Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. New Report Finds Some Babies Spend Up To Eight Hours a Day on Screens
  2. Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google
  3. Electrical Current Might Be the Key To a Better Cup of Coffee
  4. Apple Vision Pro Used In World-First Cataract Surgery
  5. Sony Rolls Out 30-Day Online DRM Check-In For PlayStation Digital Games
  6. Apple Introduces a Cheaper Option For App Store Subscriptions
  7. The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover
  8. Google and Pentagon Reportedly Agree On Deal For ‘Any Lawful’ Use of AI
  9. UAE To Leave OPEC Amid Hormuz Oil Crisis
  10. Bay Area Homeowner Offers Property In Exchange For Anthropic Stock
  11. Supreme Court Hears Case On How To Label Risks of Popular Weed Killer
  12. The Silent Frequency That Makes Old Buildings Feel Haunted
  13. Trump Administration Will Pay More Energy Firms to Cancel Wind Farms
  14. Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court
  15. Study Finds a Third of New Websites Are AI-Generated

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.

New Report Finds Some Babies Spend Up To Eight Hours a Day on Screens

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
fjo3 shares a report from The Times:
More than two-thirds of babies under two use screens, a report has found, and some are exposed for up to eight hours a day. Nearly a third of newborns were found to be watching screens for more than three hours a day, while almost 20 percent of infants of four to 11 months used screens for more than an hour a day. The report comes after the government issued guidance that children under two do not use screens at all, apart from communal activities such as video-calling relatives.

In a review of the current research, researchers found evidence linking screen time to poorer outcomes for children, including an increased risk of obesity, short-sightedness, sleep and behavioural difficulties, and later challenges with friendships. […] The research also revealed why children and parents use screens, with families reporting children doing so for educational purposes, entertainment, play and to communicate and bond with others. Parents, meanwhile, used screens to occupy or distract children, which helped caregivers to complete domestic duties, paid employment and other caring responsibilities. Nearly a quarter of parents — 23.6 percent — either had no childcare or were not aware of the government’s early years offer.

Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Elon Musk testified on day two of his trial against OpenAI, saying he helped create the company as a nonprofit counterweight to Google and would not have backed it if the goal had been private profit. CNBC reports:
Musk on Tuesday was the first witness called to testify in the trial. He spoke about his upbringing, his many companies, his role in founding OpenAI and his understanding of its structure. Musk said in his testimony that he was not opposed to the creation of a small for-profit subsidiary, “as long as the tail didn’t wag the dog.” Musk said he was motivated to start OpenAI to serve as a counterweight to Google. He got the idea after an argument he had with Google co-founder Larry Page, who called Musk a “speciesist for being pro-human,” he testified. “I could have started it as a for profit and I chose not to,” Musk said on the stand.

Earlier, attorneys for Musk and OpenAI presented their opening arguments to the jury. Musk’s lead trial lawyer, Steven Molo, delivered the opening statement for the Tesla and SpaceX CEO. OpenAI lawyer William Savitt gave the opening statement for the AI company, Altman and Brockman. OpenAI has characterized Musk’s lawsuit as a baseless “harassment campaign.” The company said Monday in a post on X that it “can’t wait to make our case in court where both the truth and the law are on our side.”

During his testimony on Tuesday, Musk repeatedly emphasized that he founded OpenAI to serve as a counterweight to Google. He said he got the idea after an argument about AI safety with Google co-founder Larry Page, who Musk said called him “a speciesist for being pro-human.” Musk said he was concerned Page was not taking AI safety seriously, so he wanted there to be an nonprofit, open source alternative to Google. “I could have started it as a for profit and I chose not to,” Musk said on the stand.
Further reading: Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court

So since you got kicked out of the non-profit -

By T34L • Score: 3 Thread

And it turned into a for-profit against your wishes, the next AI company you started, xAI, is a non-profit, right?

Right?

Like, it’s not gonna have an IPO as part of another for profit soon or anything, right?

Electrical Current Might Be the Key To a Better Cup of Coffee

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
University of Oregon chemist Christopher Hendon loves his coffee — so much so that studying all the factors that go into creating the perfect cuppa constitutes a significant area of research for him. His latest project: discovering a novel means of measuring the flavor profile of coffee simply by sending an electrical current through a sample beverage. The results appear in a new paper published in the journal Nature Communications.

[…] The coffee industry typically uses a method for measuring the refractive index of coffee — i.e., how light bends as it travels through the liquid — to determine strength, but it doesn’t capture the contribution of roast color to the overall flavor profile. So for this latest study, Hendon decided to focus on roast color and beverage strength, the two variables most likely to affect the sensory profile of the final cuppa. His solution turned out to be quite simple. Hendon repurposed an electrochemical tool called a potentiostat, typically used to test battery and fuel cell performance. Hendon used the tool to measure how electricity interacted with the liquid. He found that this provided a better measurement of the flavor profile. He even tested it on four different samples of coffee beans and successfully identified the distinctive signature of a batch that had failed the roaster’s quality-control process.

Granted, one’s taste in coffee is fairly subjective, so Hendon’s goal was not to achieve a “perfect” cup but to give baristas a simple tool to consistently reproduce flavor profiles more tailored to a given customer’s taste. “It’s an objective way to make a statement about what people like in a cup of coffee,” said Hendon. “The reason you have an enjoyable cup of coffee is almost certainly that you have selected a coffee of a particular roast color and extracted it to a desired strength. Until now, we haven’t been able to separate those variables. Now we can diagnose what gives rise to that delicious cup.”
Outside of his latest electrical-current experiment, Christopher Hendon’s coffee research has shown that espresso can be made more consistently by modeling extraction yield — how much coffee dissolves into the final drink — and controlling water flow and pressure.

He also found that static electricity from grinding causes fine coffee particles to clump, which disrupts brewing. The solution: adding a small squirt of water to beans before grinding (known as the Ross droplet technique) to reduce that static, cut clumping and waste, and lead to a stronger, more consistent espresso.

Don’t

By Local ID10T • Score: 3 Thread

This is one of those “you scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not you could, you didn’t stop to think if you should” kind of deals.

I am not looking for a more perfectly consistent coffee -according to some invented metric. I just want good coffee. It is not that hard to make good coffee. Leave it alone.

This sounds like an attempt to qualify what makes coffee coffee-like so that an artificial coffee substitute can be produced that meets minimum standards.

Let coffee be analog.

Apple Vision Pro Used In World-First Cataract Surgery

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Apple’s Vision Pro has been used in what’s described as the world’s first cataract surgery performed with the headset. MacRumors reports:
[New York opthalmologist] Dr. Eric Rosenberg of SightMD completed the initial procedure in October 2025 and has since performed hundreds of additional cases using ScopeXR, a surgical platform he co-developed for Apple’s mixed reality device. ScopeXR streams live feeds from 3D digital surgical microscopes directly into the Vision Pro, which lets the surgeon view the operative field in stereoscopic 3D while overlaying preoperative diagnostic data. The platform also supports real-time remote collaboration, allowing surgeons to virtually join procedures and see exactly what the operating surgeon sees.
“We are now able to bring the world’s best surgeon into any operating room, at any hour, from anywhere on the planet,” said Dr. Rosenberg in a company press release. “From residents performing their first cases to surgeons facing unexpected complications, this technology democratizes access to expertise and that will save vision.”

apple will take 30% of the bill

By Joe_Dragon • Score: 3 Thread

apple will take 30% of the bill

Yeah, no thanks

By Bahbus • Score: 3 Thread

I will not go to any kind of doctor promoting, or using, Apple garbage tech directly in any treatments or surgeries.

Outcome

By backslashdot • Score: 3 Thread

Patient’s hearing was greatly improved.

Sony Rolls Out 30-Day Online DRM Check-In For PlayStation Digital Games

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Sony is reportedly rolling out a 30-day online check-in requirement for some digital PS4 and PS5 games, meaning players could temporarily lose access if their console does not reconnect to renew the license. Tom’s Hardware reports:
In the info page of an affected game, you’d see a new validity period and a “remaining time” deadline. At first, this seemed like a software bug, but now PlayStation Support has confirmed its authenticity to multiple users. PlayStation owners are furious about the change.

From what we’ve seen, this DRM is intended for digital game copies. It works by instating a mandatory online check-in where you have to connect to the internet within a rolling 30-day window or risk losing access to the game. Afterward, you can still restore access, but you’ll need an internet connection to renew the game’s license first. So far, it seems like only games installed after the recent March firmware update are affected.

Affected customers report that setting your PS4 or PS5 as the primary console doesn’t alleviate this check-in policy either. No matter what, any game you download from now on will feature this new requirement, effectively eliminating the concept of offline play for even single-player titles.

Don’t care

By Tailhook • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you buy a platform from a company that once infected their customer’s PCs with a rootkit, you deserve whatever Sony choses to inflict on you.

Enjoy.

Sony Is Still Alive?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why does anyone buy their products? Sony went form perhaps the most admired name in electronics to a fermenting cesspit of garbage and over priced electronics, as well as a predatory and usurious media company. I don’t know why anyone buys anything from them today.

Re:Debunked

By Bahbus • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Note the strategic use of “At this time” and then an example in the past, rather than a denial that it isn’t happening in the near future. It will be happening going forward.

What happens when the servers eventually go down?

By ANonyMouser • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I have PS1 games from the 90s that I can still play on my PS2. I buy games on physical media still hoping that they will still run in 20 years time.

I do hope they reverse this decision.

If buying isn’t owning

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 3 Thread
Then I won’t feel bad about stealing and not drinking the verification can every 30 days.

Apple Introduces a Cheaper Option For App Store Subscriptions

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Apple is adding a new App Store subscription option that lets developers offer lower monthly prices in exchange for a 12-month commitment. “This model will allow developers to offer discounted rates to customers in exchange for more predictable long-term revenue,” reports TechCrunch. “This also caters to how many developers have already been marketing their annual subscriptions in their apps.” From the report:
Often, app developers will display the lower monthly price to highlight the discount the customer would receive if they purchase the annual subscription instead of the monthly option. If the user is on the fence about a longer-term commitment, the notion that they’re getting a better deal can help to push them toward the annual option.

Now, Apple is essentially formalizing what these developers were already doing, which allows it to also craft a set of policies around how these subscription offers are to be displayed so as not to mislead customers about the true cost of the deals.

However, the option will not be available to developers in the United States or Singapore at launch. While Apple didn’t offer an explanation for this, it’s still in App Store litigation in the U.S. around the specifics of the court’s ruling in its case with Epic Games around how Apple can charge for subscriptions. Apple likely doesn’t want to complicate the matter further until that matter is finalized. Singapore, meanwhile, also has a sophisticated payments market with strong consumer rules, which is why it may have been left out of the initial release.

The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
For its famous intractability, the Bloomberg Terminal has long inspired devotion, bordering on obsession. Among traders, the ability to chart a path through the software’s dizzying scrolls of numbers and text to isolate far-flung information is the mark of a seasoned professional. But as a greater mass of data is fed into the Terminal — not only earnings and asset prices, but weather forecasts, shipping logs, factory locations, consumer spending patterns, private loans, and so on — valuable information is being lost. “It has become more and more untenable,” says Shawn Edwards, chief technology officer at Bloomberg. “You miss things, or it takes too long.”

To try to remedy the problem, Bloomberg is testing a chatbot-style interface for the Terminal, ASKB (pronounced ask-bee), built atop a basket of different language models. The broad idea is to help finance professionals to condense labor-intensive tasks, and make it possible to test abstract investment theses against the data through natural language prompts. As of publication, the ASKB beta is open to roughly a third of the software’s 375,000 users; Bloomberg has not specified a date for a full release.
Wired spoke with Edwards at Bloomberg’s palatial London headquarters in early April, where he shared several examples of what ASKB can do. “With ASKB, I can create workflow templates. I can write a long query, and say, ‘Hey, here’s all the data I’m going to need. Give me a synopsis of the bull and bear cases, what the Street is saying, what the guidance is.’ Now, I want to schedule [the workflows] or trigger them when I see this or that condition in the world.”
As for what separates mediocre traders from the best, assuming both have access to the same data, Edwards said: “These tools are not magical. They don’t make an average [employee] all of a sudden great. The difference will be your ideas. In the hands of experts, it allows them to do better analysis, deeper research — to sift through 10 great ideas when they might have only had time for one. If you’re a mediocre analyst, they’ll be 10 mediocre ideas.”

I used the AI, then I lost money, now I’m suing

By Big Hairy Gorilla • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Now I’m suing Bloomberg.

Google and Pentagon Reportedly Agree On Deal For ‘Any Lawful’ Use of AI

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Google has reportedly signed a classified agreement allowing the Pentagon to use its AI models for “any lawful government purpose.” While the deal is said to discourage domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons without human oversight, it apparently does not give Google the power to block how the government actually uses its models. The Verge reports:
The agreement was reported less than a day after Google employees demanded CEO Sundar Pichai block the Pentagon from using its AI amid concerns that it would be used in “inhumane or extremely harmful ways.” If the agreement is confirmed, it would place Google alongside OpenAI and xAI, which have also made classified AI deals with the US government. Anthropic was also among that list until it was blacklisted by the Pentagon for refusing the Department of Defense’s demands to remove weapon and surveillance-related guardrails from its AI models.

Citing a single anonymous source “with knowledge of the situation,” The Information reports that the deal states that both parties have agreed that the search giant’s AI systems shouldn’t be used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons “without appropriate human oversight and control.” But the contract also says it doesn’t give Google “any right to control or veto lawful government operational decision-making,” which would suggest the agreed restrictions are more of a pinky promise than legally binding obligations.

Unsurprising

By FritzTheCat1030 • Score: 3 Thread
Do Know Evil, indeed.

‘Any Lawful’

By darkain • Score: 3 Thread

‘Any Lawful’ Use of AI… by the people that can rewrite the law at any point in time to have it say anything they want.

Nice soundbite, but its total bullshit.

UAE To Leave OPEC Amid Hormuz Oil Crisis

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
fjo3 writes:
The United Arab Emirates announced Tuesday that it would exit the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (source paywalled; alternative source), or OPEC, along with the wider group of partners known as OPEC+, effective May 1, in what could be a blow to control over prices by the group, long led in practice by Saudi Arabia. The move “reflects the UAE’s long-term strategic and economic vision and evolving energy profile” read an official statement carried by a UAE state news agency, as disruptions “in the Strait of Hormuz continues to affect supply dynamics.”

[…] The UAE is the second Persian Gulf country to leave the group after Qatar terminated its membership in 2019. The UAE has been a member of OPEC since 1971. The latest departure leaves in place 11 core members: Algeria, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.

Re:Trump Iran Crisis

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s an impressive accomplishment - nobody liked Iran, though it had allies. This unnecessary war is pissing everyone off enough they’re more or less siding with Iran over the US.

That’s the ‘respect’ Trump has brought to America.

Re:Trump Iran Crisis

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The “liberal” media also uses careful wording. Headlines state the war in Iran instead of the war with Iran as to distance US involvement. This is entirely the US and Israel’s doing. The story changes overnight when MAGA says so. Literally from “no new wars” to “we must stop Iran immediately”.

We gave Iran the nuke

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Only it’s the strait of Hormuz instead of an actual nuclear weapon. And it’s way more effective than any nuclear weapon they could ever get their hands on.

Iran now has the power to crash the entire world economy. All thanks to the staggering incompetence of one senile old man and a bunch of sycophantic hangers on and a bunch of people who couldn’t figure out that making a known rapist and pedophile president wasn’t going to end well for them…

The thing is so far about 40% of the country here in America has been completely insulated from this mess. It won’t last but it’s looking like it may hold out for them until after the midterms and then they don’t matter anymore.

Re:Trump Iran Crisis

By WaffleMonster • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s an impressive accomplishment - nobody liked Iran, though it had allies.

Iran now has even fewer allies after lobbing missiles and drones at everyone in the region. The UAE was one of Iran’s top targets. Now the fucking Israelis are sending Iron dome to UAE.

Re:We gave Iran the nuke

By pulpo88 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

There are some mindless haters anywhere but a lot of people are thoughtful. And a lot of those thoughtful people really can’t stand Trump. I mean the guy lies soooo much, even for a politician. Thoughtful people tend not to like that. Especially when it translates to action that is seen as harmful to so many people.

And when I say he lies, I mean that as an objective statement of fact. I’m not expressing my opinion. There are people who literally sit around all day and fact check him, and provide documented verifiable evidence of the lies. Some info on that here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

But you must surely be aware of this?

Bay Area Homeowner Offers Property In Exchange For Anthropic Stock

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Bay Area homeowner and investment banker Storm Duncan is trying to swap a 13-acre Mill Valley property for Anthropic equity instead of cash. He created a LinkedIn page for the home, describing the move as a “diversification play” because he is “under-concentrated in AI investments relative to the importance of AI in the future, and over-concentrated in real estate.” A young Anthropic employee, Duncan says, might be “in the exact opposite scenario.” TechCrunch reports:
Duncan is asking potential buyers to email him to discuss deal specifics, but he said it would be a private transaction that doesn’t require the buyer to sell their stock outright. On LinkedIn, he also said the homebuyer would “continue to retain 20% of the upside value of the shares exchanged for the duration of the lockup period.”

Duncan, who described himself as a longtime Bay Area resident who moved to Miami during the pandemic, bought the property in 2019 for $4.75 million. It’s currently occupied by “a high-profile VC,” he said, but he declined to identify the VC.

Clearly close to the peak of the bubble

By Shisha • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Looks like we’re close to the peak of the bubble. The question is which: the AI bubble or the SF property bubble or both?

Let me guess…

By Sebby • Score: 3 Thread

He’s a rich white a$$hole.

(probability of being wrong: 0%)

Re:Let me guess…

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
What does his race have to do with this?

Loopholes ahoy!

By Fly Swatter • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Someone is getting scammed, and it isn’t the current property owner. Lock-up period? upside? That’s not selling a property that is futures prediction*…

* Otherwise known as gambling.

Supreme Court Hears Case On How To Label Risks of Popular Weed Killer

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR:
A divided U.S. Supreme Court on Monday heard a dispute over labels on the popular Roundup weed killer, which thousands of people blame for their cancers. How the Supreme Court rules could have implications for tens of thousands of lawsuits against Roundup maker Monsanto, which is now owned by Bayer. The case centers on who decides about warning labels on chemicals: the federal government — or states or juries. […] The justices will not be evaluating whether glyphosate causes cancer. Rather, they’ll consider who should decide what appears on warning labels and whether states have a role to play after the EPA weighs in.

The current U.S. solicitor general backed Monsanto. Sarah Harris, his principal deputy, said the Environmental Protection Agency is in the driver’s seat, not anyone in Missouri. “Missouri thus requires adding cancer warnings but federal law requires EPA to approve new warnings and tasks EPA with deciding what label changes would mitigate any health risks,” Harris argued. “State law must give way.” Several justices, including Brett Kavanaugh, appeared to agree with Monsanto’s argument about the need for a single, uniform standard across the country.

But others, like Chief Justice John Roberts, wondered what would happen if the federal government moved more slowly than states did, who wanted to act quickly on information about new dangers. “Well, it does undermine the uniformity,” Roberts said. “On the other hand, if it turns out they were right, it might have been good if they had an opportunity to do something, to call this danger to the attention of people while the federal government was going through its process,” he said about states.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson asked about the emergence of new science, and the EPA’s reviews. “There’s a 15-year window between when that product has to be re-registered again and lots of things can happen in science, in terms of development about the product,” she said. Bayer, which now owns Monsanto, only sells Roundup that contains glyphosate to farmers and businesses these days. Bayer has been pushing to resolve scores of the residential cases through a sweeping settlement, trying to put the costly claims behind it.

Re:What does the science say?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The science is on the manufacturer’s side.

What?

https://publichealth.gmu.edu/n…
https://www.sciencedirect.com/…
https://www.pan-europe.info/pr…
https://link.springer.com/arti…

You wouldn’t know science if it gave a lecture up your ass.

Re: What does the science say?

By logjon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
It’s kinda how the oil companies spent decades trotting out their own scientists to pretend global warming wasn’t real. Certain people will not accept anything short of a double-blind study where human participants are intentionally exposed to Roundup until they get cancer. These are the same types of morons who look at every snowstorm as proof global warming doesn’t exist.

Re: What does the science say?

By databasecowgirl • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
EPA says it is safe, IF used as directed. DDT was similarly found to be safe IF used as directed. And DDT has been a godsend in stopping malaria. But most people don’t use as directed and the results have been a disaster.

IARC, part of WHO, classify it as Group 2a, probably carcinogenic, citing limited evidence in humans but sufficient evidence in humans.

The issue isn’t just with the toxicity of glyphosate, but the toxicity of Monsanto who has a huge legal team ready to sue anyone in their way.

Look at all the farmers who’ve lost their farms due to lawsuits due to supposedly using illegal ‘roundup ready corn’ because their harvest contained some proprietary genetics. Eventually it was established the genetics was introduced by pollen from other farms using the product legally. Even weeds were using the genetics illegally.

Maybe if it was used judiciously, and only in monitored ag applications, it would be safe. But do you trust the neighborhoods of ‘Tim the Toolguys’ slopping it on their lawns with a more is better attitude in order to have the best lawn on the block?

From my perspective, I think it’s way overused. IMHO, it’s dangerous to walk barefoot or even sit on a grass lawn.

I’m half tempted to buy a bag of roundup ready corn to protest the chemical’s overuse by parks and rec after seeing it be sprayed recklessly on weeds in a water causeway. But then I figure it would only lead to more roundup used and the groundskeepers aren’t using PPE so they will likely become advocates against its use soon enough once the NHL sets in.

Re:What does the science say?

By slacktide • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Don’t go up the ladder, go down. I extensively use 20% concentrated vinegar to control weeds and brush on my ~1 acre property. It’s just as fast acting and effective as Roundup, but instead of causing cancer, it smells like salad dressing. Unlike Glyphosate it is not a selective herbicde and kills broadleaf plants and grasses alike. So it’s not as useful for farmers spraying Roundup resistant soybean crops. But for control of backyard weeds, it’s much preferred to giving your family and pets cancer.

Re:What does the science say?

By eepok • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Some key notes on those papers—

That first paper tests the EU lifetime safe dosage 0.5 mg/kg/day of glyphosate on rats. They’re not saying “any amount of glyphosate will give you cancer”, they’re calling out the safe dosage as being too high. (The dosage translates to say that an 185lbs person should be able to consume 42mg of glyphosate per day.) The average American probably consumes less than 1mg (in total) per day.

The second paper is and update to the author’s paper plus additional literature review. The paper discloses that author is a paid witness in glyphosate litigation. That doesn’t mean what’s written isn’t true, just that there reason to be skeptical and read further.

The third link is a press release from an anti-pesticide group, not research. Everything covered in that release is covered in the first two links.

The fourth link, like the second, is written by someone who is an expert witness in glypshosate litigation while writing the paper. Speaking to the content, it evaluates the US EPA and WHO conclusions about glyphosate (“not likely to cause cancer” vs “probably carcinogenic to humans”) and shows that they came to different conclusions because they looked at different research and asked different questions. The author concludes that had they looked at the same research, they likely would have come to the same conclusions.

The Silent Frequency That Makes Old Buildings Feel Haunted

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Researchers say infrasound — low-frequency vibrations from things like pipes, HVAC systems, and traffic that humans can’t consciously hear — may help explain why some old buildings feel unsettling or “haunted.” Rodney Schmaltz, senior author and professor at MacEwan, says: “Consider visiting a supposedly haunted building. Your mood shifts, you feel agitated, but you can’t see or hear anything unusual. In an old building, there is a good chance that infrasound is present, particularly in basements where aging pipes and ventilation systems produce low-frequency vibrations. If you were told the building was haunted, you might attribute that agitation to something supernatural. In reality, you may simply have been exposed to infrasound.” ScienceBlog.com reports:
Infrasound sits below roughly 20 Hz, the lower limit of what the human ear can ordinarily detect. It’s generated by storms, by volcanic activity, by tectonic rumblings deep in the Earth’s crust, and (this is the part that matters) by the mundane mechanical heartbeat of cities: ageing pipes, HVAC systems, traffic, industrial machinery. “Infrasound is pervasive in everyday environments, appearing near ventilation systems, traffic, and industrial machinery,” says Schmaltz. Most of the time, we walk through it without a second thought. The question the team wanted to answer was whether walking through it was actually doing something to us, whether the frequency was registered somewhere below consciousness, somewhere we couldn’t readily name.

The experimental setup was deliberately ordinary. Thirty-six undergraduate students filed one at a time into isolated testing rooms and sat alone with a piece of music, either a calming instrumental or a horror-themed ambient track designed to provoke discomfort. Hidden subwoofers, including a 12-inch unit positioned in an adjacent hallway and a 16-inch speaker oriented toward the ceiling in a neighboring room, pumped infrasound at approximately 18 Hz into half those spaces. The participants had no idea. That last point turned out to be rather important. When the team ran the numbers, they found that participants couldn’t reliably identify whether infrasound had been present. Their guesses were, statistically speaking, no better than chance. And according to Schmaltz, participants’ beliefs about whether the infrasound was on had no detectable effect on their cortisol or mood. The physiological response didn’t care what the participants thought was happening. It just happened anyway.

What happened, specifically, was this: those exposed to infrasound reported higher irritability, lower interest in the music, and a tendency to rate the music as sadder, irrespective of whether it was the calming or the horror track. Cortisol levels, measured before and about 20 minutes after exposure, were also elevated. Kale Scatterty, the PhD student who led the work, notes that irritability and cortisol do tend to move together under ordinary stress, but adds that “infrasound exposure had effects on both outcomes that went beyond that natural relationship.” That distinction matters more than it might seem. Previous theories about infrasound and paranormal experience have often leaned on anxiety as the explanatory mechanism, the idea that low-frequency sound triggers a kind of free-floating dread that the mind then reaches for supernatural explanations to account for. The new data don’t really support that picture. Measures of anxiety didn’t budge significantly. What went up was irritability and disinterest, a kind of sour, low-grade aversion rather than fear. That’s perhaps a more honest description of how a lot of ghost stories actually feel in the telling: not screaming terror, but wrong atmosphere, a sense of unease that never quite crystallizes into something you can point at.
The study has been published this week in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience.

EM sensitivity

By Hentes • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I’m surprised how rarely infrasound emissions are measured. The health effects are well known, and it wouldn’t surprise me if the symptoms of most “EM sensitive” people were actually caused by infrasound coming from a crappy antenna.

Mythbusters

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I seem to recall the Mythbusters did a reasonably well designed practical experiment and found this just wasn’t likely - if you think a place is haunted, it’s because you’re susceptible to that kind of thinking, not because of infrasound.

You can hear below 20 hz

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Informative Thread
20hz is not the level you can hear, it’s the level where repeated pressure changes get unified in your brain to a single tone.

Below that level, your brain perceives them as individual beats. At 20hz they are coming pretty quick, but if you listen (and they are loud enough) you can distinguish each one.

Re:Mythbusters

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
When mythbusters debunks something, they usually debunk it in a single scenario. They don’t go through all the effort to exhaustively explore the search space. That is why they are criticized for not being scientific.

Mythbusters shines when they prove something is possible. Break a glass with your voice? That’s where they are at they strongest. (There is still room for alternate hypothesis, maybe the singer held the glass too tightly? But it’s a solid piece of experimental evidence).

I Call BS

By deadweight • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
This is misleading. I am not surprised that infra-sound can bother people in various ways. What they did not do was survey various buildings for infra-sounds. I saw no coherent explanation of why old buildings would have more of it. It also leaves off that plenty of ghost stories occurred in pre-industrial and pre-plumbing eras. What they needed to do was use 4 buildings, 2 new and 2 old, with one of each having infra-sound. There may be some psychology where feeling unsettled in a 10 year old building means one thing and in a 100 year old building something else, but this study did not go there or even survey any buildings at all for infra-sound.

Trump Administration Will Pay More Energy Firms to Cancel Wind Farms

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The Trump administration says it will reimburse energy companies $885 million to cancel two planned offshore wind farms, with the firms in turn agreeing to put money into oil and gas projects instead. “The deals are modeled after a similar agreement last month with the French energy giant TotalEnergies,” notes the New York Times. “TotalEnergies forfeited its leases for two wind projects planned off the coasts of New York and North Carolina, while committing to a range of fossil-fuel investments.” From the report:
[…] The first new agreement affects Bluepoint Wind, a wind farm in the early stages of development off New York and New Jersey. The project was proposed by Global Infrastructure Partners, a part of asset manager BlackRock, and Ocean Winds, which is itself a joint venture between Engie and EDP Renewables, two European clean-energy firms. The second deal would cancel Golden State Wind, another early-stage venture off California’s central coast. Golden State Wind is a 50-50 partnership between the developers Ocean Winds and Reventus Power.

Both Bluepoint Wind and Golden State Wind agreed not to pursue any new offshore wind projects in the United States, although that pledge would not necessarily apply to the companies behind the ventures. Ocean Winds has also been developing another giant wind farm known as SouthCoast Wind, off Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., that is much further along in the planning and permitting process. That project is not affected by Monday’s announcement, although it has essentially been paused since Mr. Trump took office last year. […] It is also unclear how much the companies will actually invest in new fossil fuel infrastructure. In documents released this month, Interior revealed that it would count investments that TotalEnergies made before the deal toward its pledge, raising questions over whether the company had any obligations to make additional investments.

Re:Ideologically fueled insanity.

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

How does ANY of this make sense. We’re paying people NOT to generate energy?

First rule of MAGA: Do not question dear leader.

Second rule of MAGA: Was something implemented by a democrat? Undo it. For example https://obamawhitehouse.archiv…

Re:Doctor Evil 2.0

By AleRunner • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Absolute NONSENSE! .. We in the UK have some of the most expensive electricity on earth! Our Green endeavour has been a disaster for paying customers! Most of us can’t even afford to heat our homes.

That’s because we’re paying the cost of nuclear and gas, not because of Wind. Hinkley point C, delivering just 3 GW just went up to £35 billion.

If that same money had been invested into a new super capacity transmission line from Scotland to England and increasing offshore Wind in Scotland, not only would prices fall vastly, but it would also already have been delivered.

Re: Ideologically fueled insanity.

By Sique • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Luckily, wind turbines don’t need much service. The farmer moves his equipment across his field way more often. You can schedule the maintenance during the time when there is no crops on the field. You also don’t need to build the wind turbine as much away as possible from the next path. Why not place it directly beneath the access road which is already there? And for maintenance, you only need a small service van. If you have to replace anything large, you use the helicopter. There are not many mobile cranes which are able to lift something into 500 ft height. The rent contract with the farmer contains wording about the rules for access. As someone who has serviced cell phone antennas somewhere in the nothingness, I call that a non-issue.

Re:Ideologically fueled insanity.

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yeah, the vast majority of America agrees with you.

I wish I believed this, but I think only about a third does. Another third thinks this is great and the last third is made up of people with heads up asses, the kind of people who still think they can be apolitical even though politics happens to them whether they understand it or not.

Trump is accidentally the greenest President

By FeelGood314 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
By being a lapdog to Putin he forced Europe to wean itself of Russian gas
By attacking Iran he’s made oil more expensive and also unreliable accelerating the rest of the worlds movement away from it
By being a totally unreliable trading partner and trashing the integrated North American auto industry he’s made it politically possible for Canada and Mexico to import Chinese electric cars. In putting an oil embargo on Cuba he’s forced Cuba to move to solar and wind. If Cuba survives it will serve as an example to the developing world on how to transition.

Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press:
Technology tycoons Elon Musk and Sam Altman are poised to face off in a high-stakes trial revolving around the alleged betrayal, deceit and unbridled ambition that blurred the bickering billionaires’ once-shared vision for the development of artificial intelligence. The trial, which started Monday with jury selection, centers on the 2015 birth of ChatGPT maker OpenAI as a nonprofit startup primarily funded by Musk before evolving into a capitalistic venture now valued at $852 billion. The trial’s outcome could sway the balance of power in AI — breakthrough technology that is increasingly being feared as a potential job killer and an existential threat to humanity’s survival. Those perceived risks are among the reasons that Musk, the world’s richest person, cites for filing an August 2024 lawsuit that will now be decided by a jury and U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, California.

The civil lawsuit accuses Altman, OpenAI’s CEO, and his top lieutenant, Greg Brockman, of double-crossing Musk by straying from the San Francisco company’s founding mission to be an altruistic steward of a revolutionary technology. The lawsuit alleges they shifted into a moneymaking mode behind his back. OpenAI has brushed off Musk’s allegations as an unfounded case of sour grapes that’s aimed at undercutting its rapid growth and bolstering Musk’s own xAI, which he launched in 2023 as a competitor. Gonzalez Rogers questioned potential jurors Monday about their views on Musk, Altman and artificial intelligence. Some jurors said they had negative views of Musk, but most said they would still be able to treat him fairly and focus on the facts of the case. […] “Part of this is about whether a jury believes the people who will testify and whether they are credible,” Gonzalez Rogers said during a court hearing earlier this year while explaining why she believe the case merited a trial. The judge will make the final decision on the case, with the jury serving in an advisory role.
The latest development is that a jury has been seated. During selection, several prospective jurors expressed negative views of Elon Musk, but Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers rejected attempts by Musk’s lawyer to remove some of them solely on that basis, saying dislike of Musk does not automatically mean someone can’t be fair.
The court is selecting nine jurors, and the case is expected to wrap by May 21, when it would go to the jury. Tomorrow, April 28th, will feature opening statements.

Can the Tesla robots make popcorn yet?

By drnb • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Technology tycoons Elon Musk and Sam Altman are poised to face off in a high-stakes trial

Can the Tesla robots make popcorn yet?

Re: Scam Artman vs Felon Husk

By sodul • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

They will be both losing thanks to discovery and the fact that a lot of the evidence will become public.

Both of them are pretty well known for rejecting reality and substituting their own. We should be able to witness multiple parallel realities during this trial.

Re:we’ll finally know

By ZipK • Score: 5, Funny Thread

We will all learn, by official measure of the court, which one of these guys has a bigger dick.

“Has a” or “is the”?

Re:This should be interesting

By bloodhawk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
They always tell what they consider their version of the truth.

Re:This should be interesting

By greytree • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I think Musk does that.

I think Altman tells whatever will get him what he wants, from that person, at that time:

"[…] most of the people we spoke to shared the judgment of Sutskever and Amodei: Altman has a relentless will to power that, even among industrialists who put their names on spaceships, sets him apart. “He’s unconstrained by truth,” the board member told us. “He has two traits that are almost never seen in the same person. The first is a strong desire to please people, to be liked in any given interaction. The second is almost a sociopathic lack of concern for the consequences that may come from deceiving someone.”"

https://archive.ph/QMf3Y#selection-2501.4-2501.519

Study Finds a Third of New Websites Are AI-Generated

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
alternative_right shares a report from 404 Media:
Researchers working with data from the Internet Archive have discovered that a third of websites created since 2022 are AI-generated. The team of researchers — which includes people from Stanford, the Imperial College London, and the Internet Archive — published their findings online in a paper titled "The Impact of AI-Generated Text on the Internet.” The research also found that all this AI-generated text is making the web more cheery and less verbose.
“The proliferation of AI-generated and AI-assisted text on the internet is feared to contribute to a degradation in semantic and stylistic diversity, factual accuracy, and other negative developments,” the researchers write in the paper. “We find that by mid-2025, roughly 35% of newly published websites were classified as AI-generated or AI-assisted, up from zero before ChatGPT’s launch in late 2022.”
“I find the sheer speed of the AI takeover of the web quite staggering,” Jonas Dolezal, an AI researcher at Stanford and co-author of the paper, told 404 Media. “After decades of humans shaping it, a significant portion of the internet has become defined by AI in just three years. We’re witnessing, in my opinion, a major transformation of the digital landscape in a fraction of the time it took to build in the first place.”

Maty Bohacek, a student researcher at Stanford and one of the co-authors of the paper, added: “As AI-generated content spreads, the challenge is finding a role for these models that doesn’t just result in a sanitized, repetitive web,” he said. “Rather than forcing models to be perfectly compliant and agreeable, allowing them to have a more distinct personality or ‘friction’ might help them act as a creative partner rather than a replacement for human voice.”

Might be to late already!

By oldgraybeard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The Internet is being buried with AI generated slop being created, indexed, summarized and regurgitated as even more AI slop to be consumed by AI bots to generate even more AI slop. With anything really creative, innovative, informative and true being the needle in the proverbial haystack and effectively hidden.

GIGO

By Registered Coward v2 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So AI will be training itself on stuff generated by itself, the ultimate self licking ice cream cone. Reminds me of the game of putting a paragraph repeatedly through translation software back and forth between to languages until you got gibberish,

This is a race to the bottom

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The damage that it’s going to do the Internet, and to society, and to education, government, and all the other components of society, is staggering. An enormous amount of work done by dedicated people over decades will be swamped by the flood of AI slop, and I don’t think we’ll know what we’ve lost until it’s gone.

Many readers of this site are likely familiar with various sci-fi stories that deal with nanobots which have begun reproducing without limit, eventually consuming all resources and reducing their planet to “gray goo”. This is the information equivalent: it will expand to occupy everything that it possibly can, overwhelming everything generated by humans. And when that happens, it will impact our shared view of reality, which is based on a (mostly) common set of facts.

And when nothing is real, anything can be real. This will not escape the attention of would-be fascists and dictators.

Re:Same as it ever was

By karmawarrior • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Wordpress is a framework for publishing web content. It’s not really relevant here. You can publish slop using AI too. And the fact a website is Wordpress based does not mean the content is good or bad.

This is idiotic snobbery, and you should know better.

Re: Might be to late already!

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
My website was king for 10 years. Now it’s buried under 50 rudimentary AI clones churning out blog posts about how their software is better, whilst they blanket Reddit with new accounts promoting themselves and spreading misinformation about mine. Reddit seems to ban a lot but not all. Impossible to compete. Still have my core users but they’re dwindling. Was a fun run.