Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. The Backlash Against Duolingo Going ‘AI-First’ Didn’t Even Matter
  2. Sony Says Its Xperia Smartphones Are Still ‘Very Important’
  3. Amazon’s Cloud Business Giving Federal Agencies Up To $1 Billion In Discounts
  4. Encryption Made For Police and Military Radios May Be Easily Cracked
  5. HBO Max Password Sharing Crackdown Will Get ‘Aggressive’ Next Month
  6. Linux Desktop Share Tops 6% In 15 Million-System Analysis
  7. Trump Signs Executive Order Opening 401(k) Retirement Market To Crypto Investments
  8. Microsoft’s $30 Windows 10 Security Updates Cover 10 Devices
  9. Google TV’s Uncertain Future
  10. OpenAI Releases GPT-5
  11. OpenAI Pays Bonuses Ranging Up To Millions of Dollars To 1,000 Researchers, Engineers
  12. China’s Solar Giants Quietly Shed a Third of Their Workforces Last Year
  13. Digital Foundry, the Most Trusted Name in Game Console Analysis, is Going Independent
  14. US President Calls on Intel CEO To Resign Over China Ties
  15. Electronic Arts Tries (Once More) To End Its Football Addiction

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.

The Backlash Against Duolingo Going ‘AI-First’ Didn’t Even Matter

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Duolingo’s decision to go “AI-first” sparked backlash from users, but the company’s second quarter earnings result tell a different story. Quarterly revenue exceeded expectations, stock surged nearly 30%, and daily active users grew 40% year-over-year. TechCrunch reports:
Now the company anticipates making over $1 billion in revenue this year, and daily active users have grown 40% year-over-year. The growth is significant but falls in the lower range of the company’s estimates of growing between 40% and 45%, which an investor brought up to [CEO Luis von Ahn] on Wednesday’s quarterly earnings call.

“The reason we came [in] towards the lower end was because I said some stuff about AI, and I didn’t give enough context. Because of that, we got some backlash on social media,” von Ahn said. “The most important thing is we wanted to make the sentiment on our social media positive. We stopped posting edgy posts and started posting things that would get our sentiment more positive. That has worked.”

Customers vs Owners

By gurps_npc • Score: 3 Thread

The customers hate the idea of more AI. We know it is an inferior product.

The stockmarket loves the idea of firing employees and replacing them with AI, we know it saves money.

The question is not what the stock does in a few weeks. Instead it is do they lose customers over the next couple of months/years. If that happens it won’t matter how much money they saved.

Sony Says Its Xperia Smartphones Are Still ‘Very Important’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Despite dwindling global market share, retreat from key regions like Europe, and halting in-house production, Sony insists its Xperia smartphone line remains “very important” to its business. 9to5Google reports:
During Sony’s latest financial results presentation this week, Sony CFO Lin Tao addressed the state of its Xperia smartphone brand, saying that Xperia is part of “a very important business for us” as reported by CNET Japan (translated). Tao said that “communication technology is a very important technology that Sony has cultivated for a long time. We also want to continue to value our smartphone business.” Though adding that “communication technology is used in areas other than smartphones.”

Amazon’s Cloud Business Giving Federal Agencies Up To $1 Billion In Discounts

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Amazon Web Services has struck a deal with the U.S. government to provide up to $1 billion in cloud service discounts through 2028. CNBC reports:
The agreement is expected to speed up migration to the cloud, as well as adoption of artificial intelligence tools, the General Services Administration said. “AWS’s partnership with GSA demonstrates a shared public-private commitment to enhancing America’s AI leadership,” the agency said in a release.

Amazon’s cloud boss, Matt Garman, hailed the agreement as a “significant milestone in the large-scale digital transformation of government services.” The discounts aggregated across federal agencies include credits to use AWS’ cloud infrastructure, modernization programs and training services, as well as incentives for “direct partnership.”
Further reading: OpenAI Offers ChatGPT To US Federal Agencies for $1 a Year

Encryption Made For Police and Military Radios May Be Easily Cracked

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
Two years ago, researchers in the Netherlands discovered an intentional backdoor in an encryption algorithm baked into radios used by critical infrastructure — as well as police, intelligence agencies, and military forces around the world — that made any communication secured with the algorithm vulnerable to eavesdropping. When the researchers publicly disclosed the issue in 2023, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI), which developed the algorithm, advised anyone using it for sensitive communication to deploy an end-to-end encryption solution on top of the flawed algorithm to bolster the security of their communications. But now the same researchers have found that at least one implementation of the end-to-end encryption solution endorsed by ETSI has a similar issue that makes it equally vulnerable to eavesdropping. The encryption algorithm used for the device they examined starts with a 128-bit key, but this gets compressed to 56 bits before it encrypts traffic, making it easier to crack. It’s not clear who is using this implementation of the end-to-end encryption algorithm, nor if anyone using devices with the end-to-end encryption is aware of the security vulnerability in them.
Wired notes that the end-to-end encryption the researchers examined is most commonly used by law enforcement and national security teams. “But ETSI’s endorsement of the algorithm two years ago to mitigate flaws found in its lower-level encryption algorithm suggests it may be used more widely now than at the time.”

Military grade security

By allo • Score: 3 Thread

56 Bit RSA.

Re:Why Encryption?

By Rinnon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The police should not be able to have encrypted communications. Everything they say on the radio should be publicly accessible and a public record.

These two statements are not mutually exclusive. It’s reasonable to assert that the communications should be a matter of public record while also suggesting that real time access to those communications should be restricted for the sake of officer safety and operational security. You might argue that leaving the records in the hands of the police is in itself a problem, but a different record keeping solution can be devised to solve that issue that doesn’t require everybody and their grandmother to be able to eavesdrop on a police channel.

RC4 is still widely used in APCO-25 systems

By Indy1 • Score: 3 Thread

In the US, a lot of agencies are still using RC4 (known as Motorola advanced digital privacy, aka ADP ) for critical communications. And these agencies have zero clue how easy it would be to brute force the keys.

Isn’t this exactly what governments have demanded?

By taustin • Score: 3 Thread

Back doors into encrypted communications? Is there a government in the world that hasn’t demanded exactly this?

Backdoor?

By ceoyoyo • Score: 3 Thread

That doesn’t really sound like a backdoor.

The original article says the standard cut it down to meet export control requirements. The algorithm in question is one of four choices, and the standard makes pretty clear that it’s the one for shady foreigners:

The Cipher Key has an input length of 80 bits;
the Initialization Vector has a length of 29 bits. The effective Cipher Key length of TEA4 is reduced within the
algorithm to 56 bits to permit worldwide exportability without restriction, at time of definition.

HBO Max Password Sharing Crackdown Will Get ‘Aggressive’ Next Month

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Warner Bros. Discovery is preparing to crack down on HBO Max password sharing by the end of 2025, with "aggressive” enforcement and messaging starting next month. Deadline reports:
JB Perrette, head of streaming and gaming at Warner Bros. Discovery said on the company’s second-quarter earnings call that messaging to consumers is about to get more “aggressive.” The media company looking to close the loopholes by the end of 2025, with the impact starting to appear in its financials by 2026. Several months of testing has enabled WBD to determine “who’s a legitimate user who may not be a legitimate user,” Perrette said. Once that is determined, he continued, the next step is to “turn on the more aggressive language around what needs to happen” in order to and make sure that “we are putting the net in the right place, so to speak.”

Asked about what “inning” the process is in, to use the baseball cliche, Perrette said only the first. By the fourth quarter, he said, the process will be happening “in a much more aggressive fashion.” “The message language right now has been a fairly soft, cancel-able message,” he said. It will “start to get more fixed and such that people have to take action as opposed to right now, sort of having to be a voluntary process.” Once those directives are established, he said, “the real benefit will start probably in the fourth quarter and then kick in in 2026.”

It’ll be interesting to see how aggressive

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Netflix didn’t actually stop me from sharing my passwords with my kid now that they’ve moved out. But we aren’t heavy users on either side. The kid is working on their career so they’re working a hell of a lot of hours and I just don’t watch that much.

On the other hand I know lots of folks around here have been dinged and I suspect that’s because they’re algorithm determined they could get two subscriptions out of you where as they couldn’t get to subscriptions out of me I would just cancel (and they were right).

It’s another example of selective enforcement of a rule or law. Relatively harmless All things considered. Certainly better than a lot of the other things we selectively enforce in America.

HBO canceling will get aggressive

By allo • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

If they don’t want account sharing, they should not allow multiple streams at the same time. If they allow them, it doesn’t matter how far apart the people are.

Linux Desktop Share Tops 6% In 15 Million-System Analysis

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet:
In an interview, Lansweeper, an IT asset discovery and inventory company, revealed to ZDNET that, in its analysis of over 15 million identified consumer desktop operating systems, it found that Linux desktops currently account for just over 6% of PC market share. This news comes after several other studies have shown the Linux desktop is right around the 6% mark. Indeed, according to the US Federal Government Website and App Analytics count, the Linux desktop market share over the last 90 days has reached 6.3%, a new high. In July, according to StatCounter, the Linux desktop also set a record high by its metrics with 5.24%.

Microsoft Quakes in it’s money vaults.

By nightflameauto • Score: 3 Thread

I’ve been using Linux of one stripe or another since the mid nineties. Debian came on a CD with, was it BOOT or MaximumPC? I tried it and was hooked. I root for Linux all the time. That said, I don’t think we need to celebrate ever tenth of a percent of climb in its interest.

Having said that? It’ll be interesting to see what happens as the Windows 10 EOL comes. I don’t know if the public is informed enough to kick the Microsoft habit or not, but it will be interesting to watch what plays out.

It doesn’t have to surpass Windows to be big

By thecombatwombat • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s already night and day using a Linux desktop with regard to how vendors support it from a few years ago. Not that long ago, expecting things like Netflix and Spotify to work was out of the question, now you can pretty much assume they are all aware of and support Linux.

More and more hardware vendors, peripheral makers, are contributing their own support, directly to the kernel. I bought a PS5 controller a few years ago but no PS5, because I saw Sony had contributed the drivers directly to the kernel, and they work great. It seems extremely likely that in another 2-3 years, it will surpass 10%. At that point, you’ll really be able to expect to go and say, buy a mouse or a monitor or some USB speakers, and have the hardware manufacturer be paying attention to Linux. At that point, I don’t really care what the market share is, but normal people can have a big tech alternative without a lot of hoops to jump through, and that’s a good thing.

Thanks Microsoft

By RitchCraft • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Windows 11 was the best thing to ever happen for Linux.

Re:If it becomes too big it might be bad

By dskoll • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I can’t see that happening. The Linux ecosystem is too unruly for it to succumb to corporate enshittification. There will always be Debian, Slackware, and other non-corporate distros, and if commercial software becomes too onerous, we’ll do what we do now… not use it.

Trump Signs Executive Order Opening 401(k) Retirement Market To Crypto Investments

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
President Trump is set to sign an executive order opening up 401(k) retirements plans to alternative assets, like private equity, real estate, and cryptocurrency. The move has the potential to unlock trillions in new investment for asset managers outside of stocks, bonds, and cash, “though critics say it also could bring too much risk into retirement investments,” reports Reuters. From the report:
“The order directs the Securities and Exchange Commission to facilitate access to alternative assets for participant-directed defined-contribution retirement savings plans by revising applicable regulations and guidance,” the White House official said on condition of anonymity. The order directs the Labor Secretary to consult with her counterparts at the Treasury Department, the SEC, and other federal “regulators to determine whether parallel regulatory changes should be made at those agencies,” the official said. […]

The new investment options carry lower disclosure requirements and are generally less easy to sell quickly for cash than the publicly traded stocks and bonds that most retirement funds rely on. Investing in them also tends to carry higher fees. In defined contribution plans, employees make contributions to their own retirement account, frequently with a matching contribution from their employer. The invested funds belong to the employee, but unlike a defined benefit pension plan, there is no guaranteed regular payout upon retirement.

Many private equity firms are hungry for the new source of cash that retail investors could offer after three years in which high interest rates shook their time-honored model of buying companies and selling them at a profit. Whatever results may come from Trump’s order, it likely will not happen overnight, private equity executives say. Plaintiffs’ lawyers are already preparing for lawsuits that could be filed by investors who do not understand the complexity of the new forms of investments.

Time for some Boomers

By OverlordQ • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

To lose even more of their retirements

Re:Time for some Boomers

By crgrace • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Crypto is a trip. It generates no yield, has very little real-world use (beyond facilitating crime), and is a negative sum game.

Crypto requires real money to operate (a lot of custom chips are playing “guess the number” simultaneously), so the net amount of money coming OUT of crypto is necessarily less than the amount of money being invested in crypto.

In other words, the average return on crypto has to be less than 1. You have benefited personally, but that has come at the expense of others who came after (analogous to a Ponzi scheme). Crypto generates no value, so you just got taken out of the trade with new money.

It’s all very interesting.

Re:Time for some Boomers

By crgrace • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Crypto is demonstrably NOT a ponzi scheme though. It’s decentralized, has no leader, nobody to collect money at “the top”, and no rug to pull.

That is why I said “analogous to a Ponzi scheme”. In fact, the creation of a “distributed Ponzi scheme” may be the true innovation of crypto.

And haven’t you got the memo, crypto isn’t a currency anymore, hasn’t been for a while. Now it’s a “store of value” and an “investment”.

Re:Time for some Boomers

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Crypto is demonstrably NOT a ponzi scheme though. It’s decentralized, has no leader, nobody to collect money at “the top”, and no rug to pull.

None of those things are part of the definition of a Ponzi scheme.

A Ponzi scheme is where the value paid to earlier investors is paid by the money put in by later investors.

Trump is ruling by Fiat

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
And has been for some time. All of the systems designed to protect you have broken down fundamentally. All of them.

In project 2025 they call it shock and awe. The idea is is that they throw so much shit out there you can’t sue over everything and even if you could the supreme Court is completely corrupt so you are probably going to lose. So far 60% of Trump’s ludicrous executive orders have been upheld by the courts.

While America was freaking out over a trans girls in sports and woke and sjw and dei and heavy metal music and violent video games and whatever other fucking moral panic has got the right wing in a tizzy this week the heritage foundation has been quietly packing the courts with sycophants willing to do anything the billionaires tell them.

Every single branch of government is now in control of the heritage foundation and the billionaire ghouls running it.

There is a microscopic chance that somebody like Gavin newsom will win in 2028 but the Republicans know that’s coming and they are doing crazy ass gerrymandering and voter suppression to prevent that.

The scale of what’s going on and the complete collapse of our Republic is something people just cannot wrap their heads around because they grew up in a democracy so they can’t imagine that democracy going away.

So there isn’t nearly enough panic. And on top of that the billionaires spent 45 years buying every single news outlet. One of the guys who just got fired from The Washington Post did a detailed article about how bezos has destroyed the newspaper.

I say it again every single institution designed to protect you has failed. Last November the final and only remaining line of defense, the voting public, failed you. From here on out it’s only going to get worse .

Microsoft’s $30 Windows 10 Security Updates Cover 10 Devices

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft’s $30 Extended Security Updates license for Windows 10 will cover up to 10 devices under a single Microsoft Account, the company confirmed in updated support documentation. The ESU program, which provides security updates through October 13, 2026, requires a Microsoft Account for all three enrollment options: the $30 one-time purchase, redemption of 1,000 Microsoft Reward points, or free enrollment for users who sync their PC settings to OneDrive. Windows 10’s support ends October 14, 2025.

Translation

By n0w0rries • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you give us a copy of all your data so we can feed it to our AI, we’ll pay Chinese hackers to keep updating Windows 10, so you can keep subscribing to defense software, for only $30!

This will have limited effect, security-wise

By Halo5 • Score: 3 Thread

A very large segment of Windows users have NEVER payed for an OS update or upgrade, and they aren’t about to start doing so now. Mark my words, they’ll end up walking back on the planned (and entirely fake) obsolescence of Windows 10. All of these Windows machines that are no longer being updated will be targeted in a huge malware campaign at some point, and it will be a big deal. This is the type of thing that gets politicians talking and bringing up the “M” word again, and MS wants to avoid this at all cost. At some point, they’ll walk this back.

Re:Lol. I’ve already switched to Linux.

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Wasn’t hard.

Am in the process of switching to Mint 22 (Cinnamon) full-time. Not hard, but tedious. Already duplicated my Firefox and Thunderbird configurations, and converted all my complex spreadsheets from Excel (and budget in Lotus 123 - which still works fine under Win10 btw) to LibreOffice Calc and figured out similar alternatives to AxCrypt (ccrypt and/or 7zip). Still hung up on a good alternative to Publisher; LibreOffice may work okay for new files, but not so much with existing files, maybe Scribus or stop caring? Copying over files with some probable re-organization will be tedious. So far, I’ve just been too lazy to complete the tasks.

Re:Lol. I’ve already switched to Linux.

By Zak3056 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Still hung up on a good alternative to Publisher

If it makes you feel any better, whether you’re on Windows or Linux, you need to be looking for an alternative to Publisher… it’s been deprecated and has an EOL about a year out. You can, of course, continue to run it, but I can’t imagine running any MS software that doesn’t get security updates anymore, especially one that’s an Office component.

Microsoft needs to be forced to support by law

By xack • Score: 3 Thread
Microsoft should be forced to provide security updates in perpetuity. Stop making AI gimmicks and support people who use their computer for actual work. Car companies have to provide parts for decades so should Microsoft. They can afford it since they have more money than Dr Evil demanded.

Google TV’s Uncertain Future

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Google has quietly admitted defeat in selling advertising for its smart TV platform, returning ad inventory to publishers and accepting a revenue share instead of controlling ad spots directly, according to The Verge. The policy reversal comes as Google spends hundreds of millions of dollars annually on Google TV without breaking even, while Amazon outspends the company on retail incentives that have already pushed Google TV sets out of Costco stores in favor of Fire TV models.

Amazon pays up to $50 per activated television to retailers and manufacturers, The Verge reported. Google TV has grown to 270 million monthly active devices worldwide since unifying Android TV and Chromecast under a single brand in 2020, but many devices operate in overseas markets that generate little revenue or run customized versions controlled by pay-TV operators. YouTube’s success in the living room — generating $9.8 billion in quarterly ad revenue and accounting for 12.5% of all US television viewing — has reduced internal support for Google TV, with sales teams prioritizing the video platform and some YouTube executives arguing the smart TV budget should be redirected, the report adds.

OpenAI Releases GPT-5

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI released GPT-5 on Thursday, ending a two-year development cycle that CEO Sam Altman called a “significant leap in intelligence” over previous models. The updated AI system achieved state-of-the-art performance across multiple benchmarks, scoring 94.6% on AIME 2025 mathematics problems and 74.9% on SWE-bench Verified coding tasks.

The model operates as a unified system combining a standard response mode with deeper reasoning capabilities that activate automatically based on query complexity. OpenAI reduced hallucinations by approximately 45% compared to GPT-4o and 80% compared to its previous reasoning model when using extended thinking modes. GPT-5 becomes available immediately to all ChatGPT users at no cost, with paid subscribers receiving higher usage limits and access to GPT-5 pro for more complex reasoning tasks.

Still not very intelligent

By jonbryce • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I asked it to give me 5 odd numbers that don’t have the letter e in them. Trick question, because there aren’t any.

It came back with:

Twenty-one
Thirty-one
Forty-one
Fifty-one
Sixty-three

You Both Lack Lateral Thinking

By Roger W Moore • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
There are odd numbers which don’t have the letter ‘e’ in them, for example: trois, cinq or fünf

Re:The most hype I’ve ever seen.

By MpVpRb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Agreed, the hype is abundant
But also, genuine progress is being made toward creating truly useful tools
And no, I don’t mean the stupid pop culture stuff, I mean useful tools for scientists and engineers

Re:You Both Lack Lateral Thinking

By backslashdot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Those words mean nothing in English. Failure to understand context and purpose is not lateral thinking, it’s insanity.

Re:Still not very intelligent

By EvilSS • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Wow, how did you get early access? Since it just unlocked on platform about 20 minutes after your post and still isn’t on the chatgpt site yet.

OpenAI Pays Bonuses Ranging Up To Millions of Dollars To 1,000 Researchers, Engineers

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
OpenAI is paying bonuses to around 1,000 employees on its technical research and engineering teams, or about a third of the company, ranging from the low hundreds of thousands to millions, as the company gears up to release its latest flagship GPT-5 model and faces an ever-rising battle for AI talent, according to a person with knowledge of the bonuses.

China’s Solar Giants Quietly Shed a Third of Their Workforces Last Year

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
schwit1 shares a report:
China’s biggest solar firms shed nearly one-third of their workforces last year, company filings show, as one of the industries hand-picked by Beijing to drive economic growth grapples with falling prices and steep losses. The job cuts illustrate the pain from the vicious price wars being fought across Chinese industries, including solar and electric vehicles, as they grapple with overcapacity and tepid demand. The world produces twice as many solar panels each year as it uses, with most of them manufactured in China.

Longi Green Energy, Trina Solar, Jinko Solar, JA Solar, and Tongwei, collectively shed some 87,000 staff, or 31% of their workforces on average last year, according to a Reuters review of employment figures in public filings.

Kiss cheap shit goodbye

By Tablizer • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

The pandemic has made the world nervous about single-country sources. The benefits of Comparative Advantage are being downplayed at the expense of supply resilience.

Re:Chinese Solar is untrustworthy

By Rinnon • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Solar works great when it’s made well but Chinese solar is untrustworthy because it’s made to fail suddenly and catastrophically as a means of military attack against other countries that buy it.

[Citation Needed]

Re:Chinese Solar is untrustworthy

By Gravis Zero • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Solar works great when it’s made well but Chinese solar is untrustworthy because it’s made to fail suddenly and catastrophically as a means of military attack against other countries that buy it.

[Citation Needed]

I believe they are referring to this story: Rogue Communication Devices Found in Chinese Solar Power Inverters

Why No Price Decrease?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

The world produces twice as many solar panels each year as it uses

So why are solar prices going up in price, since 2021, and not coming down?

I keep hearing about oversupply, glut, and now this. Yet, prices are rising rather than falling.

Re:Kiss cheap shit goodbye

By MacMann • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The pandemic has made the world nervous about single-country sources.

How was the pandemic a cause? I’m thinking that the larger issue is seeing trade threatened through bottlenecks in shipment by sea by piracy, terrorism, and more. If the shipments aren’t threatened by overt attacks by missiles or rifle fire on the crew then it could be more subtle such as faked GPS transmissions potentially causing ships to run aground or collide with another vessel. Should there be a successful blockade on one of these choke points then that could make single source commodities much more expensive or simply no longer available. Consider what temporary slow downs through the Suez Canal and Panama Canal did to prices of varied commodities.

China has created a near monopoly on various energy commodities like solar PV cells and complete PV panels, batteries, rare earth magnets, as well as the raw materials to make energy products like lithium. That is making people nervous. If China continues to drive out competition by dumping cheap commodities on the international market then they can use their market dominance later as leverage, much like how Russia got Europe to become overly reliant on Russian natural gas to alter use threats of cutting off supplies to as a means to discourage interference with their invasion of Ukraine.

Digital Foundry, the Most Trusted Name in Game Console Analysis, is Going Independent

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Digital Foundry, the gaming hardware analysis publication known for its technical console breakdowns, has separated from IGN ownership as of today, with founder Richard Leadbetter purchasing the outlet and its complete archives. Leadbetter, who retained 50% ownership since selling half to Eurogamer in 2015, acquired an additional 25 percent from IGN while investor Rupert Loman, Eurogamer’s original co-founder, purchased the remaining quarter.

The five-person team will operate independently, maintaining its YouTube channel with 1.5 million subscribers and Patreon support generating approximately $200,000 annually. The publication plans to develop a full website for its written content and expand coverage while keeping most content free.

Re:How much analysis

By TwistedGreen • Score: 5, Informative Thread

If you look at their YouTube channel, lots: https://www.youtube.com/@Digit…

They mostly do game reviews and industry news in addition to reviewing individual consoles. Also, given that modern consoles are constantly being updated, it’s a rich source of content.

Nice to see an independent voice re-emerge. I bet the value of IGN has dropped quite a bit now that most views are driven primarily by the algorithm.

US President Calls on Intel CEO To Resign Over China Ties

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
President Trump on Thursday called on Intel’s CEO to resign because of his past ties to China, the latest challenge for the troubled chip maker. From a report:
“The CEO of INTEL is highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately. There is no other solution to this problem,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social Thursday. The president appeared to be referencing Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan’s past business dealings in China, which Sen. Tom Cotton (R., Ark.) called out in a letter to the company’s board earlier this week.

On Tuesday, Cotton wrote an open letter to Intel’s board questioning Tan’s ties to the Chinese government, including apparent connections to the country’s military and investments in other semiconductor companies. “The new CEO of @intel reportedly has deep ties to the Chinese Communists,” Cotton wrote in a post on X accompanying the letter. “U.S. companies who receive government grants should be responsible stewards of taxpayer dollars and adhere to strict security regulations. The board of @Intel owes Congress an explanation.”

Re:Comrade Trump

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’m with you in spirit but for me the entire Trump movement makes way more sense when I gave up trying to think Republicans believe in anything anymore since I have yet to see an issue the party base would dump Trump about. It’s not social issues, it’s not economic issues, it’s nothing Republicans believed in the past.

Whatever Trump wants to do in the moment will get to the Conservative Media, they will parrot the talking points until the base has it’s new opinions and they go from there. There’s nothing left, they’re just fealty to a man and that makes them even more dangerous, they can and will get roped into any awful thing.

“I mean, say what you want about the tenets of National Socialism, Dude, at least it’s an ethos.”

Re:Trump is really smashing the China now!

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If the conflicts of interest Cotton describes (are there charges? indictments?) are enough to consider an American Citizen de-facto disqualified from a CEO position then they have to concede that Trump’s conflicts of interests disqualify him to be President.

Re:Comrade Trump

By cstacy • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I expect it is Putin. Trump looks up to him, and wishes to be like him.

That’s an opposition narrative, but I don’t believe it. I think Trump has a somewhat naive model of political power, rooted in his experience as an American oligarch (real estate business). Trump equates money with power, and does not understand power for its own sake. He expects Putin to be rational under that model, and is continually shocked at what really happens.

All the "$Evil_Foreign_Leader is a great guy” talk is just Trump trying to assert that negotiations under Trump’s model will proceed in good faith. (Even though good faith always involves government corruption of the mutual back-scratching variety that any real-estate developer is familiar with).

He doesn’t want to be Putin.
He wants Putin to be Trump.

That’s why Trump is angry with Putin, again.

Re:Trump is really smashing the China now!

By organgtool • Score: 5, Informative Thread
That’s true. It’s also true that the president doesn’t have the power to unilaterally remove the CEO of a company in the private sector. But that won’t stop him from trying nor will it stop fuckwits from capitulating.

Re:Micro manager

By newbie_fantod • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I’m having real troubled understanding how this particular dictator cult continues to function

50% of the voting population fall on the left side of the intelligence bell-curve. That’s a powerful demographic to court and more than enough to keep any fool in power with the help of a little gerrymandering and voter suppression. His entire cabinet is a tribute to proud and confident stupidity, and he himself always speaks on their level of understanding, thus making him a comfort to his base in these confusing times.

Electronic Arts Tries (Once More) To End Its Football Addiction

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Electronic Arts faces a familiar challenge as it prepares to launch Battlefield 6 on October 10: breaking its dependence on the FIFA franchise, now called EA Sports FC, which drives roughly 70% of company profits despite disappointing sales this year.

The company has poured unprecedented resources into Battlefield 6, treating it as a platform built for user-generated content rather than a traditional game release. Early signs appear promising — the trailer hit nearly 5 million YouTube views in a week and shares climbed 5% after beta testing began — but analysts remain cautious after last year’s Dragon Age flop gutted subsidiary BioWare.

Oh....it’s about…

By cayenne8 • Score: 3, Informative Thread
Oh…it’s about soccer.....took me a minute to figure it out....something about something called FIFA and then I looked it up.

trends

By 7311587 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
in large companies the ambitious out compete the competent for control. when they have power they don’t know what do to. i think this happens because the competent spend their time doing their job and getting shit done. I am not sure what the ambitious do but whatever it is impresses management.

Adventure Construction Set: “Pele’s Black Pearl”

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 3 Thread
Once again we see that it is success that is the true enemy of art.

Re:Oh....it’s about…

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 4, Funny Thread

No, it is about football, you know, the sport that’s played worldwide with your feet and a ball.