Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Slate Auto’s Radically Simple Electric Truck Starts At $24,950
  2. Meta Pauses Employee-Tracking Program Following Internal Data Leak
  3. GTA VI Is a Worrying Sign For the Future of Physical Games
  4. OpenAI Unveils First Chip As Part of Broadcom Deal
  5. Walmart’s First Nuclear Deal Shows Demand Beyond AI Data Centers
  6. Bob Iger’s Disney Wanted Apple, Twitter, and 007
  7. Boffin Claims Microsoft’s ‘Quantum Leap’ Is Invalid Due To ‘Basic Python Errors’
  8. Trump Admin Announces $17.5 Billion In Loans For 10 New Large Nuclear Reactors
  9. A 25-Year-Old Blog Looks Back At 40 Years of Computing
  10. Mushroom Behind ‘Tiny Human’ Visions Lacks Genes For Known Psychedelics
  11. Europe: The World’s Fastest-Warming Continent
  12. US AI Stock Sell-Off Shakes Markets From Wall Street To Asia
  13. 29-Year-Old Squid Proxy Bug ‘Squidbleed’ Can Leak Cleartext HTTP Requests
  14. China Reclaims Fastest Supercomputer At 2 Exaflops
  15. Wikipedia Cofounder Larry Sanger Banned From Site for ‘Canvassing’

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.

Slate Auto’s Radically Simple Electric Truck Starts At $24,950

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Slate Auto says its stripped-down electric pickup will start at $24,950 before fees, with the base model’s estimated range increased from 150 to about 205 miles. The company has started taking preorders on Wednesday. “The aggressive pricing — half the average cost of a new car in the United States — puts Slate in position to capture a share of the lowest end of the new car market, which has few gas and fewer electric options these days,” reports TechCrunch. From the report:
The price reveal comes more than a year after Slate Auto emerged from stealth. Since then, the company has been steadily detailing the extremely basic, transforming EV, which starts as a two-seater pickup truck, but can be modified into a five-seater SUV. The SUV version will start at $29,950, Slate said Wednesday. Slate has said the conversion can be done by professionals or by owners themselves. On Wednesday, it finally showed off some of the first of its “Slate University” how-to videos, which guide people through the steps for doing everything from the SUV conversion to adding headlight covers.

Everything else about the truck is bare, though it’s customizable. It has hand-crank windows, lacks an infotainment system, and all orders start with the same gray composite material, with no paint options, as Slate plans to let buyers order customizable wraps for the vehicle. That likely helps cut out a major cost center, as factory paint shops can run in the hundreds of millions of dollars. The company did not offer more details about the buying process. Slate has said it “won’t have traditional dealerships,” and plans to sell directly to customers, similar to other EV companies like Tesla, Rivian, and Lucid Motors.

Re:Pony up

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Yes, this is exactly what we wanted. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.

Note, this vehicle has all the luxury options too, they just do not come as part of packages, you can put whatever you want in it.

Decorations (wraps instead of paint)
Fancy lights
roof racks
Fancy audio gear
fancy seats
Tablet mounts to give you back that entertainment system

Re:Pony up

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

this vehicle has all the luxury options too

All would be overstating it, the “luxury items” are mostly just decorative. Electric windows, electric adjustable rearview mirrors, heated seats, heated steering wheel, smart cruise control, lane change notification/assistance, automated parking, sun roof or a whole bevy of what people might consider luxury features are not available.

But it’s not lacking in some “luxury” lighting and visual doodads that seem inspired by MTV’s Pimp My Ride though.

After having a GMC S15 in the 90’s that I loved, I was hoping for decent small electric pickup. Some amount of barebones I could handle like the tablet over an infotainment unit, but it’s a couple steps past barebones.

Chinese cars?

By ugen • Score: 3 Thread

Can we please just import Chinese cars now?

Meta Pauses Employee-Tracking Program Following Internal Data Leak

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta has paused its Model Compatibility Initiative that tracked employee mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and screen content to train AI agents, after some of its collected data became accessible to more employees than intended. Meta says it has no evidence the information was improperly accessed and will not restart the program until it is confident in its safeguards. Wired reports:
Meta rolled out the Model Compatibility Initiative (MCI) tool in April to US employees. The tool “collects computer inputs such as mouse movements, click locations and keystrokes, as well as screen content,” according to workers who have been petitioning against it over privacy, security, and personal liberty concerns. When MCI launched, employees couldn’t opt out, but that changed to a limited degree after workers protested. Meta executives have repeatedly defended the data-gathering project, saying it was necessary to train AI systems to operate computer software the way humans do and that employees were the best examples for the artificial intelligence to learn from.

On Monday, a Meta engineer issued an internal security notice stating that databases filled with information gathered by MCI had been exposed to anyone inside the company. A former employee actively involved in pushing back against MCI describes the lapse as “a mess” — and one that employees had expected would occur. “When workers raised concerns, leadership doubled down and failed to acknowledge the risks workers raised about the safety and privacy of worker and customer data,” the person says. “Leadership has clearly created an authoritarian environment where workers are no longer respected or heard.”

But after critical comments poured into internal forums on Monday expressing frustration about the security issue, Meta shocked some of its staff by pausing MCI altogether, telling WIRED about the development several hours before announcing it to employees. A few workers told WIRED they were confused in the meantime because the tool was continuing to run on their laptops. Late on Monday, Stephane Kasriel, a Meta vice president overseeing AI research, announced the pause and told staff that the security issue had been discovered on June 18 and addressed within four hours. But the initial fix didn’t stick and access to the data had to be further locked down. The issue made “some MCI-derived data” accessible to more people than intended, he wrote, without elaborating.

GTA VI Is a Worrying Sign For the Future of Physical Games

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Rockstar Games has revealed the price of Grand Theft Auto VI to be $79.99, and confirmed that the physical versions of the game won’t include a disc. Instead, they’ll contain a one-time download code when it launches November 19. “Not only is that a disappointing decision for people who like to own physical games, but given the scale of the next GTA, it also sets a bad precedent for the rest of the industry,” reports The Verge. From the report:
There are a lot of advantages to buying digital. You can start a download from your couch. You can store multiple games on one hard drive so you don’t have to get up to play something else. Storefronts like Steam or the PlayStation Store don’t run out of inventory of the newest game you’re interested in, and you can often get games at a cheaper price thanks to frequent sales.

But it’s becoming increasingly clear that digital ownership has significant disadvantages, too. If a game you don’t own digitally is removed from a storefront, whether that’s for things like licensing, artificially limited availability, or even the store eventually closing down, your only option is to hope you can find a physical version. If your account on a platform is banned, even if that ban isn’t warranted, you might be locked out of your digital library with no way to play those games unless you buy them again or hope your account gets restored. You can’t sell or trade digital games you’ve purchased, and while there are ways to share digital games, they require some work and are usually intended just for families.

It’s also much harder to preserve digital games because they only “exist” on the hard drive of a console, PC, or device they were downloaded to. This is an issue across many industries, not just console games; there are multiple examples of things like mobile games and streaming shows becoming lost for good when they don’t have a physical version. Without physical versions, you also can’t find a used version of a game at a garage sale or a local game shop.
It’s unclear whether Rockstar will ever release a physical version of the game. As for why, The Verge suspects the decision was made in part to prevent leaks; “by only being available digitally, Rockstar can ensure that GTA VI unlocks at the same exact time for everyone.”
“The digital-only choice might also indicate that the game has a massive file size that’s too big for PlayStation and Xbox game discs.”

OpenAI Unveils First Chip As Part of Broadcom Deal

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI and Broadcom have unveiled Jalapeno, OpenAI’s first custom AI chip, designed primarily to handle inference for ChatGPT and other services. It’s a major step in OpenAI’s plan to “build the full stack behind its models and products,” says OpenAI. “By designing more of the stack ourselves, we can serve more intelligence with greater efficiency and keep pushing advanced AI toward broader access.” CNBC reports:
The chip with Broadcom is an ASIC, which industry experts say is less flexible than Nvidia’s GPU, but is also less expensive and can be designed for specific AI tasks. OpenAI said that it designed the chip in nine months, and that it also crafted large parts of the computer system where it will be used.

The companies are calling the chip an “Intelligence Processor” and describe it as the first “AI accelerator” in a platform they’re building “to make advanced AI faster, more reliable, and more accessible to more people.” […] A physical sample of the new chip will be delivered to OpenAI on Wednesday. The companies said they’re aiming for initial deployment of the Jalapeno chips by the end of 2026, “expanding in the years ahead.”

Walmart’s First Nuclear Deal Shows Demand Beyond AI Data Centers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Barron’s:
Walmart is signing a long-term contract to buy nuclear power for the first time ever, a promising sign that the industry’s future is supported by more than just the AI data center boom. The retail giant agreed on Tuesday to buy power from a nuclear plant in Illinois owned by Constellation Energy for its operations in the area, including its stores and a high-tech warehouse in Illinois that stores and sorts perishable food.

Walmart will buy 176 megawatts of power from the plant over a 15-year period, or enough power to serve around 150,000 homes. The Walmart deal will allow Constellation to expand the capacity of the Illinois plant by 30 megawatts, a process known as an uprate, which can involve replacing older equipment and improving efficiency. Walmart, which has pledged to eliminate net carbon emissions from its U.S. operations by 2040, will also receive the environmental attributes associated with the nuclear energy, which generates electricity without carbon emissions.
Further reading: Trump Admin Announces $17.5 Billion In Loans For 10 New Large Nuclear Reactors

Re:Not quite immaculate conception

By Burdell • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I expect plant construction (especially lots of concrete) is a much bigger emission concern than mining the fuel (a little fuel goes a long way, although it takes a fair amount of mining and refining to get that little bit of fuel). The further down the stack you go, NOTHING is absolutely carbon-neutral (solar and wind construction require raw materials too, as does all distribution no matter the generation source), but it’s a matter of scale vs. return.

At this point, it’s not clear that the construction emissions of big nuclear makes it a net win over its expected lifetime when compared to solar/wind. And small nuclear is still mostly vapor, and not clear that it’s actually solved the scaling costs that made huge nuclear attractive in the first place. Continuing to operate the nuclear that’s already been constructed for a long time probably makes it a reasonable win (of course, if we ever get a more reasonable way to deal with the waste).

As for the water… big plants are typically built directly at water sources and manage it directly, so they aren’t really “consuming” it in the way datacenters do (where they just want to hook up to municipal water sources and outsource the management costs). Plants are restricted in output water temperature so as not to cause harm to animal/plant life downstream, and while some (depending on design) do evaporate a bunch, it’s still right there where it came from. So I don’t _think_ they have a significant impact in the way datacenters do.

2-for-one SMRs on asle twelve with coupon!

By MIPSPro • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Exactly! They are rolling back prices to three mile island! :-) In other news I remember once visiting a Wal Mart datacenter in Arkansas. Bruh..... Holy shit was it bad. They had regular PCs like fucking eMachines stacked on these plywood shelves that someone had hand built (like… with nails). So, not a server in sight. It also wasn’t a datacenter. It was an old office space they’d just stripped the ceiling tiles out of and let the HVAC treat the whole space as the plenum. Some of the tiles were still there and they’d just knocked holes through them for network cables that were strung over/using the old supports for the false ceiling. I’m surprised the place didn’t have it’s own barn cats.

Bob Iger’s Disney Wanted Apple, Twitter, and 007

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
In an exit interview with The Financial Times (paywalled), former Disney CEO Bob Iger says the company seriously considered buying Twitter, explored a potential merger with Apple, and pursued the James Bond franchise during his tenure. The Verge reports:
According to Iger, Disney came close to buying Twitter from co-founder Jack Dorsey “at a very attractive price,” sometime prior to Elon Musk buying the social media platform in 2022 and changing its name to X. Iger had plans to turn Twitter into a global distribution platform for Disney, but walked away on the morning of the deal over concerns that it would be “a horrible distraction.”

Disney was also at one point involved in early conversations regarding a potential merger with Apple, something Iger thinks would have been “truly transformational.” In the end, Iger says these conversations “never went anywhere,” and that “Apple didn’t show that much interest.” The two companies have a mixed history — Iger was an Apple board member from 2011 to 2019, and notably a driving force behind Disney acquiring Pixar in 2006, which was led by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs at the time. According to Iger, his first call with Jobs resulted in an almost immediate deal to put Disney content on the first video iPod. “All of a sudden, I’m now someone Steve likes and respects,” Iger told The Financial Times. “The old Disney that he knew was lumbering in terms of bureaucracy. And so he thought, this is a new day.”

The Pixar acquisition spurred Iger to find more companies to bring under Disney’s wing, though not every attempt was successful. “We felt unstoppable. We put together a list of acquisition targets,” said Iger. “Marvel was one, Star Wars was another, James Bond was one. We had a list and I figured let’s just tick them off and buy them all.” Iger provides no details about Disney’s attempt to buy the James Bond franchise, but we know it obviously failed — Amazon bought the 007 distribution rights when it acquired MGM in 2022, and later paid more than $1 billion to take full creative control of the franchise in February 2025.

The minnow thinks it can swallow the whale

By Vecna! • Score: 3 Thread

* Disney Market Cap: $180 billion
* Apple Market Cap: $4.32 trillion.

That’s an acquisition Bob, not a merger.

Trust

By JBMcB • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
This is the underlying problem. The CEOs don’t trust their own company. When the studio was churning out hits in the 1990s, the should have thrown everything they had at the studio team. Instead they cut the budgets and strangled wages, so half the people went to work for Dreamworks and Sony. Same thing happened with Pixar. Brad Bird (The Iron Giant, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, etc…) wanted to direct a live-action movie. Disney eventually nixed the project, so he left for a few years.

If you trust the people working for you, you pay them well and fund their projects. If you don’t trust them, you keep buying other companies hoping to fill in the creative void.

Self serving revisionism by Bob Iger ?

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 3 Thread
Framing it as entirely his personal moral epiphany is classic executive revisionism. Gets to look like a visionary who anticipated the convergence of big tech and massive content libraries.

Boffin Claims Microsoft’s ‘Quantum Leap’ Is Invalid Due To ‘Basic Python Errors’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A peer-reviewed Nature critique argues that Microsoft’s 2025 Majorana quantum-computing breakthrough — and its claim that it could enable “a truly meaningful quantum computer not in decades, as some have predicted, but in years” — is fundamentally flawed. According to Dr Henry Legg, a lecturer at the University of St Andrews, the claims were undermined by omitted data, selective plotting, and basic Python errors that concealed alternative results. Microsoft, for its part, says the bugs were minor and stands by its findings and roadmap. The Register reports:
“Last year they claimed to be years, not decades from a ‘topological quantum supercomputer,’" Legg told The Register in an email. “My feeling is that they are centuries, not decades away. If it works at all — and, based on what I have seen, the most likely scenario is that it doesn’t work.” Based on his analysis of the research Microsoft published in 2025, Legg argues that the company’s claims about finding and being able to control the elusive Majorana particle to build a topological superconductor do not withstand scrutiny.

“I demonstrate that Microsoft’s tune-up software is flawed and that coding errors resulted in incorrect statements to peer reviewers,” said Legg. “Raw data, which was omitted from the original paper, also appears to indicate Microsoft’s devices contain considerable disorder and are not compatible with the existence of a topological gap. In other words, the prerequisites for Microsoft’s claims do not appear to be met, but this was obscured because this data did not appear in the original publication.”

Essentially, Microsoft has proposed a Topological Gap Protocol (TGP) that can be used to detect the phase transition deemed to be a prerequisite for conducting quantum calculations using Majorana particles. Legg argues that based on his analysis of underlying transport data (measurements of particle change) — omitted from the original publication — Microsoft chose to focus on results that supported its thesis and ignored data that could be interpreted as a negative result. As he notes in his critique: “The TGP plotting code was set to highlight only the largest purportedly topological region.”

“The primary consequence was the omission of other regions that passed their tune-up protocol (the TGP),” said Legg. “When peer reviewers asked if other regions existed, Microsoft inaccurately stated that they had investigated the only region passing the protocol within the explored range. This was not correct.” Legg also argues that Microsoft mishandled its code. “The code antisymmetrized bias voltage based on array index rather than physical value,” his analysis says.

In other words, Microsoft’s researchers made a basic programming mistake by evaluating the array index — the number identifying a value’s position in an array — instead of the value to which the index refers. “There were two pretty basic Python programming errors that hid these alternative regions,” Legg explained. “Their plotting software was hardcoded with a filter (zbp_cluster_numbers=[1]) that forced it to display only the single largest region, concealing other successful results from their phase maps. Changing this to zbp_cluster_numbers=[1,2] shows already a second region.” Legg added: “The TGP software transformed the data by simply reversing a Python array (x[::-1]) based on its index position, ignoring the actual physical bias voltages.”

Quantum Leap is invalid?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Quick! Somebody call Scott Bakula!

“the most likely scenario is that it doesn’t work”

By gweihir • Score: 5, Informative Thread

At this time, this is the only rational stance left. There is no indication that QCs can ever scale to useful size, but a ton of indicators that they likely will not. There is not even solid proof that QCs work at all, because the longest, most complex complex calculation ever done successfully is apparently factoring 29 with a specialized algorithm for 29. That is easily in range for a conventional analog computation by non-quantum mechanisms. Hence while I think it is unlikely, the computation mechanisms that QCs rely on may still turn out to be hallucinations. Also note that even very, very, very minor deviations from the theory (and we _always_ had those in the past as soon as we had equipment to verify theory against reality precisely enough) would completely kill the QC idea. The precision required to do, say, a 128 bit calculation precisely, is unimaginable and a digital computer only reaches it by extreme measures.

Boffin

By Himmy32 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

A quick perusal of his published papers seems that boffin would even be understatement, but a well published researcher who is wholly dedicated to this field of research. And whose papers are appear to be written with well respected researchers in the field like this one and several others written with Daniel Loss.

From the Daniel Loss article:

His 1998 paper (jointly with David DiVincenzo) proposing the use of spin qubits in semiconductor quantum dots is the foundation of one of the main approaches towards the realization of a quantum computer and (as of 2025) has been cited more than 9000 times.

This doesn’t appear to be a critique that should be easily dismissed, guy clearly knows his stuff.

Re:Python ?

By HiThere • Score: 4, Informative Thread

What you don’t understand is the Python is often used as a method of invoking libraries that are written in more efficient languages. And for the layer that it handles it doesn’t introduce unacceptable inefficiencies. E.g., you wouldn’t want to do ray tracing in Python, but it’s fine for calling a library that does that.

British slang

By SeaFox • Score: 3 Thread

Apparently “boffin” is a British slang term for a scientist/engineer. I had never heard the term, and with the word being at the beginning of the headline I thought it was a person’s name. Then was confused when TFS and the Register article failed to tell me who they were.

Trump Admin Announces $17.5 Billion In Loans For 10 New Large Nuclear Reactors

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press:
The Trump administration is providing $17.5 billion to speed the development of 10 new large nuclear reactors to meet the skyrocketing power demand from massive data centers. Energy Secretary Chris Wright cited “tremendous interest” among developers of data centers that would buy the power, as well as utilities and energy companies. The nuclear plants could begin construction by 2030 and become operational in the mid-2030s, Wright and other officials said Tuesday. “This is the start,” Wright said on a call with reporters. “We’re going to move with the players that are ready to stand up and move quickly. Once that supply chain is up and running, do we think there will be dozens of these built going forward? I’d be very surprised if there were not.”

Most U.S. nuclear power plants were built between 1970 and 1990. Only two new large reactors have been built from scratch in the United States in recent decades. Those two reactors, at Georgia Power Co.‘s Plant Vogtle, were completed years late and billions of dollars over budget. The 10 new reactors will use the same design, Westinghouse’s AP1000. Wright said the Plant Vogtle project struggled because of bad planning, supply chain problems and the COVID-19 pandemic. But, he said, the reactor design is “robust and sound.”

Re:We need them, but

By Martin Blank • Score: 5, Informative Thread

We need more power, but nuclear isn’t the way anymore. I was a supporter of nuclear until around 2020, when I saw how fast solar and wind were gaining. Both have consistently shown enormous growth because they are not as specific in their land requirements, can be installed in small numbers, and the levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for them has plummeted to become profitable even without subsidies. Storage is still a challenge, but we’re seeing rapid improvements in that, too, with sodium batteries rapidly catching up in capacity.

TFA says that construction on these won’t start until at least 2030, and if they make that, it would be amazingly fast for how reactors are built these days. In that time, wind is expected to expand by almost 50 GW and solar by 40 GW. Battery storage is expected to almost quadruple in that time. By the time the reactors are built, they will be a tiny fraction of the new power generation installed and they will probably be the most expensive part of it.

Blame Japan and TBH yourselves

By oumuamua • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
There was a nuclear renaissance in progress until the Fukushima accident derailed it completely. Everyone screamed ‘Oh the horrible risk of nuclear power we don’t need it’. Yes it was bad and expensive but if you looked at it rationally and with perspective, statistically nuclear was still safer than almost every other power source. Where is Japan now? It has restarted or restarting the reactors it closed down after the accident https://www.bbc.com/news/artic…

Re:We need them, but

By SScorpio • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Your utopia didn’t turn out so well for Germany. Shutting down all their nuclear plants and going green. Only to need to pay inflated prices to import power from France’s nuclear plants.

Then there’s all the industries leaving Germany because they can’t get reliable power to operate manufacturing plants.

The sun doesn’t always shine, wind doesn’t always blow, and extended droughts can cause water to not flow. There needs to be alternative sources. And modern nuclear plants are preferable to coal and gas plants.

Re:We need them, but

By Tim the Gecko • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

if we stop using coal for power, what’re we gonna do with (bing) “1.1 trillion tons of proven coal reserves, enough to last around 133 years at current consumption levels” worldwide?

If you had a 133 year supply of cigarettes, would you feel you needed to smoke them?

Absurdly small sum of money

By shilly • Score: 4, Informative Thread

17.5bn for 10 large reactors? Construction for a large US reactor is of the order of $10 to $20bn. Operation is gonna be 100 to 300m a year. Decomissioning is another $2bn.

So this loan will cover the build costs for one or maybe two of these. And will the cost of capital be materially lower than what’s on the markets? If not, why bother? And if so, let’s all bear in mind that’s a straightforward taxpayer subsidy for the industry.

A 25-Year-Old Blog Looks Back At 40 Years of Computing

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Ancient Slashdot reader Mark Round writes:
Longtime reader here (since mid-1999 — Hot Grits! Oog the Caveman! Beowulf clusters!), and I can still remember posting back on Slashdot’s own 5th anniversary. Time’s rolled on: my own blog just turned 25, and it’s now roughly 40 years since I first sat down at a computer. So I went digging through archive.org, old backups, and a box of ZIP disks, and wrote up a long look back at four decades of computing through the one website that’s been my online home along the way.

It runs from my first 8-bit micro and a 1,200-baud modem through discovering the actual Internet at university (and burning far too many hours on Slashdot and sister sites like freshmeat.net), past gloriously pimped-out Enlightenment Linux desktops, all the way to the modern cloud-native world. Plenty of dodgy screenshots, terrible code, and fond memories of long-gone haunts like kuro5hin.org and Linux Coffee Talk along the way.

First Post!

By Mark Round • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Front page of Slashdot after 25 years, and First Post. Life goal unlocked!

Re:First Post!

By Brian Kendig • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Pah, all you kids get off my lawn.

Re:First Post!

By Known Nutter • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Frost Piss!!!

Get off my lawn

By RogueWarrior65 • Score: 3 Thread

1200 baud?! Feh. I started with a 110 baud acoustic coupler modem on a Teletype 110 that operated at a whopping 11 characters per second.

Mushroom Behind ‘Tiny Human’ Visions Lacks Genes For Known Psychedelics

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
alternative_right shares a report from ScienceAlert:
If you consumed a wild mushroom and suddenly started seeing tiny people around you, you might reasonably assume it contained a familiar psychedelic. But that does not appear to be the case with Lanmaoa asiatica, known locally as jian shou qing, a mushroom species sold in markets in Yunnan, southwestern China. When eaten undercooked, the mushroom can produce vivid visions of miniature people — not unlike Gulliver on his travels to Lilliput. To try and find out the root cause, University of Utah mycologists Colin Domnauer and Bryn Dentinger sequenced the genomes of 53 mushroom samples from across the wider Lanmaoa genus. And despite the reported hallucinations, they found no close matches to genes associated with psilocybin or ibotenic acid, two well-known mushroom hallucinogens whose biosynthetic pathways were specifically examined in the study.

“Biosynthetic gene mining of the L. asiatica genome found no close hits with any genes known in the production of mushroom psychoactive compounds,” write the researchers in their published paper. “This supports our hypothesis of the presence of a novel unidentified metabolite responsible for the unique hallucinogenic properties of L. asiatica.” […] Whatever chemical pathways are causing these effects in the brain, the responsible compound appears to be something scientists have not yet identified. […] By identifying 1,515 corresponding genes across the selected specimens, the researchers obtained a clearer answer to the question of what defines a mushroom species as part of the genus Lanmaoa. There are now 17 recognized species in the genus, including four that haven’t been identified before, two of which the researchers specifically named here: Lanmaoa fallax and Lanmaoa carbonilivor. The researchers say the Lanmaoa family and evolutionary tree can now be more fully mapped out, and some existing specimens may need to be reclassified.

What if it filters certain visible frequencies

By syntap • Score: 5, Funny Thread

revealing that the tiny people are actually there?

Ancestor worship

By Okian Warrior • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

do these substances bring out a reality not normally visable, or do they make the brain invent these things. if so where or what is the brain getting the info from ? Why do multiple people report the same things ? (suggesting external input not self generated ?

The mushrooms are almost certainly not making an invisible aspect of reality visible.

That being said, this report is very interesting from an anthropological point of view: ancestor worship.

The report doesn’t say whether the tiny people were recognized by the viewer (and I couldn’t find any references), but this effect might have been the source of ancestor worship among the people of southeast Asia, where the mushroom grows.

Ancestor worship and animism (belief that the spirits of things hang around after death) might have its roots in this sort of psychedelic experience.

This.

By Petersko • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

In my younger days, the list of psychedelics I tried was pretty lengthy. And I never had a single bad trip. Not one. I was always joked while not joking that the stereotyped hallucinations always eluded me. I wanted to see elves peeking at me from behind bushes. But no matter how deep I went - and I went 800 mcg of LSD deep - the hallucinations topped off at melty, wooshy, and emotionally bizarre and impactful. I never hallucinated specific, coherent events or individuals.

Well, here it is. I would return from a 25 year hiatus to try that.

Reality?

By jpatters • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Of course this invites the wacky hypothesis that the mushrooms enable the person eating them to perceive something that is real but hidden somehow. I propose to test this by having multiple people take it in the same time and place, and then independently produce detailed descriptions of the specific tiny people that they see. They will either match or they won’t, and then we’ll have the answer.

We must get to the bottom of this!

Re:reconstruction ?

By znrt • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

your entire perception of reality is actually a controlled hallucination. your brain literally invents reality from external stumuli: photons, waves and particles in the air, etc. mixed with your own past experiences.

substances (and other particular circumstances) can trigger connections in your brain that cause your perception to change, or even runs amok. my (uninformed) guess is that these shrooms somehow trigger areas of the brain involved in shape recognition, and human shapes in particular. there is quite a bit of medical literature about people consistently hallucinating very specific stuff.

Europe: The World’s Fastest-Warming Continent

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
fjo3 shares a report from the AFP:
The latest heatwave sweeping across Europe is a stark reminder that it is the world’s fastest-warming continent, stretching into an Arctic that is heating at an even greater pace. Britain, France, Italy and Spain have issued red alerts and health warnings for much of their territory this week as the region endures its second heat episode since May.

Here is a look at why Europe is warming faster than elsewhere: The planet as a whole is around 1.4C warmer than in preindustrial times, defined as 1850-1900. By comparison, Europe is around 2.4C hotter than the preindustrial era, according to the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. The long-term rise in global average temperatures is mainly due to greenhouse gas emissions from burning oil, gas and coal, but it varies by regions due to a combination of factors. Land warms faster than the ocean as water can absorb more heat and cool through evaporation.

Shifts in atmospheric circulation have driven more frequent and more intense heatwaves in the European summer, according to Copernicus. High-pressure systems, which bring settled weather and higher temperatures, have become more common in Europe, Copernicus director Carlo Buontempo said. […] Another major reason is geography as Europe is connected to the Arctic, which is 3.2C warmer than in preindustrial times. The region’s rising temperatures are partly due to a process known as the albedo feedback. Bright snow and ice reflect much of the sun’s heat back into space, but as they melt they reveal darker, heat-absorbing surfaces such as land and the ocean.

In other parts of Europe, areas where snow was very frequent in winter have seen this coverage shrink, exposing dark land. Stricter air quality regulations have reduced aerosol emissions since the 1980s. But tackling the pollutant had the side effect of contributing to global warming, as these tiny airborne particles have a cooling effect by reflecting sunlight and making clouds more reflective.

Right now the real temperature here …

By Qbertino • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

… in Europe is roughly 5 degrees centigrade above worst case scenarios projected for the year 2050 back in 2016. Germany will likely crack the 40 degree mark in multiple locations at the end of this week. Once again a new heat record. I personally expect this to only get more intense in the next years until perhaps the gulf stream completely shuts down.

These are cascading effects kicking in and ramping up. It wouldn’t stop if the planet went net-zero carbon tomorrow. So we’re pretty f*cked, as predicted ever since 1970. I’m curious how hard though. Guess we’ll find out soon.

Re:Hot or cold? Make your minds up!

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The UK wasn’t built to survive hot, humid weather. We need urgent reform of planning laws so that people can fix their homes with things like exterior shutters on windows. The push to install heat pumps should focus on air-to-air with cooling capability.

In Japan, where they have hot and humid months, the advice is to design your house for the summer. You will be a bit cold in winter, but that’s far better than being extremely hot and humid in the summer.

Re:Right now the real temperature here …

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
About 25 years ago, I began to take a serious interest in climatology. I started buying textbooks and reading them - and for the most part, that went smoothly, because I could easily understand the math and physics. (I struggled a bit with some of the organic chemistry, and had to spend a couple of years coming up to speed on that.) After a while, I could read all the reports and some of the papers being published, so I made my way through things like the IPCC reports — which are thousands of pages. Eventually, I got to the point where I could read almost anything published in the field — but admittedly, some of the material still takes me a long time to get through.

And the single biggest takeaway from all that work is: climatologists, as a field, have been consistently underestimating how bad things are and how bad they’re going to get. This is because they’re scientists, and all scientists are trained to be conservative in their assessments. Whereas a non-scientist might write “X proves Y”, a good scientist will write something like “X suggests that Y may be happening” or the equivalent. This approach implicitly acknowledges uncertainty and the possibility that future work will yield different results: it’s how science self-corrects over time.

This mindset is commendable: it shows intellectual honestly. But unfortunately in this particular discipline, at this particular time, it doesn’t ring the alarm bells loudly enough. We need a Samuel L. Jackson moment: “The world is on fire, mXXXXrfXXXXXrs” We need radical changes, e.g. all fossil fuel production and consumption must end. We need vast reductions in energy consumption. We need sweeping societal changes, e.g., an end to daily commuting as the norm, it should be an exception. And even if we do all of that, it may still not be enough, because this is an exponential process with a huge amount of momentum — in other words, we’re going to keep sliding up the curve for some period of time even if we do everything that we should have done decades ago.

I’ve said, for all these years, that I’m not going to live to see the hellscape that’s coming - the mass starvation, the killer megastorms, the wars over water, the refugee crises, the political, economic, and societal chaos. Now I’m not so sure.

It’s all the immigrants.

By Petersko • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I mean, they’re flooding across the borders at the same time as the temperature is rising. That’s got to be causal, right? And a lot of them are darker than most white folks. Everybody knows dark bodies retain more heat - there’s your mechanism. Albedo’s a bitch, am I right? Letting your daughter bring one into your home definitely means you need air conditioning.

The last paragraph is the most interesting.

By sabbede • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
And perhaps the greatest warning. We had a mechanism that was offsetting warming and removed it to save the environment, making things worse for the environment.

US AI Stock Sell-Off Shakes Markets From Wall Street To Asia

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
A tech sell-off shook global markets on Tuesday as attention turned away from developments in the US war with Iran and toward the future of AI companies and chipmakers that have driven stock markets to record highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq index closed 2.2% lower on Tuesday. The S&P 500 was also down by Tuesday afternoon, dropping 1.43% while the Dow remained steady. All three major US indices have hit record highs this year, riding off a rush of funding to support AI technology and infrastructure. Nasdaq is up 10% for the year, while the Dow jumped 6% so far this year, breaching past 51,000 points, and the S&P 500 is up 7.3%.

But some economists have warned that the influx of AI spending is a bubble reminiscent of the dot-com bubble that burst in the early 2000s. Seven tech companies make up 30% of the S&P 500’s value. The heavy reliance on a single industry and a few key companies has some investors wondering if it’s a matter of when, not if, there will be a burst. Those concerns have been heightened by signals from the Federal Reserve last week that it may increase interest rates, and therefore the cost of borrowing, in order to tackle rising inflation.
Alphabet fell 5% on Monday. SpaceX plunged 16%. The selloff also spread to Asia, with South Korea’s benchmark dropping 10% as SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics each lost more than 12%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 declined 3.5%.

POP!

By PhantomHarlock • Score: 5, Funny Thread

…and nothing of value was lost.

Re:The world economy destroyed,

By Black Parrot • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It’s just too big to fail.

In a free country, “too big to fail” is to big to be allowed.

B.S. Story - Insignificant Decrease

By JakFrost • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yeah the tiny little bump down is not the start of the AI bubble bursting, not just yet. The little blip on Tuesday got wiped out on Wednesday and it’s back to normal with some reshifting of investments in Asia.

Except for SpaceX which is now dropping back to its $150 opening IPO price to the public. It’s going to bounce back up but once again in insignificant single digit percentage increases which means that even with the upcoming increase just by a few percentage points, it makes no difference to retail investors since you can’t swing enough volume to actually make a reasonable profit on it.

When I was younger watching the Dow Jones industrial average hit 10,000 was a massive event. And then it hits 20,000 followed by $30,000 and now it’s at 51, 000. So if I took the money that I had when I was younger and working and saving money and just left it invested in that index? Or just a total stock index? Or even a technology index? I could have retired by now but that money got used on life and other things and and it didn’t stay invested. So compound interest and all the growth in the last few decades didn’t happen.

Re:The world economy destroyed,

By dfghjk • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It would be a good start, but not worth it unless Musk and Thiel are also ruined.

Re:POP!

By HeadSoft • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

This follows the late-90s script perfectly. The market sell-off doesn’t mean AI is dead, it just means the phase where VCs throw a hundred million bucks at any pitch deck with the words large language model is finally wrapping up.

When the dot-com bubble burst, the internet didn’t vanish. It just stopped being this weird, optimistic playground and matured into a hyper-monetized corporate utility. We survived the Pets.com collapse only to end up with tracking cookies, paywalls, and SEO-optimized garbage.

That is exactly the worse place we are heading toward with AI.

The financial bubble popping won’t stop the tech itself. It just pivots the industry from wow look what this can do to how do we squeeze every fractional cent of efficiency out of this to satisfy shareholders. Get ready for the grind era of AI.

First, the VC-subsidized honeymoon is over, so say goodbye to useful free tiers. Second, AI features are going to be aggressively baked into every piece of software you already use just to justify a thirty percent subscription price hike. Third, the web is already getting flooded with cheap AI content farm filler meant to farm ad clicks, making actual search even more useless. And finally, companies are still going to try replacing human workflows with good enough automated systems to cut overhead, even if the quality plummets.

The tech is going to become ubiquitous, invisible, and deeply annoying. We are leaving the fun hype phase and entering the mundane, extraction-focused corporate integration phase. Welcome to the new normal.

29-Year-Old Squid Proxy Bug ‘Squidbleed’ Can Leak Cleartext HTTP Requests

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A 29-year-old bug in the Squid web proxy, dubbed Squidbleed and tracked as CVE-2026-47729, can let an authorized proxy user retrieve fragments of another user’s cleartext HTTP requests, including credentials and session tokens. The security researcher who reported the flaw credited Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview for the discovery. The Hacker News reports:
Squid describes this as an attack by a trusted client: someone already permitted to use the proxy, not any random host on the internet. That matches Squid’s usual home, shared networks like schools, offices, and public Wi-Fi. In those setups, the attacker is just another user of the same proxy. The leak also only reaches traffic that Squid can read. Normal HTTPS rides an opaque CONNECT tunnel, so Squid never sees inside it; the exposed traffic is cleartext HTTP, plus TLS-terminating setups where Squid decrypts and inspects. The attacker also needs the proxy to reach an FTP server they control on port 21. Both FTP and that port are on by default.

[…] If you patch, verify the fix, not just the version. Confirm the guard is in FtpGateway.cc, or check your distribution’s backport, since distros ship their own builds (Debian packages Squid 5.7). The public thread is still inconsistent: maintainer Amos Jeffries first said Squid 7.6 carried the fix, then corrected that to 7.7, and on June 22 Debian’s Salvatore Bonaccorso noted the referenced commit looks like it is already in 7.6. The fix is small, a null-terminator check before the vulnerable strchr calls, merged to the development branch in April and v7 in May. Squid 7.6 does separately patch CVE-2026-50012, an unrelated cache_digest heap overflow.

The cleaner move is the one the researchers recommend anyway: turn FTP off. Chromium dropped FTP years ago, and most networks carry almost none of it, so disabling it removes this attack surface for free, whatever build you run. The risk is real but bounded. SUSE rates it moderate, CVSS 6.5, and the vector explains the score: the attacker needs proxy access (low privileges), and the only impact is confidentiality, nothing on integrity or availability.

TFS left out that Mythos AI hepled uncover the bug

By williamyf • Score: 3 Thread

Two things can be true at the same time.

Yes, is true that AI is a bubble, and is over-hyped.
Yet, is also true that AI has an important and valuable role to play in software development.

But you do not have to trust me, as I am some internet rando, instead, trust trustworthy (redundancy intended) people like:

Linus Torvalds:

On the positive side, he framed AI-discovered bugs as “short-term pain” with long-term benefits: “When AI finds a bug in any source code… long term is you found a bug, we fixed it, that the end result is better for it.” After all, he continued, “I think finding bugs is great, because the real problem is all the bugs you didn’t find…”

https://linux.slashdot.org/sto…

Greg K-H:

It’s not just Linux, he continued. “All open source projects have real reports that are made with AI, but they’re good, and they’re real.” Security teams across major open source projects talk informally and frequently, he noted, and everyone is seeing the same shift. “All open source security teams are hitting this right now....”

For now, AI is showing up more as a reviewer and assistant than as a full author of Linux kernel code, but that line is starting to blur. Kroah-Hartman has already done his own experiments with AI-generated patches. “I did a really stupid prompt,” he recounted. “I said, ‘Give me this,’ and it spit out 60: ‘Here’s 60 problems I found, and here’s the fixes for them.’ About one-third were wrong, but they still pointed out a relatively real problem, and two-thirds of the patches were right.” Mind you, those working patches still needed human cleanup, better changelogs, and integration work, but they were far from useless. “The tools are good,” he said. “We can’t ignore this stuff. It’s coming up, and it’s getting better....” [H]e said that for “simple little error conditions, properly detecting error conditions,” AI could already generate dozens of usable patches today.

https://linux.slashdot.org/sto…

The Firefox team:

We view this as clear evidence that large-scale, AI-assisted analysis is a powerful new addition in security engineers’ toolbox. Firefox has undergone some of the most extensive fuzzing, static analysis, and regular security review over decades. Despite this, the model was able to reveal many previously unknown bugs. This is analogous to the early days of fuzzing; there is likely a substantial backlog of now-discoverable bugs across widely deployed software.

https://news.slashdot.org/stor…

Please also notice that the source of the links and its comunity is not particularly AI friendly, so… … So, again, two things can be true at the same time…

Re:TFS left out that Mythos AI hepled uncover the

By JoshuaZ • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Huh? Summary says explicitly “The security researcher who reported the flaw credited Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview for the discovery” so where are you getting that the summary didn’t note this?

China Reclaims Fastest Supercomputer At 2 Exaflops

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader hackingbear shares a report from TOP500:
The 67th edition of the TOP500 list of the world’s most powerful supercomputers was announced today at the ISC 2026 conference in Hamburg, Germany. LineShine, a previously unlisted system installed in China, debuts at No. 1, displacing El Capitan as the world’s most powerful supercomputer as measured by the High Performance Linpack (HPL) benchmark. LineShine achieved 2.198 Exaflop/s on HPL — about 80 percent of its 2.736 Exaflop/s theoretical peak — making it the first system on the TOP500 to exceed two exaflops of sustained double-precision performance using CPUs only.

Installed at the National Supercomputing Centre in Shenzhen (NSCS) and built by the Shenzhen Cloud Computing Center, the system is based on a custom Chinese processor and the “LingKun” platform: 13.79 million cores across 304-core LX2 processors running at 1.55 GHz, linked by the proprietary LingQi interconnect and running Kylin OS. LineShine draws approximately 42.2 megawatts of power, for an efficiency of 52.07 Gigaflops/Watt. Its debut marks the first time since 2017 that a Chinese system has led the TOP500, and it also takes over the No. 1 position on the HPCG ranking with 22.00 HPCG-Petaflop/s. On the HPL-MxP mixed-precision benchmark, LineShine reached 7.92 Exaflop/s for fourth place, a comparatively modest 3.6x speedup over its HPL score that points to a CPU-only design without dedicated low-precision accelerators.
While impressive, “the results may say more about Beijing’s desire to show self-sufficiency in computing systems than its standing in the global AI race,” reports Reuters.
Reuters interviewed tech and policy experts who said that the results “do not mean that China has the world’s fastest computer for AI work because of changes in the computing industry in recent years and the methods used to compile the list.” The reports notes that LineShine “ranked fourth on a benchmark test designed to simulate computing work that is more similar to AI.”

Jimmy Goodrich, a senior fellow at the University of California’s Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation, said: “If the hyperscalers submitted their systems, this ‘world’s fastest’ would not crack the top five.” Addison Snell, CEO of Intersect360 Research, a firm that focuses on supercomputers, added: “I’m not surprised it’s the number one system. What I’m surprised by is that they submitted it and want recognition for it.”

US water cooled super computer

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Funny Thread

The obvious choice is to build a super computer under the reflecting pool. Using the amazing pumps and clean water to provide algae-free computing and beating both China and Russia. USA USA USA

Thank you for your attention in this matter.

Chinese Tech

By sit1963nz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Seems like China as not as dependant on US technology as the US thought

Re:Shockingly powered by…

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Congrats on 15 year old propaganda. Today they can build better quality cars faster and cheaper. And before you open your yap about safety, these vehicles pass EU safety standards which are more stringent than what the USA requires.

Re: Yawn

By arglebargle_xiv • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Yup. If it hadn’t been for Trump’s idiotic sanctions it’d be a Chinese computer made with US chips and money going to US companies. The PRC should give him some sort of science innovation award for the huge boost he’s given their domestic chip industry.

Re:Chinese Tech

By excelsior_gr • Score: 5, Informative Thread
“LineShine uses semi-custom 304-core LX2 processors based on the Armv9 instruction set architecture running at 1.55GHz. The LX2 appears to have been co-designed with China’s National Supercomputing Center and Huawei, with 40,960 chips deployed across 92 cabinets. It has a total of 13,789,440 cores.” From: https://www.datacenterdynamics…

Wikipedia Cofounder Larry Sanger Banned From Site for ‘Canvassing’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Wikipedia cofounder Larry Sanger has been indefinitely banned from editing the site after editors concluded that he violated its canvassing rules, “or in other words, calling on his followers off platform in order to influence Wikipedia’s content,” reports 404 Media. Sanger says the ban proves Wikipedia suppresses ideological diversity, while editors argue he was trying to mobilize an outside audience to influence internal decisions and had ignored an earlier warning. From the report:
The discussion that led to the decision to ban Sanger concluded with what an editor called a “clear consensus” to ban Sanger. “There is general agreement among participants that he has engaged in off-wiki canvassing and is not here to constructively build the encyclopedia,” the editor said in a note closing the discussion. “There is also a significant concern shared by many editors that his actions constitute calls for outing.”

While Sanger has been railing about bias on Wikipedia for years, the specific issue here is around his WikiProject Intellectual Diversity. WikiProjects are group efforts among Wikipedia volunteers to deal with certain issues on the site. […] Sanger’s WikiProject Intellectual Diversity, as its name implies, aims to bring more intellectual diversity to the site, mostly meaning more right-leaning perspectives. Sanger’s WikiProject Intellectual Diversity and its goals alone do not merit a ban according to Wikipedia’s policies. The problem, according to Wikipedia editors, is that during the discussion about whether to allow WikiProject Intellectual Diversity to become an official WikiProject, Sanger invited his 91,000 followers on X to influence that discussion.

Discussions about potential bans are supposed to remain open for at least 72 hours. While consensus that Sanger had violated Wikipedia policies was clear, Sanger was banned at some point before that deadline. He was then briefly unbanned, and then again indefinitely banned once 72 hours had elapsed and the discussion about the ban closed. “Wikipedia has become more of a mob-rule anarchy than ever,” Sanger said in a statement sent to me by a spokesperson. “In the kangaroo court in which a mob ousted me, Wikipedia’s administrators showed that they don’t appear to value details like formal charges, a designated prosecutor, basic decorum, distinction between prosecution and judge, dispassionate adjudication, and so forth. They have no proper system other than triggering a mob to selectively enforce their hodgepodge of vague rules.”

“Now that same mob has blocked me for trying to bring an intellectually diverse group of thinkers and editors to the site,” Sanger continued. “Subscribing to their groupthink is now an official requirement of being a member in good standing. Something must change, and now. I only wonder if the system as it currently stands can even allow the discourse necessary to fix the system.”

Re: Sanger’s Wikipedia page

By jddj • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Couple-three answers:

1. No, of course not.

2. More and more it describes where Republicans are being let by the nose, away from traditional conservative topics, which _certainly should have a place in any informed and putatively neutral discussion. Why the right has turned to bullshit sauce lately is beyond me. They used to have ideas worth discussing. Not just lies, hate and bigotry. Look at the leaders. They’re flacking this.

3. These lunatic topics (including climate change denial, which someone else was kind enough to point out) are what’s being excluded when someone plays the “left-wing-bias” tune. For people making this noise “left-wing-bias” is stiff that looks like factual science-backed fairly neutral reporting. Y’know, like we used to have before the world went nuts.

Re:The Hive mind

By sg_oneill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you look at the climate change denial page you can see the hive mind in action.

Seems pretty factual and unbiased to me?

People keep thinking truth and science should be “balanced” and “fair” , but reality doesn’t work by that. A scientific truth doesn’t have sides and it doesnt function by debate. A thing is true or it isn’t, and while the scientific process is a fundamentally statistical beast, its always been a process of pushing the knowledge curve against well defined asympotes. Its never had an obligation to pay attention to the opinions of the illeducated or dishonest. Because science doesnt deal with opinions, it deals with experiments and results.

Debates are for social media not scientific discourse. Sure there are robust exchanges of conflicting papers and studies where uncertainty exists, but it bears no resemblance to the shouty name calling and exchange of thought-terminating cliches that dominate social media. Science doesnt debate, and neither does wikipedia. The truth is not democratic.

Re: Don’t jump to conclusions

By martin-boundary • Score: 5, Informative Thread
“Fox News” isn’t about having a different approach. It’s about artificially equalizing bullshit extreme viewpoints with mainstream educated viewpoints. American media (and American viewers) have suffered from this policy for decades now. It’s why debates about flat earth, climate change, evolution etc exist endemically in that country.

Re: Don’t jump to conclusions

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It isn’t “bad mouthing” an ideology to clearly indicate the consistent ideological association of that ideology with state-sponsored genocide.

Yet another person doesn’t know what Socialism is. May I suggest reading the Wikipedia entry instead of Fox News?

Re: Don’t jump to conclusions

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The rest of the planet operates on socialist policies like healthcare and better protections for workers and new families. That fucking terrifies republicans.