Snipping Tool used to have this "feature" whereby any drawing performed on a screenshot would be animated as an overlay (this was only visible in the UWP Photos app at the time). Funnily enough, that's the first thing that came to mind when I heard of Acropalypse.
Funnily enough, I actually had issues with Coinbase today as well. All of a sudden they wanted to block me from using cards (no idea why, I've been a customer for at least two years).
I got told the change was due to security and irreversible, unless I delete and register a new account. I did that, and short story it worked for a few hours. After that I started failing ID checks (using the same information I registered for Binance).
Soon enough, I couldn't top up either by card or bank. They sent me an email telling me to use "alternative methods" when they literally are none - except directly transferring crypto over which kind of defeats the point.
I filed a complaint (different to a support ticket), so we'll see how that goes...
PS: Binance has been giving me issues as well. They owe me 5 USDT, and they told me to keep the chat open for approximately eight hours. Not as bad as Coinbase, but definitely not without issues.
What I never end up understanding about such topics is what is truly meant by "understanding" [that we have finite lives]. Don't we all know that anyways? Are we being asked to calm down and accept that? If so, isn't such futile for those that couldn't initially (as I don't see how reading a book would change their psyche) and placebo for those that could (as they've just never considered life in that way)?
Just a thought, but what if all citizens over the age of 18 could use TOTP [with a randomly-assigned secret] to verify their age. If they don't have a mobile device, they could purchase one of those "calculator-like" TOTP devices.
Sure, you could give yours to a friend but you could also scan a friend's face with the biometric suggestion or their ID with that suggestion. At least the TOTP suggestion would be quicker to verify, [can be] more privacy-friendly, and can be offloaded onto any devices (you already have one if you're going to need to verify yourself).
I'd give the MSI Creator Z16 a look. Albeit, battery life is not amazing on [most] x86 platforms (compared to ARM platforms) though it should last notably longer on Linux.
That reminds me, I recently registered to Experian only to find out ".dev" emails are considered invalid. I had to register an email on one of my ".com" domains then forward over to even register with them. I called up support and they found it confusing as well, but hey ho - I can't even raise a ticket.
this is what i keep telling my friends who get .dev .io .ninja or whatever. Spam filters don't care how fun and quirky your domain is. Neither do boomers they won't recognize it as a domain either. Just get the damn .com
Whilst I agree people should at least have a ".com" backup domain (at least for email use), many services are supporting the less common TLDs nowadays. In particular, ".dev" seems to be supported well in my experience (where Experian has been the only problematic service).
As for the spam filters, whilst the domain definitely does play a part in some cases - there's more to it than that. Having the correct security configuration (DKIM, etc.) and a "trusted" mail server (good luck asking M$ for their list, though) goes a long way.
This isn't going to be just Lenovo. Microsoft requires that the certificate in question is not part of the Secure Boot database for any device meeting/utilising the "Device Guard" functionality.
And as others have said, as long as you can enroll your own keys this isn't really a bad thing. It improves security by default for the default OS shipped with the device. You have to go away from the defaults to use Linux anyways, so one more toggle isn't going to kill anyone.