Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. IBM Says It Can Fit Nearly 100 Billion Transistors On a Chip
  2. Scientists Think Neptune and Uranus May Not Be the Ice Giants We Imagined
  3. Trump-Shuttered Climate Change Site Now Back Online In Nonprofit Hands
  4. Microsoft Slammed for Building Copyright-Infringing Supercomputer for OpenAI in New Court Filing
  5. Spain-Backed Fund Joins FOSSA’s Sovereign Satellite Communications Push
  6. China’s AI Matches Anthropic in Cybersecurity, Causing Worry Over US Restrictions
  7. Are Checks Sent Through the Mail Vulnerable to Theft?
  8. US Agency Cancels Contract For Warrantless Tracking of Mobile Devices
  9. Students Around the World are Using AI-Powered Smart Glasses to Cheat on Tests
  10. ‘Supergirl’ Movie Criticized for Script, Poor Visual Effects
  11. Developer AI Token Costs Could Exceed Their Salaries in Two Years
  12. An Amazon Seller Says They Were Offered a Way to Bribe an Amazon Employee
  13. IBM is Getting Ready to Scale Quantum Computing
  14. Renewable Energy Just Hit 30% of America’s Electricity Generation
  15. How a Seemingly Harmless Image Can Jailbreak Vision-Language AI Models

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.

IBM Says It Can Fit Nearly 100 Billion Transistors On a Chip

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
IBM has unveiled “what it says is the world’s first sub-1-nanometer chip technology,” reports ZDNet, “designed to pack nearly 100 billion transistors on a fingernail-size die, roughly doubling the density of IBM’s earlier 2-nm test chip, first shown in 2021… Today, the smallest, most powerful chips top out at about 80 billion transistors.”
At the heart of the announcement is NanoStack. This is a three-dimensional, nanosheet-based transistor design that scales vertically, or along the z-axis, by stacking and staggering CMOS devices. Unlike today’s nanosheet architectures, which IBM also pioneered and which are being adopted by leading foundries at 3 nm and 2 nm, NanoStack bonds two nanosheet transistors into a single vertical structure, with each tier optimized independently and contacted from opposite sides. Each transistor in the demonstrated structure uses three sub-5 nm-thick nanosheets, about “15 silicon atoms” across, separated by roughly 9 nm spacers. Two such devices are then bonded vertically using an ultra-thin dielectric process IBM describes as a key innovation. Because the top and bottom devices can use different channel materials, dielectrics, and metals, IBM argues NanoStack is less a single trick and more a transistor platform that can be extended through multiple generations: 7 angstrom (Å), 5 Å, 3 Å, and potentially down to 1 Å in its internal roadmap.

An angstrom, by the by, is one ten-billionth of a meter. In terms of chips, an angstrom is a tenth of a nanometer. “This is the world’s first sub-1 nanometer chip technology with a new transistor architecture,” said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research and IBM Fellow, during a press briefing. “We’re not just making smaller transistors, we’re reinventing how chips are built to deliver dramatically more power and energy efficiency....” Based on internal benchmarking against its 2 nm node, the company said its new chips will deliver up to 50% higher performance at the same power, or up to 70% lower power for the same performance. Big Blue also highlighted a 40% improvement in the scaling of static random-access memory (SRAM) cell area relative to its 2 nm technology.

This is a change IBM described as a “step the industry hasn’t seen in over a decade” and one that could be particularly important for AI accelerators that live or die on on-chip memory bandwidth… According to Huiming Bu, IBM’s VP of silicon technology R&D, NanoStack is a new paradigm. It’s moving chips to scaling fully into three dimensions and giving the industry at least “another decade” of logic advances as it crosses from nanometers into angstroms… The 40% SRAM density bump could also help architects push caches and on-die memory closer to compute units, cutting data movement overhead in training and inference workloads.
IBM sees a path to production use “in as early as the next 5 years”, according to the article, and “expects NanoStack to eventually underpin CPUs, GPUs, mobile SoCs, and SRAM arrays.”

IBM’s VP of silicon technology R&D says the new innovation “can improve performance by 50% compared to the best available chip today, and at the same time can reduce power by 70%.”

Amazing if it works

By DeanonymizedCoward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

While I like to come here and rant about stupidity and enshittification, this story gives me a moment to reflect on the amazing achievements we’ve made as a species. We long ago blew through the wavelengths of visible light, and are now encroaching on X-rays and approaching the sizes of some of the larger atoms with manufactured, active structures. Impressive.

Using Z

By symbolset • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The angstrom scale business is marketing fluff to make the density increase understandable to consumers. But this is one of the developments leveraging the Z dimension that are legitimate progress. The Z dimension gives more than just the same chip folded like origami. The net distance traveled by a signal in a cycle can be reduced, which yields massive improvement in performance without additional cost of power/heat.

IBM has been making big promises

By hcs_$reboot • Score: 3 Thread
IBM has been making big promises about semiconductors, quantum computing, and other technologies for years.
It’s a good way to keep the stock price elevated*.
But what has IBM actually delivered in any of these areas in recent years?

*like Sam Altman and AGI for instance

Um, what?

By CEC-P • Score: 3 Thread
IBM sold off its semiconductor business in 2014 and does not produce any chips themselves of any kind at all. They don’t even make their own qubits. What they likely meant to say was that TSMC found a way to make 1nk chips or whatever ridiculous claim they’re making that almost definitely isn’t true.

Re:IBM has been making big promises

By Tailhook • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

But what has IBM actually delivered in any of these areas in recent years?

A great deal. IBM licenses, partners and consults with semiconductor manufacturers globally, and runs a thriving IP business from their huge R&D facility in Albany, NY. Samsung, Rapidus, AMD, ST, SMIC and others are all paying for IBM tech in recent deals. GlobalFoundries bought out IBM Microelectronics for IBM’s 300mm tech. IBM is among the most prolific patent filers in the world.

The real story here is this: ASML has a new machine for a new process node. ASML is obligated to perform much of their R&D in the US due to strict export and technology sharing agreements with the US government. IBM operates huge, world class R&D lab in Albany, heavily subsidized by the state and US government. The new process that this story is about is really IBM working as an R&D partner with ASML to refine the process and get it ready for commercial operation.

In a few years, when they get the yields to something plausible, ASML customers will buy the new machines, and IBM will be in the room, taking their cut for IP, consulting, support etc.

Scientists Think Neptune and Uranus May Not Be the Ice Giants We Imagined

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The planets Neptune and Uranus may be better described as “magma-ocean giants” rather than “ice giants,” according to a team of researchers from the University of California. Gizmodo reports:
While the Voyager flyby confirmed the planets’ classification as ice giants… [a]s the least explored planets in the solar system, the two planets have never been thoroughly investigated. Therefore, scientists aren’t sure where the planets originally formed in the early solar system or the reason for their wildly chaotic magnetic fields. A long-standing hypothesis suggests that both worlds have a hydrogen/helium atmosphere that covers a vast mantle of ices, made primarily of water, ammonia, and methane, with a rocky core. The new study, however, notes that the three-layer model of an ice giant’s interior structure is not the only way to explain the properties of the two planets.

The researchers also point out that objects found in the Kuiper Belt, which are thought to preserve evidence of the material in the outer Solar System where Uranus and Neptune formed, are primarily composed of rock rather than ice. For the recent study, the researchers simulated different models for the interior processes and composition of Uranus and Neptune. The model that best fits Uranus’s and Neptune’s different properties suggests the two planets have a well-mixed magma ocean with dissolved hydrogen at the bottom and a hydrogen-dominated envelope at the top. The model suggests that at high pressures, hydrogen gas can dissolve into magma, forming a well-mixed fluid. This mixing might help explain Uranus’s and Neptune’s density, which has traditionally been interpreted as evidence for an ice-rich interior.
The article notes that the theory “could also help scientists understand the interior structure of sub-Neptune planets in the Milky Way, which have thus far remained a mystery.”

Uranus

By BladeMelbourne • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Uranus is filled with gas - I refuse to believe otherwise.

Re:Uranus

By hcs_$reboot • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The only way to know for sure is to explore Uranus thoroughly.

Trump-Shuttered Climate Change Site Now Back Online In Nonprofit Hands

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Donald Trump shuttered the web site Climate.gov in 2025, cutting off public access to climate information from America’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

But “former members of the site’s team have brought much of it back at a new domain,” reports The Register:
“Trusted climate information should not disappear when politics change,” Climate.us managing director Rebecca Lindsey said of the new platform in a press release. Lindsey, who previously served as the Climate.gov program manager and lead editor, told The Register in an email that she and one of the web developers responsible for the site were the first to be caught up in government purges when DOGE swept through the department in late February 2025… Created in cooperation with sustainability nonprofit accelerator Multiplier, Climate.us aims to be an independent alternative to its old .gov, and many of the former NOAA crew behind the previous website have teamed up for the new initiative to “keep climate information accurate, accessible, scientifically rigorous, and useful for the people who rely on it.”

Climate.gov, which now redirects to a NOAA page about climate but which hosts none of the data the shuttered site used to contain, was taken offline in July 2025 following a Trump executive order prioritizing “gold standard science....” arguing that prior climate science models relied on worst-case scenarios, which somehow meant the public availability of 15 years of climate data and reporting ought to change…

All of the content that was purged from the .gov is now back, along with blogs from experts, climate status reports, maps and data pathways, and national assessments of climate change as well. Lindsey told us that rapidly changing political winds have led her to believe that the government isn’t the right place for that mission to continue, and that she would have concerns about returning the site to federal management if a future administration changed its position on climate change… Lindsey said that the Climate.us team will continue with the same mission it had before the Trump administration attempted to quash it: Getting climate science in front of the public in a manner that’s understandable so they can make their own decisions about how to respond.

Re:Probably for the better in the long run

By evanh • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What are they trying to do? It seems like to me that they want a catastrophe on the presumption that they’ll end up on top. It’s another variant of “might-is-right.” It fits the war mongering mentality. Take what can be taken, stab em’ in the back, generally being a cunt of a person. Black heart syndrome.

Re:Convenient

By vivian • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The war in Iran was the direct reason I decided to maximise the system I could put on my new roof - and oversize the battery. I was expecting oil prices and energy costs to go high and stay high.

I ended up installing 10kw of 23% efficient solar panels was all I could fit on the approximately 100sqm north side of my roof. They are paired with a FoxESS 9.9kw single phase inverter and a 48kwh stack of Fox CQ7 batteries.

I might have slightly oversized on the batteries but over the last three weeks since it was installed, including rainy and cloudy days I have been 98% energy independent (the inverter always draws a little power from the grid) while exporting 15 to about 34kwh a day.

A 25kwh battery would probably do just as well for home power most days, though obviously with less energy arbitrage capacity.

At 15k AUD for the whole setup and warrantied stored power throughput of 178 MWh that will work out to about 6c/kwh for any stored solar power power I am using from the battery, so if the grid export price is significantly above that its worth exporting excess power and turning a profit, to help cover the electricity providers fixed connection fees.
Its the beginning of “winter” here now (where the temperature plunges to 16 centigrade at night and I sometimes even have to wear a light sweater.
In Summer I’m going to be drowning in excess power, even with my AC cranked because the house is pretty well insulated.

It really is possible to use renewables to completely cover your energy needs with a modest up front investment (esp. compared to the overall cost of a house) , and it’s only going to get cheaper and more environmentally friendly as sodium ion batteries ramp up in production.

My next car will be electric or plugin hybrid for sure.

Re:Probably for the better in the long run

By Barsteward • Score: 5, Informative Thread
As CO2 stays in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, lets have a look at the cumulative emissions since 1750 Oh look, USA at the top with Europe 2nd and China 3rd.

Re:Probably for the better in the long run

By Barsteward • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
China population:- 1,412,914,089
USA population:- 349,035,494
So China is just over 4 times the size of USA

China emissions:- 13,124,727,993
USA emissions:- 4,632,164,876
That makes China’s emissions just below 3 times as bad - so who is really the more polluting especially when China is making all the stuff Westerners buy?

Re:The Working Class Ruin Everything

By F.Ultra • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Taxpayer-Funded Travel: Data from OpenSecrets has shown that Republican congressional offices have spent more on taxpayer-funded travel than Democrats in recent years

Privately Funded Travel: Tracking by LegiStorm indicates that Republican members of Congress often outpace Democrats in accepting privately sponsored trips and travel expenses.

So you lied there, and then you lied to you daughter by pretending that the Southern Strategy never happened…

Microsoft Slammed for Building Copyright-Infringing Supercomputer for OpenAI in New Court Filing

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The New York Times alleges Microsoft actively encouraged OpenAI to steal its copyrighted work, reports Ars Technica, citing a new (and heavily redacted) court filing Thursday:
NYT’s motion comes after the [U.S.] Supreme Court sided with Cox Communications in a case where Sony tried and failed to claim that Cox was contributing to music piracy as an Internet service provider, which set a new standard for contributory infringement. Moving forward, plaintiffs will have to prove that parties intentionally acted to induce illegal conduct. Recognizing that the legal precedent has changed, the NYT now wants to amend its complaint to align its contributory infringement claim against Microsoft with that new standard… A Microsoft spokesperson told Ars that the company views the amended complaint as “a last-ditch effort by the plaintiff to save its claim from unfavorable precedent set in other recent rulings…”

The updated complaint seeks to specify that [Microsoft’s] supercomputer was tailor-made to help OpenAI infringe and allege that it was built for the explicit purpose of training AI on copyrighted works without permission. And as the NYT alleged, its articles were more heavily weighted by this system, as both firms hoped to train models on the highest-quality journalism possible, so that level of writing could be confidently mimicked in outputs. By building this “unusually complex” machine, Microsoft not only helped select the works that were infringed but also provided a means to seize copyrighted works without permission, the NYT alleged. “Microsoft specifically designed it for the purpose of using essentially the whole Internet — curated to disproportionately feature Times Works — to train the most capable LLM in history,” the NYT alleged… Similarly as problematic for the NYT are hallucinations where Microsoft and OpenAI models falsely cite the NYT for content that they never published… “Users who ask a search engine what The Times has written on a subject should be provided with neither an unauthorized copy nor an inaccurate forgery of a Times article, but a link to the article itself,” the NYT alleged…

In a statement provided to Ars, OpenAI spokesperson Drew Pusateri reiterated the AI firm’s often-repeated claims that AI training on copyrighted works is indisputably fair use… OpenAI has argued that “ChatGPT is not a substitute for a Times subscription,” the NYT reported, partly because “they transformed the material for a different use.”
An OpenAI spokesperson told Ars Technica that OpenAI’s models “empower innovation,” while a New York Times spokesperson insisted that Microsoft “actively encouraged OpenAI to steal our copyrighted works… [O]ur core claims remain the same from the day we filed this lawsuit — that Microsoft and OpenAI stole millions of The Times’s copyrighted works to compete with our products and illegally enrich themselves.”

The article speculates that the case’s most extreme outcome “could require OpenAI and Microsoft to wipe models and start over. The NYT has also asked for permanent injunctive relief to prevent future infringement, as well as extensive damages…”

Re:The suit is nonsense

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Training an AI is exactly the same as training a human mind

I dunno about that… for one thing, most humans don’t confidently spout nonsense unless alcohol is involved.

My general patience and good will is gone

By BitterEpic • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I do not have any faith in the companies of Silicon Valley to have the greater good in mind anymore. It’s all about the money so this doesn’t surprise me anymore.

Move fast and break things as progressively transitioned into fuck with people and don’t give them to a choice to opt out. This ranges from robot-taxis blocking roads to scooters littering streets to AI glasses bringing surveillance so your data can be sold without your consent. Nope, you can’t use money anymore so that your previous purchases can be used to sell targeted advertising spots with Google pay and Apple pay.

Silicon Valley needs some more regulation. I no longer give a shit about what new hype machine that have.

PSA; Stop giving money to homeless subscription pan handling. When you pay for a subscription, you just increase the behavior and with it more pan handling. The prices for hardware have gone up because of the fucktards who keep giving money to ChatGPT, Gemini etc. WE WHO DO NOT BUY THESE STUPID SERVICES have to deal with the increased prices because of idiots unable to show restraint. Good job fucking us over chumps.

Re:Genie is not going back in the bottle

By SoftwareArtist • Score: 5, Informative Thread

A court could absolutely order them to throw out a model. Perhaps you don’t think it’s likely to happen, but the law doesn’t depend on what you think is likely. The court could also issue an injunction barring them from training future models on copyrighted material without permission. They also could grant damages.

Consider that Anthropic settled a similar case for $1.5 billion, which shows they thought they might lose a lot more if the case went to trial.

Possession is 9/10ths of the law

By Slashythenkilly • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
To corporations with morally questionable officers, illegal business dealings are simply a calculated risk that can be written off in the loss column. It doesnt matter if its illegal dumping, stealing intellectual information, skirting import or labor laws, or sickening/killing a percentage its customers. If the truth is about to be uncovered, a corporate attorney hands over a check, a paper admitting no fault, and the recipient typically signs a non-disclosure agreement. Nobody goes to jail for or is accountable for the decisions made behind a desk because if they did, this bullshit would slow down or stop.

Crap in, crap out

By butt0nm4n • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Wild off the cuff guess stat. 80% of content being consumed by LLM is untrustworthy, opinion, wrong, brain farts. Just like what I am typing here.

Anyone who believes LLM will lead to Gen AI doesn’t get the tech or has an incomplete definition of Gen AI. We really need a new Turing test, we kinda cheated the test with LLM, made a parrot instead of a person.

The principal flaw of LLM AI as a business is that producing content wasn’t a problem we needed to solve. We were drowning in the stuff already.

LLMs give a great search and summary feature, but I don’t see a way to monetise that with ads like google does without making the results even more dubious. For a subscription model, in my enterprise take up of co-pilot is low, don’t know why, If I use my own experience, I’ve made apps I was told there was a business case for that turned out be very niche, low usage but high value, very specialist tools.

I work with a lot of ambitious go getters, who would I promote? The one who leans on AI to produce some samey looking dross, or the one who can innovate and communicate independently, think on their feet, surprise me and do more with less. If I’ve got a leader who is dependent on AI, that is a weak, compromised leader.

Then there is a phenomenal trust issue, many just don’t trust big tech with sensitive data, and who can blame them, AI companies have no respect for copyright or IP. And the hidden cost, after paying the sky high subs, the cost of your employees labour validating AI answers and patching up flaky results improving the AI product for your competition too. And your employees getting dumber the more they use it.

Nope.

I don’t doubt there are niche specialist applications to be exploited in legal and tech to get productivity and quality gains, but specialise and grow your own, don’t help your competition by improving the general models . Don’t end up dependent on a supplier, look how cloud is biting companies in the ass with fees. Once they get you hooked, they jack up the price. Bad strategy, you don’t need more parasites.

Spain-Backed Fund Joins FOSSA’s Sovereign Satellite Communications Push

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Spanish startup FOSSA Systems “has raised about $10.5 million to expand its connectivity constellation,” reports Space News, noting some funding is backed by Spain’s government:
The support from the Spanish Society for Technological Transformation (SETT) comes a year after the fund injected 14 million euros into Spain’s Sateliot , which is also developing a satellite connectivity network with security and defense applications. Spanish private investment firm Kibo Ventures led FOSSA’s funding round, the six-year-old venture announced June 24, bringing its total raised to date to nearly 20 million euros.

The proceeds will help fuel FOSSA’s push beyond the tiny picosatellites it once used to connect low-power monitoring devices toward larger cubesats in low Earth orbit, enabling additional sovereign communications and space-based intelligence capabilities… The company’s funding round follows a wave of investments this year in European ventures planning to develop sovereign space capabilities, including Austrian propulsion startup Gate Space, which secured 6.3 million euros earlier this month from a European Commission-backed accelerator program.
“Our goal is to establish FOSSA as a European benchmark in sovereign space infrastructure,” said Julián Fernández, FOSSA’s CEO and cofounder.

China’s AI Matches Anthropic in Cybersecurity, Causing Worry Over US Restrictions

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Chinese AI systems “have matched the performance of Anthropic’s powerful model Mythos in some cybersecurity scenarios,” reports the Wall Street Journal.

They call it “a development poised to reset the global tech race and pressure the White House in its overhaul of U.S. AI policy.”
Security researchers said that a new AI model, released this month by China’s Zhipu AI, also known as Z.ai, can match the latest U.S. models when it comes to finding security bugs, although it still lags behind Anthropic’s and OpenAI’s products in other tasks. Overall, the capability gap between top U.S. models and those built by Chinese companies has narrowed significantly, and use of Chinese AI systems has surged as businesses seek to rein in runaway costs. A host of companies, including Microsoft, are weighing how they can offer Chinese models on their platforms, a development that is set to alter the balance of power among tech companies…

Unlike models from Anthropic or OpenAI, Zhipu’s GLM-5.2 is open-weight. That means it can be downloaded and run on hardware operated by anybody and can be modified and used without supervision. Open-weight models are ideal for users who want unfettered access to systems they control, but they are also ideal for hackers, who can run them in the shadows. GLM-5.2 has ranked as one of the 10 most-used AI models, according to data from OpenRouter, a company that provides access to more than 400 AI models. In some benchmarking tests, according to the cybersecurity company Semgrep, GLM-5.2 bested Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.8 model, which was released in May. When given further instructions, Opus 4.8 and GLM-5.2 can match Mythos in bug-finding ability, according to researchers…

“Banning Fable while selling chips China needs to develop its own version is a gift to China,” said Saif Khan, a distinguished technology fellow at the Institute for Progress think tank who worked on export restrictions in the Biden administration. The U.S. needs to maximize the use of Mythos and comparable models to harden its cyber defenses while it can, he added. Among the Mythos 5 and Fable 5 users that had lost access before Friday’s decision to restore Mythos 5 access for some trusted entities: the National Security Agency, which had been testing the tools and found them impressive in trials, according to people familiar with the matter… “It is incentivizing companies across the globe to use cheaper but very capable Chinese open-weight models, while at the same time undermining the U.S. AI industry,” said Niels Provos, a researcher who led security teams at Google and Stripe. “I don’t understand it.”
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the article.

It’s times like these

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Funny Thread

With such sensitive and new geopolitical, technological and socioeconomic issues to deal with that we elected such a responsible group of thoughtful individuals to guide us through these situations. I am sure they are giving the proper consideration and delicate balance this requires.

Re:Open Source Wins Again

By gweihir • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Indeed. Common good vs. some assholes getting even richer. That said, there is an open Swiss model (Apertus) as well.

Re:So what does that mean?

By caseih • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In truth niether. China isn’t that good yet but moving quickly. Anthropic is still at the top of the game for now but won’t be there forever and they insist on keeping the models locked up and proprietary. Sooner it later the more open models will win. And hopefully we’ll finally get accessible hardware to run them locally.

Re:So what does that mean?

By vladoshi • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Yes, how could the country that has won 16 of the last 26 Math Olympiads, and supplied it ethnic aid to the others and who make all the world’s computers and computer parts, possibly do this?

Re:Open Source Wins Again

By WaffleMonster • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

To be fair, you need at least 256GB of RAM just to run the 2-bit version of this model. Most people aren’t going to be able to do that at home.

But yeah, the Chinese government is willing to throw lots of money at building AI models and giving them away, so Western companies are screwed.

Another way of looking at this if western companies are screwed.. hardware prices return to planet earth where more people are able to run this stuff at home. Three years ago the cost of 512GB DDR5 was less than the cost of a single 4090 GPU today.

Are Checks Sent Through the Mail Vulnerable to Theft?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The New York Times tells the story of a 63-year-old retiree who wrote a check for several thousand dollaras to pay her taxes. But she discovered much later that her taxes were never paid because that check had been intercepted and then altered to be payable to someone else:
In some cases, thieves may pilfer one or more checks from local mailboxes. Adam Rust, director of financial services for the Consumer Federation of America, said thieves sometimes “fish” for checks at free-standing drop boxes, using long tools with sticky pads on the ends to grab letters. In other cases, more sophisticated criminals may steal large batches of checks, copy them and then sell them on the internet. Often, the purloined checks are chemically altered in what’s known as “check washing” to remove the name of the recipient. The thief replaces it with a fraudulent name, and often increases the amount of the check, before cashing or depositing it.
The 63-year-old retiree’s bank told her she’d waited too long to recover the funds:
Schwab’s “security guarantee,” outlined on its website , says that “Schwab will cover losses in any of your Schwab accounts due to unauthorized activity.” But fine print at the bottom of the page notes that reimbursement “requires your timely reporting of unauthorized activity to Schwab,” and that Schwab “will not be liable for additional or increased losses resulting from a failure to report unauthorized activity in a timely manner.” It notes that more details are available in account agreements… Notify your bank as soon as possible, said Scott Anchin, senior vice president of strategic initiatives and policy at the independent bankers association. Banks generally allow at least 30 days and sometimes up to 90 days from the time your statement is made available to you to report suspected check fraud, he said.
So how can you avoid check fraud? Adam Rust, director of financial services for the Consumer Federation of America, just suggests that “No one should ever mail a check.”
If you must write a check, he said, try to deliver it in person or take it inside a post office to mail rather than relying on your own mailbox or public drop boxes. The American Bankers Association recommends using permanent “gel” ink pens when you do write checks to reduce the risk of tampering… And if you don’t already, consider using your bank’s online bill payment service.
The article notes that even the U.S. federal government “has been moving away from paper checks for things like benefit payments and income tax refunds, saying digital payment methods are more secure.”

Re:Checks? Yes. Just don’t do it.

By battingly • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Almost all ballot fraud happens through the mail.

Almost all misinformation about ballot fraud happens when republicans are trying to disenfranchise voters. Registered democrats outnumber registered republicans in this country, so preventing people from voting is a key strategy of the GOP.

Re:Checks? Yes. Just don’t do it.

By stabiesoft • Score: 5, Informative Thread
And of course very quietly, the R’s tell their people to vote by mail. Because it helps guarantee turnout. With a mail in, you vote ahead. R’s don’t like early voting much either, except for their people. The R’s have refined disenfranchisement of non-R voters to a fine art.

reduced payment methods is loss of freedom

By will4 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If we lose a method of paying for something, there is a loss of freedom.

Importantly, there is a loss of decades of pre-internet, pre-finance tech laws and court cases which protect the parties and individual citizens using that form of payment.

Forcing everyone to move to a “more convenient” form of payment lets the financial top 1% rewrite the laws and regulations to benefit them at the expense of a loss of freedom and protection for average citizens.

Removing the forms of payment lets big banks, the federal and state government, regulators, hedge funds, wall street, private equity and global NGOs get closer to tracking and having the power to “veto” any payment which disagrees with the politics, agenda or lobbyist favorites of the 1% and financial firms.

There are decades of VISA and Mastercard credit card payment systems allowing and profiting from credit card purchases at certain types of stores, and now that it is convenient and fits a political agenda, they cut off those stores from accepting VISA or Matercard credit card purchases.

We do not want a loss of freedom where every purchase is tracked, has a micro-tax/fee added to it, is used to profile the sell and buyer and to feed into a larger mass watching of each person.

It someone says “more-convenient” the first question should be “Who profits from this?” and the second should be “Which loss of freedom is this?”.

And, when there is a natural disaster, electronic hack, or loss of freedom due to a military invasion of a country, how will people purchase food and water?

Re:Checks? Yes. Just don’t do it.

By maladroit • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The Republicans and the Trump administration are the ones working to disenfranchise voters right now.

They are demanding state voting lists so that they can target the areas where there are more Democrats.

And there’s this blatant plan to have the USPS block mail-in ballots in some situations:

https://www.reuters.com/world/…

Re: Really?

By shilly • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This is just ridiculous cope. The UK has this, with a population of 70m, as does Germany with a population of 84m, and France with a population of 70m. It’s nothing to do with size, or any other random factor you can think of. The UK’s banking system is much older than the US’s, and yet has managed to drag itself into the era of instant free electronic payments.

US Agency Cancels Contract For Warrantless Tracking of Mobile Devices

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
America’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has “canceled its contract for a surveillance tool that enables warrantless tracking of mobile devices,” reports the Associated Press.

They note the move comes “after lawmakers, a prosecutor and a judge raised concerns about the legality of the tool in criminal investigations.”
ATF, the federal agency responsible for enforcing the nation’s gun laws, told The Associated Press that it discontinued what it called a “pilot” program using a tool called Webloc after Rep. Michael Cloud, a Republican from Texas, and Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, expressed reservations about the agency’s use of bulk commercial location data. Webloc, which is made by a vendor called Penlink, sources data from consumer apps and advertising networks, which collect the location of mobile devices from consumers who download apps or browse the web…

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2018 that police needed a warrant to obtain historic movement data from cellphone companies on a criminal suspect. But it has never addressed the growing practice of commercially acquired data.

Other users of Webloc include the U.S. military and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement but also local law enforcement agencies such as police in places like Elk Grove, Calif. and Durham, N.C. The technology has also expanded around the world, with the national police in El Salvador and Hungarian intelligence agencies as customers, according to a report from earlier this year from Citizen Lab, a group of researchers at the University of Toronto who investigate digital threats to civil society.
The article notes that other U.S. law enforcement agencies continue to buy commercial geolocation data, “including the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.”

They’re not tracking people

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
for the alcohol or tobacco.

don need no steenkin’…

By guygo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

other U.S. law enforcement agencies continue to buy commercial geolocation data, “including the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.”
The Grabber’s lapdog armies don’t care about little things like warrants and legal searches!
They KNOW they’re ALWAYS right, so who needs a judge to tell them.

Re:Flock Cameras?

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You don’t have a right to privacy in public, this has a lot of precedent about it.

If you don’t want Flock cameras you have to ban them via law at you local or state level but there’s nothing de facto illegal about them being outside in public.

Small efficiency gain in the assembly line

By Sloppy • Score: 3 Thread

I’m imagining devices going by a conveyor belt, and a worker with a wirecutter is making a brief snip on each of the devices as it travels by.

The boss walks up, and the snipper guy asks “Is it true? Is the customer canceling?”

The boss briefly nods but then shakes his head. “Yeah, they’re canc—no, I mean they still want the devices. They just don’t want the snipping anymore. They say go ahead and leave the warrant-detection-and-lookup circuit live.”

“Good. I never really understood what I was doing here. They’re still weren’t required to check the sensor anyway, so why disable it?”

The boss explained, “so we could charge them for the snipping.”

Students Around the World are Using AI-Powered Smart Glasses to Cheat on Tests

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Students are using AI-powered smart glasses to cheat on tests, reports CNN. “And in East Asia’s test-obsessed societies, where a single exam could impact the trajectory of a student’s future career and social status, educators are scrambling to get ahead of the problem.”
Already, countries are stepping up inspections for test-takers. For China’s grueling annual college entrance exam earlier this month — which more than 10 million hopefuls take each year — authorities required screening of all glasses. In the United Kingdom, the head of England’s exam watchdog warned earlier this month that AI glasses and smart devices like earpieces could worsen cheating in exams… [T]wo incidents in South Korea were the country’s first reported cases of cheating with AI glasses… In Taiwan, the university where a prospective student was caught cheating is now reviewing rules and standard operating procedures for AI eyewears during examinations.

But experts worry these individual cases point to a more widespread issue. “If we’re seeing a few cases being reported, we’re seeing a lot more cases not being reported,” said Thomas Corbin, lecturer at Deakin University in Australia, who has conducted research around the usage of AI-powered glasses and other smart devices in academic assessment. With the rapid development of AI technology, however, smart glasses are becoming slimmer, less noticeable, while integrating AI models that can operate independently with connectivity, raising concerns not only about exam integrity, but also about broader privacy risks… “Wearable AI is as much of a challenge to exams as ChatGPT was to essays in 2022 and I just don’t think there is any real way that we can reliably have exam practices moving forward,” Corbin said.

They are only cheating themselves

By gweihir • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The other take-away is that tests are pretty useless anyways. I have known that since I started teaching.

Really?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

Really? Where are the proctors?

There are no smart glasses on the market that can hide what they are. Everyone and their dog can identify smart glasses from across the room. So, how is this a thing?

Furthermore, if we are supposed to believe and accept that they are going unnoticed and getting in to exam rooms, how are we able to get these numbers on cheaters undetected?

This is Facebook drivel.

No one saw that coming

By shanen • Score: 3 Thread

At least not if they were wearing AI glasses imposing VR advertising for next month’s improved AI glasses.

Obligatory joke for low hanging fruit.

Adam Smith’s biggest mistake was stealing the invisible hand’s cloak of invisibility. Mostly downhill since then, now at AI-enhanced speeds.

Re:They are only cheating themselves

By Brain-Fu • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What’s the alternative? Completely subjective grades that are assigned to the students by their teachers?

(That was meant to be rhetorical, since that is obviously even more worthless).

Given the economic opportunities that grades open up, I don’t think it is fair to say “they are only cheating themselves.” They are cheating others out of work and/or scholarship money, too.

‘Supergirl’ Movie Criticized for Script, Poor Visual Effects

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Onion joked the new movie Supergirl is about a hero who must single-handedly save the world “after the catastrophic collapse of interest in the genre.”

Unfortunately, The Hollywood Reporter says the film’s reviews “range from negative to tepid praise (averaging a 58 percent Rotten Tomatoes score).”
Many point fingers at the film’s script, with Variety’s line — “a comic-book movie with the worst script I can remember” — going viral… Not to pile on, but there’s another recurring gripe from the reviews that stood out: Critics bashed the film as being murky, dark and gray, with poor VFX: “Muddy CG sludge” wrote one. Another said the film was full of “sludgy browns and grays” and “the visual murkiness of the settings makes it hard to follow the already unintelligible action sequences.” A third wrote the “VFX is so rough it makes The Flash look like Avatar.” Moviegoers increasingly despise murky, dark visuals (often used to hide weak effects), along with obvious CGI and incoherent action. They’ve seen it so many times they’ve become allergic.
The Bulwark agrees that the action sequences are "terribly lit, incoherently staged, and just generally weightless and ugly… [I]t’s reminiscent of the disaster that was The Flash: It’s just very obvious during certain sequences that everyone was in a big green-screen warehouse and the camera was whipping around with the knowledge that everything would be painted in later, so who really gives a crap how anything looks on the day of.”

But they also call the movie “a tremendous slog of a film, a real step backwards for the James Gunn-overseen DC Universe of movies and TV shows” that’s “neither fun nor exciting” and “feels empty.”
The film does have one bright spot: Lobo, who is played by Jason Momoa as something like Michael Keaton’s Beetlejuice by way of Jason Momoa’s Aquaman. He’s blustery and cantankerous and saucy and just a little menacing; it’s a perfect piece of casting and a really nice performance. Unfortunately, it’s the only spark of life in what is otherwise a deeply dour, deeply boring piece of filmmaking… Supergirl is just a misfire on nearly every level, one that lacks the sincerity and fun of last year’s reboot of this universe or the comic pathos present in Gunn’s Peacemaker series on HBO Max.
Reason calls it "dark, depressive, and dull" and “a downer of a movie in nearly every way.”
It’s not fun. It’s barely even righteous. It’s just miserable. At one point, Supergirl flat-out murders a guy by pushing a giant sword through his neck. Somehow, I suspect even Zack Snyder would be appalled.
Time argued fans of last decade’s superhero movies “should be demanding more, not less.” Though “Will there be rioting in the streets once audiences get some idea of how lousy Supergirl is? Probably not.”

Second Movie In a Row Saving a Dog

By XopherMV • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I like Krypto. However, this is the second movie in a row where he features as a key part of the plot. Like, find something else to drive the story. Please. Let the dog be an interesting side character.

Supergirl’s plot involves getting a poison antidote hanging around an evil character’s neck. She fights this evil character multiple times and could take the antidote at any point. Of course, she doesn’t because that’d be the end of the movie. The end result is that this plot point gets dragged out for no particular reason.

Other points make no sense. There’s only 2 Kryptonians left. But, evidently they’re so well known across the galaxy that everyone knows their weaknesses.

Why is this of interest here?

By LainTouko • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I generally expect the Slashdot audience to mostly have working brains, so why is “here is a thing which was in comics many decades ago. This makes it automatically interesting!” such an effective marketing ploy here? Shouldn’t we be looking for new and interesting ideas generated by the world of the 2020s rather than the world of the 19-whatever-it-is?

Though it’s part of a general degradation in science fiction. Take robots, for example. Originally, there were stories with robots in because people were trying to imagine the future and wondered if we’d make robots to do things, obviously something for technically-minded intelligent people to be interested in. Now there are stories with robots in because they’re an expected sci-fi/fantasy thing, like magic or superheroes. We need to get back to honestly speculating what the world might look like in 100 years time. Maybe the problem is that the answers look bad.

Supergirl: a TikTok influencer with superpowers

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Supergirl is a total cinematic calamity, but its downfall stems from the relentless wokeification of its lead character. Rather than an inspiring, hopeful Kryptonian heroine in the classic Superman tradition, the film delivers a 23-year-old cringey punk-rock anti-hero: jaded, cynical, self-absorbed, and allergic to responsibility.

She comes across less as a beacon of hope and more like a TikTok influencer with superpowers. Her “world-weary” arc and pile of regrets feel ridiculous for someone so young, not profound.While the generic villains, coincidence-driven plot, and forced edginess don’t help, the core failure is transforming Supergirl into yet another “strong female character” who is simply grating and unlikable. Wokeification didn’t empower her, it buried her. Another nail in the DCU’s coffin.

Re:Let me guess

By jhoegl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So, when you link an article of women graduating more, that is somehow an agenda?
Yeah… I am woke, because my eyes are wide open.
Keep yours closed, Im sure it will work out for you, especially in education.

Did y’all watch the same movie?

By OS24Ever • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I went to it last night. I have no idea what the complaints are about. ‘Dark and Muddy’ we were on a world destroyed by war, with people scrounging out an existnance that had bad guys stealing every female child for a breeding farm. Should it be bright and clean?

way to blow the ending spoiler. Yes, she killed a guy. how many action movies have been released where the body count is 100x higher and we’re cool with it? the hero murders entire base full of people blows it up on the way out, but supergirl stabs a guy who shot her dog with a poison that tortures it to death over three days and killed a kids family, killed another family and their kid in front of her.

He died to quickly for my taste. He needed to die screaming, one appendage ripped off at a time.

it was a fun movie, I swear to god I do not understand people these days.

Developer AI Token Costs Could Exceed Their Salaries in Two Years

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Enterprises may soon be paying as much for their developers’ AI token usage as they do for their salaries,” writes InfoWorld:
According to Gartner, these costs will meet, or even exceed, the typical software engineer’s monthly salary within the next two years. This is not only because developers are increasingly adopting generative AI and agentic tools, it reflects a trend toward consumption-based licensing models as vendors balance infrastructure investments with profitability…

Gartner senior principal analyst Nitish Tyagi explained that it’s important to note that Gartner’s prediction is based on a global average salary of $2,000 per month; it doesn’t mean AI token usage will exceed all salaries. For instance, in the US, yearly pay rates can be six digits or more. However, that kind of spend is not out of the realm of possibility, Tyagi emphasized. “I have heard scary numbers like ‘My developer consumed $20K last month,’ or ‘A business user consumed $32K’.”

If these amounts sound shocking, that’s the point. “The goal is to alarm the industry about the impact of token cost if it is not governed and controlled,” he said… AI coding vendors have yet to deliver “mature, built-in cost optimization capabilities,” Tyagi said, and prices will likely only continue to rise as vendors further build out their models while at the same time trying to remain profitable. Thus, enterprises struggle to forecast and control costs, and, because AI is moving so fast, many organizations lack the “maturity and frameworks” to determine ROI, he noted. Agent-driven workflows are difficult to govern, context windows become bloated, budgets are wiped out earlier than anticipated, and token spend becomes hard to justify....

“Without a governed engineering operating model, costs can escalate faster than the productivity gains these tools are designed to deliver,” Tyagi said.

Re:software engineer’s $2,000 monthly salary

By test321 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This is a GLOBAL average. For France the pay grade of 2 000 €/month (30 k€/year) would Junior level for a developer (look here for current job offers: as “developer”, typical is 40 k€/year before taxes, remove 25% for taxes, then divide by 12: https://www.apec.fr/candidat/r… ). For Southern Europe 2000 € is considered a good salary.

Re:Subsidies can’t last forever

By gtall • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The Wall Street Journal had a story a weekend ago about how OpenAI and Anthropic are getting pressure to cut their prices, that will certainly ding their path to profitability and thus their stock prices (were it to come to pass). Apparently there are some Open Source AI thingies out there and the Chinese are always ready with a cheaper product. Some companies are starting to use them.

I suppose we’ll get another Idiot-Gram from Project 2025, foghorned into the blathersphere by la Presidenta about how using Chinese AI could turn the users into Chinese eating Chinese food or Ohio pets, or using Communist AI that doesn’t have an upfront price. Those sneaky Antifa operatives will stop at nothing to screw White America. They’ve already destroyed the reflecting pool, they’ll be coming by your homes to pee in your pools as well.

I tried

By jamienk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I tried hard in the last 2 months: I bought Claude, came up with a project I thought seemed reasonable: JS-based rich-text editor with plugin system. Existing solutions (CKEditor, TinyMCE, Quill, etc etc) are old, unwieldy, sometimes proprietary, and modern browsers have many newly supported features… My goal was an HTML web component of /

I tried to carefully prompt. Before coding I used Claude to help research the issues involved (dead standards, browsers handling edges cases differently, generated HTML questions, etc.). Claude was thoughtful and reassuring. I knew it would be more complex than Claude kept insisting, but that’s OK. As usual with LLMs, at first I was more than impressed, I was blown away.

Still, bugs. That’s expected. Fixes were easy and it was amazing how Claude understood the issues. But the more I tested, the more the bugs proliferated. Some issues activated Claude to rewrite whole architectural parts of the codebase, which broke dependencies. Fixing the dependent stuff introduced new bugs. I slowly had to learn more and more about the implementation specifics. More and more I had to audit the code changes, revert, try again. Soon I found myself questioning Claude’s approaches in what seemed to be subtle ways. At times I was forced to really dig in, and the code – which looked so clean and organized – was a true spaghetti mess. Out-of-date comments. Repeated blocks of functionality with small differences. Convoluted back-and-forth paths across files, functions, classes. Each plugin had drifted to requiring its own long list of specialized one-off supporting worlds of code. Basic browser functions got overwritten with convoluted bespoke mish-mash slop with long interruptions of exceptions work-arounds and crazy shit.

Maybe the thing works. But the bugs are brutal! Everything is delicate! I’ve lost track of what the hell is going on.

But all of this was very familiar! It all looked like what USED TO happen to me before I got experience. What happened when I instructed programming newbies to take a crack without supervision. What happened when someone paid $5 to Upwork for something the boss thought would be easy.

We are not there yet. Not even close. It is 1998 and we are using for layout with the “100% td width” work-around.

Re:Tooling exceeds Machinist Cost

By Compholio • Score: 5, Informative Thread

A well taken care of lathe lasts 70+ years, so the $50k you spend on it now pays dividends for as long as you keep it, and you can sell it used when you upgrade. The money on AI tooling is just gone. No machine shop would rent that lathe at $25k/yr

Yeah, somebody let slip that out larger organization is blowing $300k/mo on AI a while back when somebody else complained that our smaller section bought a nice server with a bunch of GPU for $50k. We get along just fine with our one-time purchase and really don’t see the need to rent servers.

We ran into something similar where we were looking at the cloud compute cost for a project that we could buy a better server every month for the price we were paying and had a bunch of folks trying to keep us in the cloud. At the end of the day it always boils down to that they don’t want to have employees to maintain the physical infrastructure and it’s mind-blowing how much people are willing to blow on renting this stuff.

Ditto: have to throw away 1/2 of what Claude does

By Somervillain • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I am mandated to use Claude by my employer. I’m grateful it’s there, but no, I cannot fucking trust that stuff. I give maybe 5 prompts a day and at least one will have a major error. I have to completely discard over half of what Claude does. I’ve given up trusting it to write unit tests. I am glad I’m not paying for it and it gets more expensive with each version.

The only reason I am glad it’s there is that when I prompt it something…it gives a wrong answer that usually leads me to the correct one. It’s pretty useless for the languages I know well. It’s too unreliable to save me time. The only benefit is for languages and platforms I know nothing about. I will admit, when it speeds the process along greatly. Although even then, like Regex, which I used like 4x a year....it’ll write a TERRIBLE RegEx that’s 100 characters long, but it works and it jogs my memory well enough to fix it down to a 20 character RegEx like a how someone who isn’t a moron would have written it. It also allows me to be braver in technology I don’t work with…for better or worse. As they say…nothing is more dangerous than a guy with “a little” knowledge…and access to really sharp tools!

An Amazon Seller Says They Were Offered a Way to Bribe an Amazon Employee

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Jack Nekhala had a business selling on Amazon — and in December he received an unusual offer, reports Bloomberg. A woman said she could bribe an Amazon employee “to help him retrieve $90,000 in funds that the e-commerce giant had frozen after suspending him over an alleged violation of review policy.”
Hoping to ingratiate himself with the company and restart his business, Nekhala offered to provide evidence, including recorded conversations and screen shots, that he said proved Amazon personnel were peddling inside information and influence. The smoking gun, Nekhala told the representative: information about his seller account. Only certain Amazon employees are supposed to have access to such details, but Nekhala had received them from the woman on WeChat, the Chinese messaging app. Nekhala’s experience, which he documented and shared with Bloomberg, provides a rare glimpse into an international black market that has been a persistent scourge of Amazon’s online store. On one side are sellers looking for a variety of favors: a competitive edge over their rivals, information on how to boost sales, a way to get themselves unsuspended. On the other are middlemen who lurk on message apps like Telegram, WeChat and WhatsApp offering access to people inside Amazon who can get things done for a price…

It’s impossible to determine the scope of the illicit activity, but it’s an open secret among Amazon sellers and consultants, who are frequently approached on social-media platforms and messaging apps. “The message is always the same: ‘I’m going to show you screenshots to prove I have inside access,’" said Chris McCabe, a former Amazon employee who runs a seller consulting firm… In 2020, federal prosecutors exposed an international bribery scheme involving Amazon sellers and employees. The ring allegedly extracted about $100 million in unfair advantages by bribing Amazon employees in Asia to help them sell more products and sabotage their competitors. Five people in the US were convicted and received jail terms or probation. Last year, law enforcement officials in India began investigating more than 20 former Amazon employees suspected of accepting bribes from trucking companies in exchange for routes, according to The Times of India.

After Nekhala reported his own experience to Amazon, the representative committed to “do some digging” and to email him instructions on how his evidence could be shared, according to a recording of the conversation. But Nekhala said he never heard back. The employee who leaked his personal information had already been fired for unrelated misconduct, according to Amazon.
Amazon told Bloomberg employee involvement was “very rare,” and that “We invest heavily in this area and have dedicated teams and systems in place to prevent all types of fraud, including by our own employees.”

Amazon is corrupt!

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
News at 11.

Is this (corporate) exceptionalism, USA?

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
TL;DR: US company that screws-over its suppliers and its employees also suffers employees that help suppliers screw-over other suppliers.

Re:Amazon is corrupt!

By hey! • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think it may be evidence that Amazon has a shitty corporate culture that squeezes every penny it can out its employees.

Corruption can happen anywhere, but it’s more likely to happen in totalitarian cultures where people feel like the system is rigged anyway. That’s why countries like Russia and China have corruption problems. But I suspect the same feelings of me vs. the system occur in a capitalist enterprise like Amazon where employees are governed by dystopian, rigid, computerized metrics.

This isn’t even a little surprising

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Oracle, Facebook, all these large companies have huge numbers of employees and contractors and subcontractors and sub-subcontractors. And with few exceptions — at the top — they treat them as disposable, as we see in their headlong rush to replace them with horribly broken AI systems. Many of these people are elsewhere in the world and are paid far less than their US counterparts.

All of this creates a rich ecosystems that’s ripe for bribery; it’s an inexpensive and effective way to get things done. It’s not rare: it’s commonplace and unremarkable. Of course these companies will claim otherwise because they don’t want to admit that they’re created a culture of corruption, and every once in a while they’ll throw someone under the bus so that they can claim they promptly investigate all such activities, that’s all bullshit. The systems they’ve built are functioning as designed and intended, and as long as massive amounts of money keep flowing to corporate executives, they have no reason to disturb them.

Everyone foolish enough to put their personal/company/organization data in clouds run by these companies should consider that all of their data is quite likely available to anyone who can put $5K or $20K or whatever in a manila envelope and slide it across a table.

Re:Amazon is corrupt!

By cusco • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

You have no idea what you’re talking about. Peru was rated ‘most corrupt country in the world’ and yet it’s pretty much the opposite of totalitarian, the government could be better described as “chaos”.

As I used to tell my ESL students, “Oh, there’s plenty of corruption in the US, it’s just that it happens at a higher level. Rather than passing $20 to a cop they’re passing $100,000 to a politician or official so we don’t see it.”

IBM is Getting Ready to Scale Quantum Computing

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
IBM spent a decade “building, testing and improving” quantum computing, reports the Wall Street Journal.

“This year, the company is laying the groundwork to turn that technology into a fully-fledged, scalable business from an expensive science project.”
IBM said last month it plans to form a new independent subsidiary called Anderon, a foundry to produce the silicon wafers needed to make quantum-computing processors. The venture is seeded by a $1 billion investment from the Trump administration and another $1 billion of IBM’s own cash. Anderon will give the company a new line of business in selling wafers to other quantum-computing companies. It will also provide a steady stream of wafers to continue developing its own quantum technology, positioning IBM to capture part of what the Boston Consulting Group projects will be a $90 billion to $170 billion market for quantum-computing providers by 2040…

The company also plans to spend an additional $9 billion over five years to advance the final stages of its quest to build a quantum-mechanics-powered computer capable and reliable enough for widespread use, a goal known as fault tolerance. That computer, named Starling, is being targeted for 2029. With Anderon, IBM is thinking beyond Starling, or even a more powerful quantum computer planned for 2033.

Next bubble

By jhoegl • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Here comes the next tech bubble. LLM bubble about to burst, so queue next tech-trustme-bro

Actually, this indicates quite the opposite

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Companies don’t spin off business lines into independent subsidiaries when they foresee lots of profits in the future… this is what they do when they’re trying to cut their losses.

In other words - IBM is basically cutting their losses with regards to quantum computing. They may technically keep the unit alive, but they’re gonna tighten expenditures significantly.

Who was working on QC in 1976?

By mistergrumpy • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The hyperbole, over-optimism, and over-investment surrounding QC certainly seem fairly ridiculous given current results. Without a new direction or some big breakthroughs, QCs in there current form seem unlikely to be useful. However, your repeated “they’ve been working on it for 50 years” is equally annoying. The work in the 1980’s was just a few theorists making proposal about how something might work. Small groups of experimentalists first made objects showing some degree of quantum coherence about 25 years ago. Serious efforts to scale those devices started around 15 years ago. For digital computers, it did take 100 years to go from Babbage/Boole to Eniac and another 30 years to figure out how to really scale them.

Government subsidy

By edi_guy • Score: 3 Thread

Just RTFS describes what’s happening here. Only tangentially related to “Quantum Computing”. Trump administration gave IBM $1billion dollars to spend on …basically anything as long as the Subject Line contains the word quantum. IBM says that the will kick in another $1 billion of their own…then may $9 billion down the road. I doubt that will occur. But honestly this government gift just pays for the SVP to get promoted to CEO of the new offshoot, his lackies likewise get promotions. They will hold up a recycled RISC chip to the camera and declare quantum supremacy. Someone in the administration who got Trump to sign the paperwork will get their payola, everyone wins!

This is why the government picking winners is bad policy all around. This $1 billion was better off being unspent, versus creating a weird market distortion, or more likely just being redirected to a bunch of rich, but useless execs that should be retiring already. I say this as someone who made a pretty penny on Intel stock after Trump decided the US government should give them $9 billion free money too. **

**Previous admin with their green new deal, etc was likewise bad policy throwing away free money at pointless projects that we are increasingly unable to afford. Comparing Trump / Biden is apples and oranges. Trump is a rotten, senile apple with the appearance of a rotten orange. Biden was just senile

Re:Next bubble

By JoshuaZ • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Only that this one has been a failure for about 50 years now.

I’m not sure how that could possibly be the case. Feynman suggested the idea of a quantum computer in a 1982 paper. Yuri Manin suggested a similar idea slightly before then which makes the entire idea about 46 years old. There wasn’t any substantial work on the idea aside from a few black box algorithms until Shor’s algorithm in 1994 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shor’s_algorithm which is from just 32 years ago. And substantial money going into physical implementations of quantum computing doesn’t really start until around the mid 2000s . I’m also not sure why you would think it any of it is a failure given the rapid pace in improvement of the technology. Empirically, quantum computers are improving at an exponential or even faster than exponential rate for coherence times, number of qubits, and other metrics https://www.quantamagazine.org/does-nevens-law-describe-quantum-computings-rise-20190618/. The algorithmic end also continues to improve rapidly, especially with error correction, and we’re just moving into the zone where the error correction and the physical systems are both good enough that we can physically implement quantum logical systems with real error correction. See e.g. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10628-y It is easy to forget how exponential growth looks: it looks slow and not impressive until it just takes off. We saw this just recently with the rise of solar power and grid storage which were both struggling and in the last 2 years have now taken off so much that they are rapidly dominating much of the electric grid.

Renewable Energy Just Hit 30% of America’s Electricity Generation

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
America generated 10.06% more energy with renewables in the first four months of 2026 than it did in the same period the year before. That’s according to new figures from America’s Energy Information Administration, cited in this report from Electrek:
The growth was led by utility-scale solar (+21.3%), hydropower (+15.7%), small-scale solar
In April alone, wind and solar each produced more electricity than US coal plants, while the combination of solar and wind produced 57.0% more electricity than nuclear power.

The mix of all renewables, including biomass and geothermal, accounted for 30.0% of total US electrical generation during the first third of 2026 — up from 27.8% a year earlier… EIA reported that, in April, utility-scale solar capacity surpassed wind capacity for the first time (160,208.1 MW vs. 160,100.6 MW). Further, utility-scale battery energy storage capacity increased by 17,703.5 MW, or 58.1%. Nuclear added just 18.4 MW. The combined capacity growth of all utility-scale renewable energy sources for the 12-month period (55,980.3 MW) is two-thirds more (i.e., 67.6%) than that added during the previous 12 months (33,392.0 MW).
“EIA projects no new nuclear generating capacity and a net decline of 5,200.5 MW in fossil fuel capacity.”

Re:For how much longer?

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
That’s part of what is great about this though. This is happening from sheer economics, despite the Trump admin’s attempts otherwise.

Can we please stop using MW for storage capacity?

By SubmergedInTech • Score: 5, Informative Thread

MW is a unit of power. MWh is a unit of capacity - that is, power * time.

If it helps, think of it this way:
- Power is how frequently I can give a f*ck.
- Capacity is how many f*cks I have to give.

Re:would have been impressive....

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It’s more impressive when you consider …America increased coal usage enough that America was responsible for 300% of the global coal increase in CO2 for 2025

Now where’s that Dumb Republican No Brains to come up with some more lies…

Re:Can we please stop using MW for storage capacit

By beelsebob • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Both power, and energy are relevant here. The amount of energy the storage can store is one relevant metric, but the rate at which it can supply that energy is another very important metric. For most grid operators it’s *far* more relevant to say that a battery bank can provide 100MW for 15 minutes, than to say that it has a capacity of 25MWh.

Re:For how much longer?

By Casandro • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Exactly that’s why it’s also on the rise in Germany, despite the current government trying its best to stop it. I just makes so much sense that it cannot be stopped. It’s just so affordable that at least home owners can simply invest in it.

It’s a microeconomic decision, it will rise from the bottom up. It’s not like macroeconomic decisions you can just dictate from above to suit the needs of some big companies. (like it’s done in Germany with cars)

How a Seemingly Harmless Image Can Jailbreak Vision-Language AI Models

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli writes:
Florida International University researchers have developed a technique called JaiLIP (Jailbreaking with Loss-guided Image Perturbation) that uses subtle image modifications to bypass AI safety guardrails. Unlike traditional jailbreaks that rely on carefully crafted prompts, the attack works through images that appear normal to human viewers.

The researchers tested the technique against BLIP-2, a multimodal AI model, and found that manipulated images significantly increased the likelihood of harmful responses. According to the study, the approach outperformed previous image-based jailbreak methods and nearly doubled the number of unsafe outputs generated during testing.

The findings highlight a potential security risk for businesses deploying AI systems that process both images and text. While most discussions about AI safety focus on prompts, the research suggests that seemingly harmless images may also serve as an attack vector.

Jailbreaking will never get fixed

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Just like hallucinations. No idea why people expect miracles from generative AI. It is not magic. At all. It is a small step forward, with some limited applications. Useful, but not “transformative”.

Obviously, using a tool outside of what it can do well will usually do more damage than good.

Re:Jailbreaking will never get fixed

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

How do you know it’s generative AI?

This article links to another article, published presumably for profit, which links to an article that requires a subscription. It’s just business promotion for a /. member, there’s no information here or anything to discuss.

“Obviously, using a tool outside of what it can do well will usually do more damage than good.”

What does the tool do well? We don’t know, we haven’t been told anything about the tool. And what damage or good can it do? An AI can do no damage unless it’s wired to do damage. AI is just software, completely deterministic. Can Excel do damage? Even when used to do things it doesn’t do well? The threat of AI is the people who try to exploit something poorly designed to do things they don’t understand. So what if AI hallucinates, the possibility of harm doesn’t come from AI, it comes from using its outputs to do harm.

Re: single pixel attacks

By cathector • Score: 5 Thread

wups, /. filtered out my angle-brackets.
should read: … from “99% sure it’s (the right thing)" to “99% sure it’s (something not even close to the right thing)" …

What is a “harmful response?”

By LondoMollari • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What is a “harmful response” and since when is having the sum total of human knowledge being instantly searchable “harmful?” All of this information is already freely available on the internet and in libraries. We used to say that “information wants to be free” but now that we have a tool that can do just that, we have a society that is intent on locking everything down with “governance” and “guardrails.” And the best part? China is out here making and releasing the same type of advanced AIs sans guardrails for all to download. Now what?

Re: Jailbreaking will never get fixed

By Sneftel • Score: 4 Thread

I get that you are not smart enough for this level of deduction.

Jesus. What the hell, man? Is that something you would say to somebody you were talking to in person?