Sylvester Stallone Dead: Overdose NOT True; Truth to the Death Hoax Uncovered
Sylvester Stallone dead rumors have been plaguing countless screens as of late. All the “Jaden Smith dead,” “Angelina Jolie suicide,” “Miley Cyrus death,” and more are nothing but horrible jokes. The rumored Sylvester Stallone death revolves around the 70-year-old Rocky Balboa actor having been found lifeless in his Los Angeles, California home. His death hoax came in the form of a scam message which had gone viral on Facebook. This web site was responsible for previous death hoaxes involving Vin Diesel, Nicolas Cage, Jaden Smith, Jim Carrey, Angelina Jolie and John Cena.” Read more: Johnny Depp Dead: 11th Richest Man Did NOT Commit Suicide; Death Hoax Not True In addition, an article from Morning News USA, headlined “Sylvester Stallone Dead: Actor Commits Suicide By Overdose?” reveals that the death hoax was linked to a website which looked much like CNN.
Sylvester Stallone Dead: 'Rocky 4' Rare Photos Revealed at Burial? - TGD - The Gamer's Drop - Gaming News
November 24 is the 40th anniversary of the birth of Rocky! A photo posted by Sly Stallone (@officialslystallone) on Sep 19, 2016 at 6:06pm PDT Seems the speculations are true. As for the Guardians of the Galaxy 2 cast, he is not fazed by the Sylvester Stallone dead rumors. A photo posted by Sly Stallone (@officialslystallone) on Sep 20, 2016 at 8:09am PDT Rocky was released on November 1976. Learn the latest about the Xbox and the Playstation; or updates on Capcom’s next installment or Naughty Dog’s follow up to Uncharted.
Google backs off on previously announced Allo privacy feature
The version of Allo rolling out today will store all non-incognito messages by default — a clear change from Google’s earlier statements that the app would only store messages transiently and in non-identifiable form. The records will now persist until the user actively deletes them, giving Google default access to a full history of conversations in the app. The decision will also have significant consequences for law enforcement access to Allo messages. By default, Allo messages will now be accessible to lawful warrant requests, the same as message data in Gmail and Hangouts and location data collected by Android. The messages might not be there if the user had previously deleted them, or if the conversations took place in Incognito Mode — but in most cases, they will be.