Get two WiFi boosters for 30% off and enjoy elite WiFi at home

TL;DR: As of Jan. 17, this 2-Pack of WiFi Booster Repeater Signal Amplifiers is on sale for $55.24 with the code JAN15. That’s 30% off its regular price of $79.


You’re working from home. Your spouse is splitting time at home and the office. Your kids are doing their school work from home out of an abundance of caution. And the result is a slow, spotty WiFi connection.

When your entire household relies on your internet connection, you need to make sure it’s up to the task. You don’t want the WiFi to cut out during an important meeting or lecture, or to continuously find yourself in a dead zone as you work in different rooms in your house for a change of scenery.

With the WiFi Booster Repeater Signal Amplifier from UGR, you can blanket your entire home in WiFi, so the signal will be strong wherever you decide to work. Compatible with any 802.11/b/g/n/a wireless internet router, this booster uses cutting-edge software to enhance your internet’s signal by up to 300mbps. You’ll get two amplifiers to place and position wherever the signal tends to drop.

Just press the repeater’s WPS button, press the router’s WPS button, and place it in your desired location. It connects to your existing network via ethernet then broadcasts a wireless signal, ensuring you, your spouse, and your kiddos can get your work done without issue. You’ll be able to test different areas to find what location works best. Not only will your signal be boosted, but you’ll get an extra-long range of 2,640 square feet. You’ll never have to deal with dropped Zoom calls, slow upload speeds, or randomly missing a Slack message again.

With millions shifting to a life of working at home at least part-time, it’s essential to have WiFi that can keep up. Add this two-pack of WiFi Boosters from UGR to your home to ensure the whole household is covered. It’s usually $79, but when you enter the code JAN15 at checkout during our January Sale, you can get it for just $55.24.

Prices subject to change.

two white wifi boosters

Credit: UGR

WiFi Booster Repeater Signal Amplifier (2-Pack)

$55.24 at the Mashable Shop with code JAN15

Get this massage gun on sale for $129 off

TL;DR: As of Jan. 17, you can take 36% off the O’Yeet NEX Pro Massage Gun and get it for $229.99 instead of $359.


If your resolution for 2022 is to rev up your workout routine, you’re probably going to have some sore days ahead of you. Instead of working out through the pain or taking a break right after you’ve begun, get targeted muscle relief with a massage gun.

With this O’Yeet Nex Pro Massage Gun, you can get powerful percussive massages at any time from the comfort of your own home, car, or even the gym. That means you can whip it out before a workout to help relieve any lingering muscle pain, or after you finish a workout to help prevent stiffness and soreness.

The NEX Pro Massage Gun allows for deep tissue muscle recovery by delivering the force of 60 pounds. The pulsation speeds reach up to 3,400RPM to deliver a powerful massage. It even reaches 30 percent deeper into muscles than your typical massage gun — which is pretty impressive considering it fits in the palm of your hand. It weighs just 1.2 pounds and is just 6.5 inches long. It’s no wonder why it successfully received funding on Indiegogo.

With four different speeds and eight detachable massage heads, you can use this massage gun all over your body for targeted relief. The massage strength ranges from 1,600 all the way up to 3,500 RPMs, so you can curate a personalized massage suited to your needs. Even better, a full charge will deliver up to 240 minutes of sustained run time. So, you can toss it in your gym bag and enjoy custom massages on the go for quite a whilef without needing an outlet.

Normally the O’Yeet Nex Pro massage gun retails for $359, but for a limited time, you can get it on sale for just $229.99. That’s 36% in savings.

Prices subject to change.

Black massage gun with 8 different heads and carrying case

Credit: O’Yeet

O’Yeet NEX Pro Massage Gun

$229.99 at the Mashable Shop

Sex workers are being booted off the ‘link in bio’ platform, Linktree

Another day, another online platform turning on sex workers.

Linktree, a popular social media link service, is removing sex workers and other adult content creators from its site, according to a new report from Motherboard. According to Linktree, the company is only blocking users who post links to IRL sexual encounters and other services.

“Per our company’s policies, the Linktree accounts banned stemmed from sharing a URL which violated Community Standards by sharing advertisements for the sale of real-life sexual services,” said a Linktree spokesperson in response to Motherboard.

If you’re a heavy user of social media platforms like Instagram, you’re likely quite familiar with Linktree. The service is one of the most popular “link in bio” or “bio link” services around. Linktree and similar services provide users with the tools to create a simple landing page that lists all of their social media accounts as well as other links. 

By curating all these destinations onto one page, services like Linktree often became the default choice for many social media users who are only allowed one URL in their social media bios.

“Link in bio” services became especially popular on Instagram, specifically, due to the limitation on adding links to a users’ posts. Influencers will often tell their followers to check out products or services they’re promoting by checking out their “link in bio,” which often is a users’ Linktree link.

These bio link services are also popular with sex workers. Instagram does not allow links to sexually explicit material. Services like Linktree provide a workaround.

According to affected parties who spoke to Motherboard, users received no warning from Linktree before logging into their accounts and finding they were banned. Sex workers paying for Linktree’s premium service found that they were, in fact, still being charged regardless of the ban.

SEE ALSO:

How to support sex trafficking survivors without harming consenting sex workers

The report points out that Linktree already prohibited “sexually explicit material” in its terms of service. However, these terms aren’t clear on whether linking out to such “material” hosted on a third-party platform is prohibited as well. (Judging by these latest events, this is prohibited as well.)

FOSTA/SESTA laws have made it much more difficult for sex workers to make a living. In addition, it’s become routine for new and upstart online services to turn a blind eye to sex workers when they need these users’ help in growing their platforms … only for these same services to give sex workers the boot when they’re big enough that they don’t need them anymore, as we saw with OnlyFans in 2021.

Spotify faces calls for a misinfo policy as an open letter exposes Joe Rogan’s COVID lies

Podcaster Joe Rogan is once again causing problems for the company that pays him $100 million: Spotify.

Last week, 270 doctors, scientists, and professors published an open letter to the audio streaming giant demanding that the company create an official policy around misinformation. The letter, which was first reported by Rolling Stone, focused on Rogan’s popular show, the Joe Rogan Experience, which has been a source of misinformation surrounding COVID-19 throughout the pandemic.

“We are a coalition of scientists, medical professionals, professors, and science communicators spanning a wide range of fields such as microbiology, immunology, epidemiology, and neuroscience and we are calling on Spotify to take action against the mass-misinformation events which continue to occur on its platform,” reads the letter.

“With an estimated 11 million listeners per episode, JRE is the world’s largest podcast and has tremendous influence,” it continues. ” Spotify has a responsibility to mitigate the spread of misinformation on its platform.”

An epidemiologist at University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health, Katrine Wallace, even went further in her own comments to Rolling Stone, saying she considers Rogan to be “a menace to public health.”

The letter focuses on Rogan’s Dec. 31 episode with Dr. Robert Malone, who claims to be the “inventor” of mRNA vaccine technology. The episode went viral on social media after Dr. Malone claimed “mass formation psychosis,” what he claims means when society goes “barking mad,” was to blame for the response to the pandemic.

Experts have debunked this “mass formation psychosis” claim.

“In episode #1757, Rogan hosted Dr. Robert Malone, who was suspended from Twitter for spreading misinformation about COVID-19,” reads the letter. “Dr. Malone used the JRE platform to further promote numerous baseless claims, including several falsehoods about COVID-19 vaccines and an unfounded theory that societal leaders have “hypnotized” the public. Many of these statements have already been discredited.”

The open letter continues to mention other examples of Rogan’s COVID misinformation. During an April 2021 episode of the podcast, for example, Rogan claimed that young, healthy people shouldn’t prioritize getting the COVID-19 vaccine and called vaccinating children “crazy to me.”

In response to the letter, Rogan’s fans attempted to signal boost their own praise for the podcaster in an attempt to drown out the criticism.

“We would be in very serious trouble right now without Joe Rogan and Spotify’s courage,” read a tweet from podcaster and frequent Joe Rogan Experience guest, Bret Weinstein. “Let’s make #ThanksJoeRogan and #ThankYouSpotify trend. Don’t cut and paste. And consider doing them in separate tweets. Let’s let’em know we appreciate them.”

Spotify has had to deal with controversy thanks to Rogan before. Employees of the company concerned with Rogan’s content have pushed for more editorial control over the podcaster, whose program airs exclusively on Spotify thanks to a $100 million deal. The company has previously removed dozens of episodes of the Joe Rogan Experience from its platform due to content issues.

SEE ALSO:

Vaccine skeptic Joe Rogan got COVID and then took bogus horse dewormer drug

“Spotify prohibits content on the platform which promotes dangerous false, deceptive, or misleading content about COVID-19 that may cause offline harm and/or pose a direct threat to public health,” Spotify said in a prior comment given to The Verge in April 2021. “When content that violates this standard is identified it is removed from the platform.”

Since the episode went live, Rogan’s interview with Dr. Malone has been removed from YouTube in accordance with the platform’s policies on COVID misinformation. Dr. Malone has also personally been suspended from Twitter due to its own COVID misinformation rules.

The episode, however, remains live on Spotify. The company did not respond to an email from Mashable seeking comment

Creator of a years-old app called Wordle will donate proceeds from its newfound popularity

Wordle is the daily, browser-only word game we can’t get enough of, so it’s not surprising that Wordle copycats have been sprouting up in the App Store. Those copycats aren’t the first to use that name, however. Developer Steven Cravotta actually used “wordle” first — five years ago. Now, he’s using his app’s surprise popularity to help others.

Cravotta built his Wordle when he was 18, as he wrote in a Twitter thread explaining the coincidence. He stopped promoting and updating it months later, after topping 100,000 downloads, because it hadn’t taken off. In the four years since, the app averaged merely one or two downloads per week — until last week.

“I logged into my dashboard and was SHOOK at what I saw,” he said.

Cravotta first assumed bots were behind the spike, but then googled to find out about the current Wordle craze. Now, Cravotta’s Wordle has gotten 200,000 downloads in the last week and it’s “not even slowing down yet,” he said.

The developer, whose current app Puff Count helps users quit vaping, reached out to Wordle founder Josh Wardle the two agreed to donate proceeds to Boost! West Oakland, a children’s tutoring and mentoring program in the San Francisco-adjacent city.

SEE ALSO:

All the tips and tricks you could need to succeed at ‘Wordle’

“Very excited to support such an amazing program that focuses on literacy for youth,” Cravotta said on Twitter. “We feel the money will make a real impact here!”

Beware the QR code scams

By now, most internet users know the usual scams to look out for:

Phishing emails trying to steal your account logins, misspelled URLs attempting to access your bank accounts, fake online storefronts charging you for products they never intend to send. Well, it’s time to be on the lookout for yet another growing scam: fake QR codes.

What’s a QR code? You’ve likely seen them as their use has skyrocketed during the pandemic. Many restaurants have started using QR codes to replace physical, germ-spreading menus. QR codes are those little square barcodes that take you directly to a website or app when you scan them with your smartphone camera.

QR codes seem like they were made to deter phishing. There’s no need to type in a link and accidentally misspell it, which could result in the user being sent to a scam website meant to mimic the actual legitimate site they meant to visit. Just scan the QR code and you’ll go right to the real website you intended to go to.

However, as with most new and growing technologies, scammers have found a way to weaponize QR codes too.

In December, QR codes started popping up on public parking meters in San Antonio, Texas. Simply pull out your phone, scan the familiar barcode, and pay for your parking spot. Quick and simple, right? Not so. When the San Antonio Police Department was notified, they alerted the public: It was a scam. 

Fraudsters had actually placed their own QR codes on public parking meters across the city. Drivers who used them to pay the meters were actually sending their money or sensitive financial account information to the scammers. As Ars Technica points out, other major cities in Texas, such as Austin and Houston, have reported similar parking meter grifts.

QR codes still make up just a small fraction of the scams proliferating across the web. However, the Better Business Bureau has experienced a noticeable enough uptick on its scam tracker to put out its own “scam alert” on QR codes last year. The technology has become accessible enough where anyone can make their own QR codes now.

SEE ALSO:

QR code made out of 130,000 carefully trimmed trees needs to be scanned from the sky

So, what should you do to avoid or mitigate risk?

Treat QR codes you come across you just as you would any other email you receive or link that gets text messaged to you. All the QR code is doing is directing you to a link, whether that be a login screen or a payment form, for example. Double check the source of the QR code and the URL the QR code forwards you to just as you would when you receive an email with a link inside.

If something feels off about a page that the QR code directs you to, type out the URL yourself if you know it. These links are accessible without the barcode. Be on the lookout for advertisements and public notices that are tampered with too. A fraudster can easily stick their own QR code over a legitimate one on a poster or flyer you come across offline.

Even the most publicized online scams are still tricking people. Lets nip this in the bud and try to minimize the harm caused by QR code scams before they blow up.

Will Forte, MacGruber himself, will return to ‘Saturday Night Live’ as a first-time host

MacGruber is heading home.

Will Forte is set to host Saturday Night Live for the first time, as NBC’s live-format sketch comedy series confirmed in a Sunday tweet. He’ll be joined by musical guest Måneskin, a popular Italian rock band that’s set to kick off a tour across their home country in March.

Forte is known best these days for his new Peacock series MacGruber, though you may also remember him as the star of the Phil Lord/Chris Miller-created sitcom The Last Man on Earth, which ran for four hilarious seasons before being canceled in 2018. It’s the former that makes Forte’s upcoming appearance especially noteworthy, however.

SEE ALSO:

The ‘MacGruber’ cast battles over the best action-comedy heroes — Choose Your Squad

The character of MacGruber, who is basically a MacGyver parody, has its origins on SNL. Forte debuted the character during a Season 32 episode that aired in 2007 and he quickly became a staple pegged for repeat appearances. By 2010, there was a whole, entire (and very good) MacGruber movie. Now, in 2022, the streaming revolution has given Forte a chance to revive the character yet again on Peacock.

Will MacGruber return to SNL along with the guy who plays him? It’s anyone’s guess, but we’d guess that’s a “YES!” given the character’s Peacock-fueled resurgence in addition to his origins on SNL.

Social media-savvy mom explains the setup for an awesome ‘hands-free’ TiKTok hack

TikTok’s infinite storehouse of content can leave you swiping up on your For You Page for hours — but what if, for whatever reason, you can’t use your hands?

A TikTok user named Shannon, known as @diaperbagrag on the app, found the solution in the form of a simple iPhone hack for hands-free swiping. (Editor’s note: This is also doable for Android users. Go to the “Voice Access” section of your device’s Accessibility menu to set it up.)

First, go to Settings, then Accessibility. On the Accessibility page, tap Voice Control.

Screenshot of Accessibility page on iPhone with red circle around Voice Control

On Accessibility, choose Voice Control.
Credit: Screenshot: Apple

Turn Voice Control on if it’s not already, then tap Custom Commands.

Screenshot of Voice Control iPhone page with red circle around Custom Commands


Credit: Screenshot: Apple

Finally, create the actual command. Write in what you want to say to swipe up on your FYP; like Shannon in the video, I put in “Next.” The action will be Run Custom Gesture, and swipe up with your finger to recreate it. For application, you can just choose TikTok and that’ll be the only app this command works on.

Screenshot of custom TikTok command


Credit: Screenshot: Apple

This hack isn’t just simple, but it also works wonders. Now you don’t have to fiddle your phone with wet or dirty hands, or be subjected to the same TikTok over and over ever again.

Eric Adams despairs at NYC’s ‘swagless existence’ on ‘Saturday Night Live’

Eric Adams is officially the mayor of New York City, which means it’s time he gets the Saturday Night Live treatment. In the latest episode, Chris Redd debuted his Adams impression during a press conference about New York’s “swagless existence” before he assumed his role as mayor.

Redd’s Adams go on to say students must be in school despite COVID because of all the “swagless parents” out there. He then explains that he was a police officer for over 70 years — no, 97 years — actually, 222 years — and he won’t tolerate questions about, say, the nepotism of hiring his brother as the head of his security detail.

At the end of the presser, Adams tells the virus that it’s “welcome any time in New York, and you can print that.” Let’s be real, this parody isn’t too far off from how the new mayor is handling his responsibilities.

Rocco hilariously upstages Elmo yet again on ‘SNL’ Weekend Update

The first couple weeks of 2022 have been trying for Elmo. Clips of Elmo’s uproar over Rocco, his friend Zoe’s pet rock, went viral online, portraying his outrage that a rock allegedly gets better treatment.

The blowup earned Muppet and stone both a spot on Saturday Night Live‘s latest Weekend Update. At the start of the clip, Elmo — voiced to perfection by Chloe Fineman — says he apologized for his outbursts in an Instagram post, and made a bid to host SNL himself.

After the puppet says he’s ready to move on, however, we see how that’s not exactly true. Weekend Update anchor Michael Che brings Rocco to the stage in its very own chair, and Elmo explodes: “Rocco doesn’t need a chair! Rocco doesn’t even have legs!” The appearance culminates with Che showing Elmo that Rocco will actually be the one to host SNL, and — to Elmo’s disdain — Rocco again gets the last cookie.