russian threat actors are leveraging Tigris Object Storage, Oracle Cloud InfrastructureObject Storage, and Scaleway Object Storage to host fake reCAPTCHA pages that make use of ClickFix-style lures to trick users into downloading Lumma Stealer.
    "The recent campaign leveraging Tigris Object Storage, OCI Object Storage, and Scaleway Object Storage builds upon earlier methods, introducing new delivery mechanisms aimed at evading detection and targeting technically proficient users," researchers Guile Domingo, Guy Waizel, and Tomer Agayev said.
    Attack flow for ClickFix leading to Lumma Stealer using Prometheus TDS
    Some of the notable aspects of the malware are below -

    It employs a multi-tiered C2 infrastructure consisting of a set of nine frequently changing tier-1 domains hard-coded into the malware's configuration and fallback C2s hosted on Steam profiles and Telegram channels that point to tier-1 C2s
    The payloads are typically spread using pay-per-installnetworks or traffic sellers that deliver installs-as-a-service.
    The stealer is typically bundled with spoofed software or cracked versions of popular commercial software, targeting users looking to avoid paying for legitimate licenses
    The operators have created a Telegram marketplace with a rating system for affiliates to sell stolen data without intermediaries
    The core binary is obfuscated with advanced protection such as low-level virtual machine, Control Flow Flattening, Control Flow Obfuscation, customized stack decryption, huge stack variables, and dead codes, among others to make static analysis difficult
    There were more than 21,000 market listings selling Lumma Stealer logs on multiple cybercriminal forums from April through June of 2024, a 71.7% increase from April through June of 2023

    "The Lumma Stealer distribution infrastructure is flexible and adaptable," Microsoft said. "Operators continually refine their techniques, rotating malicious domains, exploiting ad networks, and leveraging legitimate cloud services to evade detection and maintain operational continuity. To further hide the real C2 servers, all the C2 servers are hidden behind the Cloudflare proxy."
    "This dynamic structure enables operators to maximize the success of campaigns while complicating efforts to trace or dismantle their activities. The growth and resilience of Lumma Stealer highlights the broader evolution of cybercrime and underscores the need for layered defenses and industry collaboration to counter threats."
    In an interview with security researcher g0njxa in January 2025, the developer behind Lumma said they intended to cease operations by next fall. "We have done a lot of work over two years to achieve what we have now," they said. "We are proud of this. It has become a part of our daily life for us, and not just work."

    Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter  and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

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    #fbi #europol #disrupt #lumma #stealer
    FBI and Europol Disrupt Lumma Stealer Malware Network Linked to 10 Million Infections
    May 22, 2025Ravie LakshmananMalware / Cybercrime A sprawling operation undertaken by global law enforcement agencies and a consortium of private sector firms has disrupted the online infrastructure associated with a commodity information stealer known as Lumma, seizing 2,300 domains that acted as the command-and-controlbackbone to commandeer infected Windows systems. "Malware like LummaC2 is deployed to steal sensitive information such as user login credentials from millions of victims in order to facilitate a host of crimes, including fraudulent bank transfers and cryptocurrency theft," the U.S. Department of Justicesaid in a statement. The confiscated infrastructure has been used to target millions across the world through affiliates and other cyber criminals. Lumma Stealer, active since late 2022, is estimated to have been used in at least 1.7 million instances to steal information, such as browser data, autofill information, login credentials, and cryptocurrency seed phrases. The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigationhas attributed around 10 million infections to Lumma. The seizure impacts five domains that serve as login panels for Lumma Stealer's administrators and paying customers to deploy the malware, thereby preventing them from compromising the computers and stealing victim information. "Between March 16 and May 16, 2025, Microsoft identified over 394,000 Windows computers globally infected by the Lumma malware," Europol said, adding the operation cuts off communications between the malicious tool and victims. The agency described Lumma as the "world's most significant infostealer threat." Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit, in partnership with other cybersecurity companies ESET, BitSight, Lumen, Cloudflare, CleanDNS, and GMO Registry, said it took down approximately 2,300 malicious domains that formed the backbone of Lumma's infrastructure. Spread of Lumma Stealer malware infections across Windows devices "The primary developer of Lumma is based in Russia and goes by the internet alias 'Shamel,'" Steven Masada, assistant general counsel at DCU, said. "Shamel markets different tiers of service for Lumma via Telegram and other Russian-language chat forums. Depending on what service a cybercriminal purchases, they can create their own versions of the malware, add tools to conceal and distribute it, and track stolen information through an online portal." The stealer, marketed under a malware-as-a-servicemodel, is available on a subscription basis for anywhere between to The developer also offers a plan that grants customers access to source code and the right to sell it to other criminal actors. Weekly counts of new C2 domains "Lower tiers include basic filtering and log download options, while higher tiers offer custom data collection, evasion tools, and early access to new features," ESET said. "The most expensive plan emphasizes stealth and adaptability, offering unique build generation and reduced detection." Over the years, Lumma has become something of a notorious threat, being delivered via various distribution vectors, including the increasingly popular ClickFix method. The Windows maker, which is tracking the threat actor behind the stealer under the name Storm-2477, said its distribution infrastructure is both "dynamic and resilient," leveraging a combination of phishing, malvertising, drive-by download schemes, abuse of trusted platforms, and traffic distribution systems like Prometheus. Lumma C2 selection mechanism Cato Networks, in a report published Wednesday, revealed that suspected Russian threat actors are leveraging Tigris Object Storage, Oracle Cloud InfrastructureObject Storage, and Scaleway Object Storage to host fake reCAPTCHA pages that make use of ClickFix-style lures to trick users into downloading Lumma Stealer. "The recent campaign leveraging Tigris Object Storage, OCI Object Storage, and Scaleway Object Storage builds upon earlier methods, introducing new delivery mechanisms aimed at evading detection and targeting technically proficient users," researchers Guile Domingo, Guy Waizel, and Tomer Agayev said. Attack flow for ClickFix leading to Lumma Stealer using Prometheus TDS Some of the notable aspects of the malware are below - It employs a multi-tiered C2 infrastructure consisting of a set of nine frequently changing tier-1 domains hard-coded into the malware's configuration and fallback C2s hosted on Steam profiles and Telegram channels that point to tier-1 C2s The payloads are typically spread using pay-per-installnetworks or traffic sellers that deliver installs-as-a-service. The stealer is typically bundled with spoofed software or cracked versions of popular commercial software, targeting users looking to avoid paying for legitimate licenses The operators have created a Telegram marketplace with a rating system for affiliates to sell stolen data without intermediaries The core binary is obfuscated with advanced protection such as low-level virtual machine, Control Flow Flattening, Control Flow Obfuscation, customized stack decryption, huge stack variables, and dead codes, among others to make static analysis difficult There were more than 21,000 market listings selling Lumma Stealer logs on multiple cybercriminal forums from April through June of 2024, a 71.7% increase from April through June of 2023 "The Lumma Stealer distribution infrastructure is flexible and adaptable," Microsoft said. "Operators continually refine their techniques, rotating malicious domains, exploiting ad networks, and leveraging legitimate cloud services to evade detection and maintain operational continuity. To further hide the real C2 servers, all the C2 servers are hidden behind the Cloudflare proxy." "This dynamic structure enables operators to maximize the success of campaigns while complicating efforts to trace or dismantle their activities. The growth and resilience of Lumma Stealer highlights the broader evolution of cybercrime and underscores the need for layered defenses and industry collaboration to counter threats." In an interview with security researcher g0njxa in January 2025, the developer behind Lumma said they intended to cease operations by next fall. "We have done a lot of work over two years to achieve what we have now," they said. "We are proud of this. It has become a part of our daily life for us, and not just work." Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter  and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post. SHARE     #fbi #europol #disrupt #lumma #stealer
    FBI and Europol Disrupt Lumma Stealer Malware Network Linked to 10 Million Infections
    thehackernews.com
    May 22, 2025Ravie LakshmananMalware / Cybercrime A sprawling operation undertaken by global law enforcement agencies and a consortium of private sector firms has disrupted the online infrastructure associated with a commodity information stealer known as Lumma (aka LummaC or LummaC2), seizing 2,300 domains that acted as the command-and-control (C2) backbone to commandeer infected Windows systems. "Malware like LummaC2 is deployed to steal sensitive information such as user login credentials from millions of victims in order to facilitate a host of crimes, including fraudulent bank transfers and cryptocurrency theft," the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) said in a statement. The confiscated infrastructure has been used to target millions across the world through affiliates and other cyber criminals. Lumma Stealer, active since late 2022, is estimated to have been used in at least 1.7 million instances to steal information, such as browser data, autofill information, login credentials, and cryptocurrency seed phrases. The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has attributed around 10 million infections to Lumma. The seizure impacts five domains that serve as login panels for Lumma Stealer's administrators and paying customers to deploy the malware, thereby preventing them from compromising the computers and stealing victim information. "Between March 16 and May 16, 2025, Microsoft identified over 394,000 Windows computers globally infected by the Lumma malware," Europol said, adding the operation cuts off communications between the malicious tool and victims. The agency described Lumma as the "world's most significant infostealer threat." Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit (DCU), in partnership with other cybersecurity companies ESET, BitSight, Lumen, Cloudflare, CleanDNS, and GMO Registry, said it took down approximately 2,300 malicious domains that formed the backbone of Lumma's infrastructure. Spread of Lumma Stealer malware infections across Windows devices "The primary developer of Lumma is based in Russia and goes by the internet alias 'Shamel,'" Steven Masada, assistant general counsel at DCU, said. "Shamel markets different tiers of service for Lumma via Telegram and other Russian-language chat forums. Depending on what service a cybercriminal purchases, they can create their own versions of the malware, add tools to conceal and distribute it, and track stolen information through an online portal." The stealer, marketed under a malware-as-a-service (MaaS) model, is available on a subscription basis for anywhere between $250 to $1,000. The developer also offers a $20,000 plan that grants customers access to source code and the right to sell it to other criminal actors. Weekly counts of new C2 domains "Lower tiers include basic filtering and log download options, while higher tiers offer custom data collection, evasion tools, and early access to new features," ESET said. "The most expensive plan emphasizes stealth and adaptability, offering unique build generation and reduced detection." Over the years, Lumma has become something of a notorious threat, being delivered via various distribution vectors, including the increasingly popular ClickFix method. The Windows maker, which is tracking the threat actor behind the stealer under the name Storm-2477, said its distribution infrastructure is both "dynamic and resilient," leveraging a combination of phishing, malvertising, drive-by download schemes, abuse of trusted platforms, and traffic distribution systems like Prometheus. Lumma C2 selection mechanism Cato Networks, in a report published Wednesday, revealed that suspected Russian threat actors are leveraging Tigris Object Storage, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Object Storage, and Scaleway Object Storage to host fake reCAPTCHA pages that make use of ClickFix-style lures to trick users into downloading Lumma Stealer. "The recent campaign leveraging Tigris Object Storage, OCI Object Storage, and Scaleway Object Storage builds upon earlier methods, introducing new delivery mechanisms aimed at evading detection and targeting technically proficient users," researchers Guile Domingo, Guy Waizel, and Tomer Agayev said. Attack flow for ClickFix leading to Lumma Stealer using Prometheus TDS Some of the notable aspects of the malware are below - It employs a multi-tiered C2 infrastructure consisting of a set of nine frequently changing tier-1 domains hard-coded into the malware's configuration and fallback C2s hosted on Steam profiles and Telegram channels that point to tier-1 C2s The payloads are typically spread using pay-per-install (PPI) networks or traffic sellers that deliver installs-as-a-service. The stealer is typically bundled with spoofed software or cracked versions of popular commercial software, targeting users looking to avoid paying for legitimate licenses The operators have created a Telegram marketplace with a rating system for affiliates to sell stolen data without intermediaries The core binary is obfuscated with advanced protection such as low-level virtual machine (LLVM core), Control Flow Flattening (CFF), Control Flow Obfuscation, customized stack decryption, huge stack variables, and dead codes, among others to make static analysis difficult There were more than 21,000 market listings selling Lumma Stealer logs on multiple cybercriminal forums from April through June of 2024, a 71.7% increase from April through June of 2023 "The Lumma Stealer distribution infrastructure is flexible and adaptable," Microsoft said. "Operators continually refine their techniques, rotating malicious domains, exploiting ad networks, and leveraging legitimate cloud services to evade detection and maintain operational continuity. To further hide the real C2 servers, all the C2 servers are hidden behind the Cloudflare proxy." "This dynamic structure enables operators to maximize the success of campaigns while complicating efforts to trace or dismantle their activities. The growth and resilience of Lumma Stealer highlights the broader evolution of cybercrime and underscores the need for layered defenses and industry collaboration to counter threats." In an interview with security researcher g0njxa in January 2025, the developer behind Lumma said they intended to cease operations by next fall. "We have done a lot of work over two years to achieve what we have now," they said. "We are proud of this. It has become a part of our daily life for us, and not just work." Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter  and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post. SHARE    
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  • Dell embarque les modèles de Mistral AI dans son projet d'AI Factory

    A l'occasion de Dell World qui se tenait cette semaine à Las Vegas, la start-up Mistral AI a profité d'un coup de projecteur... et d'un nouveau...
    #dell #embarque #les #modèles #mistral
    Dell embarque les modèles de Mistral AI dans son projet d'AI Factory
    A l'occasion de Dell World qui se tenait cette semaine à Las Vegas, la start-up Mistral AI a profité d'un coup de projecteur... et d'un nouveau... #dell #embarque #les #modèles #mistral
    Dell embarque les modèles de Mistral AI dans son projet d'AI Factory
    www.usine-digitale.fr
    A l'occasion de Dell World qui se tenait cette semaine à Las Vegas, la start-up Mistral AI a profité d'un coup de projecteur... et d'un nouveau...
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  • LGBTQ+ nightlife is going back to its counter-cultural roots

    Queerness and nightlife go hand in hand. Out of the mainstream. Underground and counter-cultural. Whether it’s the location, venue, organisers or crowd, they are always outside the norm. 
    Some, like new lesbian bar La Camionera in Hackney, east London, have been designed, built and crafted by queer hands – the same ones which will soon be shaking, stirring and drinking negronis on a brushed aluminium countertop, or raising a glass in the purpose-built seating areas.
    Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera
    The reopening of the quietly elegant La Camionerafollows a months-long conversion of a temporary space led by its trans owner and a team of queer architects, contractors and trades. It is unique and stylish.  Advertisement

    But that’s not the only reason this tailored LGBTQ+ space stands out. Its mere existence sits against a background of queer venue closures because of an unholy trinity of rising costs, licensing issues and safety concerns. London, to take one city, has lost half of these safe spaces since 2006.
    Waves of redevelopment and gentrification have had their impact, too. One of the most famous victims was the wildly beloved Joiners Arms pub in Hackney Road in 2015. Never forgotten, attempts continue to resurrect this institution somewhere else in London’s East End a decade on.
    But can La Camionera pave the way for a design-led renaissance of after-hours ‘queerness’? One thing is for sure, there is a growing queer movement – architects included – to create safe, accessible LGBTQ+ spaces and define what that might look like.
    We’re going out, to find out.
    The state of play
    The Night Time Industries Associationrecently reported that 37 per cent of all night clubs across the UK have permanently shut since March 2020. That’s an average of three clubs a week, or 150 a year.Advertisement

    LGBTQ+ venues make up a considerable chunk of this. In the capital, between 2006 and 2022, Greater London Authority numbers show that 75 bars, clubs and LGBTQ+ pubs shut down – sometimes forever. 
    The list keeps growing. In the past 18 months, G-A-Y Late in Soho and The Glory in Haggerston have closed. Meanwhile, a third LGBTQ+ safe space, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club, has been fighting closure on and off for years – though it seems the east London venue may finally have had a late reprieve. 
    Venue closures are happening elsewhere in the UK, too, with Birmingham losing the Village Inn, Glasgow losing Bonjour and Sheffield losing the Queer Junction nightclub. 
    Based on the current rate of club closures, the NTIA warns the UK could have no nightclubs of any kind by 2030. The pro-nighttime body blames the collapse partly on the long-term impact of the Covid pandemic. Once closed down and locked up, these unique spaces rarely re-emerge, eyed up by developers for larger gain. 
    And, while the NTIA data does not explain how many of these closures are LGBTQ+, the community is among the hardest-hit because queerness and nightlife are so intertwined. Or, as Olimpia Burchiellaro, a shareholder of the Friends of The Joiners Arms campaign, puts it: ‘Nighttime is queer time’. 
    A call toArms
    While The Joiners Arms, where reportedlyAlexander McQueen used to hang out, became one of the first LGBTQ+ venues to get protection in the planning system because of the sexual orientation of its users back in 2017, no on-site replacement has yet popped up on Hackney Road.
    Tower Hamlets Council had imposed a planning condition requiring any new development on The Joiners Arms site to include an LGBTQ+ venue. Developer Regal Homes had agreed to it. However, the proposed scheme that forced the closure has been delayed. No development, no new venue. 
    Burchiellaro tells the AJ that The Joiners Arms shows that LGBTQ+ spaces often act as ‘canaries in the coalmine’; a bellwether of the redevelopment cycle and of the state of the nighttime economy more generally. With little planning protection, they can be easily lost because they are often perceived as ‘unproductive’ uses in buildings ripe for replacement.
    Source: Friends of The Joiners ArmsFriends of The Joiners Arms protest outside the former pub
    ‘Gentrification and redevelopment are making it more and more difficult for communities who are not solely focused on profit, like queer spaces, to exist,’ argues Burchiellaro. ‘And, although queer clubs and bars have always been businesses, they’ve always been so much more than that.’
    In the meantime, the Friends of  The Joiners Arms campaign has put on ‘an itinerant, moving club night’ at other east London venues as an act of resistance against anti-LGBTQ+ gentrification and the demise of LGBTQ+ nightlife in the capital, according to Aska Welford, an architectural worker formerly with Karakusevic Carson Architects. Welford, who is leading on co-design for a future permanent home for The Joiners Arms campaign, adds: ‘Even without the physical space, without a permanent, fixed space, queer people continue to exist and have a good time and be together.’
    Safe and sound
    In Edinburgh, GRAS architect Kirsty Watt has also resorted to moving club nights, dubbed ‘Femmergy’, that turn the city’s historic urban fabric – including most recently a former biscuit factory – into a playground for femme-presenting members of the LGBTQ+ community, including trans people and afab women. Watt says: ‘In Edinburgh the queer nightlife scene particularly focused around cis gay men and so women, non-binary and trans people weren’t necessarily welcome in those spaces and that was the point of it, because there wasn’t really a space at all.’
    Source: Kirsty WattFemmergy club night
    While Femmergy has difficulties finding Edinburgh venues with level access and accessible toilets, the club nights have provided a safe space for people ‘to be inherently themselves and represent themselves in a way that they want to while still feeling safe’, says Watt. 
    Both accessibility and safety are central to Femmergy, and are what makes it queer, she tells the AJ, ‘because people need to feel like they have a representation within their urban space’. However, she admits that having level access and accessible toilets have ‘limited us in terms of what venues we can work with, particularly in Edinburgh, because so many of the buildings are historic’.
    Putting the pop in pop-up
    So, if permanent dedicated spaces don’t always exist, what about bringing the nuts-and-bolts of a party to the people instead? This is the concept behind the Mobile Dyke Bar, a travelling lesbian disco started by former Royal Academy Interior design student Lucy Nurnberg and her right-hand woman, Ali Wagner, as part of a wider project dubbed Uhaul Dyke Rescue, a series of design-led club nights. The Mobile Dyke Bar is made of prefabricated parts which ‘slot’ into rental vans, which Nurnberg suggests is a tongue-in-cheek response to hyper-masculine removal van culture as much as it is a declaration of space for lesbians when there is barely any. 
    Its next stop is Mighty Hoopla, a pop festival in south London, later this month – the Mobile Dyke Bar’s second outing at the LGBTQ+ friendly event. 
    Source: Courteney FrisbyThe Mobile Dyke Bar at Mighty Hoopla in 2024
    ‘The idea was that this would be a friendly space, but also about taking space for ourselves and being like, “Look, we need a bit of a dedicated corner here”,’ explains Nurnberg, whose Uhaul Dyke Rescue service was a reaction to ‘queer spaces in London generally declining, especially lesbian spaces’.
    Nurnberg adds that her interior design course informed Uhaul’s philosophy, ‘which is a bit secret and underground’ and had to be done on the cheap. It also looks at temporary structures as queer structures. 
    ‘We had a scaffold structure on the dance floor for our first night because I know that dykes love to flex muscle,’ Nurnberg explains, ‘But I also wanted to make it for anybody more femme presenting, and for anybody wanting to look a bit sexy, so we put a swing on the structure and people loved it.’
    Why architects should design the night
    CAKE, a Dalston, east London-based practice, which was behind the Agnes stage at Rally festival in south London last year, has experience on an even bigger scale of delivering for a queer crowd. 
    The Layher scaffolding and translucent fibreglass-clad structure was designed to flip to become ‘The Strap’ at Body Movements – a queer festival the following day. That’s when the versatility of the modular structure’s raised platforms, floating walls, and one central dance floor all came into action – bringing the audience, artist and stage together. ‘For both days, depending on the music, it was a completely different environment,’ says CAKE architect Emiliano Zavala. ‘At  Body Movements people were dancing up on terraces and the whole thing was inhabited, and for Rally, the crowd was low and spread out, with the stage a kind of undercroft. The difference was really interesting.’
    Source: Rory GaylorAgnes by CAKE Architecture
    Why did CAKE take on the challenge? Hugh Scott Moncrieff, creative director, says it ‘wasn’t the idea of making money’ but the opportunity to make creative architecture that reflects music, rhythm and sound, as well as context.
    Agnes, or The Strap, was possible because CAKE had proven to festival organisers with an earlier Rally stage that you could ‘spend a tiny bit of money on design work’ and win against standard fabrication teams ‘who weren’t coming at it from an architectural lens’, Scott Moncrieff adds. Agnes could be getting an upgrade for this year’s August bank holiday festivals. The structure also won the people’s choice award at last month’s AJ Small Projects. A sign of better-designed nights out to come?
    The future is niche – and lesbian
    If the Mobile Dyke Bar and Agnes could be the future of festivals and club nights, is La Camionera the future of LGBTQ+ nighttime spaces more broadly? A well-polished, honed product for a community crying out for something decent designed especially for them? 
    Daniel Pope, of newly established design studio and architects Popelo, which worked on La Camionera, says the bar is special because the result is super-niche. Certainly, there is no underfoot nastiness, peeling paint or unwanted design features common to many of the old underground venues. Yet this is queer through and through. 
    ’There’s not really many queer spaces where you can get a really beautiful drink in a nice glass, where the floor isn’t sticky,’ says Pope. ‘And with funding being so difficult, often queer spaces can feel quite DIY and quite shabby, perhaps not thought-through. With La Camionera, we really tried to make it feel high-end. So we focused the budget on specific areas, like the bespoke bench seat and polished aluminium bar; it feels quite luxe.’
    Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera interior by Popelo and WET Studio
    Those additions, Pope admits, had to be costed in and compensated for elsewhere. Making decisions like these is part of the ‘burden’ on queer architects delivering queer spaces – often pro bono or for a reduced fee. But designing with care and enthusiasm, and, crucially, with first-hand experience of being part of the community.
    As Pope says: ‘While I can’t talk for lesbians and there’s loads of spaces for gay men in London, I know that having a lesbian space that felt really sexy was key for La Camionera.
    The architect, who worked alongside LGBTQ+ set design firm Wet Studio on the job, argues that La Camionera’s queer energy was brought by that very queer team of ‘builders and makers who know how you want to feel in a space as a queer person’. On that basis, bespoke queer design for clubs, bars and music experiences in general could be the way forward – and a challenge to the troubles of the wider nighttime economy and a lack of LGBTQ+ representation in permanent spaces.
    He adds: ‘Talking from experience, when I was not out, I would go to events and never felt like I enjoyed it. It wasn’t until I started making queer friends and we would go to queer venues that you could be yourself and connect with other people in a really magnetic way.’

    queer architecture 2025-05-22
    Gino Spocchia

    comment and share

    Tagsqueer architecture
    #lgbtq #nightlife #going #back #its
    LGBTQ+ nightlife is going back to its counter-cultural roots
    Queerness and nightlife go hand in hand. Out of the mainstream. Underground and counter-cultural. Whether it’s the location, venue, organisers or crowd, they are always outside the norm.  Some, like new lesbian bar La Camionera in Hackney, east London, have been designed, built and crafted by queer hands – the same ones which will soon be shaking, stirring and drinking negronis on a brushed aluminium countertop, or raising a glass in the purpose-built seating areas. Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera The reopening of the quietly elegant La Camionerafollows a months-long conversion of a temporary space led by its trans owner and a team of queer architects, contractors and trades. It is unique and stylish.  Advertisement But that’s not the only reason this tailored LGBTQ+ space stands out. Its mere existence sits against a background of queer venue closures because of an unholy trinity of rising costs, licensing issues and safety concerns. London, to take one city, has lost half of these safe spaces since 2006. Waves of redevelopment and gentrification have had their impact, too. One of the most famous victims was the wildly beloved Joiners Arms pub in Hackney Road in 2015. Never forgotten, attempts continue to resurrect this institution somewhere else in London’s East End a decade on. But can La Camionera pave the way for a design-led renaissance of after-hours ‘queerness’? One thing is for sure, there is a growing queer movement – architects included – to create safe, accessible LGBTQ+ spaces and define what that might look like. We’re going out, to find out. The state of play The Night Time Industries Associationrecently reported that 37 per cent of all night clubs across the UK have permanently shut since March 2020. That’s an average of three clubs a week, or 150 a year.Advertisement LGBTQ+ venues make up a considerable chunk of this. In the capital, between 2006 and 2022, Greater London Authority numbers show that 75 bars, clubs and LGBTQ+ pubs shut down – sometimes forever.  The list keeps growing. In the past 18 months, G-A-Y Late in Soho and The Glory in Haggerston have closed. Meanwhile, a third LGBTQ+ safe space, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club, has been fighting closure on and off for years – though it seems the east London venue may finally have had a late reprieve.  Venue closures are happening elsewhere in the UK, too, with Birmingham losing the Village Inn, Glasgow losing Bonjour and Sheffield losing the Queer Junction nightclub.  Based on the current rate of club closures, the NTIA warns the UK could have no nightclubs of any kind by 2030. The pro-nighttime body blames the collapse partly on the long-term impact of the Covid pandemic. Once closed down and locked up, these unique spaces rarely re-emerge, eyed up by developers for larger gain.  And, while the NTIA data does not explain how many of these closures are LGBTQ+, the community is among the hardest-hit because queerness and nightlife are so intertwined. Or, as Olimpia Burchiellaro, a shareholder of the Friends of The Joiners Arms campaign, puts it: ‘Nighttime is queer time’.  A call toArms While The Joiners Arms, where reportedlyAlexander McQueen used to hang out, became one of the first LGBTQ+ venues to get protection in the planning system because of the sexual orientation of its users back in 2017, no on-site replacement has yet popped up on Hackney Road. Tower Hamlets Council had imposed a planning condition requiring any new development on The Joiners Arms site to include an LGBTQ+ venue. Developer Regal Homes had agreed to it. However, the proposed scheme that forced the closure has been delayed. No development, no new venue.  Burchiellaro tells the AJ that The Joiners Arms shows that LGBTQ+ spaces often act as ‘canaries in the coalmine’; a bellwether of the redevelopment cycle and of the state of the nighttime economy more generally. With little planning protection, they can be easily lost because they are often perceived as ‘unproductive’ uses in buildings ripe for replacement. Source: Friends of The Joiners ArmsFriends of The Joiners Arms protest outside the former pub ‘Gentrification and redevelopment are making it more and more difficult for communities who are not solely focused on profit, like queer spaces, to exist,’ argues Burchiellaro. ‘And, although queer clubs and bars have always been businesses, they’ve always been so much more than that.’ In the meantime, the Friends of  The Joiners Arms campaign has put on ‘an itinerant, moving club night’ at other east London venues as an act of resistance against anti-LGBTQ+ gentrification and the demise of LGBTQ+ nightlife in the capital, according to Aska Welford, an architectural worker formerly with Karakusevic Carson Architects. Welford, who is leading on co-design for a future permanent home for The Joiners Arms campaign, adds: ‘Even without the physical space, without a permanent, fixed space, queer people continue to exist and have a good time and be together.’ Safe and sound In Edinburgh, GRAS architect Kirsty Watt has also resorted to moving club nights, dubbed ‘Femmergy’, that turn the city’s historic urban fabric – including most recently a former biscuit factory – into a playground for femme-presenting members of the LGBTQ+ community, including trans people and afab women. Watt says: ‘In Edinburgh the queer nightlife scene particularly focused around cis gay men and so women, non-binary and trans people weren’t necessarily welcome in those spaces and that was the point of it, because there wasn’t really a space at all.’ Source: Kirsty WattFemmergy club night While Femmergy has difficulties finding Edinburgh venues with level access and accessible toilets, the club nights have provided a safe space for people ‘to be inherently themselves and represent themselves in a way that they want to while still feeling safe’, says Watt.  Both accessibility and safety are central to Femmergy, and are what makes it queer, she tells the AJ, ‘because people need to feel like they have a representation within their urban space’. However, she admits that having level access and accessible toilets have ‘limited us in terms of what venues we can work with, particularly in Edinburgh, because so many of the buildings are historic’. Putting the pop in pop-up So, if permanent dedicated spaces don’t always exist, what about bringing the nuts-and-bolts of a party to the people instead? This is the concept behind the Mobile Dyke Bar, a travelling lesbian disco started by former Royal Academy Interior design student Lucy Nurnberg and her right-hand woman, Ali Wagner, as part of a wider project dubbed Uhaul Dyke Rescue, a series of design-led club nights. The Mobile Dyke Bar is made of prefabricated parts which ‘slot’ into rental vans, which Nurnberg suggests is a tongue-in-cheek response to hyper-masculine removal van culture as much as it is a declaration of space for lesbians when there is barely any.  Its next stop is Mighty Hoopla, a pop festival in south London, later this month – the Mobile Dyke Bar’s second outing at the LGBTQ+ friendly event.  Source: Courteney FrisbyThe Mobile Dyke Bar at Mighty Hoopla in 2024 ‘The idea was that this would be a friendly space, but also about taking space for ourselves and being like, “Look, we need a bit of a dedicated corner here”,’ explains Nurnberg, whose Uhaul Dyke Rescue service was a reaction to ‘queer spaces in London generally declining, especially lesbian spaces’. Nurnberg adds that her interior design course informed Uhaul’s philosophy, ‘which is a bit secret and underground’ and had to be done on the cheap. It also looks at temporary structures as queer structures.  ‘We had a scaffold structure on the dance floor for our first night because I know that dykes love to flex muscle,’ Nurnberg explains, ‘But I also wanted to make it for anybody more femme presenting, and for anybody wanting to look a bit sexy, so we put a swing on the structure and people loved it.’ Why architects should design the night CAKE, a Dalston, east London-based practice, which was behind the Agnes stage at Rally festival in south London last year, has experience on an even bigger scale of delivering for a queer crowd.  The Layher scaffolding and translucent fibreglass-clad structure was designed to flip to become ‘The Strap’ at Body Movements – a queer festival the following day. That’s when the versatility of the modular structure’s raised platforms, floating walls, and one central dance floor all came into action – bringing the audience, artist and stage together. ‘For both days, depending on the music, it was a completely different environment,’ says CAKE architect Emiliano Zavala. ‘At  Body Movements people were dancing up on terraces and the whole thing was inhabited, and for Rally, the crowd was low and spread out, with the stage a kind of undercroft. The difference was really interesting.’ Source: Rory GaylorAgnes by CAKE Architecture Why did CAKE take on the challenge? Hugh Scott Moncrieff, creative director, says it ‘wasn’t the idea of making money’ but the opportunity to make creative architecture that reflects music, rhythm and sound, as well as context. Agnes, or The Strap, was possible because CAKE had proven to festival organisers with an earlier Rally stage that you could ‘spend a tiny bit of money on design work’ and win against standard fabrication teams ‘who weren’t coming at it from an architectural lens’, Scott Moncrieff adds. Agnes could be getting an upgrade for this year’s August bank holiday festivals. The structure also won the people’s choice award at last month’s AJ Small Projects. A sign of better-designed nights out to come? The future is niche – and lesbian If the Mobile Dyke Bar and Agnes could be the future of festivals and club nights, is La Camionera the future of LGBTQ+ nighttime spaces more broadly? A well-polished, honed product for a community crying out for something decent designed especially for them?  Daniel Pope, of newly established design studio and architects Popelo, which worked on La Camionera, says the bar is special because the result is super-niche. Certainly, there is no underfoot nastiness, peeling paint or unwanted design features common to many of the old underground venues. Yet this is queer through and through.  ’There’s not really many queer spaces where you can get a really beautiful drink in a nice glass, where the floor isn’t sticky,’ says Pope. ‘And with funding being so difficult, often queer spaces can feel quite DIY and quite shabby, perhaps not thought-through. With La Camionera, we really tried to make it feel high-end. So we focused the budget on specific areas, like the bespoke bench seat and polished aluminium bar; it feels quite luxe.’ Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera interior by Popelo and WET Studio Those additions, Pope admits, had to be costed in and compensated for elsewhere. Making decisions like these is part of the ‘burden’ on queer architects delivering queer spaces – often pro bono or for a reduced fee. But designing with care and enthusiasm, and, crucially, with first-hand experience of being part of the community. As Pope says: ‘While I can’t talk for lesbians and there’s loads of spaces for gay men in London, I know that having a lesbian space that felt really sexy was key for La Camionera. The architect, who worked alongside LGBTQ+ set design firm Wet Studio on the job, argues that La Camionera’s queer energy was brought by that very queer team of ‘builders and makers who know how you want to feel in a space as a queer person’. On that basis, bespoke queer design for clubs, bars and music experiences in general could be the way forward – and a challenge to the troubles of the wider nighttime economy and a lack of LGBTQ+ representation in permanent spaces. He adds: ‘Talking from experience, when I was not out, I would go to events and never felt like I enjoyed it. It wasn’t until I started making queer friends and we would go to queer venues that you could be yourself and connect with other people in a really magnetic way.’ queer architecture 2025-05-22 Gino Spocchia comment and share Tagsqueer architecture #lgbtq #nightlife #going #back #its
    LGBTQ+ nightlife is going back to its counter-cultural roots
    www.architectsjournal.co.uk
    Queerness and nightlife go hand in hand. Out of the mainstream. Underground and counter-cultural. Whether it’s the location, venue, organisers or crowd, they are always outside the norm.  Some, like new lesbian bar La Camionera in Hackney, east London, have been designed, built and crafted by queer hands – the same ones which will soon be shaking, stirring and drinking negronis on a brushed aluminium countertop, or raising a glass in the purpose-built seating areas. Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera The reopening of the quietly elegant La Camionera (Spanish for ‘female trucker’ and slang for butch lesbian) follows a months-long conversion of a temporary space led by its trans owner and a team of queer architects, contractors and trades. It is unique and stylish.  Advertisement But that’s not the only reason this tailored LGBTQ+ space stands out. Its mere existence sits against a background of queer venue closures because of an unholy trinity of rising costs, licensing issues and safety concerns. London, to take one city, has lost half of these safe spaces since 2006. Waves of redevelopment and gentrification have had their impact, too. One of the most famous victims was the wildly beloved Joiners Arms pub in Hackney Road in 2015. Never forgotten, attempts continue to resurrect this institution somewhere else in London’s East End a decade on. But can La Camionera pave the way for a design-led renaissance of after-hours ‘queerness’? One thing is for sure, there is a growing queer movement – architects included – to create safe, accessible LGBTQ+ spaces and define what that might look like. We’re going out (OUT), to find out. The state of play The Night Time Industries Association (NTIA) recently reported that 37 per cent of all night clubs across the UK have permanently shut since March 2020. That’s an average of three clubs a week, or 150 a year.Advertisement LGBTQ+ venues make up a considerable chunk of this. In the capital, between 2006 and 2022, Greater London Authority numbers show that 75 bars, clubs and LGBTQ+ pubs shut down – sometimes forever.  The list keeps growing. In the past 18 months, G-A-Y Late in Soho and The Glory in Haggerston have closed. Meanwhile, a third LGBTQ+ safe space, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club, has been fighting closure on and off for years – though it seems the east London venue may finally have had a late reprieve.  Venue closures are happening elsewhere in the UK, too, with Birmingham losing the Village Inn, Glasgow losing Bonjour and Sheffield losing the Queer Junction nightclub.  Based on the current rate of club closures, the NTIA warns the UK could have no nightclubs of any kind by 2030. The pro-nighttime body blames the collapse partly on the long-term impact of the Covid pandemic. Once closed down and locked up, these unique spaces rarely re-emerge, eyed up by developers for larger gain.  And, while the NTIA data does not explain how many of these closures are LGBTQ+, the community is among the hardest-hit because queerness and nightlife are so intertwined. Or, as Olimpia Burchiellaro, a shareholder of the Friends of The Joiners Arms campaign, puts it: ‘Nighttime is queer time’.  A call to (Joiners) Arms While The Joiners Arms, where reportedlyAlexander McQueen used to hang out, became one of the first LGBTQ+ venues to get protection in the planning system because of the sexual orientation of its users back in 2017, no on-site replacement has yet popped up on Hackney Road. Tower Hamlets Council had imposed a planning condition requiring any new development on The Joiners Arms site to include an LGBTQ+ venue. Developer Regal Homes had agreed to it. However, the proposed scheme that forced the closure has been delayed. No development, no new venue.  Burchiellaro tells the AJ that The Joiners Arms shows that LGBTQ+ spaces often act as ‘canaries in the coalmine’; a bellwether of the redevelopment cycle and of the state of the nighttime economy more generally. With little planning protection, they can be easily lost because they are often perceived as ‘unproductive’ uses in buildings ripe for replacement. Source: Friends of The Joiners ArmsFriends of The Joiners Arms protest outside the former pub ‘Gentrification and redevelopment are making it more and more difficult for communities who are not solely focused on profit, like queer spaces, to exist,’ argues Burchiellaro. ‘And, although queer clubs and bars have always been businesses, they’ve always been so much more than that.’ In the meantime, the Friends of  The Joiners Arms campaign has put on ‘an itinerant, moving club night’ at other east London venues as an act of resistance against anti-LGBTQ+ gentrification and the demise of LGBTQ+ nightlife in the capital, according to Aska Welford, an architectural worker formerly with Karakusevic Carson Architects. Welford, who is leading on co-design for a future permanent home for The Joiners Arms campaign, adds: ‘Even without the physical space, without a permanent, fixed space, queer people continue to exist and have a good time and be together.’ Safe and sound In Edinburgh, GRAS architect Kirsty Watt has also resorted to moving club nights, dubbed ‘Femmergy’, that turn the city’s historic urban fabric – including most recently a former biscuit factory – into a playground for femme-presenting members of the LGBTQ+ community, including trans people and afab women. Watt says: ‘In Edinburgh the queer nightlife scene particularly focused around cis gay men and so women, non-binary and trans people weren’t necessarily welcome in those spaces and that was the point of it, because there wasn’t really a space at all.’ Source: Kirsty WattFemmergy club night While Femmergy has difficulties finding Edinburgh venues with level access and accessible toilets, the club nights have provided a safe space for people ‘to be inherently themselves and represent themselves in a way that they want to while still feeling safe’, says Watt.  Both accessibility and safety are central to Femmergy, and are what makes it queer, she tells the AJ, ‘because people need to feel like they have a representation within their urban space’. However, she admits that having level access and accessible toilets have ‘limited us in terms of what venues we can work with, particularly in Edinburgh, because so many of the buildings are historic’. Putting the pop in pop-up So, if permanent dedicated spaces don’t always exist, what about bringing the nuts-and-bolts of a party to the people instead? This is the concept behind the Mobile Dyke Bar, a travelling lesbian disco started by former Royal Academy Interior design student Lucy Nurnberg and her right-hand woman, Ali Wagner, as part of a wider project dubbed Uhaul Dyke Rescue, a series of design-led club nights. The Mobile Dyke Bar is made of prefabricated parts which ‘slot’ into rental vans, which Nurnberg suggests is a tongue-in-cheek response to hyper-masculine removal van culture as much as it is a declaration of space for lesbians when there is barely any.  Its next stop is Mighty Hoopla, a pop festival in south London, later this month – the Mobile Dyke Bar’s second outing at the LGBTQ+ friendly event.  Source: Courteney FrisbyThe Mobile Dyke Bar at Mighty Hoopla in 2024 ‘The idea was that this would be a friendly space, but also about taking space for ourselves and being like, “Look, we need a bit of a dedicated corner here”,’ explains Nurnberg, whose Uhaul Dyke Rescue service was a reaction to ‘queer spaces in London generally declining, especially lesbian spaces’. Nurnberg adds that her interior design course informed Uhaul’s philosophy, ‘which is a bit secret and underground’ and had to be done on the cheap. It also looks at temporary structures as queer structures.  ‘We had a scaffold structure on the dance floor for our first night because I know that dykes love to flex muscle,’ Nurnberg explains, ‘But I also wanted to make it for anybody more femme presenting, and for anybody wanting to look a bit sexy, so we put a swing on the structure and people loved it.’ Why architects should design the night CAKE, a Dalston, east London-based practice, which was behind the Agnes stage at Rally festival in south London last year, has experience on an even bigger scale of delivering for a queer crowd.  The Layher scaffolding and translucent fibreglass-clad structure was designed to flip to become ‘The Strap’ at Body Movements – a queer festival the following day. That’s when the versatility of the modular structure’s raised platforms, floating walls, and one central dance floor all came into action – bringing the audience, artist and stage together. ‘For both days, depending on the music, it was a completely different environment,’ says CAKE architect Emiliano Zavala. ‘At  Body Movements people were dancing up on terraces and the whole thing was inhabited, and for Rally, the crowd was low and spread out, with the stage a kind of undercroft. The difference was really interesting.’ Source: Rory GaylorAgnes by CAKE Architecture Why did CAKE take on the challenge? Hugh Scott Moncrieff, creative director, says it ‘wasn’t the idea of making money’ but the opportunity to make creative architecture that reflects music, rhythm and sound, as well as context. Agnes, or The Strap, was possible because CAKE had proven to festival organisers with an earlier Rally stage that you could ‘spend a tiny bit of money on design work’ and win against standard fabrication teams ‘who weren’t coming at it from an architectural lens’, Scott Moncrieff adds. Agnes could be getting an upgrade for this year’s August bank holiday festivals. The structure also won the people’s choice award at last month’s AJ Small Projects. A sign of better-designed nights out to come? The future is niche – and lesbian If the Mobile Dyke Bar and Agnes could be the future of festivals and club nights, is La Camionera the future of LGBTQ+ nighttime spaces more broadly? A well-polished, honed product for a community crying out for something decent designed especially for them?  Daniel Pope, of newly established design studio and architects Popelo, which worked on La Camionera, says the bar is special because the result is super-niche. Certainly, there is no underfoot nastiness, peeling paint or unwanted design features common to many of the old underground venues. Yet this is queer through and through.  ’There’s not really many queer spaces where you can get a really beautiful drink in a nice glass, where the floor isn’t sticky,’ says Pope. ‘And with funding being so difficult, often queer spaces can feel quite DIY and quite shabby, perhaps not thought-through. With La Camionera, we really tried to make it feel high-end. So we focused the budget on specific areas, like the bespoke bench seat and polished aluminium bar; it feels quite luxe.’ Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera interior by Popelo and WET Studio Those additions, Pope admits, had to be costed in and compensated for elsewhere. Making decisions like these is part of the ‘burden’ on queer architects delivering queer spaces – often pro bono or for a reduced fee. But designing with care and enthusiasm, and, crucially, with first-hand experience of being part of the community. As Pope says: ‘While I can’t talk for lesbians and there’s loads of spaces for gay men in London, I know that having a lesbian space that felt really sexy was key for La Camionera. The architect, who worked alongside LGBTQ+ set design firm Wet Studio on the job, argues that La Camionera’s queer energy was brought by that very queer team of ‘builders and makers who know how you want to feel in a space as a queer person’. On that basis, bespoke queer design for clubs, bars and music experiences in general could be the way forward – and a challenge to the troubles of the wider nighttime economy and a lack of LGBTQ+ representation in permanent spaces. He adds: ‘Talking from experience, when I was not out, I would go to events and never felt like I enjoyed it. It wasn’t until I started making queer friends and we would go to queer venues that you could be yourself and connect with other people in a really magnetic way.’ queer architecture 2025-05-22 Gino Spocchia comment and share Tagsqueer architecture
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  • How LG's 4-Stack OLED Tech Makes TVs Brighter, Better Than Ever

    Two new technologies, stacked panels and phosphorescent blues, could further improve OLED's already best-in-class picture quality.
    #how #lg039s #4stack #oled #tech
    How LG's 4-Stack OLED Tech Makes TVs Brighter, Better Than Ever
    Two new technologies, stacked panels and phosphorescent blues, could further improve OLED's already best-in-class picture quality. #how #lg039s #4stack #oled #tech
    How LG's 4-Stack OLED Tech Makes TVs Brighter, Better Than Ever
    www.cnet.com
    Two new technologies, stacked panels and phosphorescent blues, could further improve OLED's already best-in-class picture quality.
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  • Bungie management "vehemently shut down" Destiny 2 subscription idea, as reports of toxicity continue

    Bungie management "vehemently shut down" Destiny 2 subscription idea, as reports of toxicity continue
    Prioritised "monetisation over player experience".

    Image credit: Bungie

    News

    by Ed Nightingale
    Deputy News Editor

    Published on May 22, 2025

    Bungie once considered a subscription model for its online shooter Destiny, but the idea was "vehemently shut down" by management.
    Destiny 2 went free-to-play in 2019, but players need to pay for the most recent DLC expansions. There's also a store for paid cosmetics.
    Other MMOs, such as World of Warcraft or Final Fantasy 14, run on a subscription model, where players pay a monthly fee for access. According to a new report, Bungie considered this but management decided against it.

    Destiny 2: The Edge of Fate | Official Gameplay RevealWatch on YouTube
    The news comes as part of a report into the current state of Bungie, following word last week that Bungie morale is in "free fall" following the fallout of stolen assets used in its next game, Marathon.
    YouTuber and journalist Destin Legarie has spoken to former employees this week. Bungie management were described as "toxic and shut down creatives on a core level", with one former employee stating: "Ifdidn't think of it, it wasn't worth doing."
    In this context, when one employee brought up the possibility of a subscription model, it was reportedly "vehemently shut down".
    In another example, management was concerned the glowing Trials of Osiris PvP armour was too attractive, which would impact sales of armours in the Eververse store. Decisions by management "prioritised monetisation over player experience", a former Bungie employee said. Another added: "Everything happening to Bungie is because of greed."
    One former employee surmised: "Bungie's problems stem from a lack of player empathy, disconnected leadership, and a corporate-first culture."
    Eurogamer has contacted Bungie for comment.
    In 2024, Bungie CEO Peter Parsons was criticised for spending millions of dollars on classic cars. This news followed a round of layoffs where 220 staff, roughly 17 percent of the company's workforce, lost their jobs.
    Last week, Bungie admitted to including designs in Marathon without the artist's consent. And this wasn't the first time Bungie had made this mistake.
    The company showed off Marathon back in April. It's a PvP extraction shooter set to release on 23rd September this year.
    #bungie #management #quotvehemently #shut #downquot
    Bungie management "vehemently shut down" Destiny 2 subscription idea, as reports of toxicity continue
    Bungie management "vehemently shut down" Destiny 2 subscription idea, as reports of toxicity continue Prioritised "monetisation over player experience". Image credit: Bungie News by Ed Nightingale Deputy News Editor Published on May 22, 2025 Bungie once considered a subscription model for its online shooter Destiny, but the idea was "vehemently shut down" by management. Destiny 2 went free-to-play in 2019, but players need to pay for the most recent DLC expansions. There's also a store for paid cosmetics. Other MMOs, such as World of Warcraft or Final Fantasy 14, run on a subscription model, where players pay a monthly fee for access. According to a new report, Bungie considered this but management decided against it. Destiny 2: The Edge of Fate | Official Gameplay RevealWatch on YouTube The news comes as part of a report into the current state of Bungie, following word last week that Bungie morale is in "free fall" following the fallout of stolen assets used in its next game, Marathon. YouTuber and journalist Destin Legarie has spoken to former employees this week. Bungie management were described as "toxic and shut down creatives on a core level", with one former employee stating: "Ifdidn't think of it, it wasn't worth doing." In this context, when one employee brought up the possibility of a subscription model, it was reportedly "vehemently shut down". In another example, management was concerned the glowing Trials of Osiris PvP armour was too attractive, which would impact sales of armours in the Eververse store. Decisions by management "prioritised monetisation over player experience", a former Bungie employee said. Another added: "Everything happening to Bungie is because of greed." One former employee surmised: "Bungie's problems stem from a lack of player empathy, disconnected leadership, and a corporate-first culture." Eurogamer has contacted Bungie for comment. In 2024, Bungie CEO Peter Parsons was criticised for spending millions of dollars on classic cars. This news followed a round of layoffs where 220 staff, roughly 17 percent of the company's workforce, lost their jobs. Last week, Bungie admitted to including designs in Marathon without the artist's consent. And this wasn't the first time Bungie had made this mistake. The company showed off Marathon back in April. It's a PvP extraction shooter set to release on 23rd September this year. #bungie #management #quotvehemently #shut #downquot
    Bungie management "vehemently shut down" Destiny 2 subscription idea, as reports of toxicity continue
    www.eurogamer.net
    Bungie management "vehemently shut down" Destiny 2 subscription idea, as reports of toxicity continue Prioritised "monetisation over player experience". Image credit: Bungie News by Ed Nightingale Deputy News Editor Published on May 22, 2025 Bungie once considered a subscription model for its online shooter Destiny, but the idea was "vehemently shut down" by management. Destiny 2 went free-to-play in 2019, but players need to pay for the most recent DLC expansions. There's also a store for paid cosmetics. Other MMOs, such as World of Warcraft or Final Fantasy 14, run on a subscription model, where players pay a monthly fee for access. According to a new report, Bungie considered this but management decided against it. Destiny 2: The Edge of Fate | Official Gameplay RevealWatch on YouTube The news comes as part of a report into the current state of Bungie, following word last week that Bungie morale is in "free fall" following the fallout of stolen assets used in its next game, Marathon. YouTuber and journalist Destin Legarie has spoken to former employees this week. Bungie management were described as "toxic and shut down creatives on a core level", with one former employee stating: "If [management] didn't think of it, it wasn't worth doing." In this context, when one employee brought up the possibility of a subscription model, it was reportedly "vehemently shut down". In another example, management was concerned the glowing Trials of Osiris PvP armour was too attractive, which would impact sales of armours in the Eververse store. Decisions by management "prioritised monetisation over player experience", a former Bungie employee said. Another added: "Everything happening to Bungie is because of greed." One former employee surmised: "Bungie's problems stem from a lack of player empathy, disconnected leadership, and a corporate-first culture." Eurogamer has contacted Bungie for comment. In 2024, Bungie CEO Peter Parsons was criticised for spending millions of dollars on classic cars. This news followed a round of layoffs where 220 staff, roughly 17 percent of the company's workforce, lost their jobs. Last week, Bungie admitted to including designs in Marathon without the artist's consent. And this wasn't the first time Bungie had made this mistake. The company showed off Marathon back in April. It's a PvP extraction shooter set to release on 23rd September this year.
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