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A growing reason to 'mute' someone on Instagram? Envy.

A growing reason to 'mute' someone on Instagram? Envy.

Side view of young women standing on seesaw balance against white background.

Muting on Instagram serves many purposes. It's been most openly known as a step below blocking: a basic way to hide posts or stories from someone who perhaps updates their account too often or whose digital life you don't need to see.

But a growing reason for muting isn't so simple.

At an Instagram event this week, a panel of creators spoke to journalists about the various ways in which they use the app, and their own relationship with social media. Many told us how this relationship has evolved, especially after the pandemic. But one phenomenon within this conversation stood out to me. Several of these creators said they have utilized Instagram's mute feature — and not to limit annoying content, but because of their own envy.

The creators spoke about professional or personal jealousy that hindered their own progress. In other words, this is envy, defined as feelings of resentment over what someone else has. Participants said things like brand endorsements, or even someone else's covetable wardrobe, prompted them to mute other creators.

Turns out, they're not the only ones. Muting is already pervasive, but muting as a result of pressing jealousy or envy is too.

What prompts an envious Instagram mute?

Dulcie, 31, tells me that she once muted her best friend when he went on holiday with his girlfriend.

"I was just profoundly jealous that he was on holiday and I wasn't," she says. "It felt weird to be jealous of my nice friend having a nice time, but also I haven’t left the country in a long time and was having a shit time with work, so it kind of makes sense."

An illustration of a hiker holding up their phone to photograph a mountain.
Credit: Bob Al-Greene / Mashable

Likewise, Prema, 26, said she muted her flatmate on Instagram when the latter went to a two-month weight loss camp. At the time, her content was about "the significant weight loss" and "how good she looked and felt."

"It triggered me because I was also trying to make the same feeling happen for myself, but I don't have the luxury," Prema explains. "At first I didn't realise I was jealous so I just muted her. Then I realised what I was jealous about wasn't her progress — it was more that I was jealous because I wish I could do the same thing for myself."

What both Prema and Dulcie witnessed on Instagram elicited pretty strong reactions. But this is the nature of social media, a problem since its inception.

"It’s completely understandable why engaging with social media on a frequent basis may lead to increased feelings of jealousy or envy," says Dr. Anisha Patel-Dunn, DO, psychiatrist, and Chief Medical Officer at LifeStance Health. "We’re only seeing a tiny snippet of other’s lives that may be edited to seem 'perfect'."

"At first I didn't realise I was jealous so I just muted her. Then I realised what I was jealous about wasn't her progress..."
- Prema, 26

"It's curated content at its finest," Dr. Lauren Cook, Founder at Heartship Psychological Services, agrees. "When we're getting cherry-picked content, it's so easy to compare ourselves and feel like we're not measuring up. Whether it's the amount of followers someone has to their appearance and body size, we can feel jealous at a moment's notice because we tell ourselves that someone is doing better than us or that they're 'further along' than we are. A sense of inadequacy can immediately ensue."

Pressing mute out of professional angst also seems to be commonplace. Sally Anne Howard, 32, calls it "comparisonitis", saying that she has "blocked so many people in the past" as a symptom of jealousy. The founder of marketing agency 49 North Digital, Howard says muting has been freeing for her, even catalyzing her own growth.

"Turning on your blinkers and muting those whose success triggers you can actually be really freeing. It allows you to focus on spending your energy and your time serving your people and rather than worrying about what someone else is up to," she says.

Dulcie says that she has also muted people out of professional jealousy.

"I always feel like a bit of a bitch for doing it, but I figure it doesn’t actually matter. I'm just preserving a bit of peace," she says.

"I find muting someone has always helped. It stops me from getting hurt and feeling crap about myself."
- Ania, 25

Many of those who spoke to me said muting has been both helpful and has sent a message. Ania, 25, says she "highly recommends" muting. In the past, she's muted exes and one friend whose frequent content gets "slightly draining."

"I find muting someone has always helped. It stops me from getting hurt and feeling crap about myself," she continues. "It’s also a big 'fuck you', and goes to show I don’t really care what you are posting."

Examining envy

There is just cause to examine the roots of envy, and how the emotion sprouts on social media. A 2018 study in the Social Science and Medicine journal found that great levels of jealousy are associated with slower growth in psychological well-being. The authors also found that envy isn't "a useful motivator", nor does it predict success. The same study named social media and large-scale advertising as stimulants behind feeling "envious and inadequate." In another, Young People and Social Media: Contemporary Children’s Digital Culture, scholars examined adolescents' wellbeing on social media, ultimately finding that the vast majority of participants said Instagram has resulted in them feeling envious.

Cook says there can be a downside to immediately muting someone who incites jealousy. "I'm not the biggest fan of muting a person or unfollowing even just because you feel jealous. When we do this, we're really just avoiding our emotions and running away from the pain," she says.

Howard agrees that there are are other ways to cope with envy, even though muting has helped her to stop comparing herself to others.

"Working through what it is that's provoked the jealousy or envy can be more productive long term," she says. "There'll always be competition, especially in business, and sometimes muting isn't the healthiest way of dealing with it."

Patel-Dunn suggests taking a break from social media if you find yourself muting or outright unfollowing people.

"If you find that you’re using the mute feature frequently, it can be an important signal that maybe there is something more to your reaction," she says. It can also be helpful to open up to friends, family or a licensed mental health professional and share how you’re feeling. It’s so easy to fall into the comparison trap, and talking about what you’re going through can be very beneficial."

Likewise, Cook says it's important to sit with those kind of feelings, of competition and comparison, and to consider "reframing" such thoughts.

"What does this person have that you want? Rather than leaning into the jealousy, what if you used that emotion as data to tell you what you may be deeply yearning for?" she says, explaining the worth in "sitting with those feelings" for both yourself and for whatever relationship you have with certain people and their social media accounts.

"We may even get to a place where we can cheer on the other person, rather than feel like they're a threat to our worth," she says.

If muting stops someone from spiraling internally — or going as far as taking their jealousy out on someone — then maybe it's the right way to go. But reaching for that mute option may also be the right moment to reflect: on why you need this option, who is sparking this kind of emotion in you, and if there's some work to be done, away from the four corners of a phone screen.


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Pornhub accused of abusing user data

Pornhub accused of abusing user data

pornhub logo displayed on laptop

In the midst of an American moral panic about explicit content, lawmakers have started passing age-verification laws around sites like Pornhub. The tube site has responded by blocking access in Utah, one state that passed such a law. Now, Pornhub faces separate, privacy-based legal challenges from across the pond. 

Activists from the collective #StopDataPorn filed a GDPR complaint in Italy today, accusing Pornhub of illegally processing personal data and sharing it with unidentified third-parties.

According to a press release from #StopDataPorn, Pornhub:

  • Doesn't ask for consent when processing personal user data. Given that this data is related to people's sexual preferences and orientation, #StopDataPorn says it violates article 9 of GDPR.

  • Shares personal user information with an unknown number of third parties, both external and within the MindGeek network. "This undeclared dissemination of personal information constitutes an unlawful processing of data that is forbidden by the GDPR," says #StopDataPorn

  • Feeds personal data to a recommender system "that unilaterally assigns sexual preferences to each individual without their knowledge and not allowing anybody to contest this result." This is unlawful profiling, #StopDataPorn claims.

Researchers from the digital rights group Tracking Exposed (now called AI Forensics) and the pornhub.tracking.exposed browser extension have gathered evidence for the complaint. Analysis was conducted through scraping (extracting data from a website), explained Tracking Exposed founder Claudio Agosti in the press release. "We analyzed Pornhub since its abusive and influential recommendation algorithm has never been properly scrutinized, despite being one of the most popular website[s] on the internet."

A preliminary report was sent to the Italian data protection authority in March 2022, and another complaint has been filed in Cyprus as well, where Pornhub is legally based in Europe. 

Pornhub and platforms like it are hoarding information about sexual orientation and people's intimate secrets and kinks, said lead attorney of the litigation and digital rights activist, Alessandro Polidoro, in the release. 

"It is mandatory to put this massive processing of sensitive data into compliance with data protection law," he continued. "Why are we letting porn platforms harvest personal data without even asking for consent?!"

"We will respond through the appropriate process in time, and note that it is our practice not to comment on ongoing litigation," MindGeek told Mashable. "MindGeek is committed to protecting user privacy, and is continuously implementing measures to safeguard the personal data of everyone in its community."


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Bloober Team is done making psychological horror games

Bloober Team is done making psychological horror games

Layers of Fear was Bloober Team’s final psychological horror game. The studio didn’t advertise this fact, but behind the scenes, a switch flipped weeks ago: When the remastered and expanded Layers of Fear collection came out on June 15th, it marked the end of a phase that was known internally as Bloober Team 2.0.

“This year is like closing the era of making psychological horror games,” studio co-founder Piotr Babieno told Engadget. “Right now we are going into Bloober Team 3.0, making mass-market horror.”

Bloober is not abandoning horror as a whole, but it is shifting focus. Over the past decade, the studio cemented itself as a powerhouse in the realm of psychological horror games, releasing the Layers of Fear franchise, Observer, Blair Witch and The Medium, all of which generated terror through narrative and environmental cues (otherwise known as “vibes”). Because of these design choices, Bloober games have jokingly been called “walking simulators,” a description that Babieno didn’t deny.

“We focused on the story, we focused on the mood, we focused on the quality of graphics and music, but we didn’t put a lot of attention on the gameplay mechanics,” Babieno said. “It wasn’t our target. But we decided that there was a ceiling that we couldn’t break if we did not deliver something fresh, something new.”

Going forward, developers at Bloober will rely on action and player input to generate disquiet, and they hope that this nudge in creative direction will drastically expand the studio’s audience. This mechanics-first ethos was actually implemented internally in 2019, when Bloober began building the remake of Silent Hill 2 for Konami.

“We decided that our next titles should be much more mass-market oriented,” Babieno said. “We’d like to talk with more people. We’d like to deliver our ideas, with our DNA, not by environment or storytelling, but by action. So all of our future titles will have a lot of gameplay mechanics. They will be much bigger.”

Silent Hill 2 will be the public’s first taste of Bloober’s redirection — but we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Before considering the implications of fresh design philosophies, let’s take a look at how Bloober Team 2.0 became a major name on the global horror scene in just a few years.

Babieno co-founded the studio that would become Bloober Team in 2006, after selling his marketing research company in Poland. His ultimate goal was to be a storyteller: He initially considered entering the film industry, but it was too expensive, so he pivoted to games. The studio started with around 15 employees, and they focused on building contract games and other quasi-soulless experiences.

“We crafted some smaller titles on our end, but we never were really good,” Babieno said. “We tried to catch everything on the market and we were just following the crowd. And you know, if you’re following trends, if you’re following what’s fashionable, you can’t be good.”

Everything changed for Bloober Team in 2015. Though many of us may have blocked this fact from our memories, Bloober is the studio that built Basement Crawl, the worst-reviewed launch game on PlayStation 4. Basement Crawl was essentially a busted Bomberman clone when it came out in 2014, and it was shredded in reviews, settling at a rating of 27 on Metacritic. However, since it was one of just a few games to launch alongside the PS4, it sold well enough. Bloober tried to make things right by releasing Brawl in 2015, a free game that addressed many of the complaints players had with Basement Crawl.

A screenshot from Basement Crawl, Bloober Team's ill-received PlayStation 4 launch title.
Bloober Team

After the release of Brawl, Bloober underwent an internal reckoning. Babieno sat down with his team and had an honest conversation about the studio’s identity and future.

“It looks like we still don't know how to make something good, and we have a game which has 27 percent on Metacritic, so maybe we should change,” Babieno remembered thinking. “Our decision was, OK, we need to focus on creating something we will be proud of. So that's why we went back to the roots and decided we would like to deliver horror games.”

Horror has a special, blood-soaked place in Babieno’s heart. He grew up devouring books, films and games with unsettling themes, including works from Stephen King, Graham Masterton and the Silent Hill team at Konami. Fear spoke to him, and as a creator, he saw how it functioned as a shortcut to deep human emotion and universal experiences.

Babieno took his team’s plan to their investors and laid it all out: “We sat with our funders and told them, guys, we need some money, but we have a pretty good idea for the next 10 years. We would like to become one of the really good psychological horror game developers.” The investors said yes. Bloober Team 2.0 was born.

Layers of Fear came out in 2016 and was a breakout hit, followed by a succession of well-received psychological horror games, including Observer and Blair Witch. But that was just the public side of things: As Bloober was rebranding and cementing itself as a pillar of psychological horror, Babieno was secretly trying to convince Konami to let Bloober make a Silent Hill game.

Babieno first approached Konami in 2015 with a proposal to make a Silent Hill spin-off game, something completely new in the series. The conversation stayed alive for four years, and finally in 2019, Konami invited Babieno to Japan for a meeting.

“Almost the whole management board came to the meeting, and they requested us to prepare a pitch for a Silent Hill 2 remake,” Babieno said. “And whoa. We were so afraid to touch it. We understood from the first day of the conversation that we will have half of the world which will love us and half of the world which will hate us. We are touching something sacred.”

Other studios were in the running to handle Konami’s secret Silent Hill 2 remake, but Bloober got the gig. Konami made the official announcement in October 2022.

Which brings us back to today. The studio just released Layers of Fear, a complete series remastering done in Unreal Engine 5. With this collection, it’s closing the door early on the 10-year plan it laid out for Bloober 2.0 in 2015. A hard pivot worked out well for Bloober once before; it makes some sense to try that again.

Silent Hill 2 will be the first title out of Bloober Team 3.0, the studio focused on action-first, mass-market horror games. This is a small but significant shift in Babieno’s direction, but he — and Bloober as a whole — is still obsessed with fear.

“We are in a very specific moment in history because we have a lot of crises,” Babieno said. He described horror games as a type of catharsis for everyday terror, a safe place where people can dissect their own reactions to intense stimuli and reckon with real-world emotions. He mentioned the pervasive threat of climate change and global economic crises; he pointed out that Bloober is based in Poland, which has a front-row seat to the carnage of the war in Ukraine.

He continued, “As human beings, we would like to be prepared for something that is unexpected. Those fears are around us … we would like to deliver games that allow us to deal with our fears.”

Meanwhile, Bloober Team has grown to roughly 230 employees, and one of Babieno’s greatest personal fears is letting them down or having to lay anyone off. As of 2023, Bloober doesn’t do layoffs; in the past three years, he said just five people have left the company. Babieno isn’t actively growing Bloober at the moment and he isn’t looking for a buyer, even as the industry’s biggest publishers are buying talented indie studios left and right. From Babieno’s perspective, Bloober works best as an independent company building AAA-quality games — horror games, to be exact.

“I would like to stay independent because only then will we be able to make something new, something fresh and creative,” he said. “I don’t want to create games by watching an Excel spreadsheet. I would like to deliver some new milestones of horror, our niche.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/Nk9xzgA
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Final Fantasy XVI has already sold over 3 million copies

Final Fantasy XVI has already sold over 3 million copies

It seems a whole lot of people still enjoy the dulcet mews of chocobos and the ever-present Cid, as Final Fantasy XVIhas sold over three million units since launching on June 22. This new darker take on the series is a PS5 console exclusive, making these sales figures even more impressive. For comparison’s sake, Final Fantasy XVsold five million copies during its launch week back in 2016, but that was a multi-platform title available for both PS4 and Xbox One.

Square Enix says that this three million figure represents both digital and physical sales throughout the globe. This falls slightly short of the recent FF7 remake, which sold 3.5 million units during its first three days of availability. Again, the remake was available on multiple consoles. It’s also worth noting that the PS4 never had availability issues like the PS5, so the install base was much highers (though that’s slowly changing.)

All of these numbers pale in comparison to Nintendo’s crown jewel The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, which sold a massive 10 million copies in just three days. However, JRPGs have typically struggled with reaching sales numbers in line with open-world adventures, particularly in the West.

Positive reviews and word of mouth likely led to the impressive sales numbers for Final Fantasy XVI. We praised the gorgeous environments, spectacular bosses and nuanced combat system in our review of the title.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/bOJoClw
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Microsoft is already offering a generative AI certification program

Microsoft is already offering a generative AI certification program

Although Big Tech is still (sometimes clumsily) figuring out generative AI’s ethics and implications, the genie is out of the bottle, and the technology is already integrating into the workforce. From that perspective, Microsoft announced a new program today to train workers on AI. The initiative will offer free coursework through LinkedIn, including certification. It’s somewhat ironic since the appeal of generative AI is that it’s dead simple to use: It automates content creation using everyday language. But the courses could still provide tips for composing the most effective prompts while showing beginners the ropes, giving them a chance to keep pace with our rapidly changing world.

Microsoft’s AI Skills Initiative, part of the company’s Skills for Jobs program, will include free courses created by (Microsoft subsidiary) LinkedIn, offering learners “the first Professional Certificate on Generative AI in the online learning market.” Microsoft says the courses will cover introductory AI concepts and “responsible AI frameworks,” culminating in certification. It’s launching in English only, but the company says it will add Spanish, Portuguese, French, German, Simplified Chinese and Japanese “over the coming months.”

In addition, the company is launching a trainer toolkit for educators with “downloadable, bite-sized content for trainers” and a separate AI course for teachers and other trainers.

Microsoft also announced an open grant program for AI with an eye on boosting historically marginalized populations. The Generative AI Skills Grant Challenge is a collaboration between data.org, Microsoft’s AI for Good Lab and GitHub. It aims to “explore, develop, and implement how nonprofit, social enterprise and research or academic institutions can train and empower the workforce to use generative AI.” Grant recipients will receive financial support, group learning opportunities, data training / guidance and access to Microsoft events and cloud-computing resources. The grant program is accepting applications now with an August 15th deadline. You can learn more and apply here.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/fm2QHOi
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Android TV's new Shop tab lets you buy movies from different providers

Android TV's new Shop tab lets you buy movies from different providers

Google is about to make it a lot easier for you to buy and rent movies across streamers — for better or worse for your wallet. The company has announced it's adding a Shop tab on Android TV, where you can browse, purchase and store movies.

Though it looks a bit similar, the Shop tab differs from the Android TV's Discover tab in a few ways. Both pages show content from a variety of streaming platforms, but the Discover tab displays recommendations based on your viewing habits, whether or not the titles cost anything to watch. On the other hand, the Shop tab only features content you can, well, shop. Instead of having to click through each app individually, you can see all the movies that are available to rent or buy across the streamers you subscribe to.

The Shop Tab also has a Library section that displays every title you've purchased with your Google account on Google TV devices and its mobile app, Android TV devices and YouTube. Speaking of the Google TV mobile app, you can log in to it on your phone or tablet to download content from your Library for offline access later on. The wait to access this new feature shouldn't be long, as Google reports that the Shop tab will roll out across the US and 23 other countries over the next few weeks.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/ayNQVZk
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Score Fire TVs Fire tablets and more on sale

Score Fire TVs Fire tablets and more on sale

The Amazon Fire 10 HD tablet, 32

If you're obsessed with Amazon Fire products, these markdowns are right up your alley. Here are the best Amazon Fire deals as of June 28, ahead of the big Prime Day sales event:


Amazon recently announced that it will hold its annual Prime Day on July 11-12 this year, and we've already started rounding up some early deals for your convenience. The mega-retailer has been known to prioritize its own products during Prime Day and the lead-up to it — including its line of Fire TVs, streaming devices, tablets, and more. Browse this week's top Amazon Fire deal picks below.

Best tablet deal

Why we like it

The Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet is on sale for its lowest price ever right now, which is super attractive as is. Besides its price point though, this 32GB device also comes with attention-worthy features like a Full HD display, 12-hour battery life, super-fast response time thanks to an octa-core processor, and split screen functionality. Use it to enjoy your favorite apps, chat with loved ones via Zoom, type docs in Microsoft Office, and more. The Fire HD 10 tablet has also gone through engineer-led tumble testing, which proved it's more durable than the 10.2-inch iPad.

More Fire Tablet deals

Best Fire Stick bundle deal

Why we like it

This Fire TV Stick bundle with an Amazon eero 6 mesh Wi-Fi router is a deal and a half — considering it's retailing now for its lowest price ever. The streaming stick comes in a 4K Max model, which is 40% more powerful than its counterpart Fire TV Stick 4K, and allows for more fluid navigation. With your eero 6 2-pack system, up to 3,000 square feet of home space will be supported by the router/extender. Buffering and Wi-Fi dead zones be gone.

More Fire Stick deals

  • Check back soon for more Fire TV stick deals.

Best Fire TV deal

Why we like it

The Amazon Fire TV 32-inch 2-Series flaunts an HD 720p resolution and Dolby Digital Audio system. It lets you stream all your favorite movies and shows on platforms like Disney+ and Prime Video, play video games, listen to music, get your live TV fix, and more. With the accompanying Alexa voice-controlled remote, you can ask relevant questions and integrate your Fire TV with other smart home tech.

More Fire TV deals


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How to earn $20 in credits for your Amazon Prime Day order

How to earn $20 in credits for your Amazon Prime Day order

a disco ball above a pile of jewelry and an amazon box against a bright yellow background

Amazon will literally pay you to shop this Prime Day. No, really.

For the second year in a row, the retail giant is giving customers a couple of ways to earn free credits they can redeem during its annual sitewide sale (which is happening on July 11 and 12). Only Prime members are eligible, unsurprisingly, though one upcoming offer is open to trial users who don't want to commit to a paid plan just yet:

1. Try Amazon Photos before July 8 for $15

After downloading the free Amazon Photos app and signing into your Amazon account, simply upload at least one picture and turn on the Auto-Save feature to automatically back it up. Amazon promises to email you within four days to confirm that a free $15 credit has been applied to your account, and you'll be able to put it toward any Prime Day order over $30 of products sold by Amazon.com or Amazon Digital Services LLC. (Look for "sold by Amazon.com" or "sold by Amazon Digital Services LLC" under the "Add to Cart" button in the right-hand column of product pages. Anything that isn't listed by a third-party seller should work, besides gift cards.)

Some fine print: This has to be the first photo you've ever uploaded to Amazon Photos, and you have to be a paid Prime member.

mobile and desktop views of the amazon photo app
Credit: Amazon
Amazon Photos (opens in a new tab)
Get a $15 Prime Day credit through July 7 at 11:59 p.m. PT
(opens in a new tab)

2. Buy a $50 Amazon gift card starting July 3 for $5

Prime members (paid or trial) who purchase at least $50 worth of Amazon gift cards between July 3 and July 10 will receive a $5 credit in their Amazon account right after they complete their order. The credit can be redeemed anytime through Friday, August 25, in case nothing catches your eye on Prime Day.


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Amazon's invite-only deals for Prime Day are seriously impressive: Here's how to shop them

Amazon's invite-only deals for Prime Day are seriously impressive: Here's how to shop them

person in front of wall of amazon boxes

UPDATE: Jun. 27, 2023, 11:21 a.m. EDT This story has been updated with more details about the best invite-only Prime Day deals.

As Amazon rings in year eight of Prime Day, they've decided to up the ante. Instead of just offering Black Friday-worthy savings in July, they're offering extra exclusive Black Friday-worthy savings in the form of invite-only deals.

These deals are bringing the heat with some seriously impressive markdowns, so we created this guide so you can make sure you don't miss out on saving some cash. You'll find our favorite picks out of Amazon's invite-only options below, and don't forget to check out our running list of the best deals you can already shop ahead of Prime Day.

What are invite-only Prime Day deals?

Inevitably, Prime Day (and sales like it) have extra hot-ticket items that once they've dropped down to their sale price, sell out quickly. The idea behind invite-only deals is that you won't have to be glued to your computer screen on July 11 and 12 (the official sale days) to grab those deals.

Instead, you can request access to invite-only deals from now to any time before Prime Day. Not everyone who requests access will be selected to shop the deals, but the lucky group that is will get emails with unique shopping links during the Prime Day event.

So far, there are only nine invite-only deals available (six of which we think are worth the hassle), including price drops of return and new record-lows, like an Amazon Fire Omni Series TV for 75% off and JBL headphones for 55% off.

Who can access invite-only Prime Day deals?

Prime Day is a sale specifically for Prime members. Though we have found plenty of deals ahead of Prime Day that members and non-members alike can shop, invite-only deals are available exclusively to Prime members.

If you don't want to pay for a Prime membership just for a chance to score an invite, you can also sign up for a 30-day free trial.

How to shop invite-only Prime Day deals

We've listed the best invite-only deals below, but if you want to navigate to them on your own, you'll find them in the "Invite Only Prime deals" sections of Amazon's Today's Deals page and Prime Day event page.

Here's what you have to do to secure your invite:

  1. Request an invite. To get in on the savings, you'll have to let Amazon know you're interested by navigating to the right side of the page on any invite-only deal anytime before Prime Day. Click "request invite," and you'll get a pop-up with a confirmation that your request has been received.

invite requested notification from amazon
You'll get a confirmation on-screen once you've successfully requested an invite. Credit: Amazon / screenshot
  1. Sit back and wait. At this point, you've done everything there is to do. You can request as many of the invite-only deals available as you'd like, but you will only be able to request each item once, so no need to go back and do it daily. (RIP to the idea of scoring four Omni TVs for the price of one.)

  2. Check your email on Prime Day. On July 11 and 12, Amazon will send out invites with unique links for the chosen ones to buy the items at their special prices. If you're not selected, you'll also receive a notification from Amazon. Make sure your inbox doesn't mark Amazon emails as spam!

The best invite-only Prime Day deals

Why we like it

It's a 4K TV for $100 — in the words of Mashable Senior Shopping Reporter and resident TV deals expert Leah Stodart, that's "WILD." And she's right to say it, since a $100 4K TV from pretty much any brand is not a common sight to see. For this truly unbeatable price, you'll get a TV with a great picture, Alexa integration, and a built-in Fire TV interface.

Why we like it

According to our friends at PCMag (which is owned by Mashable's publisher, Ziff Davis), the 14-inch Acer Swift X "delivers one of the best price/performance ratios you can find" even at its $1,099.99 MSRP. That's not a typo: The 512GB configuration with an AMD Ryzen 7 5825U processor has a deflated list price on Amazon, so its $629.99 invite-only Prime Day offer is an even better deal than advertised.

Why we like it

Boasting a mind-boggling 50-hour battery life (with a 10-minute quick charge feature), the JBL Live 660NC are top-rated wireless over-ear headphones with Adaptive Noise Cancelling and Ambient Aware modes. When the black version drops to $89.95 on Prime Day (with an invite), it'll beat its previous all-time-low price from the past two Black Fridays by $10.

Why we like it

The Foreo Luna 3 is a professional-quality, app-connected facial cleansing brush that massages as it removes makeup and dead skin. (It's completely different from the Foreo Bear, a microcurrent device that we didn't love.) All three versions will be 50% off as part of an invite-only Prime Day deal — there's Normal Skin (pink), Sensitive Skin (purple), and Combination Skin (blue) — which is a good buy if you don't want to splurge on the newer $279 Foreo Luna 4.

Why we like it

Released in March, the sleek SodaStream E-Terra has an all-new electric interface with one-touch controls and three preset carbonation levels. The white starter pack spotlighted in an invite-only Prime Day deal comes with one CO2 cylinder and one dishwasher-safe reusable bottle, though you can also use it with any 1-liter and 0.5-liter BPA-free reusable plastic bottles you have on hand. (It's never dipped below $109 on Amazon before, FYI.)

Why we like it

Out of all the smart home devices and accessories Amazon could have chosen for an invite-only Prime Day deal, these limited-edition smart speaker stands it initially dropped on Star Wars Day (May the 4th) are a left-field pick. At any rate, they work with the fourth- and fifth-generation Echo Dots and come in three variations: Darth Vader, Stormtrooper, and The Mandalorian. None of them have ever gone on sale before.


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