
Call of Duty Warzone may be Battlegrounds Mobile rival in the making, here is why
India Today
Activision may be planning to bring another Call of Duty game to smartphones and it may be the right move.
Battlegrounds Mobile is yet to arrive in India but the mobile gaming market in India seems to be already heating up because of that. Activision may now be planning to bring Call of Duty Warzone to smartphones after its smash mobile title Call of Duty Mobile. The developer has posted a job advertisement on LinkedIn inviting applications from candidates who will focus on “content expansion across Call of Duty.” The Call of Duty Warzone is among the leading games with battle royale strategy for gaming consoles, such as Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5, and Windows. Its smartphone version is likely to take on PUBG Mobile’s upcoming Indian version, as well as PUBG: New State. The LinkedIn post does not directly mention Activision’s plans for the Call of Duty Warzone, but one of the hashtags from the post gives it away. “Our dev teams are dedicated to mobile and comprised of all major disciplines. We're hire globally, and in addition to Art and Production we've opened new roles for Engineering (Graphics & C++) and Designers (Game/System),” reads the job advertisement. There is a link to the job vacancy directory that currently has over 91 job profiles, including those for graphics engineer and build engineer for mobile.
Students who appeared for the Bihar School Examination Board Class 12 exams can now access their results through multiple platforms, including the India Today Board Results page for smoother and quicker access. With heavy traffic expected on official websites, this alternative option ensures students can check their scores without delays or technical glitches.

After fight with US Military, Anthropic starts searching for policy expert on weapons and explosives
Anthropic, the AI startup that found itself at odds with the Pentagon over unrestricted AI use, is now looking for an expert in chemical weapons and explosives. However, the company is not planning to build such weapons, but instead wants to formulate its policy in regard to weapons.

Reddit is exploring biometric verification methods such as Face ID and Touch ID to ensure users are real humans, not bots, while pledging to maintain the platform's tradition of anonymity. CEO Steve Huffman said the company is planning to address the rising influence of AI-generated content and protect authentic user engagement.










