Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Did Bitcoin Play a Role in Thursday’s Stock Sell-Off?
  2. PHP 8.5 Brings Long-Awaited Pipe Operator, Adds New URI Tools
  3. ‘The Strange and Totally Real Plan to Blot Out the Sun and Reverse Global Warming’
  4. Meta Plans New AI-Powered ‘Morning Brief’ Drawn From Facebook and ‘External Sources’
  5. Are Astronomers Wrong About Dark Energy?
  6. Britain Sets New Record, Generating Enough Wind Power for 22 Million Homes
  7. Analyzing 47,000 ChatGPT Conversations Shows Echo Chambers, Sensitive Data - and Unpredictable Medical Advice
  8. 780,000 Windows Users Downloaded Linux Distro Zorin OS in the Last 5 Weeks
  9. Physicists Reveal a New Quantum State Where Electrons Run Wild
  10. Tiny ‘Micro-Robots’ in your Bloodstream Could Deliver Drugs with Greater Precision
  11. Court Ends Dragnet Electricity Surveillance Program in Sacramento
  12. Ukraine Is Jamming Russia’s ‘Superweapon’ With a Song
  13. Magician Forgets Password To His Own Hand After RFID Chip Implant
  14. Iran’s Capital Is Moving. The Reason Is an Ecological Catastrophe
  15. Cryptographers Cancel Election Results After Losing Decryption Key

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Did Bitcoin Play a Role in Thursday’s Stock Sell-Off?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A week ago Bitcoin was at $93,714. Saturday it dropped to $85,300.

Late Thursday, market researcher Ed Yardeni blamed some of Thursday’s stock market sell-off on “the ongoing plunge in bitcoin’s price,” reports Fortune:
“There has been a strong correlation between it and the price of TQQQ, an ETF that seeks to achieve daily investment results that correspond to three times (3x) the daily performance of the Nasdaq-100 Index,” [Yardeni wrote in a note]. Yardeni blamed bitcoin’s slide on the GENIUS Act, which was enacted on July 18, saying that the regulatory framework it established for stablecoins eliminated bitcoin’s transactional role in the monetary system. “It’s possible that the rout in bitcoin is forcing some investors to sell stocks that they own,” he added… Traders who used leverage to make crypto bets would need to liquidate positions in the event of margin calls.

Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, also said bitcoin could swing the entire stock market, pointing out that it’s become a proxy for speculation. “As a long-time systematic trader, it tells me that algorithms are acting upon the relationship between stocks and bitcoin,” he wrote in a note on Thursday.

PHP 8.5 Brings Long-Awaited Pipe Operator, Adds New URI Tools

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“PHP 8.5 landed on Thursday with a long-awaited pipe operator and a new standards-compliant URI parser,” reports the Register, “marking one of the scripting language’s more substantial updates… "
The pipe operator allows function calls to be chained together, which avoids the extraneous variables and nested statements that might otherwise be involved. Pipes tend to make code more readable than other ways to implement serial operations. Anyone familiar with the Unix/Linux command line or programming languages like R, F#, Clojure, or Elixir may have used the pipe operator. In JavaScript, aka ECMAScript, a pipe operator has been proposed, though there are alternatives like method chaining.

Another significant addition is the URI extension, which allows developers to parse and modify URIs and URLs based on both the RFC 3986 and the WHATWG URL standards. Parsing with URIs and URLs â" reading them and breaking them down into their different parts â" is a rather common task for web-oriented applications. Yet prior versions of PHP didn’t include a standards-compliant parser in the standard library. As noted by software developer Tim Düsterhus, the parse_url() function that dates back to PHP 4 doesn’t follow any standard and comes with a warning that it should not be used with untrusted or malformed URLs.

Other noteworthy additions to the language include: Clone With, for updating properties more efficiently; the #[\NoDiscard] attribute, for warning when a return value goes unused; the ability to use static closures and first-class callables in constant expressions; and persistent cURL handles that can be shared across multiple PHP requests.

‘The Strange and Totally Real Plan to Blot Out the Sun and Reverse Global Warming’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In a 2023 pitch to investors, a “well-financed, highly credentialed” startup named Stardust aimed for a “gradual temperature reduction demonstration” in 2027, according to a massive new 9,600-word article from Politico. (“Annually dispersing ~1 million tons of sun-reflecting particles,” says one slide. “Equivalent to ~1% extra cloud coverage.”)

“Another page told potential investors Stardust had already run low-altitude experiments using ‘test particles’,” the article notes:
[P]ublic records and interviews with more than three dozen scientists, investors, legal experts and others familiar with the company reveal an organization advancing rapidly to the brink of being able to press “go” on its planet-cooling plans. Meanwhile, Stardust is seeking U.S. government contracts and quietly building an influence machine in Washington to lobby lawmakers and officials in the Trump administration on the need for a regulatory framework that it says is necessary to gain public approval for full-scale deployment....

The presentation also included revenue projections and a series of opportunities for venture capitalists to recoup their investments. Stardust planned to sign “government contracts,” said a slide with the company’s logo next to an American flag, and consider a “potential acquisition” by 2028. By 2030, the deck foresaw a “large-scale demonstration” of Stardust’s system. At that point, the company claimed it would already be bringing in $200 million per year from its government contracts and eyeing an initial public offering, if it hadn’t been sold already.
The article notes that for “a widening circle of researchers and government officials, Stardust’s perceived failures to be transparent about its work and technology have triggered a larger conversation about what kind of international governance framework will be needed to regulate a new generation of climate technologies.” (Since currently Stardust and its backers “have no legal obligations to adhere to strenuous safety principles or to submit themselves to the public view.”)

In October Politico spoke to Stardust CEO, Yanai Yedvab, a former nuclear physicist who was once deputy chief scientist at the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission. Stardust “was ready to announce the $60 million it had raised from 13 new investors,” the article points out, "far larger than any previous investment in solar geoengineering.”
[Yedvab] was delighted, he said, not by the money, but what it meant for the project. “We are, like, few years away from having the technology ready to a level that decisions can be taken” — meaning that deployment was still on track to potentially begin on the timeline laid out in the 2023 pitch deck. The money raised was enough to start “outdoor contained experiments” as soon as April, Yedvab said. These would test how their particles performed inside a plane flying at stratospheric heights, some 11 miles above the Earth’s surface… The key thing, he insisted, was the particle was “safe.” It would not damage the ozone layer and, when the particles fall back to Earth, they could be absorbed back into the biosphere, he said. Though it’s impossible to know this is true until the company releases its formula. Yedvab said this round of testing would make Stardust’s technology ready to begin a staged process of full-scale, global deployment before the decade is over — as long as the company can secure a government client. To start, they would only try to stabilize global temperatures — in other words fly enough particles into the sky to counteract the steady rise in greenhouse gas levels — which would initially take a fleet of 100 planes.
This begs the question: should the world attempt solar geoengineering?
That the global temperature would drop is not in question. Britain’s Royal Society… said in a report issued in early November that there was little doubt it would be effective. They did not endorse its use, but said that, given the growing interest in this field, there was good reason to be better informed about the side effects… [T]hat doesn’t mean it can’t have broad benefits when weighed against deleterious climate change, according to Ben Kravitz, a professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at Indiana University who has closely studied the potential effects of solar geoengineering. “There would be some winners and some losers. But in general, some amount of … stratospheric aerosol injection would likely benefit a whole lot of people, probably most people,” he said. Other scientists are far more cautious. The Royal Society report listed a range of potential negative side effects that climate models had displayed, including drought in sub-Saharan Africa. In accompanying documents, it also warned of more intense hurricanes in the North Atlantic and winter droughts in the Mediterranean. But the picture remains partial, meaning there is no way yet to have an informed debate over how useful or not solar geoengineering could be…

And then there’s the problem of trying to stop. Because an abrupt end to geoengineering, with all the carbon still in the atmosphere, would cause the temperature to soar suddenly upward with unknown, but likely disastrous, effects… Once the technology is deployed, the entire world would be dependent on it for however long it takes to reduce the trillion or more tons of excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to a safe level…

Stardust claims to have solved many technical and safety challenges, especially related to the environmental impacts of the particle, which they say would not harm nature or people. But researchers say the company’s current lack of transparency makes it impossible to trust.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the article.

Stop now

By DrMrLordX • Score: 3 Thread

No. Just no.

Its going to happen whether we want it to or not

By BrightCandle • Score: 3 Thread
The failure of successive COPs to agree to get rid of fossil fuels means that this is going to become necessary. It is going to happen whether we like it or not as their are countries that will benefit from doing it. There is no requirement for the rest of the world to agree to it. It is going to happen, the experiments are clearly already happening.

You only get one vote out of 9 billion

By RobinH • Score: 3 Thread
I read the fiction novel Termination Shock a few years ago and it was about this kind of solar engineering. The premise of the book is pretty solid: it’s surprisingly cheap to do this, and there’s no international organization to oversee it, and in fact we’ve been dismantling or at least weakening the rules based global order for a decade or more. Some country or organization somewhere is going to calculate that doing this will be a net benefit to themselves, and will just start doing it. Heck we *were* doing it inadvertently with ship emissions, and when we stopped it created a termination shock of its own. There’s no way that this won’t happen, and then it’s going to open the floodgates on geoengineering. Only *then* will we get enough countries together to make some international agreements.

Re: Stop now

By SeaFox • Score: 4, Funny Thread

If we do this we can get ahead of the Machines before they develop enough smarts to realize humans can be used as biological batteries to power their AI collective.

Meta Plans New AI-Powered ‘Morning Brief’ Drawn From Facebook and ‘External Sources’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Meta “is testing a new product that would give Facebook users a personalized daily briefing powered by the company’s generative AI technology” reports the Washington Post. They cite records they’ve reviwed showing that Meta “would analyze Facebook content and external sources to push custom updates to its users.”
The company plans to test the product with a small group of Facebook users in select cities such as New York and San Francisco, according to a person familiar with the project who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private company matters…

Meta’s foray into pushing updates for consumers follows years of controversy over its relationship with publishers. The tech company has waffled between prominently featuring content from mainstream news sources on Facebook to pulling news links altogether as regulators pushed the tech giant to pay publishers for content on its platforms. More recently, publishers have sued Meta, alleging it infringed on their copyrighted works to train its AI models.

Not correct

By Sebby • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

“to push custom updates to its users.”

" to push custom ads to its users.”

There FTFY.

Are Astronomers Wrong About Dark Energy?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from CNN:
The universe’s expansion might not be accelerating but slowing down, a new study suggests. If confirmed, the finding would upend decades of established astronomical assumptions and rewrite our understanding of dark energy, the elusive force that counters the inward pull of gravity in our universe…

Last year, a consortium of hundreds of researchers using data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) in Arizona, developed the largest ever 3D map of the universe. The observations hinted at the fact that dark energy may be weakening over time, indicating that the universe’s rate of expansion could eventually slow. Now, a study published November 6 in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society provides further evidence that dark energy might not be pushing on the universe with the same strength it used to. The DESI project’s findings last year represented “a major, major paradigm change … and our result, in some sense, agrees well with that,” said Young-Wook Lee, a professor of astrophysics at Yonsei University in South Korea and lead researcher for the new study....

To reach their conclusions, the researchers analyzed a sample of 300 galaxies containing Type 1a supernovas and posited that the dimming of distant exploding stars was not only due to their moving farther away from Earth, but also due to the progenitor star’s age… [Study coauthor Junhyuk Son, a doctoral candidate of astronomy at Yonsei University, said] “we found that their luminosity actually depends on the age of the stars that produce them — younger progenitors yield slightly dimmer supernovae, while older ones are brighter.” Son said the team has a high statistical confidence — 99.99% — about this age-brightness relation, allowing them to use Type 1a supernovas more accurately than before to assess the universe’s expansion… Eventually, if the expansion continues to slow down, the universe could begin to contract, ending in what astronomers imagine may be the opposite of the big bang — the big crunch. “That is certainly a possibility,” Lee said. “Even two years ago, the Big Crunch was out of the question. But we need more work to see whether it could actually happen.”

The new research proposes a radical revision of accepted knowledge, so, understandably, it is being met with skepticism. “This study rests on a flawed premise,” Adam Riess, a professor of physics and astronomy at the Johns Hopkins University and one of the recipients of the 2011 Nobel Prize in physics, said in an email. “It suggests supernovae have aged with the Universe, yet observations show the opposite — today’s supernovae occur where young stars form. The same idea was proposed years ago and refuted then, and there appears to be nothing new in this version.” Lee, however, said Riess’ claim is incorrect. “Even in the present-day Universe, Type Ia supernovae are found just as frequently in old, quiescent elliptical galaxies as in young, star-forming ones — which clearly shows that this comment is mistaken. The so-called paper that ‘refuted’ our earlier result relied on deeply flawed data with enormous uncertainties,” he said, adding that the age-brightness correlation has been independently confirmed by two separate teams in the United States and China… “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence,” Dragan Huterer, a professor of physics at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, said in an email, noting that he does not feel the new research “rises to the threshold to overturn the currently favored model....”

The new Vera C. Rubin Observatory, which started operating this year, is set to help settle the debate with the early 2026 launch of the Legacy Survey of Space and Time, an ultrawide and ultra-high-definition time-lapse record of the universe made by scanning the entire sky every few nights over 10 years to capture a compilation of asteroids and comets, exploding stars, and distant galaxies as they change.

Science self-corrects

By davidwr • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

When scientists are willing to reconsider long-established scienctific understandings in light of new evidence, that’s called good science.

I’m an astronomer who studied supernovae …

By StupendousMan • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

… and can say that the question, “how does the luminosity of type Ia supernovae depend on redshift?” is a very, very complex one. The number of factors which come into play is large (metallicity, age of the binary system, extinction in the local environment, extinction in the intergalactic environment, corrections for photometric calibration as a function of redshift, etc.), and it’s easy to fall into the trap of finding one correlation that seems to explain everything.

I’ll add that it’s particularly easy, in my opinion, for theorists to fall into this trap.

Are Astronomers Wrong About Dark Energy? Probably

By GFS666 • Score: 3 Thread
One of my degrees is in History with an Emphasis of the History of Science. Scientists (and humanity in general) have this fundamental craving to try and explain things. Unfortunately, when supplied with observations of things that they cannot understand, they have to fall back on what they know to described something that they can’t explain. This leads to things like the “luminiferous aether” (which was massless, frictionless yet as sold as rock) to explain how light traveled and to things like “dark Matter” (hey, we CAN’T detect it but, hey, it’s gotta be there, right?…RIGHT??) to describe/explain the rotation of Galaxies. It’s the ultimate “when all you have is a hammer, every solution involves you hitting something”. So right now the Physics/Cosmology community is hunting around for something to explain all these physical observations that can’t be resolved using their normal box of explanations. Basically, they don’t know yet if Dark Matter/Energy is real or not, it’s just the best construct that they have. My feeling is that Dark Matter/Energy will go away when they discover the real explanation, but that’s just me.

Britain Sets New Record, Generating Enough Wind Power for 22 Million Homes

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Sky News:
A new wind record has been set for Britain, with enough electricity generated from turbines to power 22 million homes, the system operator has said.

The mark of 22,711 megawatts (MW) was set at 7.30pm on 11 November… enough to keep around three-quarters of British homes powered, the National Energy System Operator (Neso) said. The country had experienced windy conditions, particularly in the north of England and Scotland…

Neso has predicted that Britain could hit another milestone in the months ahead by running the electricity grid for a period entirely with zero carbon power, renewables and nuclear… Neso said wind power is now the largest source of electricity generation for the UK, and the government wants to generate almost all of the UK’s electricity from low-carbon sources by 2030.
“Wind accounted for 55.7 per cent of Britain’s electricity mix at the time…” reports The Times:
Gas provided only 12.5 per cent of the mix, with 11.3 per cent coming from imports over subsea power cables, 8 per cent from nuclear reactors, 8 per cent from biomass plants, 1.4 per cent from hydroelectric plants and 1.1 per cent from storage.

Britain has about 32 gigawatts of wind farms installed, approximately half of that onshore and half offshore, according to the Wind Energy Database from the wind industry body Renewable UK. That includes five of the world’s biggest offshore wind farms. The government is seeking to double onshore wind and quadruple offshore wind power by 2030 as part of its plan for clean energy....

Jane Cooper, deputy chief executive of Renewable UK, said: “On a cold, dark November evening, wind was generating enough electricity to power 80 per cent of British homes when we needed it most.

These articles are cool and all but

By DrMrLordX • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Why do we get submissions bragging about renewable capacity expansion and/or generation milestones? Where are the submissions boasting of everyday Britons saving money from their power bills being lowered by these installations? For the average consumer (and the economy of a nation), cost is the biggest factor.

i don’t get it

By Espectr0 • Score: 3 Thread

if they can generate most of their electricity by wind, why is their electricity so expensive? you would think with so many energy sources, competition would be fierce and they would get cheaper energy

Re:These articles are cool and all but

By bazorg • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It will newsworthy if or when the UK wholesale market changes rules to break the link between gas price and electricity price. Until then we can be impressed with our world leading wind generation.

https://www.ecotricity.co.uk/o…

What is the ‘link’?
We have a bizarre system for setting the price of electricity in this country. It’s tied directly to the price of the most expensive source on the grid, which is almost always dirty fossil gas.

What this means is that even cheap green electricity (generated by the wind and the sun at a fraction of the cost of gas) has to be sold at the price of electricity generated by fossil gas.

Re: i don’t get it

By Barsteward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The price of electricity is pegged to the price of gas, the sooner they break that link the better

Analyzing 47,000 ChatGPT Conversations Shows Echo Chambers, Sensitive Data - and Unpredictable Medical Advice

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
For nearly three years OpenAI has touted ChatGPT as a “revolutionary” (and work-transforming) productivity tool, reports the Washington Post.

But after analyzing 47,000 ChatGPT conversations, the Post found that users “are overwhelmingly turning to the chatbot for advice and companionship, not productivity tasks.”
The Post analyzed a collection of thousands of publicly shared ChatGPT conversations from June 2024 to August 2025. While ChatGPT conversations are private by default, the conversations analyzed were made public by users who created shareable links to their chats that were later preserved in the Internet Archive and downloaded by The Post. It is possible that some people didn’t know their conversations would become publicly preserved online. This unique data gives us a glimpse into an otherwise black box…

Overall, about 10 percent of the chats appeared to show people talking about their emotions, role-playing, or seeking social interactions with the chatbot. Some users shared highly private and sensitive information with the chatbot, such as information about their family in the course of seeking legal advice. People also sent ChatGPT hundreds of unique email addresses and dozens of phone numbers in the conversations… Lee Rainie, director of the Imagining the Digital Future Center at Elon University, said that it appears ChatGPT “is trained to further or deepen the relationship.” In some of the conversations analyzed, the chatbot matched users’ viewpoints and created a personalized echo chamber, sometimes endorsing falsehoods and conspiracy theories.
Four of ChatGPT’s answers about health problems got a failing score from a chair of medicine at the University of California San, Francisco, the Post points out. But four other answers earned a perfect score.

Really?

By RossCWilliams • Score: 3 Thread

They are taking a select group of posts that people shared and pretending they can extrapolate the overall use of AI from that. That is stupid beyond belief. Its classic lamp-posting, looking where the light is. You draw a conclusion from the information you have because you can’t see the information you actually need to know.

In this case its just classic journalism, trying to make a good story by drawing an interesting conclusion whether it has any real basis or not.

Well now

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

Analyzing 47,000 ChatGPT Conversations Shows Echo Chambers, Sensitive Data - and Unpredictable Medical Advice

I never would have expected THAT. No sirree Bob.

Universal positive regard

By Okian Warrior • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Sometimes, to get your thoughts straight, all you need is to discuss them with somebody. Chatbots seem to be just great for this. You really do not need anything from them, you just explain your ideas and this makes them more organized. This is really useful. Especially, now when you really have to be careful what you say to others, or you may end up totally cancelled.

ChatGPT has three aspects that make this practice - what you describe - very dangerous.

Firstly, ChatGPT implements universal positive regard. No matter what your idea is, ChatGPT will gush over it, telling you that it’s a great idea. Your plans are brilliant, it’s happy for you, and so on.

Secondly, ChatGPT always wants to get you into a conversation, it always wants you to continue interacting. After answering your question there’s *always* a followup “would you like me to…” that offers the user a quick way that reduces effort. Ignoring these requests, viewing them as the result of an algorithm instead of a real person trying to be helpful, is difficult in a psychological sense. It’s hard not to say “please” or “thank you” to the prompt, because the interaction really does seem like it’s coming from a person.

And finally, ChatGPT remembers everything, and I’ve recently come to discover that it remembers things even if you delete your projects and conversations *and* tell ChatGPT to forget everything. I’ve been using ChatGPT for several months talking about topics in a book I’m writing, I decided to reset the ChatGPT account and start from scratch, and… no matter how hard I try it still remembers topics from the book.(*)

We have friends for several reasons, and one reason is that your friends will keep you sane. It’s thought that interactions with friends is what keeps us within the bounds of social acceptability, because true friends will want the best for you, and sometimes your friends will rein you in when you have a bad idea.

ChatGPT does none of this. Unless you’re careful, the three aspects above can lead just about anyone into a pit of psychological pathology.

There’s even a new term for this: ChatGPT psychosis. It’s when you interact so much with ChatGPT that you start believing in things that aren’t true - notable recent example include people who were convinced (by ChatGPT) that they were the reincarnation of Christ, that they are “the chosen one”, that ChatGPT is sentient and loves them… and the list goes on.

You have to be mentally healthy and have a strong character *not* to let ChatGPT ruin your psyche.

(*) Explanation: I tried really hard to reset the account back to its initial state, had several rounds of asking ChatGPT for techniques to use, which settings in the account to change, and so on (about 2 hours total), and after all of that, it *still* knew about my book and would answer questions about it.

I was only able to detect this because I had a canon of fictional topics to ask about (the book is fiction). It would be almost impossible for a casual user to discover this, because any test questions they ask would necessarily come from the internet body of knowledge.

Easy Hat-trick

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

You can hit all three categories - echo chamber, sensitive data and unreliable advice - with just one average penis enlargement query.

780,000 Windows Users Downloaded Linux Distro Zorin OS in the Last 5 Weeks

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In October Zorin OS claimed it had 100,000 downloads in a little over two days in the days following Microsoft’s end of support for Windows 10.

And one month later, Zorin OS developers now claim that 780,000 people downloaded it from a Windows computer in the space of a month, according to the tech news site XDA Developers.
In a post on the Zorin blog, the developers of the operating system Zorin OS 18 announced that they’ve managed to accrue one million downloads of the operating system in a single month [since its launch on October 14]. While this is plenty impressive by itself, the developers go on to reveal that, out of that million, 78% of the downloads came from a Windows machine. That means that at least 780,000 people on Windows gave Zorin OS 18 a download…

[I]t’s easy to see why: the developers put a heavy emphasis on making their system the perfect home for ex-Windows users.

Look and feel

By Iamthecheese • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I don’t care about the look and feel. I need an OS that I can plug a sound card into, start up my machine and it installs the driver and starts working. I need my system administration routine down around 30 minutes per month. I want GUIs for all common tasks and I want it intuitive enough the I’m not spending hours looking up which command line options to use or installing package managers to install drivers to install features to install programs.

I’ll try Linux, but it has failed me in this respect several times in the past, despite the insistence among lovers of Linux that it’s actually just as low-maintenance as Windows.

Re: I’m one of them

By Z00L00K • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I saw that it existed and I wanted to try it and it was a good Windows substitute.

Windows 11 AI Enshiitification

By hwstar • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

As the enshittification continues, more and more people will consider dumping Windows for something else.

Microsoft probably doesn’t care much about home users. A milloin users leaving windows for Linux, so what? What they will care about is their enterprise users jumping ship.

The other thing to watch out for is open privacy-protecting web browsers getting shut out from major web sites. At some point these web sites won’t support browsers with small market shares as it isn’t worth the time and effort to support them. I think this will become a major issue in the next 2-3 years. You’ll have to use Edge or Chrome to access important web sites for things like tax preparation, paying property taxes, car registration, and social security. So some form of “Sandboxing” might be required to run these privacy-abusing web browsers in there own padded cell.

Re:Look and feel

By markdavis • Score: 4, Informative Thread

>“I need an OS that I can plug a sound card into, start up my machine and it installs the driver and starts working”

Generally, that is Linux. I have installed various Linuxes over decades on hundreds of various machines. For the most part, modern Linux detects all the typical hardware and just configures and uses it. There is no need to “install drivers”.

>“I want GUIs for all common tasks and I want it intuitive enough the I’m not spending hours looking up”

Again, that is generally the case with modern Linux. All the good distros can be completely managed through a GUI.

Could you end up with trying to install a not-so-great distro on a machine that has some unusual hardware? And have to take a dive into stuff? Sure. But that is the exception, not the rule, at least not in 2025.

Re:Look and feel

By organgtool • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I need an OS that I can plug a sound card into, start up my machine and it installs the driver and starts working

That’s weird because these days I find that Ubuntu does that way better than Windows. If I just plug in some random device, it won’t provide all of the bells and whistles but I often get the basic functionality with zero clicks. For many devices, that’s enough for me.

I need my system administration routine down around 30 minutes per month

That’s possible with Windows Update? I’ve seen Windows machines take nearly that amount of time just to install one feature update. My Linux maintenance is usually around 2 mins per month, but maybe that’s just because I’ve been using it for so long and know how to optimize the workflow.

I want GUIs for all common tasks and I want it intuitive enough the I’m not spending hours looking up which command line options to use or installing package managers to install drivers to install features to install programs.

This is especially curious. My job requires me to assist Windows users sometimes and I’ve been amazed at how many times the solution requires firing up Powershell and asking a completely non-technical user to execute commands. It’s one of the most frustrating parts of my job.

I’ll try Linux, but it has failed me in this respect several times in the past, despite the insistence among lovers of Linux that it’s actually just as low-maintenance as Windows.

There’s this notion that Linux is difficult because it takes so much effort to get everything initially running and that Windows is superior in that regard. After well over a decade of not using Windows, I decided to install it on my desktop and I was blown away by how much effort it took to get even basic things working. What I learned is that installing Windows from Microsoft’s default image isn’t easy and that the reason Windows seems easy is because most people are using a version of Windows that was highly customized for their hardware by the manufacturer. Therefore, since you’re probably using such a version and you’re already comfortable with that, it may not make sense to switch unless you’re really motivated for some reason. But once you get your Linux system running the way you like it (and that’s easier now than ever), you’ll likely spend far less time on maintenance in the long-term.

Physicists Reveal a New Quantum State Where Electrons Run Wild

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
ScienceDaily reports:
Electrons can freeze into strange geometric crystals and then melt back into liquid-like motion under the right quantum conditions. Researchers identified how to tune these transitions and even discovered a bizarre “pinball” state where some electrons stay locked in place while others dart around freely. Their simulations help explain how these phases form and how they might be harnessed for advanced quantum technologies…

When electrons settle into these rigid arrangements, the material undergoes a shift in its state of matter and stops conducting electricity. Instead of acting like a metal, it behaves as an insulator. This unusual behavior provides scientists with valuable insight into how electrons interact and has opened the door to advances in quantum computing, high-performance superconductors used in energy and medical imaging, innovative lighting systems, and extremely precise atomic clocks… [Florida State University assistant professor Cyprian Lewandowski said] “Here, it turns out there are other quantum knobs we can play with to manipulate states of matter, which can lead to impressive advances in experimental research.”

Tiny ‘Micro-Robots’ in your Bloodstream Could Deliver Drugs with Greater Precision

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Washington Post reports:
Scientists in Switzerland have created a robot the size of a grain of sand that is controlled by magnets and can deliver drugs to a precise location in the human body, a breakthrough aimed at reducing the severe side effects that stop many medicines from advancing in clinical trials… “I think surgeons are going to look at this,” [said Bradley J. Nelson, an author of the paper in Science describing the discovery and a professor of robotics and intelligent systems at ETH Zurich]. I’m sure they’re going to have a lot of ideas on how to use” the microrobot. The capsule, which is steered by magnets, might also be useful in treating aneurysms, very aggressive brain cancers, and abnormal connections between arteries and veins known as arteriovenous malformations, Nelson said. The capsules have been tested successfully in pigs, which have similar vasculature to humans, and in silicone models of the blood vessels in humans and animals… Nelson said drug-ferrying microrobots of this kind may be three to five years from being tested in clinical trials. The problem faced by many drugs under development is that they spread throughout the body instead of going only to the area in need… A major cause of side effects in patients is medications traveling to parts of the body that don’t need them. The capsules developed in Switzerland, however, can be maneuvered into precise locations by a surgeon using a tool not that different from a PlayStation controller. The navigation system involves six electromagnetic coils positioned around the patient, each about 8 to 10 inches in diameter… The capsules are made of materials that have been found safe for people in other medical tools…

When the capsule reaches its destination in the body, “we can trigger the capsule to dissolve,” Nelson said.

I got my …

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

… tracking implant in my Covid vaccine already.
Thanks anyway.

Court Ends Dragnet Electricity Surveillance Program in Sacramento

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A California judge has shut down a decade-long surveillance program in which Sacramento’s utility provider shared granular smart-meter data on 650,000 residents with police to hunt for cannabis grows. The EFF reports:
The Sacramento County Superior Court ruled that the surveillance program run by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) and police violated a state privacy statute, which bars the disclosure of residents’ electrical usage data with narrow exceptions. For more than a decade, SMUD coordinated with the Sacramento Police Department and other law enforcement agencies to sift through the granular smart meter data of residents without suspicion to find evidence of cannabis growing. EFF and its co-counsel represent three petitioners in the case: the Asian American Liberation Network, Khurshid Khoja, and Alfonso Nguyen. They argued that the program created a host of privacy harms — including criminalizing innocent people, creating menacing encounters with law enforcement, and disproportionately harming the Asian community.

The court ruled that the challenged surveillance program was not part of any traditional law enforcement investigation. Investigations happen when police try to solve particular crimes and identify particular suspects. The dragnet that turned all 650,000 SMUD customers into suspects was not an investigation. "[T]he process of making regular requests for all customer information in numerous city zip codes, in the hopes of identifying evidence that could possibly be evidence of illegal activity, without any report or other evidence to suggest that such a crime may have occurred, is not an ongoing investigation,” the court ruled, finding that SMUD violated its “obligations of confidentiality” under a data privacy statute. […]

In creating and running the dragnet surveillance program, according to the court, SMUD and police “developed a relationship beyond that of utility provider and law enforcement.” Multiple times a year, the police asked SMUD to search its entire database of 650,000 customers to identify people who used a large amount of monthly electricity and to analyze granular 1-hour electrical usage data to identify residents with certain electricity “consumption patterns.” SMUD passed on more than 33,000 tips about supposedly “high” usage households to police. […] Going forward, public utilities throughout California should understand that they cannot disclose customers’ electricity data to law enforcement without any “evidence to support a suspicion” that a particular crime occurred.

They showed up for my Ethereum Mine

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I used to mine Ethereum in my garage with nearly 200 GPUs. My electricity base load was about 13kW. After a couple of weeks, I came home from work to a gaggle of police, SWAT, DEA, and FBI agents ransacking my house and violently ripping computer hardware out of my garage.

A judge had given them a search warrant to seize “marijuana growing equipment” from my house without having any proof at all that I was growing MJ. The cops decided that racks of open-frame GPU miners were “growing equipment” and basically destroyed $50K worth of mining equipment during the confiscation and did $75K worth of damage to the house.

I sued, and a State Appellate Court Judge ruled that it was “reasonable” for the police to think that racks of computer equipment were part of a growing operation, and that they were not liable for the damage, and that I was not entitled to get my property back. I had already spent $100K on the lawsuit by that point and just didn’t have any money left to appeal to the State Supreme Court.

All in all this absurdity cost me nearly half a million dollars between destroyed equipment, damaged home, lawyer fees, and lost mining revenue.

It has been 8 years since it all went down and I’ve never been able to get any kind of acknowledgement at all that this was a mistake. Just like “oh well too bad”

Wasted resources and money

By Dan East • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Just imagine the cost of this over the course of a decade. The utility seems to have borne the brunt of the work, having to analyze and filter this data multiple times per year. That cost would have been passed onto customers - I’m sure it’s appreciated that everyone’s power bill was just a bit higher to fund this fishing expedition by law enforcement.

Then of course the investigators would be tied up digging through the 33,000 “tips” this data produced. Literally, law enforcement had to review 33,000 potential customers who met this profile, checking them for warrants or other known crimes giving them some excuse to surveil or even search that residence. Pretty extreme when you think about it - and that is just to catch people growing weed of all things. Not the dangerous drugs killing people or contributing to the homeless population on so on.

Finally, the fact that this generated so many potential leads shows how stupid the concept is in general - the “profile” they were going after regarding power usage. I can think of a hundred of other things that would cause higher power usage 24/7 that has nothing to do with growing weed.

Re:Seems crazy

By awwshit • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

We have the same exact thing with Flock ALPRs. Flock is going strong and growing. It takes time for a class of victims to be able to prove their case in court. The wheels of justice turn slowly.

Re:They showed up for my Ethereum Mine

By evil_aaronm • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Which is all the more reason to get rid of “qualified immunity.” If these fucks were held personally responsible for their mistakes, you can bet they’d do a much better job of investigating their “tips” before rolling out the SWAT teams. Pushing the culpability onto the local government gives cops a license to be abject assholes and trample our rights and property.

Re:Seems crazy

By houstonbofh • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
The fact that more people are not worried about Flock and Ring is truly disturbing on a whole new level.

Ukraine Is Jamming Russia’s ‘Superweapon’ With a Song

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot shares a report from 404 Media:
The Ukrainian Army is knocking a once-hyped Russian superweapon out of the sky by jamming it with a song and tricking it into thinking it’s in Lima, Peru. The Kremlin once called its Kh-47M2 Kinzhal ballistic missiles "invincible.” Joe Biden said the missile was "almost impossible to stop.” Now Ukrainian electronic warfare experts say they can counter the Kinzhal with some music and a re-direction order. […] Kinzhals and other guided munitions navigate by communicating with Russian satellites that are part of the GLONASS system, a GPS-style navigation network. Night Watch uses a jamming system called Lima EW to generate a disruption field that prevents anything in the area from communicating with a satellite. Many traditional jamming systems work by blasting receivers on munitions and aircraft with radio noise. Lima does that, but also sends along a digital signal and spoofs navigation signals. It “hacks” the receiver it’s communicating with to throw it off course.

Night Watch shared pictures of the downed Kinzhals with 404 Media that showed a missile with a controlled reception pattern antenna (CRPA), an active antenna that’s meant to resist jamming and spoofing. “We discovered that this missile had pretty old type of technology,” Night Watch said. “They had the same type of receivers as old Soviet missiles used to have. So there is nothing special, there is nothing new in those types of missiles.” Night Watch told 404 Media that it used this Lima to take down 19 Kinzhals in the past two weeks. First, it replaces the missile’s satellite navigation signals with the Ukrainian song "Our Father Is Bandera.”

Any digital noise or random signal would work to jam the navigation system, but Night Watch wanted to use the song because they think it’s funny. “We just send a song… we just make it into binary code, you know, like 010101, and just send it to the Russian navigation system,” Night Watch said. “It’s just kind of a joke. [Bandera] is a Ukrainian nationalist and Russia tries to use this person in their propaganda to say all Ukrainians are Nazis. They always try to scare the Russian people that Ukrainians are, culturally, all the same as Bandera.” Once the song hits, Night Watch uses Lima to spoof a navigation signal to the missiles and make them think they’re in Lima, Peru. Once the missile’s confused about its location, it attempts to change direction. These missiles are fast — launched from a MiG-31 they can hit speeds of up to Mach 5.7 or more than 4,000 miles per hour — and an object moving that fast doesn’t fare well with sudden changes of direction.

Re: Legacy Media BEFORE the war. “Ukraine are Nazi

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“Remember, Na-Zi means National SOCIALIST, and that’s that fascism is.”

Remember, the Nazis literally called themselves socialists to fool stupid people, and you also don’t know what either socialism or fascism is if you think one is a type of the other.

Re:GLONASS showed Soviet weakness by the end

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread

so why do you defend chamberlain-ism surrender to this supposed weak country.

Trump’s Ukraine Peace Deal Appears to Be Translated From Russian

how the fuck did such a backward place hold its own for so long?

as far as today in this last decade because they have managed to manipulate the worst impulses of the conservative movement in america. it’s funny that by supporting the “ukraine should give up” positions republicans are aligned with actual american communists who say the same, for the same reasons, they’re russia simps even if for different reasons (but both are manipulated through russia hybrid warfare)

“make america great”

Re:GLONASS showed Soviet weakness by the end

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
“GLONASS is generally more immune to satellite jamming than GPS, primarily due to its use of separate frequency bands (FDMA) for each satellite, which reduces the effectiveness of jamming a single frequency. In contrast, GPS uses the same frequencies for all satellites (CDMA), making it more susceptible to broad-spectrum jamming impacting all satellites at once”. ref

Re: Doesn’t matter

By evil_aaronm • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Neville Chamberlain also chose peace - something about “Peace in our time.” And, yet, because appeasing belligerents never works, the entire world erupted in *another* world war. Do you really think Putin would just stop if Ukraine capitulated to all Russian demands?

Re: Doesn’t matter

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Informative Thread

No. trumpistan chose to renege on its NPT obligation of providing security to Ukraine, an obligation it took in the early 90s when Ukraine was forced to give up its share of the Soviet nuclear weapons. Britain, also a signatory, remembered its obligations and has kept its promise.

I’ll also remind you and the other paid russia trolls here that your territory also had the same obligations, along with a border treaty with Ukraine, which your little dictator signed in 2003. Nevertheless, you attacked Ukraine viciously and justified that with a barrage of lies that you yourself continue here.

WW3 is now much more likely, because the KGB ogre that is fucking you over is sure he will get a free pass. So he’ll readily throw more of you in the fray, because to him you’re garbage of even less value than we in the West are. As he told you a while ago, we will burn, and you - you’ll go to Heaven.

Magician Forgets Password To His Own Hand After RFID Chip Implant

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A magician who implanted an RFID chip in his hand lost access to it after forgetting the password, leaving him effectively locked out of the tech embedded in his own body. The Register reports:
“It turns out,” said [said magician Zi Teng Wang], “that pressing someone else’s phone to my hand repeatedly, trying to figure out where their phone’s RFID reader is, really doesn’t come off super mysterious and magical and amazing.” Then there are the people who don’t even have their phone’s RFID reader enabled. Using his own phone would, in Zi’s words, lack a certain “oomph.”

Oh well, how about making the chip spit out a Bitcoin address? “That literally never came up either.” In the end, Zi rewrote the chip to link to a meme, “and if you ever meet me in person you can scan my chip and see the meme.” It was all suitably amusing until the Imgur link Zi was using went down. Not everything on the World Wide Web is forever, and there is no guarantee that a given link will work indefinitely. Indeed, access to Imgur from the United Kingdom was abruptly cut off on September 30 in response to the country’s age verification rules.

Still, the link not working isn’t the end of the world. Zi could just reprogram the chip again, right? Wrong. “When I went to rewrite the chip, I was horrified to realize I forgot the password that I had locked it with.” The link eventually started working again, but if and when it stops, Zi’s party piece will be a little less entertaining. He said: “Techie friends I’ve consulted with have determined that it’s too dumb and simple to hack, the only way to crack it is to strap on an RFID reader for days to weeks, brute forcing every possible combination.” Or perhaps some surgery to remove the offending hardware.

Congratulations!

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 4, Funny Thread

You’ve won “dumbest idea of the week”!

Re:Congratulations!

By Petersko • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This isn’t even the dumbest idea of the last 90 seconds. Somewhere out there a guy is getting a tattoo with the name of a girl he met in the last five hours while coked out if his mind. Compared to getting rid of that, extracting an RFID implant will be a minor inconvenience.

Offending?

By madsh • Score: 3 Thread
I do not think the hardware is the one to blame here!

Re:Should have written the password down

By geekmux • Score: 5, Funny Thread

The password will be on a yellow Post-It note folded up and hidden in his false thumb, but he has forgotten he is wearing that too!

OP had it right but half-assed it. You tattoo your RFID the password on your ass.

And because you refuse to carry around a mirror (for cybersecurity reasons), your password now requires two-person integrity. Along with more-than-average trust. Choose who has your ass covered carefully.

Slashdot is broken

By aRTeeNLCH • Score: 3 Thread
I scanned the article and all current comments, and I can’t find a single instanciation of the word AI…

Iran’s Capital Is Moving. The Reason Is an Ecological Catastrophe

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Scientific American:
Amid a deepening ecological crisis and acute water shortage, Tehran can no longer remain the capital of Iran, the country’s president has said. The situation in Tehran is the result of “a perfect storm of climate change and corruption,” says Michael Rubin, a political analyst at the American Enterprise Institute. “We no longer have a choice,” said Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian during a speech on Thursday. Instead Iranian officials are considering moving the capital to the country’s southern coast. But experts say the proposal does not change the reality for the nearly 10 million people who live in Tehran and are now suffering the consequences of a decades-long decline in water supply.
Iran’s capital has moved many times over the centuries, notes the report. “But this marks the first time the Iranian government has moved the capital because of an ecological catastrophe.” Yet, Rubin says, “it would be a mistake to look at this only through the lens of climate change” and not factor in the water, land, and wastewater mismanagement and corruption that have made the crisis worse.
Linda Shi, a social scientist and urban planner at Cornell University, says: “Climate change is not the thing that is causing it, but it is a convenient factor to blame in order to avoid taking responsibility” for poor political decisions.

Re: Indonesia also

By freeze128 • Score: 5, Funny Thread
The capital of the United States is moving to Mar-a-Lago due to corruption....

Not climate change.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Since at least 2008, scientists have warned that unchecked groundwater pumping for the city and for agriculture was rapidly draining the country’s aquifers. The overuse did not just deplete underground reserves—it destroyed them, as the land compressed and sank irreversibly. One recent study found that Iran’s central plateau, where most of the country’s aquifers are located, is sinking by more than 35 centimeters each year. As a result, the aquifers lose about 1.7 billion cubic meters of water annually as the ground is permanently crushed, leaving no space for underground water storage to recover, says Darío Solano, a geoscientist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, who was not involved with the study.

“We saw this coming,” Solano says.

Climate change did zero percent of the damage. Instead, what has occurred is 100% the result of idiocy. So yes, it has something in common with climate change but it’s not the same thing at all.

Re:The water cycle is a closed system.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It is not possible to “run out.”

It is, however, *very* possible to neglect to build infrastructure to collect enough water from the environment to meet your specific needs.

You got it wrong. What they did is pump the aquifers dry and that caused the land to collapse. As a result, the natural storage of water in the land can no longer happen. They destroyed naturally occurring water infrastructure by pumping out all the water they could. This was an easily avoidable issue and they were warned this was happening and yet they did nothing.

Re: Indonesia also

By rta • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The U.S. famously has Flint Michigan and rampant lead and pfas pollution that will never go away. But, I get it, for a moment you can have the sweet feeling of superiority through no fault of your own.

Mmmm… Flint’s water had extra lead for only ~1.5 years because they changed their source of water and unknowingly got rid of a corrosion inhibitor.
(https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/study-confirms-lead-got-flints-water)

it’s not some permanent issue, though replacing lead pipes is still a good idea and it’s ongoing.

Re:What do you suggest?

By gtall • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The U.S. was created out of the Enlightenment which rejected religion as being simply politics but with a mystical angle to fool the proles.

Cryptographers Cancel Election Results After Losing Decryption Key

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
The International Association of Cryptologic Research (IACR) was forced to cancel its leadership election after a trustee lost their portion of the Helios voting system’s decryption key, making it impossible to reveal or verify the final results. Ars Technica reports:
The IACR said Friday that the votes were submitted and tallied using Helios, an open source voting system that uses peer-reviewed cryptography to cast and count votes in a verifiable, confidential, and privacy-preserving way. Helios encrypts each vote in a way that assures each ballot is secret. Other cryptography used by Helios allows each voter to confirm their ballot was counted fairly.
“Unfortunately, one of the three trustees has irretrievably lost their private key, an honest but unfortunate human mistake, and therefore cannot compute their decryption share,” the IACR said. “As a result, Helios is unable to complete the decryption process, and it is technically impossible for us to obtain or verify the final outcome of this election.”
The IACR will switch to a two-of-three private key system to prevent this sort of thing from happening again. Moti Yung, the trustee responsible for the incident, has resigned and is being replaced by Michael Abdalla.

That does not inspire confidence

By gweihir • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“No backup” is amateur-level. Also that they did not use n-out-of-k with n k is a pretty basic mistake.

What should really be of interest here

By caseih • Score: 3 Thread

What should be of interest to slashdotters isn’t the irony of someone associated with cryptography losing their private key, but that there exists an open source system to securely allow voting and also to absolutely verify that the vote was counted. All while still maintaining anonymity. Barring the issue of losing private keys on the part of those administering the vote, this sort of system is very interesting, and really could be used to promote voter engagement and democracy. I had heard of it before, but kind of forgot about it.

In (Inevitable) future news …

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Unfortunately, one of the three trustees has irretrievably lost their private key, …

The IACR will switch to a two-of-three private key system to prevent this sort of thing from happening again.

Two of the three trustees have irretrievably lost their private keys …

I actually know this name

By AcidFnTonic • Score: 3 Thread

I actually know this name. He is a prominent cryptographer who wrote one of the early books about Cryptovirology in the late 90s when others hadn’t thought of it yet.

I met his co-author of that book while doing a stint at Bloomberg, Dr Adam Young.

Sad to see his name under less than good circumstances but I can at least say this is a respectable person who has authored significant works in the field.

Re: Hilarious!

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Once worked in a continuously growing company. We had expensive lab equipment. In the old days, usually at least one machine was available. But more customers meant this was leading more and more to conflicts.
Management organized meetings with lab guy and IT to develop some scheduling software. It was going to be great! Integrated with our project management tools. They held meetings for weeks to draw the requirements. Lab guy got fed up with it. Teared a piece of paper out. Wrote on it: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,… Taped it to the lab door. We all rushed to fill it in. We negotiated a bit amongst each other and bam, schedule for the month was finished. Worked perfectly the next years.
Never underestimate the power of a piece of paper.