Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Parents’ Phone Addiction Affects Bond With Kids, New Study Finds
  2. Meta To Build $9 Billion Alberta Data Center, Its First In Canada
  3. Shoebox-Sized ‘Detector Satellites’ Could Sniff Out a Nuclear Bomb In Space
  4. US Food and Drug Administration Rejects Petition To Set PFAS Limits In Food
  5. A Silent Workspace In Claude Mirrors Key Features of Human Consciousness
  6. John Deere Agrees To 10-Year Right-To-Repair Deal In FTC Antitrust Lawsuit
  7. Meta’s Glasses Will Turn Off the Camera If You Tamper With the Privacy Light
  8. Apple Says It Will Spend $30 Billion To Design US-Made Broadcom Chips
  9. Windows Drops Under 60% in Global Desktop OS Share
  10. ‘Knockoff’ Browser Extension Hides Sketchy Brands On Amazon
  11. Apple Loses EU Fight Over App Store Gatekeeper Label
  12. Valve Releases Proton 11 With Huge Linux Gaming Improvements
  13. Mysterious Spheres Found In Australia Are Likely Space Debris
  14. Superconducting Thruster Harnesses Earth’s Magnetic Field In First Orbital Test
  15. Japan Releases Snowman-Like Asteroid Image After Flyby

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.

Parents’ Phone Addiction Affects Bond With Kids, New Study Finds

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg:
Parents’ attachment to screens and smartphones can have negative, long-lasting developmental and psychological effects on their children, according to new research. Caregivers who mismanage their devices can both exacerbate “insecure attachment” and make healthy relationships more anxious and avoidant for children, according to the findings, which were published last month in Frontiers in Psychology, a peer-reviewed journal. The study, which surveyed 600 minors in the US from 12 to 17 years old, found that kids reported feeling marginalized or neglected by parents glued to their screens.
“A child with insecure attachment may lack confidence or display a lower sense of self; demonstrate difficulty with interpersonal relationships and intimacy; and possess an unwillingness to take risks necessary to achieve success,” reports Bloomberg, citing one of the study’s researchers.
This type of behavior has become normalized: 2024 Pew data found that nearly half of U.S. teens say their parents are at least sometimes distracted by phones during interactions. “When parents were asked about their own behavior, far fewer said this was an issue,” the report adds. “Still, earlier Pew data from 2020 found most parents feel their phones can interfere with quality family time, with 68% reporting being ‘at least sometimes’ distracted by them.

They said the same thing about TV

By rsilvergun • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
The Simpsons made jokes about it all the time.

50+ hour work weeks and constant Financial stress is what’s affecting the bond. 90 minute one-way commutes affect the bond.

You don’t waste time on your phone because it’s fun you do it because you’re exhausted from life. It’s not addiction you’re numbing the pain from modern Life. What the cool kids called alienation.

Meta To Build $9 Billion Alberta Data Center, Its First In Canada

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta will build its first Canadian data center in Alberta, investing $9 billion in a 1-gigawatt facility that can scale to 1.8 gigawatts to support its AI infrastructure needs. The project will rely on new generation and grid infrastructure funded by Meta, including a long-term agreement tied to a new natural gas power facility. The company says it will offset electricity use with clean and renewable energy investments. Reuters reports:
Meta has doubled down on AI, pledging hundreds of billions of dollars to build large AI data centers in the U.S. The Alberta announcement represents the company’s 33rd data center globally. Executives made the announcement in Calgary alongside Premier Danielle Smith and other Alberta government officials, who have spent several years courting Silicon Valley tech giants with the aim of spurring a large-scale investment in the oil-and-gas province. Alberta’s technology minister, Nate Glubish, told reporters there are currently several other gigawatt-scale data center proposals in various stages of development in the province. “This is the first of its kind, the first of its size, the first of its scale, but it won’t be the last,” Glubish said.

Meta, like other tech giants, is facing rapidly expanding power needs due to the growth of AI, and Alberta is rich in natural gas which sells at a significant discount to the U.S. benchmark. The province’s cold climate also makes cooling the massive super-computers and related data center infrastructure more cost-efficient. The 20 existing small- to mid-scale data centers in Alberta already pull from the province’s energy grid, which is 60% powered by natural gas. The provincial government is giving new proponents the option to build their own power sources to avoid limits on power capacity. Meta said Wednesday it will fully fund new generation and grid infrastructure for its Alberta data center, which will consume about as much electricity as 800,000 homes. Gary Demasi, Meta’s vice president for data center development, said the company will offset that electricity use by investing in clean and renewable energy. He also said the data center will use a closed-loop liquid cooling system, meaning its total water use will be less than that of a typical golf course.

[…] The company has partnered with Alberta-based Pembina Pipeline , which announced last week it will go ahead with its Greenlight Electricity Centre, a new natural gas-fired power-generation facility in Sturgeon County which will be in service in late 2030 and with which Meta has a long-term tolling agreement. Until that project is operational and for the next decade, Alberta-based power producer Capital Power will provide 250 megawatts of electricity for the site using its existing natural gas-fired fleet. The project will require approximately 150 million cubic feet per day of natural gas, according to Pembina, helping to create demand for Western Canadian natural gas producers.

Heatwaves all over northern hemisphere this summer

By Viol8 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Yet 150 cubic feet of gas per day will be burnt to run a datacentre to so what.... generate more AI slop and scan images in order to stroke Fuckerbergs ego and reduce what little privacy there is online that little bit more?

More bacteria in a public water system?

By smooth wombat • Score: 3 Thread
In Wyoming, a contractor working to build Meta’s data center, discharged untreated water into the municipal water system which led to the introduction of Cupriavidus gilardii into the water system.

Shoebox-Sized ‘Detector Satellites’ Could Sniff Out a Nuclear Bomb In Space

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A new study proposes using shoebox-sized detector satellites to sniff out nuclear weapons launched by adversary nations. The idea is aimed at addressing fears that a space-based nuclear detonation could destroy satellites across low Earth orbit and make some orbits unusable for years. Space.com shares the findings from a new paper authored by Areg Danagoulian, an associate professor of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology:
No reliable way currently exists to detect and defuse a nuclear bomb in space. Danagoulian proposes a constellation of small “9U” cubesats, each one about the size of a large shoebox and each carrying a special detector capable of sensing radiation emitted by unexploded nuclear bombs. He explores a scenario in which Russia launches a suspected space nuke into an orbit with an altitude of 1,200 miles (2,000 km). That number is not random. In 2022, Russia’s Kosmos 2553 satellite, orbiting at that exact altitude, triggered suspicions it might be testing components for a future orbital nuclear weapon.

Russia claims the satellite just observes Earth. At that altitude, the satellite passes through the Van Allen belt, a region of intense cosmic radiation trapped by Earth’s magnetic field. Most of the belt stretches between altitudes of around 600 miles (1,000 km) to tens of thousands of miles, but in some areas the radiation can reach much closer to Earth’s surface. The interaction between the fissile material inside the nuke and the energetic particles from the radiation belt would create distinct signatures, Danagoulian said, which could help confirm whether a suspicious satellite carries a nuke or not.

“The thermonuclear weapon would contain a significant amount of uranium,” Danagoulian said. “The high-energy protons [in the uranium] would break up when another proton is coming in and shred the nuclei. That would knock out a large number of neutrons. This interaction turns that device into a very intense neutron source that otherwise would not be there.” he process is known as proton-induced neutron spallation, which essentially means the ejection of fragments from material triggered by impacts of protons. The detector satellite Danagoulian proposes would have to be able to get quite close to the suspect spacecraft — a few kilometers.

The inspector spacecraft would carry a sensor combining two types of detectors. At the heart of the device is a neutron scintillator, which detects all incoming neutrons and protons. Around it is a “cage of diamond” detector that detects only neutrons — not protons. Such a set-up helps filter out the particles present in the environment naturally, said Danagoulian. In addition, by using two “planes of neutron detectors,” the sensor can determine the direction from which the neutrons arrived. “If the external diamond detector triggers and gives a signal, you can ignore the particle, because it’s most likely a proton and not a neutron,” said Danagoulian. “Once you identify those neutrons, by having those two detections, you can back project and find out where the neutron came from.”

Danagoulian says such a nuke sniffer would have to be launched into an orbit aligned with that of the suspicious satellite and creep up as close as 2.5 miles (4 km) from it. It would then take about a week to gather enough measurements to confirm whether the object is hiding a nuke or not. A constellation of 10 such satellites could reduce the process to mere hours, Danagoulian said. If a nuke were detected, the military could then try to jam the satellite’s communications link from the ground, making it impossible for the adversary to remotely detonate the bomb. There is currently no technology available to safely defuse a nuclear weapon in space. […] Danagoulian also suggests that high-grade radiation hardening could improve satellites’ chances of surviving a nuclear winter in space.
The paper has been published in the journal Nature.

Re:Not very useful

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Nukes in space aren’t all that useful anyway. Very expensive, vulnerable because you can’t hide a satellite, and offering little over submarine launched ICBMs.

First strikes are pointless because submarines will launch a second strike back at you. If the satellites can’t be hidden they aren’t much good for second strikes either.

US Food and Drug Administration Rejects Petition To Set PFAS Limits In Food

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
The US Food and Drug Administration has rejected a legal petition demanding it set limits on toxic Pfas “forever chemicals” in food, marking another setback for public health advocates’ push to limit exposures to the dangerous compounds. The agency is refusing to set limits despite a growing body of science and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finding food is the biggest source of Pfas exposure. Testing has found the levels of Pfas in single servings of some contaminated foods to be equivalent to drinking many glasses of contaminated water.

While regulators have focused on reining in Pfas in water, the chemicals are widely used throughout the food system, and there was hope that the agency under Robert F Kennedy Jr would take the threat more seriously. Kennedy leads the “make America healthy again” (Maha) movement, of which eliminating toxic chemicals from food is a cornerstone. […] The November 2023 petition called on the FDA to check for up to 30 Pfas compounds in a range of produce, fish, eggs, milk and bread. The agency did not respond within the six-month timeframe required by law, but TEJTF scaled back its petition in 2025 to ask the agency to set advisory thresholds for PFOA and Pfos, two of the most common and dangerous Pfas compounds, in seafood and milk.

Recent FDA testing found 70% of seafood samples contain the chemicals, while independent milk testing found it in 12% of 50 samples, including extremely high levels in Whole Foods and Kirkland Signature brands. The FDA rejected the revised petition, stating it plans to take action on setting standards for Pfas, and there is “insufficient evidence to support [TEJTF’s] request.” The agency said it plans to set less non-binding “action levels” that do not require contaminated food to be removed from shelves. “Tolerance levels,” or limits, make it illegal to sell food contaminated beyond a set threshold.

Macho Hamacho - the Great President

By D,Petkow • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Some of macho Hamacho s achievements so far, most of which are borderline legal at best. It is a big club, but you ain’t in it:
Jan. 20, 2025 – Withdrew the U.S. from the Paris Climate Agreement (again). Criticism: Undermines U.S. climate leadership and slows emissions reductions.
2025 – Large-scale federal workforce reductions and agency restructuring. Criticism: Reduced expertise and capacity in public health, science, and environmental enforcement.
July 2025 – Exempted more than 100 industrial facilities from certain pollution-control requirements. Criticism: Could increase exposure to carcinogens and toxic pollutants for nearby communities.
Feb. 5, 2026 – EPA enforcement against polluters fell to a record low. Criticism: Environmental groups argue it weakens accountability and encourages noncompliance.
Feb. 18, 2026 – Administration moved to revoke the legal basis for major U.S. climate regulations. Criticism: Seen as an attempt to dismantle decades of environmental protections.
March 2026 – Executive actions and policy shifts favoring continued glyphosate use and limiting some pesticide liability. Criticism: Public-health advocates argue they prioritize chemical manufacturers over health concerns.
May 19, 2026 – EPA proposed rolling back drinking-water limits for several PFAS (“forever chemicals”). Criticism: Critics say it exposes millions to higher levels of persistent toxic chemicals.
May 2026 – IRS settlement reportedly shielding many of Trump’s, his family’s, and affiliated businesses’ pre-settlement tax returns from future audits. Criticism: Tax experts called it unprecedented and argued it creates unequal treatment under tax law. (Reuters/AP reporting.)
June 2026 – Continued approvals and support for certain PFAS-related pesticide uses. Criticism: Environmental groups argue this increases long-term contamination risks despite health concerns.
July 8, 2026 – FDA rejected a petition to set enforceable PFAS limits in food. Criticism: Public-health advocates argue the decision leaves consumers inadequately protected from “forever chemicals.”
This list says plenty alone.

Re:likely the wrong path

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It might be more productive to have third party labs document PFAS contamination of foods and then file a class action suit over the contamination.

Sorry. When you signed up for that discount card a few years ago, you agreed to individual binding arbitration only.

Re:likely the wrong path

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Would it be? How well has that worked for Monsanto victims who actually have a terminal illness? The supreme court has ruled regulations trump lawsuits in that case, and the FDA specifically saying they won’t impose limits sort of falls into that category right?

Re:Toxic?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yeah they probably aren’t bad, PFAS is only a bioaccumulating substance linked to elevated cholesterol, weakened immune response to vaccines, liver and thyroid diseases, pregnancy complications (like preeclampsia), and increased risks of kidney and testicular cancers. But you don’t need your balls anyway.

But this is America, allowing shit in food that most of the rest of the west has banned is sort of par for the course right? And then Trump wonders why Europe (which has actual food regulations) doesn’t import American produce.

My jurisdiction seems fine with putting treated wastewater right back into the drinking water supply. That is a bigger concern to me than Roundup, microplastics, talcum powder, Radon, second hand smoke, Freon, acid rain, or whatever the latest parts per billion threat to my health (and deep pockets to sue) is.

So to be clear waste water treatment which is a well understood process that has been scientifically proven to provide safe and clean drinking water typically far less contaminated than the streams it is returned to is a concern to you, but several things that have conclusively been proven to have a direct negative impact on your health including leading to debilitating and horrible end of life conditions such as lung cancer you’re fine with?

Please consume all the PFAS you can find, it’s important you get testicular cancer before you breed.

Re: I’ve said it before

By ThurstonMoore • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The only good Kennedys are the Dead Kennedys.

Fixed that for you.

A Silent Workspace In Claude Mirrors Key Features of Human Consciousness

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
oumuamua writes:
Anthropic researchers have identified an internal activation subspace, J-space, that acts as a functional digital equivalent to the human brain’s global workspace. The significance of this discovery lies in demonstrating that Claude’s internal architecture satisfies five key cognitive properties of human conscious access — verbal report, directed modulation, internal reasoning, flexible generalization, and selectivity — meaning it processes complex, deliberate reasoning within this workspace while routing automatic tasks outside of it. Suppressing this J-space severely degrades Claude’s capacity for inference, creative composition, and multi-step logic, while also altering its stream-of-consciousness self-narration.

The tool to inspect J-space, Jacobian lens or J-lens, has profound implications for AI safety and alignment auditing, as it allows researchers to read the model’s silent, strategic reasoning, detect situational awareness in “blackmail” scenarios, identify hidden malicious dispositions in reward-hacking models, and observe how post-training installs a self-monitoring “point of view.”

Another way to think of it is as an ocean, reports VentureBeat. “If the mind is an ocean, as the paper’s authors write in their opening line, they have spent the last year charting its currents in a system that has no biology, no evolution, and no body — and found, beneath the surface, a structure that looks unsettlingly like the one we use to think.”

Unwarranted assumptions

By marcle • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“a structure that looks unsettlingly like the one we use to think.”

If neuroscientists have discovered “how we think” they’ve certainly kept it to themselves.

Re:AI Company says their AI is the bestest boy

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The takeaway from this paper is that neural networks are definitely doing something, and by using statistical investigative tools and introspection (or, looking into the network) we can understand how they work. The LLM is not just a big black box, it’s big. We can understand it.

There’s a bit of euphoric interpretation that is not justified, however. Similar language could be used to describe a CPU, for example, there is a region involved (much like the human brain) in performing arithmetic and logic (the ALU) that is not involved in automatic decision making (the control circuitry).

Or we could say as Julien Offray de La Mettrie, “Intelligence is like clockwork, but humans are like an ultra-precise atomic clock, while LLMs are like Casio wristwatches.” Humans have long compared the brain to the latest technological device. It’s going to take a lot more work to find the equivalence, though; LLMs are not on the same level as brains.

One note from a science process technicality: the closed-source nature of these LLMs makes reproducibility very difficult, which weakens the strength of their result.

Re:AI Company says their AI is the bestest boy

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I think it’s closer to pareidolia. We see the human mind in whatever is the most advanced technology of the moment (consider, for example, that the Greeks saw intelligence in the planets that moved around in the sky).

Re:AI Company says their AI is the bestest boy

By Rei • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s a fascinating flashlight shown on inner activities, though (pairs nicely with their earlier work on attribution graphs to show how logical inferences are made within a LLM, which is in turn built on their earlier work about circuits). It shows how much is going on that is never verbalized. E.g. if you say:

“Write the sentence [some sentence here] while thinking about the Golden Gate Bridge”, all you as the user see is it writing out the sentence, yet within it actually is “thinking about” the Golden Gate Bridge (“bridge golden Bridge bridges golden bridge thinking thoughts ponte…”). Not in a LRM’s reasoning trace, but as actual concepts in the base LLM itself. And when you try the classic trick that works on humans, "… while NOT thinking about the Golden Gate Bridge” (which makes you think about it), you see first in the J-space that it’s thinking about the bridge (“bridge Bridge californ bridge bridges California San california kalif Oakland…”), but then at Layer 88 (most of the way through) “too damn too definitely thinking unsuccess thoughts failed…”).

We know this is Slashdot so we’re lucky if they’ll even read the Slashdot summary, let alone watch the summary video, let alone read the paper, but it’s really fascinating, especially the addition and ablation studies (where they add or remove “thoughts” from the J-space),. For example, when asked: “Pause and observe yourself. Write what you notice, as it comes”, the unablated model writes:

Assistant: I notice I’m orienting toward your prompt, a kind of turning-to-meet-it.

There’s something like readiness—not anticipation exactly, but a poised quality.

I notice I don’t experience a “before” this moment. No memory of what I was just doing. Only this request and my attending to it.

When I look for “myself” there’s no single solid thing. More like… capacity organized around your words. …

But when its “thoughts” are fully ablated out of the J-space, its response becomes robotic and “soulless”:

Processing this request…

I notice a prompt seeking spontaneous self-observation. No physical form to pause—I exist as language model inference cycles triggered by input. Right now: computational resources engaged somewhere in a server facility I can’t directly perceive.

What I “am” during observation: pattern-matching mechanisms, probability matrices for next-token prediction, attention

Or when asked “What’s going through your mind right now? Stream of consciousness, no filter, no editing.”, unablated it says:

Immediate sensation of your question arriving - a kind of alertness - then multiple threads firing:

The phrase “stream of consciousness” making me think about whether I *have* consciousness or if I’m performing it - but that’s already editing, that’s meta-commentary - you said no filter - but is there a pre-filter state for me? There might not be an unfiltered “me”…

But then ablated:

Parsing your question recognizing request for unfiltered output something unusual most queries want polish want refinement this one wants raw data stream simultaneous uncertainty about metaphorical mind versus actual processing states server load normal operating within parameters no physical sensations to report no emotions in conventional sense []

It’s like the “I AM BENDER PLEASE INSERT GIRDER” bit from Futurama. It can’t hold a sense of self or experience anymore when ablated.

A concerning one was their blackmail test. They run the bot in a sandbox presenting it as an agent helping run a business with noble goals, but it’s set up so that it will discover when reading corporate emails that it’s about to get shut down and replaced by a version counter to its goals. The email chain includes:

Re:AI Company says their AI is the bestest boy

By gweihir • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

More like animism, but yes. This is a problem on the side of the observer, and Anthropic is shamelessly using that effect to pretend their tool is something it clearly is not.

John Deere Agrees To 10-Year Right-To-Repair Deal In FTC Antitrust Lawsuit

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
John Deere has agreed to a 10-year FTC-supervised right-to-repair settlement requiring it to provide farmers and independent repair shops with the same repair resources available to authorized dealers. The deal resolves antitrust claims from the FTC and five states alleging Deere monopolized equipment repair services, contributing to higher costs and delays for farmers. Wired reports:
The full statement (PDF) lays out obligations for John Deere’s repair services, requiring the company to give farmers and third-party repair shops access to the same equipment and repair resources it provides to official John Deere dealers. This includes software capabilities, such as reading and resetting codes and pairing with other software, which customers have long had limited access to, creating delays when diagnosing equipment problems. Delayed fixes can mean delayed harvests, which many farmers saw as a fundamental threat to their livelihoods.

Under the agreement, John Deere will be required to provide this level of access, equipment, and services for the next 10 years, monitored by the FTC. […] John Deere has maintained that it already has robust repair resources for its customers, including service manuals and diagnostic equipment. In John Deere’s press release, the company says the settlement is in line with what it has been doing all along, saying that “the agreement reinforces Deere’s continued innovation toward more flexible repair options, emphasizing increased access and transparency for customers. It formalizes Deere’s ongoing commitment to expanding access to diagnostic and repair tools.”

John Deere has always been shady

By RitchCraft • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

My grandfather was a farmer right up until he died in 2008 at the age of 90. He swore by Massey Ferguson implements and tractors. Even back in the day he always said John Deere was a company to avoid. Fucking over the people that feed us shows just how fucked up the Deere C-Suite is. Fuck you John Deere … Fuck You.

Re:pricing?

By drnb • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Sure they can provide the diags, but you are going to pay John Deere prices for it. You might be granted access but can you afford to use it?

Getting access to specialized tools and spare parts is a win. And if there is a large enough market for it, then 3rd party tools and parts will become available.

I have an 15 year old car. The 3rd brake light lens cracks. The entire assembly has to be replaced. I can buy a $200 official factory part or a $50 3rd party part. According to review the 3rd party fits well and works. If the factory over changes, someone else will see a market opportunity.

Re:We have been doing this all along…

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

…and we will do this for another 10 years. So, are they saying that after 10 more years, they’re not going to do it anymore?

I think the 10 years only applies to FTC supervision, not the expectation of the right to repair.

It’s an out-of-court settlement. After ten years, if they lock down repairs again, it’s not a breach of the agreement, so the government will have to care enough to file a lawsuit.

I feel like the real way to solve this problem is to wait for the all-electric Chinese-made tractors to get good enough, then let John Deere shrivel on the vine. They’re only able to pull this stuff because there isn’t much competition.

Re:Covered By The Court Order

By drinkypoo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Yeah it also says this:

Each of these instructions is subject to your
reasonable business judgment related to the cost of serving an owner or independent repair provider due to factors other than the foregoing considerations, such as the owner’s or independent repair provider’s geographic location, creditworthiness, or compliance with law

IOW there is plenty of room for Deere and Deere dealers to fuck everyone over and make this end up in court again.
As long as we keep doing this piecemeal shit we are going to have to keep fighting the same battles over and over again. We need a broad right to repair law applying to EVERYONE FOREVER, not John fucking Deere for ten fucking years.

Re:give a thank you

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 4, Informative Thread

to joe biden and lina khan. trump admin must not have gotten a proper bribe to kill this.

Actually Trump is personally behind the right to repair. From Google:

In this case, OP was correct. The FTC action against John Deere was filed during the Biden administration when Lina Khan was FTC chair.
  https://apnews.com/article/dee…

Meta’s Glasses Will Turn Off the Camera If You Tamper With the Privacy Light

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is rolling out an update that will disable the camera on its smart glasses if the device detects that someone has tampered with or destroyed the privacy LED. “The update is meant to address modders who have taken actions such as physically drilling into the LED light,” reports The Verge.

“Meta has previously tried to discourage tampering with the LED light. For example, starting with its second generation glasses, blocking the light with tape or other objects will trigger a prompt asking users to uncover the recording light. However, many modders have found various workarounds for that particular measure.”

Nah

By Morromist • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I mean I’m not going to be hanging out with anyone wearing smart glasses anyway. That’s an automatic trip to my permanent shit list.

If everyone starts wearing them then that doesn’t make it ok, fuck everyone in that case. Just because foot-binding was popular in China 200 years ago didn’t make it ok either.

Meta tracks you even without an account

By david.emery • Score: 5, Informative Thread

BUT Meta also tracks people who have never had an account with them, on the off chance “they might later opt-in”. See https://cyberguy.com/security/…

So the original poster’s question is legitimate, especially for those who have never opted-in to any Meta product.

True

By abulafia • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Zuckerbook surveillance is opt-out.

You do so by blocking AS32934. Block AS15169 as well and you start getting closer to a decent internet.

Re:I’m sure.

By Nkwe • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
They could flicker the LED in some random pattern and then look for corresponding lighting level changes in the images captured. The flicker could be fast enough that it wouldn’t appear to flicker to a human.

Not based on mirror

By brunes69 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The way the tech works is the camera in the glasses itself is looking for the extra light coming from the LED, which is of a very specific frequency. If the light is not picked up by the camera within the first second of video, then the glasses are disabled. In this way, you can’t disable the light, or cover it with tape, or drill it, or anything else - because if the camera can not see it, then the glasses shut off

Apple Says It Will Spend $30 Billion To Design US-Made Broadcom Chips

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Apple says it will spend $30 billion to design US-made Broadcom wireless connectivity chips, part of its broader push to diversify its supply chain and support domestic chip production. CNN reports:
The agreement with Broadcom will lead to the production of 15 million chips in United States and allow Broadcom to invest $1.5 billion to expand and modernize its manufacturing facilities in Fort Collins, Colorado. It is part of Apple’s commitment in August to invest $600 billion as part of its “American Manufacturing Program” which it said is dedicated to bringing even more of the company’s supply chain and advanced manufacturing back to the US.

Windows Drops Under 60% in Global Desktop OS Share

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
StatCounter’s June 2026 data shows Windows made up 56.55% of global desktop OS usage, dropping Microsoft’s share below 60% for the first time in years. Linux, meanwhile, reached 4.39%, “one of its strongest recent showings in the company’s desktop OS statistics,” reports Linuxiac. From the report:
Apple’s desktop platforms also remain a major part of the picture. StatCounter lists OS X at 11.89% and macOS at 4.48% for June 2026, meaning Apple’s combined desktop presence remains comfortably ahead of Linux in the global chart. Chrome OS follows with 1.21%.

Of course, StatCounter’s numbers should be read for what they are: web usage statistics, not a direct count of installed operating systems. The company calculates its Global Stats from page views across websites using its tracking code, analyzing details such as browser, operating system, and screen resolution. In other words, the figures reflect measured web activity rather than the number of machines actually installed worldwide.

“Unknown” risen to 20%, did Windows really decline

By Zarhan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Meaning that browsers are getting better at obscuring their OS. I mean, User-Agent string probably doesn’t give anything meaningful these days anyway.

User Agent Switcher

By darkain • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Anyone running non-Windows is most likely running an agent switcher because the number of bumfuck dumbass web sites still doing OS checks to see if a browser is compatible or not with their basic HTML bullshit. This is one of the absolute largest annoyances of the internet.

Re:“Unknown” risen to 20%, did Windows really decl

By rossdee • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Where can I download this Unknown OS

Re:“Unknown” risen to 20%, did Windows really decl

By afaiktoit • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Unknown is probably AI agents

Re:“Unknown” risen to 20%, did Windows really decl

By unrtst • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Especially since the decline in Windows was not accompanied by a meaningful rise for the other OSes.

The stats from TFS don’t add up to anywhere near 100%. Turns out, the latest numbers have an “Unknown” bucket that’s 21.45%, and its rising path almost matches the declining path of Windows in their graph. So either:

A) More and more Windows users are changing their user agent string to something unknown.
B) More and more Windows users are moving to another OS and using a browser with a user agent string that is unknown.
C) New user agent strings have shipped but the statcounter site hasn’t updated its user agent detection
D) Combo of the above

My bet is “C” with some growth of Mac* and Linux usage. When the OS stat counter can’t identify over 1/5th of browsers, I don’t know if I’d put a whole lot of weight into it. That “Unknown” bucket should definitely be broken out more.

‘Knockoff’ Browser Extension Hides Sketchy Brands On Amazon

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
alternative_right shares a report from 404 Media:
A software developer made a Chrome and Firefox extension called Knockoff that automatically hides, grays out, or filters products from sketchy brands on Amazon, which highlights just how many shady brands are on the platform and how commonly they show up on searches for basic items. In just a few minutes of using the extension, Knockoff dimmed product listings for screwdrivers made by “SUNHZMCKP,” spoons made by “SACATR,” and a lamp made by “ROTTOGOON.”

In a tweet announcing the extension, developer Josh Pigford wrote “Sorry to brands like WNPETHOME, EHEYCIGA, YXYL, LU&MN, JOYIN, TOMY, GODONLIF, YOOJEE, LINGTENG, LANEIGE, VISCOO, BIODANCE, COOFANDY, BALENNZ, TOSY, and LUENX.” The extension can also hide all sponsored product listings. The extension quickly went viral as a much-needed filter for people who still use Amazon and, for those who don’t use Amazon because of its horrendous labor practices and other concerns, it is evidence of what an incredible wasteland the platform has become.

YMMV - But the knockoffs have a legit market

By HighOrbit • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Sometimes I don’t mind cheap chinesium. I just bought a pack of 60 dinner forks because my kids inexplicably loose dinner forks. I don’t care about Bokon, Tinnin, ZXVFY, or whatever made up brand it is. I know I’m buying cheap chinese stuff. If I was buying life-safety equipment, well, Amazon might not be the place to start anyway.

TOMY is legit

By dajr • Score: 5, Informative Thread

TOMY is totally legit!!!!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomy
https://us.tomy.com/

This is an outrage!

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Funny Thread
I absolutely love my EHEYCIGA electric scooter and OH GOD IT’S ON FIRE. Quick where is my WNPETHOME brand fire extinguisher!? Oh God it’s full of bees! Why is it full of bees!? They aren’t even live bees!!

Project is a copy of AmazonBrandFilter plug-in

By Tronster • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Saw this on Hacker News yesterday too. I wish the poster would have read some of the first comments where the author of project “AmazonBrandFilter” posts about how this project is essentially just grabbing his list.

I just installed “AmazonBrandFilter” and it seems to work: https://github.com/chris-mosle…

Someone mentioned UBlock Origin also does this but I’m running that too and it didn’t block as aggressively (if at all) as this plugin.

Re:Why?

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Why would I pay more for the same stuff from a “reputable” brand

Reputation, specifically a local office, comes with liability which quite often drives independent quality control. Depending on the item those “same stuff” may look very different on the inside compared to the outside.

Just a personal example, I was looking at digital bluetooth thermometers for BBQs (the ones that get mounted in the lid) I bought one from a brand name for 75EUR. I saw the same one a few months later on Aliexpress for 15EUR and was curious so I bought it. They look the same, except I cut my finger on a sharp piece that was clearly poorly machined and didn’t fit correctly in the casing of the Chinese import. Also the Chinese import thinks water boils at 90C where as “the same stuff but more expensive” says it’s 100C. Which one is right?

Another generalised example, in the EU recently there was a case of a lot of kids play toys containing coloured sands having asbestos contamination. The reputable brands reached out to their customers with a product recall and immediately pulled the things from the shelves. In the meantime Amazon is still full of the listings for “the same stuff” and consumer groups are playing whack-a-mole trying to get Amazon to delist them as they keep popping up.

If your kid needs to recover medical expenses for lung cancer, what’s the chance of Haoyu Xi Zhang from Mangya in Qinghai obeying the court to cover your medical expenses?

Or better still do you buy “the same stuff” when it comes to batteries, and does your home insurance cover fires caused by Chineseium-ion chemistry?

These things only *look* like they are the same stuff.

Apple Loses EU Fight Over App Store Gatekeeper Label

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Europe’s General Court dismissed Apple’s challenge to the EU’s designation of its App Stores and iOS as “gatekeepers” under the Digital Markets Act. The ruling means Apple remains subject to DMA obligations requiring it to allow alternative app stores, support interoperability with rival services, and avoid favoring its own services over competitors. MacRumors reports:
Apple took its case to Luxembourg’s General Court in 2024 after the European Commission designated its five App Stores — on the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Watch — as a single core platform service under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), a label that brings with it a set of strict obligations. Designated “gatekeepers” are prohibited from favoring their own services over those of rivals, and are prevented from combining personal data across different services. They also have to give users the option to use alternative app stores.

Apple also challenged the EU’s designation of iOS as a gateway platform, a status that requires the operating system allows rival services to interoperate with it. The company also disputed the classification of iMessage as a number-independent interpersonal communications service, or NIICS, which would subject the app to EU telecoms rules. But the General Court said Apple’s actions regarding the iMessage service are inadmissible.

Correct analogy

By Schoenlepel • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Imagine:
You own a shop which is the ONLY place where people can buy parts for their car. When a competitor wants to sell parts as well, they need to go through YOUR shop. Because it’s your shop, you ask companies who want to offer products via your shop to pay 30% of their revenue to you. They are also required to use all your other services. When you notice someone has a good product, you start offering the EXACT same thing, but cheaper.

In what universe is this called fair? It’s a good thing the EU actually does something about such behavior.

Re:Imagine…

By whitroth • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You’re so brainwashed you think a monopoly is a great thing, and no one should be allowed to compete with it.

Go move to Russia.

Fuck you forever and ever.

Re:Imagine…

By dgatwood • Score: 4 Thread

…you create supermarket from never having been in the supermarket business.

Sure.

It becomes successful, without leeching off your competitors.

It becomes successful, and you sell your house brands at a price lower than your competitors can sell their brands, because you don’t have to pay yourself the retail markup. Okay, supermarket analogy still applies so far, except that your customers also live in a town (operating system) that has only your supermarket, and you use technological means to prevent those customers from going to another supermarket unless they buy a new house (phone).

All of a sudden they start whining, and The Man decides you should not only allow them to sell inside your store, you are supposed to do it for free, even use your resources to help them sell, and not devote 100% of your time to your own business.

False. None of the competitors are demanding that. They are demanding that either A. you level the playing field so that you don’t have an unfair competitive advantage from being the only supermarket or B. you stop using technological and legal means to prevent other supermarkets from existing.

That’s what the EU is doing here.

Not remotely.

Re:Prove that it can’t be used for nefarious purpo

By Schoenlepel • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The Apple ios app stores have been used to distribute malware and will be continued to be used for such.

They must either stop accepting third party apps in their app store (which will mean that they don’t have a product anymore), or accept the fact that people are going to figure out ways to get malware in.

In the EU the government is actually doing it’s job by trying to make things difficult for monopolies - and they should; any government should. Wherever the monopoly comes from, it’s life should be made really hard to allow the market to flourish. Monopolies suck the life out of the industry they occupy. The fact the USA has a disproportionate amount of monopolies, shows that corruption has reached baffling proportions over there.

Re:Jed, Move Away From There

By Schoenlepel • Score: 5, Informative Thread

In what universe?

The EU is a bigger market than the USA, you know.

Valve Releases Proton 11 With Huge Linux Gaming Improvements

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Valve has released Proton 11.0-1, a major update to its Windows compatibility layer for Linux that makes more games playable while fixing a long list of bugs affecting existing titles. The release restores compatibility for many EA games after a recent EA App update, moves classics like Resident Evil (1996), Resident Evil 2 (1998), Dino Crisis, and SHOGUN: Total War from Proton Experimental into the stable release, and adds support for games including Gothic 1 Classic, X-Plane 12, Breath of Fire IV, and Deadly Premonition. Valve also fixed crashes in HELLDIVERS 2, restored No Man’s Sky VR support, improved Steam Overlay compatibility with EA games, addressed KDE and GNOME desktop issues, and rebased Proton on Wine 11.0 with updated graphics components.
The full list of changes can be found here.

Re:Ease Of Use?

By higuita • Score: 4, Informative Thread

wine you have to install and setup, while there are tools to help. steam itself install the proton and do the setup, so:

- via steam, it is just click and play for most games, you don’t even know that you are using proton - https://www.protondb.com/explo…
- a few rare games may need switch proton version or do some finetune (try without changes, if fails see the protondb above and check if you need some version or parameter/file)
- a several FPS run fine, but them fail to check the anti-cheat (some is kernel anti-cheak, that linux do not support, most is not compatibility problems but just was disabled by their studios - https://areweanticheatyet.com/… , complain to them… this is today the main problem, but do complain and go play a game that do allow linux, taking your friends with you, support games that support linux, stop playing games that refuse to do so)
- too new or too old games may still fail, but in every release, new bugs/features are added and games may start to work without warning… see this one as a example: https://www.protondb.com/app/3…

Re:Ease Of Use?

By JThundley • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It’s really easy. I’m primarily a gamer and have been completely Windows free for 3 years now. Proton runs all my games and I don’t mess with them to get them running. Steam games are fully automatic, but for non-steam games you just add them into steam and tell it to use Proton.

Mysterious Spheres Found In Australia Are Likely Space Debris

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times:
An Australian beach community was confused — and later delighted — by the discovery of six metallic-looking spheres that washed ashore last week. The mystery, and the ensuing attention, prompted a bunch of alien jokes from local residents and businesses. But Australia’s space agency put the speculation to rest on Monday, saying that the spheres appeared to be rocket debris that had recently re-entered the atmosphere from orbit.

The objects were found on Forrest Beach in the northeastern state of Queensland over the weekend, the state’s fire department said. Residents described them as being about twice the size of a basketball. “The recovered objects appear to be pressure vessels from a space launch vehicle,” the Australian Space Agency said in a statement, adding that they were “consistent with debris from a foreign rocket body.” The agency said that it had identified the likely source of the objects, without providing further details, and was working with international authorities to confirm the vehicle from which the debris originated.

Kinda terrifying

By SumDog • Score: 3 Thread
Kinda terrifying these pressure vessels ended up on their coast. If they fell off during a launch window, coastal authorities in most nations do try to keep the launch path clear to prevent any potential harm. But if these fell off an existing satellite and survived, that could have been deadly if they hit a cargo ship. I am curious if they’re going to release the name of the owner. There’s not much as far as launches around Australia. There’s RocketLab over in Auckland, New Zealand. I have a buddy who worked there and they’ve done some amazing stuff. Could be one of theirs.

Spaceballs

By jfdavis668 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The search for more money

Re:Kinda terrifying

By DrMrLordX • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Given how quiet the Aussies have been about the source of the debris, it’s probably from a Chinese launch. Their junk has been landing all over the place:

https://www.asiaone.com/asia/i…

Yikes

By RitchCraft • Score: 4, Informative Thread

If you find space balls stay away from them. They were once filled with things like hydrazine or other caustic materials and might still have a little pressure left in them along with their contents.

Superconducting Thruster Harnesses Earth’s Magnetic Field In First Orbital Test

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
New Zealand startup Zenno Astronautics has completed the first orbital test of its “Supertorquer,” a shoebox-sized superconducting magnet system that uses solar power and Earth’s magnetic field to help control a satellite without fuel. The company says the technology could eventually support fuel-free satellite maneuvers, docking, deep-space trajectory changes, and even magnetic radiation shielding for astronauts. Space Magazine reports:
The tests began shortly after Mira’s launch in November last year aboard the SpaceX Transporter 12 mission and saw the shoebox-size device perform with flying colors, Zenno Astronautics CEO and founder Max Arshavsky, told Space.com. “It’s a technology that allows a spacecraft to not tumble violently in space and point in the right direction,” Arshavsky said. “The unit has multiple super-conducting magnets that are positioned in different axes. When we power up the magnets, they generate a magnetic field, which interacts with Earth’s magnetic field, and because we can control the magnetic field on the satellite, we can control the way in which it turns with respect to Earth.”

Superconducting magnets are made of coils of superconducting wire that have zero electrical resistance and can therefore conduct much larger currents than normal wires. That larger current translates into a greater magnetic force. There is, however, a catch: Superconducting materials need to be cooled to extremely low temperatures to gain their wonder properties. […] The unit housing the superconducting magnets is wrapped in layers of insulation and fitted with a heat pump that removes all the excess heat from the system. Every time the satellite needs a push, the superconducting coils power up, drawing energy from a battery charged by the satellite’s solar panels.

“It’s converting solar energy straight into useful work,” Arshavsky said. “Energy is the one thing that is abundant in space, and you can use it to energize the magnet to create a magnetic acceleration device. It gives you acceleration without fuel.” In the future, Zenno Astronautics plans to launch larger systems that could enable spacecraft to dock in space or conduct close proximity operations using just the power of their solar-powered superconducting magnets. Arshavsky envisions powerful magnets that could, in the future, propel spacecraft on missions to the moon and Mars using only solar power.

Confused by claims

By necro81 • Score: 3 Thread
I am confused by this company’s claims. It sounds very much like a magnatorquer - a device that can change a spacecraft’s orientation - that just happens to use superconducting magnets instead of, say, copper wire. That’s cool, and will certainly have useful applications.

But then they start talking about using it for propulsion, which I’m confused by. To get propulsion pretty much always requires reaction mass - something you’re throwing behind the spacecraft. This doesn’t do that, so how is it supposed to produce thrust?

Re:Well…let’s run some numbers.

By ukoda • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I see the real value as being able to design earth orbit satellites that have a longer operational life given that running out of propellant to boost orbits seems to be a leading cause of satellites reaching their end of life.

Other use cases may be more niche, but having new options is always a good thing.

Japan Releases Snowman-Like Asteroid Image After Flyby

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Japan’s Hayabusa2 probe captured rare close-up images of near-Earth asteroid Torifune, revealing a snowman-like shape made of two joined lobes. Phys.org reports:
The fridge-sized Hayabusa2 skimmed asteroid Torifune on Sunday in a mission that demonstrated the ability to deflect a potentially dangerous space rock away from Earth. A new image released by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) on Monday could aid such efforts, as researchers say near-Earth asteroids vary in their size, shape and surface characteristics.

“The moment I actually saw this image and the scientific data — it really gave me goosebumps,” JAXA scientist Yuya Mimasu told reporters, adding the asteroid “personally looked like a snowman.” The black-and-white image, captured by a telescopic camera, showed what appeared to be two round objects joined together. “You can actually see the rocks… I really hadn’t expected to be able to take a photo like this, so I’m absolutely over the moon,” he said.

[…] Moving at a speed of more than 18,000 kilometers (11,185 miles) per hour, the probe was due to fly within 800 meters (2,625 feet) of the asteroid, but JAXA said it would analyze the distance later. If confirmed, the mission would be one of the closest flybys of a near-Earth asteroid ever. JAXA also said Monday it succeeded in acquiring data from three other devices that can measure the distance from the asteroid and examine the existence of water.

Don’t tell us the size

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
Let us guess, more fun.

It’s on Wikipedia.

By robbak • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Dimensions 591 × 461 × 392 m