In March 2013, Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon was found listed on a Brazilian ratings site.[21] On April 1, 2013, Ubisoft released a teaser video and website for Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon, leading many to believe that it was an April Fools' Day joke.[22] Suspicions that the game was real were further confirmed when Power Glove uploaded music from the soundtrack to SoundCloud.[23] The game was leaked on April 7, 2013, due to an exploit in Ubisoft's digital distribution service, Uplay,[24] which led a temporary closure until the exploit was fixed. On April 8, 2013, the game was listed on the Xbox Live Marketplace.[25]
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Yesterday, Far Cry 6 leaked in the PlayStation store and revealed the very good news that Giancarlo Esposito, Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul and Mandalorian actor, is playing the new villain in the game. Ubisoft rolled with the leak, releasing an official, short teaser of his character, dictator Anton Castillo, and there will be an official reveal tomorrow during an Ubisoft showcase.
The first concrete details on Far Cry 6 have leaked via a premature listing on the Hong Kong PlayStation Store, prompting publisher Ubisoft to confirm some key details about the game ahead of schedule.
Federal whistleblower protections provide legal cover to Haugen in providing private Facebook documents to the SEC and Congress, but experts say her leaks to the press could trigger legal action from Facebook.
Ready for another Far Cry? Ahead of its special digital event this Sunday, Ubisoft's upcoming Far Cry 6 reveal looks like it has leaked via PSN. A post on video game forum Resetera details the leak and provides documentation for materials that have now been pulled down.
Vergil appears as a playable character in the updated version of the game, Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3, having been leaked before his vignette was shown at the Tokyo Game Show 2011. As before, he still wields all of his weapons from Devil May Cry 3 which include the Yamato, Beowulf and Force Edge, while still using their attacks in the same manner. While not as combo savvy as Dante, his Yamato gives him excellent range in his normals and his Trick maneuvers can either be used independently or used right after several specials, giving him excellent mind games.
While abortion-rights groups have been warning of the pending decision that would permit states to ban abortions without exception, the leak Monday night of a draft opinion supported by a majority of justices galvanized fear and frustration, and protesters raised their voices.
The first leak, through Nord Stream 2, was detected on Monday evening in the pipeline's Danish section of the Baltic Sea, around the island of Bornholm, after a "major pressure drop."
The Danish Maritime Authority released a navigational warning and established a prohibition zone within five nautical miles (around 9 km) from the site, considering the leak could pose a danger to naval traffic.
I am simplifying a complex issue in order to keep the note readable, but I no longer see cost or technology as inhibiting industry from dealing with the preponderance of eliminating methane from spilling into the atmosphere. Leading companies have made what I consider to be sincere, good faith promises to address methane at their companies. It is a start but I strongly suspect won't sufficiently solve the problem. I believe a broader industry solution is needed to ensure smaller or otherwise less responsible producers and especially midstream companies are aligned and taking needed action. For example, if a large producer is non-operated in some areas or doesn't control midstream or pipeline infrastructure in another, it is hardly clear to me that we can be certain methane leaks and venting will be (overwhelmingly) eliminated. Industry-wide "regulation" is needed; preferably self-regulation from a trade group. If that doesn't happen, I would guess it would need to be externally regulated.
The biggest potential climate victory that is within grasp\u2014it is actually reasonably low hanging fruit today!\u2014is eliminating routine flaring, venting and fixing the preponderance of meaningful methane leaks. I will guess that the global LNG industry will figure this out first for future projects. The US shale industry should be right behind it, right now, not five or three years from now.
I am simplifying a complex issue in order to keep the note readable, but I no longer see cost or technology as inhibiting industry from dealing with the preponderance of eliminating methane from spilling into the atmosphere. Leading companies have made what I consider to be sincere, good faith promises to address methane at their companies. It is a start but I strongly suspect won't sufficiently solve the problem. I believe a broader industry solution is needed to ensure smaller or otherwise less responsible producers and especially midstream companies are aligned and taking needed action. For example, if a large producer is non-operated in some areas or doesn't control midstream or pipeline infrastructure in another, it is hardly clear to me that we can be certain methane leaks and venting will be (overwhelmingly) eliminated. Industry-wide \"regulation\" is needed; preferably self-regulation from a trade group. If that doesn't happen, I would guess it would need to be externally regulated.
Ultimately, oil & gas methane is a global issue. I believe future LNG projects have a decent chance to be methane venting/leak free given the limited number of buyers and sellers and the unique combination of responsible Big Oils (that is not an oxymoron for those of you in the climate crowd reading this) and major country buy-side purchasers. I actually think Middle East producers like Qatar, UAE, and Saudi Arabia could become early leaders on addressing methane. Other regions like Russia, Iraq, Iran, and Kazakhstan will need to get on board, but no one expects to be early adopters. The competition for \u201Ccleanest barrel or MCF in the world\u201D has started; oil & gas companies and countries that do not recognize the race is underway risk being roadkill in the energy transition. I will expand on this theme in a future posts. 2ff7e9595c
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