Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Occupy Wall Street Co-Founder Built an On-Device AI For Activists
  2. Trump Loses More Control Over AI Regulation As Illinois Passes Landmark Law
  3. Valve’s Steam Deck Sells Out Again, Even After 40% Price Increase
  4. Microsoft Allegedly Leaked Dutch Civil Servants’ Data To the US
  5. IBM, Red Hat Commit $5 Billion To Secure Open Source Supply Chains
  6. Robinhood Now Lets Your AI Agents Trade Stocks
  7. DOJ Charges Google Employee With $1.2 Million Polymarket Bet On Search Term
  8. Last.fm Goes Independent After Breaking Up With Paramount Skydance
  9. Perfect Randomness Realized For the First Time
  10. Websites Have a New Way To Spy On Visitors: Analyzing Their SSD Activity
  11. Meta To Start Testing AI Subscription Services
  12. Nvidia To Spend $150 Billion a Year In Taiwan
  13. Rust Will Save Linux From AI, Says Greg Kroah-Hartman
  14. The AI Fight Brewing Inside the New York Times
  15. YouTube To Automatically Detect, Label AI-Generated Videos

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.

Occupy Wall Street Co-Founder Built an On-Device AI For Activists

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo:
In an era where Silicon Valley’s conservatism is both expressed openly and becoming more intense by the day, it’s strange to think that tech was once seen as a hive of liberalism. The right-wing nature of today’s tech industry means that its products tend to also be seen as serving right-wing interests, either in their actual operation (like X’s openly and unrepentantly right-wing chatbot Grok) or by the simple fact that their existence serves to enrich a small group of very powerful, very conservative people.

But does it have to be this way? Can LLMs and AI agents find a place in the toolkit of progressive activist groups? The conviction that they can is the idea behind a new app called Outcry, which provides a chatbot designed specifically as a “private, on-device AI mentor for activists, organizers and movement builders.” (There’s also a web version, although it obviously lacks the privacy benefits of being entirely offline.) It’s the brainchild of Occupy Wall Street co-creator Micah White, who recently wrote a blog post about the thinking behind the project.

[…] Outcry’s other distinguishing feature is that its dataset is entirely offline — it’s included with the download. According to the readme, the entire dataset is downloaded to your device at first launch, and stored in your library’s Application Support directory.
So, how effectively does Outcry serve as a guide for collective action? “I’d say that its information is pretty high-level and general, not least because its offline nature prevents it from accessing specific details not contained in its database,” writes Gizmodo’s Tom Hawking.
He continued: “This app has the potential to be a really valuable resource, especially for people who are just beginning to become involved with activism and genuinely don’t know where to begin — and getting over that first step can be hard.”

Trump Loses More Control Over AI Regulation As Illinois Passes Landmark Law

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Illinois lawmakers on Wednesday passed a landmark AI safety bill (SB 315) that would require major AI companies to publish safety plans, submit annual third-party testing reports, report serious incidents quickly, and protect whistleblowers who flag emerging risks. OpenAI and Anthropic supported the bill, which could make Illinois a testing ground for state-level AI governance as federal regulation remains stalled. Ars Technica reports:
To force companies to be more transparent about rapid developments, Illinois would likely rely on “the Big Four accounting and auditing firms — Deloitte, EY, KPMG, and PwC — to audit their safety practices,” [said Scott Wisor, a policy director at a nonprofit called Secure AI Project, which supported the bill]. The required independent audits will likely frustrate Trump, who has tried and failed to stop states from implementing AI safety laws as Congress stalls on passing any legislation.

For Trump, the priority has been to promote AI industry interests, but he began considering expanding federal government safety testing after Anthropic’s Mythos was released and the AI firm limited access due to safety concerns. Whether or not governments at any level are prepared to protect society from the most catastrophic AI risks remains a major concern for critics who wonder how and when governments will intervene. After inside sources started leaking the details of Trump’s AI safety testing plans, critics warned that even the federal government may lack the necessary expertise to audit frontier AI models. And it seems the same criticism extends to independent auditors that Illinois may rely on but industry insiders suggest some AI firms may not entirely trust.

Adam Kovacevich is CEO of Chamber of Progress, a trade group that opposed SB 315 and counts Google and Apple among its members. He told Wired that Illinois’ requirements “would force companies to expose sensitive systems to untested auditors in a regulatory regime that’s all liability and no standards.”
Governor J.B. Pritzker confirmed his intent to sign, proclaiming that “Illinois is leading the nation in holding Big Tech accountable.”
“I look forward to signing SB 315 and working with the legislature so that AI, when used, is used responsibly,” Pritzker said.

Steve Wimmer, a senior policy and technical advisor for the Transparency Coalition, said his group considers the law to be “one of the most important pieces of legislation in 2026.”

States Rights!

By ArchieBunker • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

Oh wait are we for or against states rights on this? Better see what Fox has to say.

Irony

By jythie • Score: 3 Thread

These companies just love ‘move fast and break things’, unless the moving fast might break their things.
 
By their own logic, we should regulate now and work out problems later.

Supremacy Clause of Constitution says otherwise…

By drnb • Score: 3 Thread

Trump Loses More Control Over AI Regulation As Illinois Passes Landmark Law

Not really, the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution says that federal law supersedes state law when in conflict. Then there is the Commerce Clause that says the federal government gets to regulate things with foreign nations and between the states. State regulations would have to be in areas the federal does not address, and be subject to being overridden by the fed at any time.

Valve’s Steam Deck Sells Out Again, Even After 40% Price Increase

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Valve’s Steam Deck has sold out again despite a steep price increase that pushed the 1TB OLED model as high as $949 — about $300 above its original price. “Even with the $300 price bump, the Steam Deck sold out after less than 24 hours back in stock,” reports IGN’s Jacqueline Thomas. “I don’t know how many units Valve was able to stock into its store, but it does seem like Valve spent a couple weeks building up its stock before putting the handheld back on its store.” IGN reports:
Over the last couple weeks, Valve has been receiving plenty of “game console” shipments from China. At first, I thought this was a sign that the company was getting ready to finally release the Steam Machine, but it looks like at least a portion of these shipments â" if not all of them — were Steam Deck restocks. That’s a lot of Steam Decks to sell through at these inflated prices, but it’s also possible that Valve is just staggering its stock so that its delivery infrastructure isn’t overwhelmed.

Now its just a question of when the Steam Deck will come back in stock. Before yesterday, the Deck was sold out for months. At the time, it was the most affordable way to get into PC gaming, especially in the face of the RAM crisis. That’s no longer true, but it looks like the Steam Deck’s popularity is enough to make it sell out regardless. Maybe the higher price will at least help Valve keep it in stock for people who still want to buy it, no matter the cost.
Earlier this week, Valve announced a price increase of more than 40% for two of its Steam Deck models, citing “rising memory and storage costs.”
The price changes, according to Valve, reflect “the current state of component costs and other global logistical challenges across the industry as a whole.”

“The 512GB tier of its OLED handheld gaming PC — the newer model with an upgraded display — will now cost $789, an increase of 43%,” notes the BBC. “The larger 1TB model will cost $949, an increase of 46%.”

Guess the economy is doing fine

By sarren1901 • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

Given that people can some how afford to drop $900 on a personal gaming device, the economy must be fine.

I use mine all the time.

By WolfgangVL • Score: 3 Thread

Steamdeck is a great little workstation if you can get past the form factor. I have a couple of docks around my house, and moving the system from room to room for specific tasks is pretty great. It’s sort of like a laptop in this regard, only I can swap the SD card out for a different one depending on the “Current” use case of the device.

Pretty awesome utility, and I’m suspicious that this is the sort of thing driving sales. There’s not a lot of devices with enough horsepower that can do this so seamlessly.

Microsoft Allegedly Leaked Dutch Civil Servants’ Data To the US

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Cybernews:
The technology giant Microsoft has been accused of leaking the data of civil servants working for the Netherlands’ regulatory agencies to the US House of Representatives. The civil servants affected by the leak work at the Authority for Consumers and Markets (ACM) and the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP), according to the NL Times. They are involved in implementing the Digital Services Act (DSA), the European Union regulation on online services, aimed at combating illegal content and protecting user rights.

NL Times reports that Microsoft shared emails, minutes, and invitations sent by the civil servants without redacting their names in the documents. Willemijn Aerdts, Dutch State Secretary for Digital Economy and Sovereignty, said she discussed the allegations with US Ambassador to the Netherlands Joe Popolo. […] The allegations against Microsoft further strengthen concerns over Europe’s dependence on American technologies, which poses major risks to data privacy.
Further reading: Netherlands Blocks US Takeover of Vital Digital Supplier

No Choice

By ISoldat53 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Microsoft had no choice but to comply with the subpoena. The Dutch, and the rest of the world, does have the choice in which cloud service, if any, they put all of their data.

Data Sovereignty

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If you use Amazon or Microsoft, your data is as protected as Trump’s next tantrum. Actually worse than that, as there will be people seeking compliance in advance and nobody gives a damn about American laws nevermind yours.

You cannot trust the US government

By bradley13 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The US government can compel any US company to release data that it holds, even if that data is stored outside the US. Pretending that any US company can comply with the GDPR is a fantasy.

This might, might be acceptable, if one could trust the US government. At latest after the Snowdon revelations, we all know that you cannot.

I guess this just goes to show

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The Dutch were right in telling foreign companies to fuck off: https://yro.slashdot.org/story…

And the US Ambassador who is whinging about this decision https://cybernews.com/tech/net… can go fuck himself and then fuck off. Or maybe the other way around, no one wants to see him do that.

Re:No Choice

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
> Microsoft had no choice but to comply with the subpoena.

No such DOJ criminal warrant or subpoena was issued. What’s extraordinary is that the U.S. House of Representatives engaged in spying on a regulatory agency of a fellow NATO member. But then again, the current Washington Administration does seem to be about burning all bridges.

IBM, Red Hat Commit $5 Billion To Secure Open Source Supply Chains

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
IBM and Red Hat are committing $5 billion to a new initiative called "Project Lightwell,” which aims to secure open-source software supply chains with AI-assisted vulnerability discovery, triage, patch validation, and upstream maintenance. Longtime Slashdot reader wiggles shares a press release from IBM:
IBM and Red Hat today announced Project Lightwell, a $5 billion commitment backed by new frontier AI capabilities and a global force of more than 20,000 engineers to help enterprises secure open source software. Together, these investments establish a new model for enterprise use of open source software, from upstream development through production environments.

Project Lightwell will establish a trusted enterprise clearinghouse combined with a global force of engineers to identify and fix vulnerabilities at scale. The clearinghouse will serve as a security coordination layer, using advanced AI capabilities to validate and test fixes across an unprecedented volume of open source code. These capabilities will be offered through commercial subscriptions, allowing enterprises to integrate secure patches directly into their existing software supply chains with enterprise-grade validation and lifecycle management.

IBM and Red Hat have already begun collaborating with a select group of early adopters on Project Lightwell, including Bank of America, BNY, Citi, Goldman Sachs, JPMorganChase, Mastercard, Morgan Stanley, Royal Bank of Canada, State Street, Visa and Wells Fargo. The real-world insights from these initial deployments will actively shape how vulnerabilities are identified, validated, and remediated at scale across complex software supply chains.

Re:There it is

By dj.delorie • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Selling security patches as a subscription service instead of submitting them upstream to fix the problems for all users.

“from upstream development through production environments.”
“to secure open source software at its source and across the entire supply chain.”
“Share fixes upstream so that open source communities can include them in long-term maintenance.”
“Upstream maintenance alongside open source community leaders;"

Please read the whole thing.

An abominable abuse of open source.

You do understand that the freedom and licenses you’re defending, specifically allow others to use your work for purposes you don’t agree with, right?
If you’re opposed to “evil” (but legal) uses of FLOSS, you’re opposed to the core values of FLOSS.

Re:The morality of Open Source.

By dj.delorie • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Any funding for Open Source Maintainers?

You mean, besides all the salaries that IBM and Red Hat pay to maintainers[*]? A lot of the maintainers are funded via salaries by large corporations (not just IBM/RH). How many maintainers’ salaries do you pay for?
While its true that companies typically only fund/hire the parts of FLOSS that they benefit from, can you blame them? If you’re favorite part of FLOSS isn’t funded, why is it someone else’s fault?

[*] disclosure - I’m one of the maintainers being 100% funded by Red Hat.

Re:There it is

By Kernel Kurtz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
These are the people who killed CentOS.

They know the letter of OSS, not the spirit.

Re:IBM “and” Red Hat?

By Burdell • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

From the outside, Red Hat operates as a largely independent subsidiary of IBM. I think it’s only in the last year or two that they’ve even been merging the “business operations” parts like HR.

In some ways, it feels like IBM buying Red Hat was as much about keeping anybody else from buying them (and changing them). Since Red Hat was a public company, anybody with enough cash/stock could have tried to take them over (and it sounds like there were some other interested parties), so IBM making a good offer kept them operating as Red Hat. Imagine for example if Oracle had bought them instead… things would be quite different.

Impossible

By bradley13 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I have a student who is writing a paper about exactly this topic. Almost any large project nowadays uses dozens of external libraries, which in turn use dozens or hundreds more. This creates a huge, almost unknowable dependency tree. Any of those libraries may be updated at any time, and be pulled into a new release of your software. Any of those libraries may contain a security flaw that could be discovered and exploited. Any of those libraries may be deliberately compromised - and how would you know?

As a current example, consider the recently discovered flaw in Starlette, which the developer claims is downloaded 325 million times per week. Never heard of Starlette? That’s because it is a fundamental building block buried deep in that dependency tree. Despite the title of the article, this flaw affects far more that just AI apps.

IMHO, the best solution - if you can afford it - is to write as much of your own code as you can. Sure, you may also have security flaws, but you are a far smaller and less interesting target. If there is a better solution, I don’t know what it is…

Robinhood Now Lets Your AI Agents Trade Stocks

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Robinhood is launching beta support for a new feature that will let AI agents make payments and trade stocks on users’ behalf. The company is also rolling out a virtual credit card for AI agents, with spending limits and approval controls. TechCrunch reports:
Robinhood said users on its platform can now create a separate account for their AI agents and connect them to a dedicated wallet. While these agents would be able to read and analyze users’ portfolios to come up with trading strategies and suggest investments, they’ll only be able to access the pre-loaded balance in the dedicated wallet to place orders.

Users will get notifications of all trades their AI agent makes and will be able to monitor their activities within the Robinhood app. For some trades, agents will show a preview that users may have to approve before the order is executed. The company said it has also built in fraud detection protection, in which a team from Robinhood would review suspicious trades and help users resolve disputes.

Robinhood says users can connect their AI agents to its Model Context Protocol (MCP) service to do things like analyze concentration risk and sector exposure, execute trades, or look through analyst notes to identify new investment opportunities across various sectors. The agentic trading feature is launching in beta and only allows stock trading right now. The company says it plans to add support for options, crypto, event contracts, futures, and prediction markets soon.

The important question

By DrXym • Score: 3 Thread
Can I set up an AI agent to orchestrate a rugpull?

Re:The important question

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yes but since this is robin hood the rugpull will only work if the rich get richer. As soon as you make a profit they will halt your trading forcing you to lose money. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/01/2…

How these thundercunts are still in business is beyond me.

Say it with me now…

By Pollux • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“And....it’s gone!”

AI put it all …

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

… in AI.

Never would have seen that coming.

DOJ Charges Google Employee With $1.2 Million Polymarket Bet On Search Term

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC:
Federal prosecutors charged a Google employee with fraud on Wednesday, alleging that he made $1.2 million off of bets using insider information on Polymarket. Prosecutors claim that Michele Spagnuolo, a staff information security engineer at Google, used confidential information to place trades correctly betting that singer d4vd would be Google’s most searched person in 2025. Spagnuolo has been charged with money laundering, commodities fraud and wire fraud. The complaint, filed in the Southern District of New York, was unsealed on Wednesday.

Spagnuolo was arrested Wednesday morning in New York, ABC reported. “Spagnuolo had access to Google’s internal data systems, including a particular Google internal software tool that provided him access to confidential, nonpublic Year in Search data,” the prosecutors said in their complaint. Some observers of the Polymarket platform flagged the user “AlphaRaccoon” back in December for suspicious trades on the most searched person contracts. The complaint Wednesday said that Spagnuolo was the person behind that account. “Google officially and publicly announced its Year in Search 2025 results on or about December 4, 2025. Soon after it did so, Spagnuolo’s AlphaRaccoon account, profited approximately $1.2 million on his Google Year in Search 2025-related bets,” the complaint said.

[…] Spagnuolo is also facing a civil case from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, where he’s charged with insider trading. The complaint detailed that Spagnuolo correctly predicted the outcomes of a slew of other search markets, including contracts like “Will Zohran Mamdani rank in the Top 5 most searched” and “Will Squid Game be the #1 searched TV show.” “Spagnuolo misappropriated the material Confidential Information by knowingly or recklessly using it to trade the 2025 Year in Search List Contracts in breach of his duties of trust and confidentiality,” the CFTC complaint alleged.

How about they go after friends of Trump?

By Targon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

How much money was “won” by friends of Donald Trump who bet on when Trump would do this or that? How about those who conveniently timed stock trades perfectly with announcements by Trump that would cause the overall stock market to go up or down?

Now, bets on who would be the most searched for…when was the bet placed, just before the information came out, or a year ago where it would require search/advertisement manipulation to have working at Google provide any sort of extra tip information where it would be against the rules?

What?

By gweihir • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I thought “criminal” was the new “legal” as far as the DIJ was concerned? Did this person do something to piss off the Dumb?

Sad state of events

By paul_engr • Score: 3 Thread
The ctfc should be dismantling gambling markets for the oublic good, not going after idiot gambling cheaters.

This is why gambling is illegal.

By sabbede • Score: 3 Thread
But he shouldn’t be charged with insider trading. He’s not involved in trading securities or commodities; he’s cheating other gamblers at a casino. That is illegal in States that allow casinos, but there are no Federal laws banning it. And it may not even be cheating but a legal advantage, like counting cards.

It’s gonna be fun

By rsilvergun • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
This is only insider trading if these are commodities, and their not. And I have no doubt this guy’s lawyers are taking that to the Supreme Court.

The court’s pretty corrupt though so it’ll be fun to see how it plays out, in a “our civilization is collapsing” kinda way

Last.fm Goes Independent After Breaking Up With Paramount Skydance

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Last.fm announced that it is independent again after separating from Paramount Skydance, nearly two decades after CBS acquired the music-tracking service in 2007. The company says accounts, scrobbles, privacy settings, Pro subscriptions, and billing information will remain intact. Additional details are forthcoming. Engadget reports:
“Today, Last.fm begins a new chapter as an independent company,” the announcement reads. “Ownership has changed, but the product you use every day has not.” It also said that it will keep its current team. Last.fm is a music website that can track what you listen to across platforms, apps and streaming services, including Spotify, YouTube and Apple Music.Â

[…] Last.fm started as an internet radio station in 2002, and it didn’t get scrobbling until a few years later when it merged with the original team that created the tracking process. It operated as an independent company until it was acquired by CBS Interactive, which is now part of the merged Paramount Skydance Corporation, for $280 million in 2007. In 2014, it killed off its $3-a-month subscription radio service to focus on tracking your listening habits on other providers. The company promised to share more about what you can expect from the transition in the coming weeks, but everything will work on Last.fm “exactly as it did yesterday” for now.

Last FM != Soma FM

By pr0t0 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
After seeing this article, I thought I’d pop in and listen to some Groove Salad or Secret Agent radio. Whoops!

Re:that still exists?

By coofercat • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I ditched ‘em years back, probably when they got acquired, so just took a look to see what they were about. They’ve accepted that Spotify et al. are really where it’s at, and now all they seem to do is track what you listen to on those platforms and then offer suggestions.

I suppose if you’re listening to multiple platforms, then having all that history consolidated in one place could be useful, but otherwise, I wonder how their recommendations are going to be any better than Spotify’s?

Back in the day, last.fm was pretty awesome though. I found a load of new music through listening to them, which back then resulted in me actually buying physical media. I suppose now, even if they found me something new, the best they/the industry could hope for would be that I bookmarked it or something for a couple of plays later on.

Perfect Randomness Realized For the First Time

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
ETH Zurich researchers say they have generated certified “perfect randomness” for the first time by using a quantum Bell-test setup with two entangled superconducting chips connected by a 30-meter cooled link. “In the long term, this work could play a similar role in digital security as atomic clocks do for timekeeping: a physically certified source of randomness that other systems can rely on,” reports Phys.org. “Possible applications range from the encryption of sensitive communications and digital identities to public randomness services for lotteries and blockchain applications.” From the report:
They call their method randomness amplification. “This was made possible by an improved so-called Bell-Test with simultaneously high quality and high data rate,” says [Renato Renner and Andreas Wallraff]. He and his coworkers use a complex setup that consists of two superconducting chips, which they cool down to very low temperatures close to absolute zero. Each chip represents a quantum bit or qubit, which can take on the states “0” or “1” or any arbitrary superposition of these states. A 30-meter-long tube, which is also cooled down, connects the two chips.

Microwave photons can fly back and forth between them, thus creating quantum mechanical entanglement. This means that a quantum measurement on one qubit, which randomly yields the values “0” or “1,” influences automatically and at a distance whether “0” or “1” is measured on the second qubit. The separation of 30 meters ensures that, during the measurement, even at the speed of light, no information can be exchanged between the qubits. This would disturb the perfect randomness.

Wallraff and his team made the choice of the exact type of measurement (or “measurement basis” in technical jargon) on the two qubits depending on an imperfect random number generator. Renner’s coworkers could then amplify the randomness of the measurement results further using a special algorithm. “The resulting sequence of zeros and ones is now really perfectly random, and we can even certify that,” says Renner. He likens this result to crossing a ridge: “The technical improvements allowed us, for the first time, to create random numbers that will remain perfectly random for all eternityâ"no matter what analytical methods are used to assess their randomness.”
The findings have been published in the journal Nature.

Can someone help explain “perfect” randomness?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I’m curious as to how this is more random than previous sources of randomness we use, specifically the development and recording of electrical shot-noise, or using a source that exhibits completely chaotic interaction with environments - pointing a camera at a lava lamp.

How were they not random enough to be considered perfect?

And I guess while we’re at it, do we really truly need an even more perfect random number for cryptography? I’m not aware of any attacks that have broken cryptography by attacking hardware random number systems (though there are those who have exploited poorly implemented software pseudo-RNG)

Re:Can someone help explain “perfect” randomness?

By r1348 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Probably because true randomness is different than “too many parameters to account for”.
The physical interactions you described follow precise laws, it’s just that there are way too many interactions to be realistically predictable in real time… for now.
The randomness described in the article derives directly from the statistical nature of quantum physics, so it’s non-deterministic by design.

Now to be fair, all deterministic “traditional” physics is an emergent phenomenon of non-deterministic quantum physics, but that would be ahuge digression I don’t have the time and energy for right now…

Re:Unnecessary expense

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I think my wife’s conversational topics might also work.

Re:Can someone help explain “perfect” randomness?

By sleschdott • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Regarding hardware RNGs: Theodore Ts’o (of Linux fame) begs to differ. https://daniel-lange.com/docum…

Re:Can someone help explain “perfect” randomness?

By locofungus • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I skimmed a few of the referenced papers back to something in 1986.

It turns out that the practical implementation of a theoretical perfect (quantum) random bit generator (the example given in one paper was a zener diode[1]) always has some skew. This might vary over time but, for example, a random bit stream that is biased to more ones than zeros over the last 10s is more likely than not suffering from some temporary bias that an attacker can at least theoretically use.

Using classical physics it’s possible to remove this bias so that you have a pseudo-random stream that is, for all practical purposes perfect however it’s (apparently[2]) provable that doing this in the classical domain is theoretically open to attack due to the original bias.

What this has done is allowed a quantum process to do that post filtering so that even the theoretical attack on the pseudo-random stream driven from an almost perfect RNG is gone.

[1] example here - different paper:
https://www.researchgate.net/f…

[2] I took it on trust - one paper said it was proved in another referenced paper, I didn’t try to check if it really did say that and I certainly didn’t even try to follow a proof…

Websites Have a New Way To Spy On Visitors: Analyzing Their SSD Activity

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Now sites have a new way to spy on their visitors: measuring subtle interactions with their solid-state drives. The technique, named FROST (fingerprinting remotely using OPFS-based SSD timing), allows sites to monitor other sites a visitor is viewing and what apps are open on their devices. The technique, laid out in a research paper (PDF), exploits a side channel, a form of leak resulting from physical manifestations such as electromagnetic emanations, data caches, or the time required to complete a task. By measuring the manifestations, attackers can decrypt encrypted traffic and infer other confidential data.

The attack that FROST uses is known as a contention side channel, which measures the interaction of various processes all using (or competing for) a given resource. By measuring the timing of certain I/O (input-output) operations of the SSD a visitor is using, the researchers were able to determine the websites open in other tabs — even on other browsers — and the apps that were open on the visitor’s device. FROST requires no interaction from the visitor other than opening the site hosting the attack. […] Unlike previous contention side-channel attacks on SSDs, FROST runs exclusively in the browser. It uses JavaScript that interacts with the OPFS (origin private file system), an allocated storage space that’s reserved for a specific site to run code needed to complete a given task. Websites can create one with no interaction required by the visitor.

While each file system is sandboxed, meaning it’s isolated from other websites and from the device system itself, the JavaScript can measure the I/O interactions. Then, by running those interactions through a pretrained convolutional neural network — a system that uses deep learning to analyze text, audio, and images — the attacker can deduce various apps and websites open on the device. “The attacker continuously measures SSD contention by performing random reads from a large OPFS file,” the researchers explained. “SSD contention caused by user activity causes measurable latency differences for these read operations. By training a convolutional neural network (CNN) on these traces, the attacker can fingerprint user activity on the host system by classifying new traces using the trained model.”

Bullshit, overblown synopsis

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread

>By measuring the manifestations, attackers can decrypt encrypted traffic and infer other confidential data.
The research paper doesn’t say anything about decrypting encrypted traffic nor inferring confidential data. I think the author just looked up “side channel” and ascribed the implications of other side channel attacks to this particular technique.

Read the paper: what’s actually happening here is a demonstration where code in the browser can use local SSD timings to encode a stream of bits by influencing access times. Then, another open browser page on the same computer can infer the signal sent by the other process by examining SSD latency timing.

It’s mildy interesting, and far from the first such side channel, but nowhere does this technique break out of the browser’s sandbox or decrypt confidential data. This is nothing like “visit this page and you’re haxx0red noob.” In order to succumb to any sort of attack, a legitimate website you normally visit would have to be hacked too. And if they have gotten that far, they wouldn’t need to exfiltrate data via this side channel.

Re:adblock and privacy badger

By larwe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It’s not a question of asking people to think… it’s a question of undermining things that actually make them money. It would be possible to design a browser that is extremely hostile to advertising, tracking and other malware. Unfortunately, the people with enough money to maintain and promote a credible browser make most of that money from advertising, tracking and other malware. This whole article thread is just another example of “allowing other peoples’ unvetted code to run on your computer is never safe”, but the people who make browsers and major websites have business models that rely on this idea. It’s a tension that cannot be resolved in the Age of Enshittification.

Re:adblock and privacy badger

By Aighearach • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Sites don’t use it, even just reading the summary would tell you that this is something that works in the lab when the fake users are generated by scripts and there isn’t any other activity on the node. Real computers are doing lots of different shit in the background and don’t have narrowly consistent timing, especially compared to other users with similar storage systems. And storage performance operates in a set of narrow performance bands. “Which of a site’s 2 users are using it right now?” might be possible, but fingerprinting an anonymous user of a real web service would be a whole different issue.

The important thing is that some dingbat academician got a publishing credit.

The Web is _shit_ in one …

By Qbertino • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

… _very_ fundamental way.

[Disclaimer: Passionate multi-decade Senior Web Developer here]

And that is *drumroll*:

Always online, no standard default way for offline.

Seriously, this is the biggest downside (and perhaps eventually downfall) of the Web and ist it’s protocols. It’s the reason I initially thought “Who needs this crap?” back in the 90ies when the Web first appeared.

In this regard Fidenet and other BBS networks are technically superior(!!) to the modern Web.

Solid crypto-based Ident/Auth/Authed DNS and a set of document-centric offline capable Web protocols on top would be the right way to do this. Most security problems and this tracker garbage we have to deal with _every_ _single_ _day_ would vanish in an instant. As would quite a few other problems of the modern Web along with it.

The Web is awesome. It won for very good reasons. But it _that_ way the Web is epic shit by design. If the Web eventually fades away it will likely be because of that flaw.

Until then it’s paying bills, so not many too hard feelings on my end. But the general IT expert in me sure wishes we had better protocols for solid offline capability.

Re:adblock and privacy badger

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The important thing is that some dingbat academician got a publishing credit.

Good ol’ 2026, where we insult academics because some idiot reporter probably used AI to write an article which has nothing to do with the research paper itself.

Now if you read the paper the “dingbat academician” didn’t propose any direct security risk, rather demonstrated a way to setup a covert data channel between two things under their control at a rate of about 600bits/second. It is a very interesting paper and one that explores performance of Javascript and I/O access. Specifically this is more of a comparison to an existing side channel that on a raw OS level can achieve 900bit/s (using sync operations in Linux). The paper also concludes that the risk here is insanely small especially how OPFS access required user to explicitly allow a website to do so.

Please keep the insults to reporters and people who read “science news” instead of the papers themselves.

Meta To Start Testing AI Subscription Services

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Meta will begin testing paid subscriptions for its Meta AI app and website, with a $7.99/month Meta One Plus plan and a more capable $19.99/month Meta One Premium plan offering. The test will start next month in Singapore, Guatemala, and Bolivia as Meta looks for AI revenue beyond advertising while continuing to offer a free tier. CNBC reports:
Naomi Gleit, the head of product at Meta, revealed the subscription testing in an Instagram video, announcing that the plans “give people who use Meta AI more to work with, more capacity, bigger, more complex requests, and more room to create for businesses and creators.”

Meta One Plus will cost $7.99 a month and the Meta One Premium plan will cost $19.99 a month, the company confirmed. The more expensive version offers users additional computing capacity to produce more comprehensive responses and other advanced features. The company will continue to provide a free version of the app and site.

“We’re offering premium tools that allow you to enhance presence, supercharge content, automate tasks, and protect your brand,” Gleit said in the post. “We’re also thinking about how to bring this all together in a way that makes sense.”

Reality check in 3.. 2.. 1..

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I guess this is the moment when they realise that the only reason why some people use AI because it’s free or forced upon us. No marketing campaign will ever make people pay this sort of money pay for a silly chatbot, especially the Meta AI crap.

Re:Reality check in 3.. 2.. 1..

By larwe • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I think “people” are not the target market; influencers (and wannabe influencers) and brands are the target market. I.e. it is a spam-enhancement tool.

Re: Meta has an AI?

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They might get a better responsie by requesting $4.99/month to remove the Meta AI slop from their Facebook interface.

Re:Meta has an AI?

By haruchai • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Anyone who’s seen Zuck testify at Congress has seen Meta AI in action.
I’m quite impressed at how close to human it appeared

Re:meta paid AI vs Openweights

By allo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

You really think someone who would potentially use Meta AI is able and willing to buy a cluster of strix halos?

Even with reasonable ideas like running a small model on an average graphics card it is simply too complicated to set up for many people, not straightforward to connect to your mobile device (and people might want to shut down their PC, some don’t even have one anymore) and overall more maintenance intensive for someone who rather shells out a few dollars to not have to worry about running own LLM.

You and me can run own LLM. Average Joe can’t and doesn’t want to.

Nvidia To Spend $150 Billion a Year In Taiwan

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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the company plans to spend around $150 billion a year in Taiwan, calling it the “epicenter of the AI revolution.” “Four years ago, five years ago, Nvidia was spending about $10, $15 billion dollars a year in Taiwan. Now we’re spending $100, going to $150 billion dollars in Taiwan each year,” Huang said. Reuters reports:
Huang was speaking at a launch celebration in Taipei for the chip company’s planned Taiwan headquarters, which he said will break ground this year and aims to become operational in 2030. He did not provide a timeframe for the number of years the company plans to invest $150 billion. The Taiwan headquarters will bring Nvidia closer to TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker which makes many of the advanced semiconductors powering the trend towards AI and is a major supplier to the U.S. tech company.

“Taiwan is booming,” Huang said on stage at the celebration which was attended by his parents, wife, daughter and son in addition to around 1,000 employees. “Taiwan is the epicentre of the AI revolution. This is where the chips come, packaging comes, this is where the systems are made, this is where AI supercomputers were created. The number of partners we work with here in Taiwan, incredible.”

Careful how you word that

By Tablizer • Score: 3 Thread

“Taiwan is booming”

Especially when Xi goes to grab it.

Re:Just trying to get Xi’s attention

By korgitser • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Huang’s billions are probs not going to impress the Chinese, who are investing multiples of that. The Chinese also consider developing their own (AI) semiconductors a national priority, with the US of the last 10-15 years having proven to them conclusively that Western supplies can not be relied upon. Their homegrown stuff is not as advanced as Nvidia on performance/watt yet, but it’s cheap (especially compared to the multiple orders of magnitude inflated prices of Nvidia) and it works, and has built an AI industry in China that rivals the US.

So this ship sailed for Huang some time ago. I’m reading this announcement more as a “screw you guys, I’m going home” to Trump. The Orange Man has had Huang lick his boots, messed with his business with his trade wars and sanctions games, and paraded him in China now… and all for nothing, Trump has zero leverage on China, he has nothing to offer to China, and thus, nothing to offer to Huang either. All mouth and no trousers. Why would Huang hang around …

Taiwan is where the semiconductor industry is at, and Taiwan is where Huang needs to be, too. The tech is there, the engineering is there, the manufacturing is also there, even if they branch a little to the US. The US semiconductor industry otoh is moving out of inertia by now, unable to keep up with the volume, and therefore, investment, and r&d of Taiwan. And all of that is before you take into account the US is basically in war with higher education by now, which does not bode well for any hopes of long term brain availability.

At what point will they get a private army?

By schweini • Score: 3 Thread
Serious question: at what point will it be worth it for the tech companies to investt directly into Taiwan’s defense from a Chinese invasion?
With hundreds of billions of dollars at stake, wouldn’t it make sense to buy Taiwan some AA systems and coastal artillery, just to deter an invasion a little more and hence secure their investment?

They must not think China is going to take Taiwan

By sarren1901 • Score: 4 Thread

Given how Trump is showing the world that “Might makes Right” we are basically showing China that it’s okay to use military force to try and take what you want. Given that little meeting they just had, will Trump actually defend Taiwan if China decides they want it?

Given that uncertainty, is it really wise to invest 150 billion into a territory that can’t remotely stand on its own? Taiwan’s best bet if the are invaded is to self-sabotage, which would likely be worse for the world then just letting China have it.

Nvidia CEO obviously has more connections and insider information then I do, but it still interesting to read about this all the same.

Rust Will Save Linux From AI, Says Greg Kroah-Hartman

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Linux stable kernel maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman says Rust can help Linux deal with a flood of AI-discovered security bugs (namely Dirty Frag, Copy Fail, and Fragnesia) by preventing common C mistakes around memory, locking, error handling, and untrusted data at build time rather than during human review. It’s “not a silver bullet” and does not mean rewriting the whole kernel, but he said new drivers and subsystems will increasingly use Rust as Linux evolves forward. ZDNet reports:
Kroah-Hartman illustrated those pitfalls with real C bugs in the kernel, including a 15-year-old Bluetooth bug that dereferenced a pointer without checking it and a Xen bug where “we forgot to unlock” in an error path. “The majority of the bugs in the kernel are this tiny, minor stuff,” he explained. “Error conditions aren’t checked, locks aren’t forgotten, unreleased memories leak, and vulnerabilities add up over time. They crash the kernel. This is what we live with in C. This is why we don’t like it.” Kroah-Hartman argued that the “best beauty of Rust” is catching those mistakes at build time rather than in review. For example, when it comes to locking, he highlighted Rust’s locking abstractions in the kernel: “The only way you can get access to inner pointers of structures is by grabbing that lock, and releasing the lock automatically. The compiler does it, it’s guarded, the lock happens, everything’s happy. You just can’t write code to access these values…without grabbing the lock. The compiler will not let you.”

Those properties, he argued, directly remove a huge fraction of the bugs he sees: “This is going to save us those two things. First, 60% of the bugs in the kernel right there, they’re gone. Thank you.” The payoff is earlier, more automated enforcement: “If this happens at build time, not review time, don’t make me a maintainer who has to read your code [and] say, ‘Oh, then you properly check that error value. Oh, did you properly grab the locks in the right spot?’ Rust gives us that for free. This is the best thing ever.” Even if Rust vanished tomorrow, Kroah-Hartman argued, it has already forced the kernel to clean up C code and interfaces. He credited Rust’s influence outright: “We stole this from Rust. Thank you. It’s a good idea, so if Rust disappeared tomorrow, we have cleaned up the C code in the kernel so much and taken in the ideas. We thank you, you’ve made Linux better with it just by existing.”

[…] What ultimately sold a number of core maintainers, including him, on Rust was how it “makes reviewing code easier.” With CI [Continuous Integration] bots enforcing builds and Rust’s type system enforcing key invariants, maintainers can “focus on the logic” rather than resource bookkeeping: “I can care about that one function. I don’t have to worry about the rest of this stuff, because I assume that it works properly, because it was built properly.” Internally, he said, the top maintainers have already made their call on Rust’s status: “The Linux kernel maintainers, we get together every year and talk about what the processes are doing. Last year, we said the Rust experiment is over. It’s not an experiment. This is for real.” The rationale: “The people behind it are real. We trust them. We know what they’re doing. They’ve shown and put in the work to make Rust a viable language in the kernel, and we’re going to make this stick. Let’s go full speed ahead. And, as always,” he said wryly, “world domination proceeds.”
“If you never remember anything else in my talk, just remember these four words. It came from Microsoft Security many, many years ago,” Kroah-Hartman told attendees. “They realized all input is evil. You have to validate all input.”

What’s the benefit of Rust here though?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you’ve got the AI tools to tell you how you screwed up with C, why do you need Rust? Just fix what the LLM says you broke. Now you have the speed of C without the bugs. It ought to be easy to find that class of error, right?

Re:Wait, 4 words?

By Guspaz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“All input is evil”

Re:I don’t currently use Rust

By Kisai • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Just to point it out, in case people drink the kool-aid.

Just be cause “Rust does this thing better” does not mean you should always use Rust instead of C. You should always be using C when performance matters. Not Rust, not C++. If anything, C developers should be always using /Wall or /W4 and then treat all warnings as errors with /Werror . Many MANY projects out there have thousands of warnings a lot of then dealing with uninitialized memory, integer/floating point casts, and string lengths.

Realistically, string handling sucks in C because of the baggage of ANSI C, as wchar_t makes things horrible to debug.

The thing that would make C/C++ code safer from the start to implicitly check the length of variables, instead of having to pass the length.

All post-unicode languages such as Rust, Javascript and Python (not PHP or Perl) handle their strings internally as unicode, thus you don’t actually need to know the length of the string to pass to it. In C is a UTF-8 string have a BOM? Does it use Windows, Mac or Unix line endings? you have up to three additional non-printable characters when dealing with unicode. Then there is Windows which is an additional special hell because it’s wchar_t is UTF-16 in visual C but UTF-32 in GCC. Yet the vast majority of software out there only wants to deal with UTF-8.

If C and C++ natively did UTF-8, a good chunk of mistakes would not happen. Pointer nonsense not withstanding, most of the mistakes in C could probably be tracked by an AI linter and OSS projects could just fix things instead of publishing code that would fall under treating all warnings as errors. It’s the pointer stuff that trips up people who don’t understand the underlying assembly language code it would make. So people not familiar with C or ASM will constantly use variables that use the local registers rather than the ram address, and then wonder why the compiler complains about stack space.

Fun fact “the switch” statement is a heavy use of the stack space, because the compiler is unwrapping this to a series of “jump if equal” which is equal to “if” statements. This is the purpose of making functions as small and single-purpose as possible and antithesis of C++ classes. This is why you don’t use C++ in performance code.

Rust seems to aim to be “better C” but doesn’t necessarily do so since it technically runs on the C runtime. I think Rust might be fine to use in things outside of kernel space, but it seems like it might be expensive to use in the kernel/driver space.

Meanwhile, Nvidia, AMD, Razer, and Logitech are out there making “Driver” bundles that are full on chromium embedded frameworks , going in much the wrong direction. These companies have stopped caring.

Rust will bring world peace

By thesjaakspoiler • Score: 5, Funny Thread

We should allow for programming languages to be awarded the Nobel Peace Price.
If Henry Kissinger can get a Nobel Peace Price, Rust should also be able to get one because everything is better with Rust.
I’d wish that someone would have pointer out that Visual Basic doesn’t have pointers so we could have had Linux kernel support for it.

Re:I don’t currently use Rust

By swillden • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

You should always be using C when performance matters. Not Rust, not C++.

You clearly haven’t written a significant amount of Rust (or C++) and then disassembled it to examine the output.

The thing that would make C/C++ code safer from the start to implicitly check the length of variables, instead of having to pass the length.

You mean, what Rust does.

In C is a UTF-8 string have a BOM?

Is a C string even UTF-8? You have no idea. The *only* thing you know about a C string is that it has some bytes and (you hope!) a NUL terminator.

If C and C++ natively did UTF-8

You mean, what Rust does.

It’s the pointer stuff that trips up people who don’t understand the underlying assembly language code it would make.

It’s also the pointer stuff that trips up people who do understand the underlying assembly language code.

Fun fact “the switch” statement is a heavy use of the stack space, because the compiler is unwrapping this to a series of “jump if equal” which is equal to “if” statements.

Only if your compiler sucks, which hasn’t been the case for a very long time. Back in the late 80s when I started writing C, compilers already optimized switch statements into binary searches of the target space. By the early 90s I’d encountered a couple of compilers that optimized them into extremely efficient hash tables, making them both faster and more compact. In the 2020s compilers are downright wizardly at optimizing these things.

This is actually really important for Rust, because Rust’s type-safe-union enums strongly encourage heavy use of switches. Many cases that require vtable-based polymorphism in C++ (or structs of function pointers in C) end up as highly-optimized switches in Rust. You can do vtables in Rust, too, but they’re strikingly less common than in C++ and even than in many common C styles.

This is the purpose of making functions as small and single-purpose as possible and antithesis of C++ classes.

Good C++ classes use functions that are as small and single-purpose as possible. You can write crap code in any language. You can write slow code in any language.

Rust seems to aim to be “better C” but doesn’t necessarily do so since it technically runs on the C runtime.

This doesn’t follow at all. Using the C runtime doesn’t preclude being a better C, at all. The problems with C have very little to do with its runtime. C’s problems are all about the lack of bounds checking, lack of dangling pointer checking, lack of thread synchronization checking. Note that in Rust the last two things are done entirely at compile time. It’s like if "-Wall -Werror” got 1000 times smarter. Not because the compiler is smarter but because the language semantics don’t require the compiler to allow a lot of potentially bad stuff.

It is true that sometimes Rust is too restrictive, disallowing provably safe code. Just yesterday, I couldn’t convince the borrow checker that a function was safe without breaking a hashmap lookup into two steps. I actually considered using a small unsafe block to avoid the extra lookup. I decided against it, but this raises two points: First, in Rust if you need to you can always discard the protections (though note that even “unsafe” blocks are more restrictive than”-Wall -Werror”) and drop down to a C style, or even assembler if you need to. Second, and more importantly, Rust points out when you’re doing something potentially risky and forces you to think hard about it. C just lets you do it… even with -Wall -Werror.

I think Rust might be fine to use in things outside of kernel space, but it seems like it might be expensive to use in the kernel/driver space.

Rust is fine for both, though when using in the kernel, drivers or on

The AI Fight Brewing Inside the New York Times

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge:
How newsrooms should use AI — or if they should at all — has been a recurrent debate within the media industry over the last several years. Increasingly, these rules are being hammered out at the bargaining table between unions and publishers. Right now, employees at The New York Times are gearing up for a fight. Unionized staff with the Tech Guild say Times management has refused to provide the union with information related to how the company has used AI, its plans for AI use in the future, and how it will affect employees’ jobs and workflow. (The union filed an unfair labor practice charge earlier this month.) The Tech Guild, a NewsGuild of New York unit of around 700 software engineers, designers, product and project managers, and data analysts, also filed grievances saying Times management violated their collective bargaining agreement when it started using two internal AI tools that track and evaluate employee performance and activity.

[…] Both the Tech Guild and the Times Guild (which represents 1,500 editorial, ad sales, and support staff at the Times) filed unfair labor practice charges against the Times, saying that company violated labor law by refusing to respond to their requests for information around AI use at the outlet. The Times did not respond to specific questions about how it uses DX and Glean, but spokesperson Danielle Rhoades Ha said in an email that the company disagrees with the characterizations made in grievances and that it would respond as part of its “normal contractual process.” “Likewise, we will respond to this Request for Information (RFI) in due course as we’ve done with 80+ other RFIs from the Guild in recent years,” Rhoades Ha said.

The Times Guild is currently bargaining a new contract, pushing for robust protections against AI, like requirements that a human is behind any AI tool being used, that any journalism utilizing AI is transparently labeled, and that staff are compensated for AI model training deals the company might make. The Times deploys artificial intelligence tools for some reporting, like using it to parse millions of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein or scan satellite images of Gaza to try to find where Israel had dropped a specific kind of bomb. […] [Ben Harnett, a software engineer at the Times and chair of the unit’s generative AI committee] emphasizes that the unit’s position is not that AI shouldn’t ever be used, but that workers should have a say in how it’s deployed. Metrics like how many tokens an employee uses or how often they’re using AI to do their jobs create pressure to do more and incentives that don’t align with doing quality work. “It’s going to distract [you] from actually doing a good job, which is what we think the company should want,” he says.
Two of the contentious AI tools mentioned in the report are DX and Glean. DX is an engineering productivity tool that tracks a developer’s output, generative AI use, efficiency, and other related metrics. Meanwhile, Glean is an internal knowledge-search tool that indexes materials like wikis, GitHub documents, Google Docs, and emails so employees can query company information.
The concern, according to Times Tech Guild members, is that data meant to measure broader developer experience is now being applied to individuals and cited in performance or disciplinary contexts. There’s also worry that it could be used to monitor individual contributions and produce false or misleading results.

Damn Communists

By machineghost • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I am sick of these socialists and their damn unions, trying to … um … make my news more accurate! Those fricking commies!

“And then they came for me…”

By jlowery • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When the “anything for a profit” motivations of modern capitalism steamrolled over laborers of all stripes, it was “Don’t worry—we’ll retrain them and they’ll get better jobs.”

Now the white collar workers are next. Why don’t they learn a manual trade, or move to where the work is? Lazy bastards. /s

Automation has Been Eroding Journalism for Decades

By Koreantoast • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Just want to point out that automation is not new to journalism. Algorithms have been writing tons of articles for over a couple of decades now, from sports scores to earnings reports to reporting on earthquakes. LLM’s are perhaps the final straw for a journalism profession that has is on the verge of collapse from the one-two punch of the Internet and automation with CEO’s who are now experiencing AI psychosis having decided to pull the final plug on human written news articles.

Repeat and summarize …

By drnb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I am sick of these socialists and their damn unions, trying to … um … make my news more accurate! Those fricking commies!

Uncritically repeating and summarizing what one side’s spokespeople tell you is hardly “more accurate”. What used to make journalists more accurate is applying some skepticism and doing their own investigations to confirm, to uncover the truth. Not just accept what people you like say.
Frankly, can we even tell if one of these repeat and summarize stories is human or AI written?

Re:The most valuable lesson

By will4 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Just a disclosure of source documents would help.

A journalistic code of ethics where the reporters are disclosing at the media biases, source biases at the top of the article would help.

1) don’t equate individual events and blame a larger group (nadir fallacy / association fallacy)
2) don’t report opinions as science or proven facts just based on them originating in an academic journal, questionable methodology in an academic paper, academic expert’s opinions’
3) don’t equate anecdotes as news, a trend, an epidemic
4) don’t confuse a civil case loss with a criminal case conviction or use the definition of the crime as a name for the civil case
5) don’t report on the laundry list of past real or imagined historical events as grounds for a call to action / fix this crisis agenda
6) don’t parrot think tank or agenda based nonprofit ‘research’
7) don’t invent new agenda based terminology,
8) disclose the political bias, employment bias, social biases of experts quoted,
9) avoid having persons not in a demographic group write about the life experiences, issues, problems of people in the demographic group
10) don’t do the end of life, end of political career, end of business career, etc. articles with the “ten musicians (former music star) hated to work with” agenda
11) don’t repackage the book tour press package as news or report on the two or three outrageous revelations from a tell all book
12) don’t report on political investigations which have only allegations, testimony

YouTube To Automatically Detect, Label AI-Generated Videos

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YouTube will begin automatically labeling videos when its systems detect “significant” photorealistic AI use, while also making AI-content disclosures more visible below long-form videos and directly on Shorts. “We’ve heard consistently from our community that they value transparency when it comes to generative AI content,” YouTube said in a blog post. “These changes are designed to balance transparency with creator control.” Variety reports:
Under YouTube’s guidelines, creators will still be required to manually disclose when they use realistic AI. But starting this week, it also will roll out a new internal system to help identify AI-generated content. “If a creator doesn’t specify whether or not they used AI, but our systems detect significant photorealistic AI use, we will now automatically apply a label,” YouTube said.

YouTube creators who believe their content was incorrectly flagged as AI-generated can modify the disclosure status using the YouTube Studio tool. However, according to YouTube, the AI labels will “remain permanent” in some cases, including for content created using YouTube’s own AI tools (such as Veo or Dream Screen) and for content that contains C2PA metadata (based on standards from the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity) that indicates it was fully AI-generated.

In addition, YouTube is moving the disclosure label for photorealistic and meaningfully AI-altered or AI-generated content to a more prominent position. Until now, YouTube labeled AI content in a video’s expanded description. Going forward, for long-form videos, the AI label will now appear directly below the video player and above the description. For YouTube Shorts, the label will appear as an overlay on the video itself.
“The goal here is context at a glance. If it looks real but was made with AI, viewers will know immediately,” said Rene Ritchie, YouTube head of editorial and creator liaison. He added that the AI labels alone “do not affect how our videos are recommended or whether they can earn money. This is purely about giving viewers the right information at the right time.”

Alternate headline

By BadgerStork • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Youtube creates vast adversarial network to make fake video undectable

Not enough, by far.

By SvnLyrBrto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They need to block the AI slop entirely and ban the frauds posting it.

Self-serving process

By SmaryJerry • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
YouTube needs to label content as AI so they can continue to train their AI on real data only. It is completely self-serving. In another year 90% of content will be AI and it will be more effective to label the other 10% of content as ‘real’ and just assume everything else is AI.

Not trying very hard

By NewtonsLaw • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Why aren’t they putting this information alongside the thumbnail so we can totally skip AI content if we want to. Only finding out once you’ve clicked on the video and the player has loaded is stupid — being both a waste of the viewer’s time and bandwidth.

This is necessary

By MpVpRb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I sometimes watch AI generated videos and find them amusing. I don’t hate AI videos, I just want honesty.
Someone who honestly uses a tool should be honest about it.
Someone who hides their tool use is probably up to no good.