Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Texas Grid Flags Risks As Data Centers, Crypto Sites Fail Voltage Tests
  2. Police Sued After Imprisoning Innocent Man Placed Near Violent Crime By Flock License Plate Reader
  3. Prada Unveils ‘Liquid Cooling’ Inner-Layer Garment for NASA’s Moon Astronauts with Knitted-In Ventilation Tubes
  4. Black Market Tinkerers on Facebook Marketplace Offer to Hide ‘Recording Lights’ on Meta Smartglasses
  5. New Fortune 500 Rankings: Texas Overtakes California, But Amazon is #1, Beating Walmart
  6. The Gamer-Rights Group Fighting to Make the Industry Stop Killing Games (Servers)
  7. Winners Announced in 2026’s ‘International Obfuscated C Code Competition’
  8. James Bond Videogame ‘007 First Light’ Sells 3M Copies, Earns $150M
  9. After Empty Promises, Will String Theory Find New Uses?
  10. Reddit Ads Impersonate BBC and The Guardian to Push Fake AI Investment Schemes
  11. Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders And Sam Altman Are All Talking About Public Ownership In AI
  12. ‘Steve Jobs In Exile’ Remembers the Birth of the Web and ‘Making Unix Taste Sweet’
  13. Scientists Edited Human Embryo Genes. But Questions Remain
  14. Failing CS Grades Soar At UC Berkeley As Professors See Greater AI Usage
  15. Cheaper EV Sales are Increasing

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.

Texas Grid Flags Risks As Data Centers, Crypto Sites Fail Voltage Tests

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Reuters reports:
Several large data centers and crypto facilities planning to connect to the Texas power grid ahead of peak summer demand have failed key reliability tests, raising the risk of power outages just as electricity use hits its seasonal high, according to the state grid operator… Unlike traditional industrial customers, which tend to draw electricity steadily and predictably, data centers are engineered to cut their connection to the grid at the first sign of trouble to protect their equipment and keep services running. That makes them an unpredictable and potentially destabilizing force on grids already under pressure from rising demand. Four groups of unnamed large electricity users, including data centers, abruptly disconnected from the Texas grid during a test of how they would handle routine voltage disturbances, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) said in a report dated May 21.

When large customers abruptly cut their power use, it can knock the grid off balance and trigger wider outages. ERCOT, which manages electricity for most of Texas, said it reviewed about 20 gigawatts of large customers seeking to connect to the system, including eight projects totaling roughly 3.9 gigawatts aiming to start up before July 1. It said it identified four groups of large power users that could each trigger more than 5,000 megawatts of demand tripping under certain fault conditions, based on simulations of transmission system disturbances. Those abrupt drops in demand were equivalent to the electricity consumption of a large city such as Boston.

It almost looks intentional

By Jeremi • Score: 3 Thread

If I was deliberately trying to cause a nation-wide backlash against data centers, I’m not sure what I’d be doing differently from what the AI companies are currently doing.

Has nobody told them that people don’t like having their lives disrupted, particularly when they don’t see any compensating benefit, or even a convincing reason for having any of it? If they were to ease off the gas pedal just a bit, they could probably do a boil-the-frog and get a larger number of smaller/less-obtrusive data centers built over a longer time period, and without the voter revolts and strict legislation that are likely to hobble them now.

Police Sued After Imprisoning Innocent Man Placed Near Violent Crime By Flock License Plate Reader

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“When Hugo Parra was arrested last year on felony charges, his pleas of innocence fell on deaf ears,” reports the Times of San Diego:
San Diego police had a description of the Alfa Romeo car he was riding in [but no license plate number] and a witness who identified him during a curbside lineup as the man who brandished a handgun in Golden Hill. They had also checked the city’s automatic license plate camera system, run by the private company Flock, and got a “hit,” substantiating the claim. The problem, says attorney Alex Coolman, was that Parra was five miles away from Golden Hill at the time of the crime, and the so-called hit from the license plate reader was captured before any police pursuit began. “This Flock hit was obviously the wrong car, as it could not have been in both places simultaneously,” said Coolman, who represents Parra and the driver, 23-year-old Ariel Beltran.

Despite the signs pointing to it being a different Alfa Romeo, police arrested Beltran and Parra… [An officer had informed dispatch that one of the men “matched the victim’s description, other than having a different-colored hooded sweatshirt.”] Parra spent nearly one month behind bars, missing Thanksgiving and other special events with his family, before the assault with a firearm and evasion charges were dropped.
Parras says he was incarcerated with actual murderers, according to the article, and Parra and Beltran are now preparing to sue the city, seeking $1.5 million each in damages for civil rights violations and negligence. Their claim notes they’d driven past several other Flock cameras which officers could’ve used to corroborate their story (not to mention location data on their cell phones).

Meanwhile, the article also notes that last month the Institute for Justice “identified at least 17 cases in the United States of officers allegedly using Automated License Plate Reader technology to keep tabs on partners, exes, and strangers who had caught their eye…”

Re:Destroy Them

By JaredOfEuropa • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Sounds to me the cameras are working just fine, but law enforcement is using them incorrectly (and there’s no recourse or oversight).
The data should have cleared him as a suspect.

Re: Destroy Them

By angryman77 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I say they’ll only learn after they’ve been successfully sued for a few billion dollars because of lazy/negligent work. Let the lawsuits continue!

Re:Destroy Them

By jhoegl • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
You arent wrong
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6F_0iIaXGqA

And if you want to see real incompetent use of police cameras attempting to “gather data” for “precrime”, you should watch this

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfD_2fVqEMk

These are high school diploma morons attempting to use technology to do their job for them. It would be ignorant to continue to allow not only this, but corporate owned cameras access to our streets and data.

SDPD: Tenaciously Stupid

By ihadafivedigituid • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
San Diego Police Department absolutely can officially believe a car, a person, the Sun, or anything else can be in two places at once.

Having made this assessment, they are blandly impervious to any evidence to the contrary. It’s like The Naked Gun but without the humor. Poorly recruited, poorly trained, and poorly led, they are to be avoided like day-old Taco Bell leftovers.

Prada Unveils ‘Liquid Cooling’ Inner-Layer Garment for NASA’s Moon Astronauts with Knitted-In Ventilation Tubes

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Italian fashion house Prada “unveiled on Sunday the inner-layer garment set to be worn by NASA astronauts heading to the moon,” reports Reuters.

“The body-hugging suit, created in collaboration with Houston-based space infrastructure developer Axiom Space, features ventilation tubes knitted into the garment.”
Expertise for developing space exploration products “can come from lots of seemingly unrelated industries,” said Jonathan Cirtain, CEO of Axiom Space… The new product follows Prada’s splashy foray into space fashion in 2024 with the unveiling of a spacesuit that is expected to be used for NASA’s anticipated Artemis 4 moon landing in 2028…

Other fashion and apparel companies have jumped on the space bandwagon. Under Armour has partnered with spaceflight company Virgin Galactic to create space apparel, while Columbia Sportswear has worked with space exploration company Intuitive Machines on space fabric technology.
The new “Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment” was displayed on a mannequin at an event at Prada’s Manhattan store.

Black Market Tinkerers on Facebook Marketplace Offer to Hide ‘Recording Lights’ on Meta Smartglasses

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
People are disabling the “recording light” on Meta’s Ray-Ban smartglasses — “by my count, thousands of people,” says tech journalist Joanna Stern in a new video report:
STERN: “They’re hiring people on Facebook Marketplace to drill out the light for as much as $100. According to our reporting, folks are offering this service in at least 30 states — despite Meta’s attempts to stop it… In most states, we found multiple listings. In the New York and New Jersey area alone there were 23 listings.”
Stern watched a man in New Jersey disable and then conceal the light with a drill and dental probe in a New Jersey garage (a skill he learned watching YouTube and TikTok videos). He said the same day he’d already been contacted by eight more interested customers, and Stern also found at least 10 other people willing to do the same thing, just in New Jersey. “But what we found is they’re all over the country.”

Meta sold 7 million smartglasses in 2025, but a Meta spokesperson insisted to the videomaker that a “majority” of their smartglasses owners aren’t blocking the recording light. And furthermore, they added “We aggressively target anyone advertising tampering tools, have removed thousands of violating ads and Marketplace listings for these services, and pursue legal action when appropriate.” (The reporter acknowledges “many” of the Marketplace ads disappeared after they brought them to Meta’s attention — and Meta also said they were working with other retailers and sellers to take down listings for smartglasses-tampering parts.)

The reporter also heard from one journalist who said they’d used it so they could record the activities of federal immigration agents without being targeted. “Others told me they just don’t want people asking questions when they’re recording.” (There’s video of one young man saying “It’s already difficult enough to film in public. I don’t want to have a blinking light on my face.”)

Tampering with smartglasses isn’t illegal — though it is against Meta’s Terms of Service, and could void your warranty. But a lawyer in the report says recording others without consent may be illegal, depending on a wide range of “jurisdictional nuances” like whether you live in an all-party consent state or a one-party consent state. “This seems to be our new reality,” the report concludes: “more cameras, more microphones everywhere, and less certainty about who and what is recording.” (Tech blogger John Gruber offered this assessment. “Using a Meta platform to find people to hack a Meta device so you can surreptitiously record strangers. So perfectly Meta.”)

Stern’s report points out that “People are trying to fight back. Apps have popped up that use Bluetooth to scan for nearby camera glasses.” (In the video one app-maker wonders why Meta isn’t offering the same service themselves. “There are technical solutions to these problems.”)

Ironically, when I watched the report on YouTube, it was preceded by… an ad for Meta’s Ray-Ban AI smartglasses.

Re:Glass holes

By markdavis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

>“I was thinking of getting a dash cam for my car. But i call these people glass holes. Would that make me a dash hole? It is not really that different, the dash cam does not notify it is recording either.”

I, indeed, would call people going around recording everyone from a face advantage “glass holes”.

No, a dashcam or fixed security camera is not at all the same. A glass hole is a person who is recording people face-to-face without the other knowing. In such a situation, you are recording a conversation/interaction and often in a place that is not fully “public”. It is a major betrayal of a social norm/social contract.

I don’t know about you, but I do expect I might be recorded outside driving a car, in a store, even a restaurant. They might be brief interactions, rarely focused directly on just me, and rarely with audio. I do not expect to be directly recorded by someone in my home, at the table in a restaurant, in a doctor’s exam room, in a bathroom, during a business meeting, etc.

In a situation where it is not socially acceptable to hold your phone up to someone in a “I am recording you” posture, it is certainly less acceptable to be doing it with a head-mounted camera/microphone… and even less so if there is zero indication it is a recording device and is actually doing so at the time.

New Fortune 500 Rankings: Texas Overtakes California, But Amazon is #1, Beating Walmart

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Texas has dethroned California as the state with the most Fortune 500 companies,” reports the Los Angeles Times:
The Fortune 500 list ranks the largest U.S. companies by revenue. This year, 57 of the top companies are headquartered in Texas, compared with California’s 56. It’s a reversal from two years ago when the Golden State had the pole position…

California’s corporate haters say they try to avoid the state’s high costs, income taxes and strict regulations, but the western state is still a top money maker. “California dominates on nearly every other measure: its Fortune 500 companies are the most profitable ($647 billion), most valuable ($20 trillion), and employ more people than any other state (2.8 million workers),” Fortune said in a news release. Indeed, despite the naysayers, Californian companies have been leading the world in developing artificial intelligence technology as well as the latest in space and defense tech. The state is home to nearly 400 “unicorns,” or billion-dollar startups — more than any other state, according to CB Insights. It also gobbled up nearly two-thirds of U.S. venture capital last year, with San Francisco Bay Area startups such as OpenAI leading the way, according to the business information platform Crunchbase.

Texas and California have been in a tug-of-war for the crown. In 2024, after a decade, California bagged the top spot with 57 companies on the list, while Texas and New York tied in second with 52 companies each… The fourth spot was tied between Illinois and Ohio, with 29 companies each.

Amazon was the top company on the list, ending Walmart’s 13-year reign at the top of the annual Fortune 500 companies list. Amazon’s 2025 revenue was $716.9 billion, compared with Walmart’s $713.2 billion. Seattle-headquartered Amazon joined Exxon Mobil, General Motors, and Walmart as the only four companies to have ever held the top position since Fortune began publishing the data in 1955.

But but but…

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
…but Fox said that California is bad! How many of the Fortune 500 companies now in Texas actually started in California and then moved to Texas and still have a substantial California presence? The game is called talent, and talent doesn’t want to move to Texas, especially female talent.

Re:But but but…

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

…but Fox said that California is bad! How many of the Fortune 500 companies now in Texas actually started in California and then moved to Texas and still have a substantial California presence? The game is called talent, and talent doesn’t want to move to Texas, especially female talent.

I imagine they (are told to) say that because Texas gives preference to corporations over its citizens while California doesn’t, but that’s just a guess. For example, Public School Rankings by State 2026 has CA at #8 and TX at #34 - surprisingly, the latter is lower than FL at #24. (New York is highest at #1, btw.)

Re:But but but…

By cpurdy • Score: 5, Funny Thread
According to Fox News, Texas students rank very highly on standardized science tests including: “Creation, how six days of work can beat your stupid evolution”, and “Women, why they are best suited for child-rearing and obedience”.

Useless measure

By Archfeld • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Large corporations are leeches not contributors. The only true measure is GDP. California’s is approximately TWICE what Texas claims. In fact it takes Texas AND New York to beat California. If we could ensure these corporations actually paid taxes things might even out.

Re:Useless measure

By outsider007 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The only true measure is GDP. California’s is approximately TWICE what Texas claims.

GDP counts things like rent, where CA certainly beats Texas

However… I would argue that price-adjusted per-capita GDP is probably a better metric, and I think you’ll find that those are about a tie.

The Gamer-Rights Group Fighting to Make the Industry Stop Killing Games (Servers)

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Can a company take away something you’ve already paid for?” asks the BBC. “In the world of online video games, some already do.”
Publishers can decide to switch off a game’s servers, often leaving it effectively unplayable. Stop Killing Games, a growing consumer rights campaign started by American YouTuber Ross Scott in 2024, is challenging that practice. In January, the group submitted a petition featuring nearly 1.3 million signatures to the European Commission, triggering a public hearing in the European Parliament in April. What began as an online campaign is now awaiting a decision from one of the EU’s most powerful institutions…

Scott’s campaign began following an announcement from the major studio Ubisoft, saying it would shut down the online-only racing game The Crew in 2024… Ubisoft has already defended its position in court. Responding to a proposed class-action lawsuit brought by two The Crew players in California, the studio argued that customers had purchased a licence to use the game, not unlimited ownership rights, and that players had been warned online services would not be available forever. The lawsuit was dismissed without prejudice in June 2025, after the plaintiffs voluntarily withdrew the case. The wider games industry has also pushed back against the campaign. Video Games Europe, which represents many of the industry’s largest publishers, said shutting down online services “must be an option” when games are no longer commercially viable. It also warned that some of the campaign’s proposals could make online-only games significantly more expensive to develop.

“In no way are we asking companies to keep servers running or services going, they can end it any time they want,” said Scott. Instead, he and his fellow campaigners argue that when a game is shut down it should be done “responsibly”, with publishers considering “end-of-life plans” such as updating the game to work offline or releasing software that allows players to continue running it.
Two key points from the article:

Thanks to Alain Williams — Slashdot reader #2,972 — for sharing the article.


Good.

By YuppieScum • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I hope this succeeds in compelling game-makers to adopt “life after end-of-life” measures for their products as, once this precedent is set, we can do the same for hardware makers.

Open source it then

By sit1963nz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If you do not want to run the servers, open source it.

This is why I do not rent software, nor do I buy software that is server dependant.

FileMaker Pro 7 still runs fine on the machine I bought it for, it also runs fine in an emulator. It just works, it does exactly the same things it did when I bought it. It is not worn out, broken, or what ever. So I just keep using it

And you can keep you AI wank out of my computers too.

Re:Open source it then

By Echoez • Score: 4, Informative Thread

There are a few problems with “just open source it” though. For instance, they could rely on other licensed software that they paid for, and you can’t necessarily just transition that to being open source. For example, EA open-sourced Command and Conquer Generals ( https://github.com/electronica… ), but you can’t really compile it without also obtaining other licensed software such as GameSpy.

Re:Open source it then

By Samantha Wright • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The main aim of Stop Killing Games is to ensure the practice of rug-pulling eventually comes to an end. They are not trying to save MMOs, for example.

Moreover they don’t demand that every game currently on the market comply with open-sourcing requirements: at a minimum, companies always have the option of simply providing customers with adequate notice before shutdown. Open-sourcing the server would be nice, but it’s hardly the only way to protect consumers’ interests. Scott has, for example, suggested game boxes being marked with an estimated expiry date for online service functionality.

But most importantly: because this is about future games, not the present, the market has time to change. If studios and publishers are designing their games with a fair EOL in mind, then they can make decisions from the get-go to avoid licensing dependencies that they won’t be able to release in a possible ‘afterlife’ version of the game. As suggested by your example of GameSpy in C&C: Generals, when a commercial dependency is crucial to a game’s success, it tends to be a client-side library, but typically the problematic dependencies aren’t crucial; they’re e.g. add-ons for Unity or Unreal that the studio bought to save time. In a world with SKG laws, the providers of these dependencies aren’t going to be a stagnant target either—demand for compliant libraries will motivate development of open-source versions.

Interestingly, the will for doing this does exist among game developers; they just need the institutional support from legislation to twist the arms of the studios and publishers. Ross Scott has talked to a lot of devs who are burnt out from having their projects cancelled, leaving them with huge gaping holes in their resumes and portfolios where they’ve spent years on unreleased projects that are stuck under NDA. In general they tend to see SKG as a path to ensuring the games that do see the light of day aren’t also scrapped, which would erode their work histories even further. (Apparently it also just plain feels bad to have your work erased from history. Shocking, I know.)

Friendly Reminder

By organgtool • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

the studio argued that customers had purchased a licence to use the game, not unlimited ownership rights

If buying isn’t owning, then piracy isn’t stealing.

Winners Announced in 2026’s ‘International Obfuscated C Code Competition’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Yesterday 2026’s International Obfuscated C Code Contest concluded, with 22 new winners announced in a special three-hour livestreamed ceremony! Started 42 years ago, it’s been described as the internet’s longest-running contest, with entrants concocting convoluted programs glorying in the C programming language’s subtleties, all while having some fun. And “For IOCCC29, the volume and quality of submissions were at near-historic heights,” explains its home page.

There’s a "Tetris-optimized” GameBoy emulator with source code that looks like a GameBoy, as well as a quasi-Rogue-like game voted “most likely to teleport.” Awards were also given for the best imaginary emulator (a virtual machine in 366 bytes of C) and the best fractional emulator (a maze generator for the Commodore 64). But every one of the 22 winning programs seems wildly creative…

“We have added fun challenges to this year’s winning entries competition…” the web site notes. “After you figure out what a given winning entry does, we encourage you to attempt the fun challenge!”

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader achowe for bringing the news (who has submitted winning entries in four different decades, starting in 1991 and continuing through 2025) — and who won again this year for a program simulating the Space Invaders-like game from Casio’s 1980 MG-880 calculator.

Follow the IOCCC on Mastodon.


Frilly, not obtuse

By spaceman375 • Score: 3 Thread

Sure, there’s plenty of fun and humor. But “obfuscate” means to make hidden, unclear, difficult to understand. These are clever parlor tricks at best, made for pretty showings. Nobody is actually reading the code to figure out something subtle and hidden. They just marvel at how pretty the formatting is or the convoluted execution path. It used to all about reading the source, which was written to look normal but hide big surprises, sometimes as poetry. Where are the subtle punctuation marks that completely change a function’s behavior, or the occasional whitespace character in a strategic spot? It seems more for artists than programmers now.

James Bond Videogame ‘007 First Light’ Sells 3M Copies, Earns $150M

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The new James Bond-themed videogame 007 First Light had a budget of 1.3 billion Danish krone — a little more than USD $202 million, reports IGN, citing a report from Denmark’s public service broadcaster. “Denmark’s TV 2 said that makes 007 First Light the most expensive entertainment product in the country’s history” — and the game “still has some way to go before breaking even.”
007 First Light is estimated to have sold 2.2 million copies, generating $150 million in revenue… [Saturday IGM reported sales had jumped to 3 million copies.] The only official sales data we have comes from developer IO Interactive, which said that 007 First Light had become the fastest-selling game in the company’s history, shifting 1.5 million copies in its first 24 hours… The impressive sales milestone was achieved without the aid of the Nintendo Switch 2 version, which is due out this summer. The James Bond adventure is also the highest rated IOI game ever, with an 87 on Metacritic…

The developer has said it wants to make a trilogy of James Bond games.
Game-tracking company Alinea Analytics tweeted their estimates that 55.1% of sales were on PS5, 33.1% on Steam, and 11.8% on Xbox (Xbox console, Windows, and cloud combined).

And Polygon reports that new downloadable game content was announced Friday.

$150 million in revenue

By innocent_white_lamb • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

The headline number here is $150 million but that isn’t what it’s being presented as.

I assume that by “revenue” they mean gross sales revenue.

So after deducting costs (commissions and profit margins for the retailers average between 30% and 50%, apparently) the remaining amount is likely in the area of $75 to $85 million to the company.

Not an ad

By EditorDavid • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I was surprised they were making new James Bond-themed games. IGN’s newer article says it’s surpassed sales expectations, and it’s getting unusually good reviews:

The James Bond adventure is also the highest rated IOI game ever, with an 87 on Metacritic. IGN’s 007 First Light review returned a 9/10. We said: “Demonstrably obsessed with bringing the Bond fantasy to life in a way no one has ever managed before, 007 First Light is the best Bond game I’ve ever played.”

With all the interest in the original Goldeneye: Open Source game (and the James Bond franchise in general), I thought it was worth a story on Slashdot about the new game. (Ironically, I left out any mention of all the positive reviews because I didn’t want Slashdot’s story to sound…too much like an ad.)

Worst 007 Game Ever

By Bahbus • Score: 3 Thread

It doesn’t look like a 007 game. It doesn’t play like a 007 game. It looks like GTA6 and plays like a hybrid of the Splinter Cell and Assassin’s Creed series.

After Empty Promises, Will String Theory Find New Uses?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Science magazine reports:
For decades, string theory promised a “theory of everything” that described all particles and forces as tiny vibrating strings. Physicists hoped it could also solve one of the field’s deepest problems: reconciling quantum mechanics with gravity. But as string theory grew increasingly elaborate — and experimentally unreachable — many physicists lost hope.

Now, some researchers are revisiting the theory from first principles. In a paper in press at Physical Review Letters, Clifford Cheung, a physicist at the California Institute of Technology, and colleagues lay out a small set of assumptions about the universe and show that they inevitably give rise to string theory.... Cheung’s study, along with another one posted to arXiv in January, starts with two reasonably conservative assumptions: that the probabilities of all possible outcomes of an event add up to 100%, and that the laws of physics are consistent for observers moving at different speeds. Each group then posits additional assumptions that have not been borne out by observations. Cheung’s analysis invokes "ultrasoftness,” the idea that the probability of certain particle interactions drops off at a particular rate at high energies. The second study, led by University of Michigan physicist Henriette Elvang, instead assumes “supersymmetry,” a maximal coupling between matter and forces. Both groups conclude the only theory that can satisfy their assumptions is one that looks like string theory…

Cheung and Elvang stress that their aim is not to prove the inevitability of string theory. “I don’t have a dog in the fight; I just work here,” Cheung says. Rather, the goal is to explore the space of possible theories under rigid constraints — regardless of whether they reflect reality… The one thing the researchers all agree on is that the field would benefit from more alternative models to string theory. Cheung sees the agnostic, bottom-up exploration as a step in that direction. “You can either give up on the problem because it’s too culturally toxic, or you can ask: If you want to find an alternative, what do you need?” he says. “Now, we know exactly what to do.”
Thanks to Slashdot reader sciencehabit for sharing the article.

supersymmetry has to go

By fadethepolice • Score: 4, Funny Thread
The issue with these founding assumptions is including supersymmetry. If they eliminate that from the assumptions, it would be a better start, but the real issue preventing advancement is that they fundamentally do not understand the topology of the universe. The universe is not flat. All mainstream physicists are basically card holding members of the flat universe society.

Nikola Tesla said it

By quonset • Score: 4, Informative Thread

He said if you want to find the secrets to the universe you have to think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibrations. Which, at its most base level, is what String Theory tries to do. Not saying he’s right, but the overlap is interesting.

String theory and falsifiability

By jd • Score: 3 Thread

Physics has used indirect testing for many years, and I don’t think anyone expected string theory to be any different.

There are research papers that detail specific properties that must be present in any string theory-based model of gravity, for example. If we find, in our efforts to study quantum gravity, that those properties can’t hold, then string theory cannot be correct. Not just a specific string theory, ANY string theory at all.

Any string theory that requires a supersymmetry that is reachable by the LHC once it gets updated will be falsified within a very short space of time. If we persist in not seeing supersymmetry after this further round of updates (and we’ve already had several to improve luminosity), then none of the string theories involved can be correct. They have to be false.

None of these allowing string theory would prove string theory “true”, but if any are false then string theory cannot be true. If ALL of them permit string theory, then whether or not string theory describes anything real, the maths that has been done must nonetheless describe real things.

Re:I don’t buy the assumptions

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
(One of my degrees is in physics, but string theory is not my lane: I deal with electromagnetic field theory.)

If the scientists are wrong, they will eventually figure out that they’re wrong and fix it: that’s how science works. For example: Abberation (astronomy). That article contains a paragraph that explains how stellar aberration was observed, explained incorrectly, explained better - but still incorrectly, and eventually explained correctly. Science is designed to be self-correcting, and while sometimes those corrections are difficult and contentious, they inexorably happen.

The assumptions you list are made by physicists because (a) we have no experimental evidence that they’re wrong and (b) we have a mountain of experimental evidence demonstrating that they’re right. If that changes, if even a single bit of experimental evidence shows that they’re wrong then (1) someone will win a Nobel Prize and (2) science will apply the correction. But I strongly doubt this will happen.

As to string theory: my own feeling is that we may be only a few years from being able to conduct experiments that might invalidate it. Please read carefully: I’m not predicting that they will, I’m predicting that they will be capable of doing so. If I’m right about that, and those experiments are run, then either (a) they won’t invalidate string theory, leaving the door open for more discussion and research, or (b) they will invalidate string theory. Of course if the latter happens, the people who’ve invested so much of their lives working on it will be very disappointed — but because they’re scientists, they’ll accept it.

Rather than write more about this, I’m going to quote Carl Sagan: “The Cosmos is all that is or was or ever will be. Our feeblest contemplations of the Cosmos stir us — there is a tingling in the spine, a catch in the voice, a faint sensation, as if a distant memory, of falling from a height. We know we are approaching the greatest of mysteries.”

Only Game In Town

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 3 Thread

String Theory has contributed some useful mathematics but its position as the Only Game In Town (they call it that) appears to have been a psyop to keep Academia out of the work being done at private contractors.

Retired people from e.g. Skunkworks have described corrections and extensions of Maxwell’s Equations and the Dirac Equation as the path that has yielded experimental success.

Those guys didn’t “shut up and calculate”. Their work is under NDA, WUSAP, ITAR, and Invention Secrecy Act restrictions.

Some parallel work, e.g. Exodus Technologies, has started to bear fruit in the public domain, so the psyop is being wound down now. Additionally China has surpassed the US in implementation so they want All Hands On Deck.

What was strategic advantage has become a strategic liability. One can understand this mindset by not caring about the hundreds of millions of lives that could have been saved by resultant technologies. When only State Supremacy (and COG) are factored in the normal human behavior goes out the window.

The impossible need to power AI for a communist surveillance police state may also be playing a factor; hard to know prospectively but somebody has the power source being demonstrated on the slow drip of DoD “UFO” videos.

Most people won’t put Space Aliens on the top of the list of culprits when ATS projects by humans will suffice.

The biggest hurdle will be getting Deans and Department Chairs to discard their life’s work as meaningless. What a “Good Scientist” should do and what most people will do are not the same. Hence the “funeral to funeral” adage.

Reddit Ads Impersonate BBC and The Guardian to Push Fake AI Investment Schemes

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A "growing wave” of Reddit’s “promoted posts" are sending U.S. and European audiences to money-stealing scams that impersonate major news organizations including the BBC, the Financial Times, and The Guardian, according to new findings from Bitdefender Labs.

“Domains are short-lived and rapidly rotated to evade detection,” they write, noting that the impersonating sites apparently even use language “to falsely imply that the investment platform had been reviewed, approved, or vetted” by the legitimate site they’re impersonating:
The campaign promotes fake AI-powered investment platforms such as Wencoin STX, Warrior Coin AI, and Nevo Coin, using fabricated celebrity endorsements, cloned news websites, fake interviews, and invented financial success stories to lure victims into depositing money. Researchers Andrea Olariu and Emanuel Puscasu have identified multiple promoted Reddit posts masquerading as legitimate financial or breaking news stories.

Some ads claimed that:

— NVIDIA and OpenAI were “creating the future”
— Heathrow police discovered hundreds of thousands of pounds in cash
— Governments and banks were allegedly trying to “hide” a revolutionary AI investment platform
— European regulators were “silencing” articles about AI trading systems

Some Reddit ads delivered in video format, including what appeared to be a deepfake BBC news segment featuring a news anchor presenting fabricated financial headlines… Examples observed by researchers included:

— Fake BBC pages discussing "$20 billion conversations” tied to AI investments
— Fraudulent Financial Times articles about Heathrow airport cash seizures
— Fake Guardian stories claiming governments were trying to suppress coverage of Wencoin STX or Nevo Coin

The pages featured fabricated interviews, fake profit screenshots, manipulated banking documents, false testimonials, and even fictional journalists or business editors designed to make the scam look legitimate. In many cases, the content sought to create a sense of exclusivity or conspiracy, suggesting that banks, regulators, or governments were trying to suppress public access to the investment platform…

Our researchers found that after users clicked links embedded within the fake Guardian articles, they were redirected to a registration form allegedly used to create a “Nevo Coin” investment account. The form requested personal contact information, including the victim’s name, email address, and phone number. To increase pressure and encourage immediate action, the page warned that registration availability was limited, claiming that once all spots were filled, new user registrations would be suspended.
And in the final stage, they’re asked to deposit money…

I fell for this one…

By Captain Kirk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I clicked on the link, which appeared to be a BBC story, and then filled in the form including my phone number for more information. Then I saw it was a scam and bailed. Now I get 2 or 3 phone calls from the scammers every day, all from local phone numbers, but all guys with Indian accents so they are spoofing the numbers. I always answer, never speak and just let them hang there a few minutes. The annoyance is that they will sell my number to other scammers so this phone number is probably blighted for life now.

Re:feedback

By sound+vision • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When you speak of an “investing class" that tends to refer to individuals or organizations with large sums to throw around, and who make a profession out of it. Most of the people clicking on these ads are not going to be in that category.

They might fall for the same scam, though, and if it’s been demonstrated to work on the big boys, it will probably work on grandma too.

Re:Am I a bad person

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Crypto Bros and AI Bros are not sitting around on Reddit. If you’re talking joy in ordinary people being scammed then yes you probably are a bad person.

Seeing ads

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This is slashdot. Who here isn’t using any form of ad blocking?

Re:Seeing ads

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
People who should be thanked for their service in keeping my web browsing experience free.

Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders And Sam Altman Are All Talking About Public Ownership In AI

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders announced a plan for the public to take a 50% ownership stake in AI companies, remembers the Associated Press.

And then OpenAI’s Sam Altman “told Sanders that he, too, wants the public to have equity in AI companies.”
Though the CEO said he couldn’t support Sanders’ threshold of 50%, he nonetheless wanted to work with him to advocate for the general idea, according to people with knowledge of the conversation. The nearly hourlong meeting in Sanders’ Senate office this week, held at Altman’s request, highlighted the inherent tension between AI powerhouses and policymakers as Americans are increasingly asked to accept the costs of the AI boom even as they remain unconvinced of its direct benefits.

Yet it’s also creating odd political bedfellows fueled by populism as politicians from Sanders to President Donald Trump embrace giving the public a stake in AI’s growth. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Friday, Trump described a potential partnership “where the American people can benefit from the success of AI” and said executives from leading AI companies will visit the White House, “probably next week,” to discuss the idea.
The article points out that Altman also met with congressional leaders from both of America’s political parties.

Ah yes…

By Junta • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Altman wants some public ownership, but not 50% which, presuming it would be a voting stake, would actually potentially matter for decision making. It’s not a majority but if enough private market shareholders side with the public ownership, then it matters.

Instead, he wants enough for the public to have a stake specifically in the “approved” AI companies so that the companies are unambiguously “too big to fail”. A chance to hold hostage a big enough chunk of wealth so that the government is stuck doing whatever it can to protect and ensure the selected companies, whether it be in the face of a souring market or upstart companies that didn’t have the good fortune of being selected by the company. Meanwhile, the actual governance and decision making remain firmly status quo. Including decisions about how much to send back to “investors” and how much to “reinvest” (including setting their own compensation). They may even structure it so they can classify public ownership differently from private market, and reward investors in each class differently.

Just another ambition to privatize the gains and socialize the losses.

Not really. Reality is …

By aglider • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sam Altman is talking about his business.
Bernie Sanders is talking about how stopping that business harming people.
Donald Trump is talking.

The AI Get-Out-of-Bankruptcy Card

By gtall • Score: 5, Informative Thread

When in doubt, off load to the government. It isn’t beyond the realm that el Bunko has done a secret deal with OpenAI for “some” federal control in exchange for a bit of dosh under the table. In fact, given his track record and Altman’s ability to be ethically challenged, it is likely. And given that he’ll be gone in 2.5 years of the remaining sentence in Hell we have of that dolt, he’ll collect now and stick the next administration with the screw up. And it will screw up, that’s what he does. Just look at his business record. He was found guilty in NY for financial fraud. It is who he is.

Sanders is angling for tax gains to help replace the taxes el Bunko has reduced on the wealthy.

Re:Obviously, Altman wants this

By geekmux • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

He knows he is due for a catastrophic business failure quite soon. Being partially publicly owned would give him access to taxpayer money…

You mean Too Big To Fail money.

Let’s call it what it is.

And if we thought American auto manufacturing arrogance was a bit Too Big to deal with before, just wait until Seven companies insist they’re far too Magnificent to Fail..

Re:Not really. Reality is …

By hodet • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Ya Altman and Sanders are talking about two different things entirely. Altman wants taxpayer money to support the company and take on the risk, Sanders wants guardrails. The title makes it sound like some big koombaya moment. Trump just trying to figure out how he can make it benefit him personally.

‘Steve Jobs In Exile’ Remembers the Birth of the Web and ‘Making Unix Taste Sweet’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Ars Technica shares some anecdotes from Steve Jobs in Exile, a new book released last month:
[Author Geoffrey] Cain reminds us, in stunning detail, that Jobs’ “exile” era at NeXT was not only critical to his evolution as a man and an entrepreneur, but that it mattered for the rest of us, too. The technological innovations that came out of NeXT — notably, the NeXTSTEP OS — continue to live on in what we now call both macOS and iOS. As Cain puts it, “NeXTSTEP was Steve’s attempt to make Unix taste sweet....”

[W]hile many tech nerds know that Tim Berners-Lee created the first World Wide Web server on a NeXT machine while working in Switzerland in 1990, few know that NeXT employees were wary of bringing the news to Jobs. Why? They feared his wrath “and that he would dismiss [the web] as ‘shit.’" (In another timeline, NeXT might itself have capitalized on this world-changing innovation....)

Perhaps one of the wildest anecdotes that Cain uncovered was how one voicemail changed computer history forever. In 1996, when Apple was solidly in its mediocre Performa era — and considering buying BeOS as the basis for its new operating system — a mid-level NeXT product manager asked aloud, “Why don’t we just frickin’ call Apple?” (NeXT was also struggling during this period.) And so someone did. As Cain writes:

Garrett left the group of managers, walked back to his office, and took a risk. He picked up his designer phone and called the head of software at Apple. He left what he described as “one of my more inspired sales pitches” on the man’s voicemail, explaining why Apple should be looking at NeXT instead of Be… In any other universe, Garrett’s call might have gotten him fired. But in this timeline, it worked out. And thanks to him, Steve [Jobs] was about to enter Apple’s airspace once again.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader destinyland for sharing the article.

Erm no

By pele • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

NeXTSTEP was Jobs attempt to sell $10k workstations to education.
And yes, money talks. Nothing to do with sales pitches or technical prowess of any kind. Let’s not forget ObjC and the sheer amount of stress and madness it caused. BeBOX was waaay ahead of NeXTCUBE (in fact it was up there with alphas of the same era) and BeOS was waaay ahead of NeXTSTEP.

I agree

By jasonwalls • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

The real reason macOS often feels more coherent than other Unix derivatives lies in its NeXTSTEP heritage. While most Linux distributions and BSDs are fundamentally compositional (ie. assembling a kernel, userspace, init system, desktop environment, and numerous independent projects) macOS was built as a more deliberately designed system.

It shows up in several consistent mechanisms. Property lists (plists) serve as the primary format for preferences, application metadata, and service configuration across the platform. Launchd provides a unified, declarative approach to managing background processes. The long evolution of Cocoa and its successors established strong conventions for how applications should behave and integrate with the system. The result is lower cognitive load: fewer competing configuration styles and less need to learn the quirks of dozens of separate components.

This coherence comes from deliberate trade-offs. Apple has consistently prioritized opinionated design and predictability over maximum flexibility. Power users sometimes feel constrained by the guardrails, and the system has grown more locked down over time. Linux desktops have improved considerably with better tooling and declarative approaches, narrowing the gap in some areas.

Even so, the difference in day-to-day consistency remains noticeable for many who move between the platforms. The NeXT influence didn’t just deliver a kernel, it embedded a philosophy that an operating system should feel like a unified product rather than a collection of parts.

Linux could do this under, but under the leadership of one person. Unfortunately he’s not interested from what I can see.

Re: Erm no

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
OOP is a way to organize your code.

LISP doesn’t give any guidance at all on how to organize the code, but it is an extremely flexible language. The flexibility allows creative people to come up with new ideas and test them immediately. That is how Alan Kay came up with Smalltalk, which is a close cousin of Objective-C.

It’s where Javascript came from (an excellent language for its original purpose: setting values). It’s where the concept of the | in unix came from.

But LISP is not an easy language: the programmer needs to find the beauty. That is why it is not suitable for work: when money is involved, beauty goes out the window.

Re:I agree

By phantomfive • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I remember back in 2001 reading in the newspaper that the next OS from Apple was going to be based on Unix. I thought, “Wow, I guess Apple won’t be dying after all.” A massive upgrade over System 9, and clearly better than Windows.

Doom and Quake

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

The NeXT machines and the OS were used for both Doom and Quake, because the development env was so superior to everything else out there back then!

Scientists Edited Human Embryo Genes. But Questions Remain

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“A DNA-editing feat involving editing the genes of early stage embryos was announced this week,” reports the Wall Street Journal.

They describe the feat as “a far cry from designer babies, but nevertheless a step in that direction.”
Dieter Egli, an associate professor of developmental cell biology at Columbia University and his co-authors, including Nathan Treff of Nucleus Genomics, a New York-based DNA-testing startup, say the technology could help fix disease-causing mutations in embryos. “We’re not throwing the final ‘OK, you will have gene-edited babies tomorrow’ at the public,” said Egli. “That is a process that can occur through discussion matched with scientific progress....”

Previous gene-editing efforts have often used Crispr, which can cut out parts of the DNA sequence, but the technology can also cause damage if the wrong DNA is targeted or cut out. In 2018, Chinese scientist He Jianku said he used Crispr to tweak DNA in human embryos and was imprisoned for the work. The technology Egli’s group used, called base editing, allows them to target individual DNA letters in sequences more precisely with fewer adverse effects… Egli’s group focused on altering two genes, one that can raise the risk of heart disease and one that is tied to blood disorders like sickle cell disease, and the research showed they were sometimes able to do so successfully, in the same embryo, without damage.

“I am generally supportive of the concept of embryo editing to prevent genetic disease,” said Dr. Paula Amato, a fertility expert at Oregon Health & Science University who wasn’t involved in the research… Base editing has been used in human embryos before, according to peer-reviewed studies. The technology was used to correct a disease-causing mutation and an Alzheimer’s disease-risk gene variant, said Alexis Komor, associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biophysics at the University of California, San Diego, who wasn’t involved in the work. “There really is not any unmet medical or clinical need for this, especially from an in vitro fertilization perspective,” Komor said. “Usually what you’ll hear is that they’re doing it just so that you know we can prevent genetic diseases, but there are so many other better ways to do that.”

Using embryo editing to create babies is illegal in the U.S. and many other countries. Scientists have long worried that it is a slippery slope and that the technology could ultimately be used to promote eugenics. Her worry is that “they’re basically building a blueprint” for more ethically problematic forms of embryo editing. “In my opinion, I think this is a huge no-no,” Komor said. “There’s just no ethical way to use this....”

Nucleus Genomics Chief Executive Kian Sadeghi said his company plans to fund Egli’s further research, building on the new findings. His company sells a polygenic embryo-screening product, which screens prospective parents’ embryos and produces risk scores for their likelihood of developing disease, as well as factors like height, IQ and eye color. The company has said the IQ predictions are limited in accuracy.
The research was published online Monday on a preprint server.

But then, maybe you could

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
better adapt humans to life in space. The proverbial slippery slope.
How will it work out?

Caution, not fear

By Baron_Yam • Score: 3 Thread

We should be cautious about germline genetic engineering, mostly because of the potential for causing harm to the individual, but also a broader fear of creating a larger divide between the haves and have-nots.

The idea that such caution should result in an absolute ban on such things is due to fear, and it’s stupid and those fears should be discounted. If they aren’t, the fears will result in what they are trying to prevent as the work continues in private.

If I were planning on having a child, and I had the money, nothing would stop me from having my offspring’s DNA tailored as far as known genetics would allow to optimize their heath.

Failing CS Grades Soar At UC Berkeley As Professors See Greater AI Usage

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The University of California at Berkeley discovered the percentage of failing grades in multiple CS classes this spring “is significantly higher than past semesters,” reports the campus’s student newspaper.

“Instructors point to students’ increased reliance on AI, lack of mathematical preparedness and understaffing as potential contributing factors.”
According to [coursework platform] Berkeleytime, 35.3% of CS 10 students and 10.6% of CS 61A students received F’s in spring 2026. In spring 2025 and spring 2024, the percentage of F’s did not exceed 10% for either class. The electrical engineering and computer sciences department’s grading guidelines state that 7% of students in lower division courses, including CS 10 and CS 61A, should receive D’s and F’s…

[UC Berkeley teaching professor Dan Garcia, who taught both classes] believes the “primary driver” of these abnormally high failing rates is due to a “vast increase in academic dishonesty” due to students’ usage of large language models, such as Claude, ChatGPT and Google Gemini. “Some of the numbers that you saw from the number of students who receive failing grades were because we caught them (cheating) and prosecuted them and are sending their cases to the Center for Student Conduct,” Garcia said. “But in other cases, it’s students who are leaning a little too hard on LLMs to do their work for them, and then at exam time just really aren’t ready.” According to Garcia, nearly 30 students in CS 10 were “caught cheating on take-home exams” in spring 2026…

In addition to overreliance on AI, Garcia also pointed out that many students are underprepared mathematically, a concern echoed by campus associate teaching professor Gireeja Ranade. Ranade noticed a similar lack of prerequisite mathematical skills in her spring 2026 EECS 127 class, “Optimization Models in Engineering,” which she described as “differently challenging” to teach this semester. The class saw a 16.8% F rate, far higher than the 5% of D’s and F’s that the EECS department describes as “typical” for an upper division course…

Both Garcia and Ranade have joined more than 1,300 UC faculty in signing a petition calling for the reinstatement of ACT and SAT standardized testing scores for STEM admissions in the UC system.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader theodp for sharing the article.

Lack of math skills?

By kbrannen • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Looking that course up it seems that’s about proving algorithms and other stuff, so maybe you do need more advanced math skills for such a theoretical course. My 39 years of experience is that 2 years of high school algebra is good enough for the typical programmer. I’ve worked 2 jobs in my time where higher math was needed, but the employer hired someone with a Phd in math to figure out what needed to be done, the rest of us did the UIs, the DBs, the infrastructure, etc. I’m not dismissing higher math, there are places where it’s useful, but most programmers don’t need it. Hmm, I also see that course isn’t required to graduate, so some of those students shouldn’t be taking it if they’re not sure of their skills/knowledge.

Re:Lack of math skills?

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The purpose of the CS department is not to provide vocational training for programmers; it’s to teach CS. In turn, CS is far, FAR more than mere programming, and thus requires an understanding of math in multiple areas — to name a few: graph theory, queueing theory, discrete mathematics, combinatorics, calculus, differential equations, probability, geometry/trigonometry, linear algebra.

Students who are unable or unwilling to learn these things aren’t going to be able to learn CS because they lack the foundation(s) required, and thus they’re likely to receive low grades. That’s how it is, and that’s how it should be.

This is not to say that people who only want to learn to program should not do so: they most certainly can. But that’s a very different educational path than trying to learn CS. It’s roughly the same as someone who wants to learn to be an electrician vs. someone who wants to earn a degree in EE.

#1 reason - kids used AI to get into Berkeley

By retrobunnies • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
They cheated. Generated AI code, cover letters, or what have you using AI tools. This is the main reason. Meanwhile qualified students were rejected by Berkeley because they didn’t cheat and just seemed like a “normal” candidate.

Re:Standards, not gaussians

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

My point stands. And I’m not confusing anything. The material covered in a course, and the level at which it is covered, are set before students enroll in the course. The pass/fail rate is determined by the kinds of students who enroll. It should not be set by departmental grading guidelines. How is a department to know whether a specific batch of students in a class in any quarter or semester will find the material difficult or not? They can base expectations for a specific course on historical statistics, but it’s misguided to stipulate the percentage of fails by fiat as a supposed way of controlling how “difficult” a course is.

A passing grade in a course should indicate that you obtained competency with the material presented, at the level defined in the course description. You can’t stop students from taking a difficult course they’re not prepared to handle. Nor can you stop students from taking easier courses that they will ace because they’re over-prepared. Pre-med students do this all the time, for example.

As for the topic in this story: failure rates are up because students are abusing AI tools and are ill-prepared for the course material. Sounds to me like the problem is a lack of adequate preparation for the incoming students. Prerequisites and/or skill-testing should be required of students before they can enroll in these courses. Perhaps the department would rather adjust the content of a course in order to keep a steady pass/fail rate. I think that’s the wrong approach, because it just moves the goalposts, rather than giving students credentials for scoring goals on a standard playing field.

Re:So let them fail

By geekmux • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Understanding what an LLM can and cannot do should be part of the knowledge of a CS student, they clearly don’t so deserve the failing grade.

A student should understand what an LLM can and cannot do, but a CEO firing humans by the hundreds to replace them with premature ToddlerAI, somehow gets a pass?

Make it make sense. Because Greed is destroying the point of a student. And a classroom.

Cheaper EV Sales are Increasing

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Sales have increased for Hyundai’s under-$35,000 IONIQ 5, totalling 18,395 for the first five months of 2026, reports Electrek, “up 16% from the same period last year.”

But meanwhile BYD’s overseas sales surpassed 160,000 for the first time last month, “up 80% from May 2025 and 19% from the previous record of 135,098 set in April.”
Through the first five months of 2026, BYD sold 616,263 vehicles overseas. In May, overseas sales accounted for over 41% of BYD’s total sales. In several major markets, including the UK, BYD surpassed Tesla and Kia to become the best-selling EV brand through April. “With fuel prices remaining high, more drivers are turning to electric vehicles as a smarter and more economical choice,” Bono Ge, BYD UK’s Country Manager, said last month.
Elsewhere Electrek notes that Toyota’s bZ (starting at under $35,000) was the third-best-selling EV in the U.S. in the first three months of 2026, behind only the Tesla Model 3 and Model Y. “Last month, bZ sales doubled from May 2025, with 2,646 units sold.”

And meanwhile the first Volkswagen ID. Polo and Cupra Raval models “rolled off the production line at the Group’s Martorell plant in Spain, the first of several new affordable, mass-market EVs.”
Starting at €24,995 ($29,000) and €26,000 ($30,100), the ID. Polo and Cupra Raval are the first models from the Group’s Electric Urban Car Family

[T]he first customer deliveries are scheduled to begin later this summer and into the fall. Following the ID. Polo and Cupra Raval, Volkswagen will introduce new members to the Electric Urban Car Family, including the ID. Cross, an electric version of the T-Cross, later this year. According to Volkswagen, the ID. Cross will start at around €28,000 ($32,500).

water is wet

By redback • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

yeah if you make things affordable more people buy them.

EVs are already better for most non-commercial use

By Smonster • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
My next vehicle will definitely be a long range EV. My household has two motor vehicles. One ICE. One PHEV. When we replace the ICE it will be with a long range EV. But we also will replace the PHEV with another PHEV when the time comes vs another EV. It is for the similar reasons I have three ways to heat my house in tne winter.

But EVs are already better in almost every way compared to ICE vehicles. The only thing ICE vehicles have over EVs is better refueling times and towing. (And it’s probably easier to hike in a gallon or three of gas than the equivalent electricity. But having back up solar panels could solve that in some situations with an EV too.)

A PHEV solves refueling issue for road trips until the interstate and destination charging situation improves. But most of the time anyone with a garage or driveway are likely to just charge overnight. So charging isn’t really an issue. Anything with 300+ mile range would easily get me to NYC or DC and back home without worrying about charging too. Even if I got caught in traffic. But for longer trips, charging on the road is not ideal.

Re:Also EVs are all crap good for nothing because

By garyisabusyguy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

>>They make pollution much much much worse than zero emission cars we have since a quarter of a century. I did say this before but no people are unable of any critical thinking and this forum is full of old right wing boomer farts they all are

No. Slashdot is full of people, who read the garbage sentence you puked out above, and said, “FUCK THIS LOSER AC”…

Beyond that the case you make is dependent on the falsehood that “smog” and “particulate pollution” are the same thing, when smog is a combination of tailpipe emissions (ozone, nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds) and particulates under PM2.5, while tire wear dust is up to PM10

In regards to “walkable cities”, and the abandonment of “roadtrip culture”… That is a long long way from happening in a country that intentionally destroyed it’s passenger rail systems a hundred years ago at the behest of the automotive industry.

It is particularly amusing that you rail against foreign oil use, while disparaging alternatives, which is really just an attempt to confuse people into doing nothing, and quite frankly doing nothing will not serve us well.

So, as a Gen-Xer to a Gen-z noob, sit down, shut up and spend some time learning how to post understandable sentences with a clear intent.

Oh wait, you are posting AC which means you know you are full of shit

Re:Also EVs are all crap good for nothing because

By madbrain • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Complete BS.

When looking strictly at tire particulates in isolation, the 20% to 26% emission increase from EVs has a negligible, almost imperceptible impact on clear skies and visual haze.
While the environmental protection agency identifies microscopic particulate matter ($PM_{2.5}$) as the primary driver of regional haze and reduced atmospheric visibility, tire dust behaves in a way that prevents it from creating smog or muddying the horizon. [1, 2]
The physical mechanics of tire dust limit its impact on clear skies through three specific factors:
## 1. The Particles are Physically Too Heavy to Create Haze [3]
Atmospheric haze is caused when light hits thousands of tiny, microscopic particles suspended in the air, scattering the light waves and blurring the horizon. [4]

* Tire Dust is Mostly Coarse: Up to 99% of the mass shed by an EV tire consists of large, heavy fragments (typically 10 to 100+ micrometers in diameter).
* Rapid Ground Fallout: Because these pieces are so large and heavy, gravity pulls them down immediately. They fly off the tire and settle into the roadside dirt or gutters within seconds. They do not stay suspended in the atmosphere long enough to scatter sunlight or form a visible shroud of smog. [3, 5, 6]

## 2. Lack of Volatile Organic Chemical Evaporation
True sky-blocking smog requires gaseous chemical reactions. Sunlit skies turn hazy when volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and nitrogen oxides mix in the heat to generate ground-level ozone and ultra-fine chemical aerosols.

* Isolated tire dust is a solid, stable compound made of vulcanized synthetic rubber, carbon black, and heavy metals. It does not evaporate into the air as a gas, meaning the extra rubber shed by an EV does not feed the chemical reactions that create regional smog or overcast city horizons. [7]

## 3. Extremely Confined Geographic Footprint
Particles that stay aloft long enough to reduce visibility are usually tiny enough to be carried for hundreds of miles by the wind. By contrast, the small percentage of tire dust that does manage to become airborne ($PM_{2.5}$) has a highly localized presence: [8, 9]

* Field measurements show that airborne tire particulates drop off drastically just 50 to 100 meters away from the roadway.
* Because this dust settles so quickly right next to the asphalt, it remains a localized roadside pollutant rather than rising into the upper atmosphere to create a regional blanket of haze. [8]

## Summary of Isolated Impact
If you look exclusively at the tires, an EV will drop roughly 20% more solid black rubber fragments onto the physical ground. However, because these pieces lack the buoyancy to float and the volatile gases to react with sunlight, this extra debris cannot create atmospheric haze. The sky directly above a highway remains just as clear regardless of the increase in tire wear mass.
If you would like to look at what does impact the sky, we can look at how regenerative braking affects the creation of airborne metallic dust, or how eliminating tailpipe exhaust reduces regional smog. [10]

[1] [https://www.epa.gov](https://www.epa.gov/pm-pollution/particulate-matter-pm-basics)
[2] [https://www.facebook.com](https://www.facebook.com/virginiatech/posts/how-does-tire-wear-from-our-vehicles-contribute-to-pollution-researchers-at-virg/689983136996111/)
[3] [https://www.airflows.cee.vt.edu](https://www.airflows.cee.vt.edu/portfolio/tire-wear-particles/)
[4] [https://ww2.arb.ca.gov](https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/resources/visibility-reducing-particles-and-health)
[5] [https://en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haze)
[6] [https://www.sierraclub.org](https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2024-2-summer/material-world/evs-pollution-tailpipe-tires)
[7] [https://nypost.com](https://nypost.com/2024/03/05/business/evs-release-more-toxic-emissions-are-worse-for-the-environment-study/)
[8] [https://books.rsc.org](https://books.rsc.org/books/edited-volume/675/chapter/377700/Local-acting-Air-Pollutant-Emissions-from-Road)
[9] [https://www3.epa.gov](https://www3.epa.gov/ttnemc01/prelim/otm31appC.pdf)
[10] [https://ev.com](https://ev.com/news/study-reveals-evs-produce-less-brake-and-tire-pollution-with-fewer-non-exhaust-emissions)

Re: No people are not buying EVs

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Unlike you, I don’t create disinformation.

You obviously want details, so here goes: I bought the car for $15k at auction, after fees it cost about $16k. The damage it had was almost entirely cosmetic, but insurance companies are fickle about Teslas in general because they typically don’t have contracts with third party repair shops that will work on Teslas, so they’ll total it out over basically nothing. As for me, I just have my cousin do it. Mine was the 10th he restored from salvage. The actual parts cost about $3,100. I paid him another $3,000 for his labor, then some $1,800 to have Tesla perform the HV inspection so it can supercharge again, and $150 or so to have a company that subscribes to Teslas toolbox software to reprogram a seatbelt sensor, which needed to be done after the torsion bar was replaced with an aftermarket version.

We did buy a few OEM parts, but all were used from eBay, like one of the headlights. A few parts were new, but they were all objectively better than the OEM versions, including the skid plate, which is powder coated aluminum as opposed to the plastic one that comes stock. Body parts, e.g. hood and fender were redone with Bondo and matching paint.

With a bit of googling, you can verify these pricing details, including the reason insurance companies total them out over relativity minor damage. See also rich rebuilds, among numerous others on YouTube who do exactly what I did all the time.

The only part you might have a hard time reconciling is it’s likely that Teslas have gone up in price at salvage auctions since I got mine in March.

As for the free charging, all I can tell you is that for those of us who have had jobs that don’t suck with employers who don’t suck, perks like this are pretty common. Shit, it’s cheap compared to the free health insurance I already get from them.