Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Tests Suggest Russian Satellites Can Jam GPS On a Continental Scale
  2. Donut Lab’s ‘Solid-State’ Battery Exposed As Regular Li-Ion
  3. ‘Severe’ Stress On Oceans As Rate of Sea Level Rise Doubles In 10 Years, UN Warns
  4. OpenAI Files For IPO
  5. Meta Deletes Face-Recognition System From Its Smart Glasses App
  6. Xbox Game Exclusivity Will Be Decided on a ‘Case-by-Case’ Basis, Microsoft Says
  7. Apple Announces macOS 27 ‘Golden Gate’, Drops Support For Intel Macs
  8. Apple Announces Siri AI, Next Generation of Apple Intelligence
  9. WhatsApp Catches Spyware Firm NSO Defying No-Hacking Court Order
  10. Firefox Merges Support For Vulkan Video Decoding
  11. Italy’s Bending Spoons, Owner of AOL and Vimeo, Files For Nasdaq IPO
  12. Jeff Bezos Is Funding a Wild Hunt for the Brain’s ‘Core Algorithm’
  13. Ruby Fights Supply-Chain Attacks With Filter Offering ‘Cooldown’ Before Installing New Packages
  14. A San Francisco Burglar Escaped in a Robotaxi - and Police Still Can’t Find Him
  15. Texas Grid Flags Risks As Data Centers, Crypto Sites Fail Voltage Tests

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.

Tests Suggest Russian Satellites Can Jam GPS On a Continental Scale

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Researchers say mysterious, seconds-long GPS interference bursts detected across Europe appear to come from Russian EKS early-warning satellites, making this “a rare example of human-made GPS interference coming from space,” reports Ars Technica. The signals may be tests of space-based jamming capability, short satellite communications, or something else, but experts say they raise troubling questions about whether GPS disruption could eventually be weaponized on a continental scale. From the report:
The discovery came from an investigation detailed in a June 2 preprint paper by Todd Humphreys and his student Zach Clements at The University of Texas at Austin, along with Argyris Krizise at Stanford University in California. By sifting through public data from ground-based stations with global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receivers, they identified a pattern of high-powered interference lasting less than 10 seconds each time but simultaneously detectable by ground stations across Europe from Norway to Spain to Poland, and even reaching as far west as Greenland and Canada.

By analyzing the ground station data from January 2019 to April 2026, the researchers found 75 days with at least one widespread GNSS interference event overlapping with the GPS L1 frequency band centered on 1575.42 megahertz. That represents the main band used for signal transmission by the US-made GPS satellite constellation and GNSS constellations from other countries. Such interference patterns happened mostly on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays during business hours in Europe, Humphreys told the YouTube channel Veritasium. Because such “continental-scale” interference was simultaneously affecting GPS receivers across Europe and beyond, Humphreys and his colleagues calculated that the source had to be at least 1,200 kilometers above the Earth.

[…] In the Veritasium video, Humphreys speculated that the Russians may have been testing the satellites’ GPS interference capabilities only briefly on a neighboring frequency adjacent to the typical GPS band. “And then in the eventual future when there is a hot conflict, they go ahead and tune their transmitter down to the GPS band, but it’s much more damaging now that it lies right on that band,” he said. Incidentally, the raw data also revealed a second interference burst from the Russian satellites in a lower-frequency band used by China’s BeiDou navigation system. “I can no longer say this is accidental with confidence,” Humphreys told Veritasium. He also described the Russian satellites’ quiet demonstration as a “massive escalation in the electronic warfare background conflict that is going on right now.”
Richard Bowden, division head of assured and resilient PNT at the multinational technology company GMV in Spain, wrote in a LinkedIn comment: “These signals are, without a doubt, intentional and placed on or around GNSS signals, and have the potential to disrupt legitimate use of GNSS services. But from our side at least, we can’t be sure they are intentionally malicious or intended as an EW [electronic warfare] weapon.”

Donut Lab’s ‘Solid-State’ Battery Exposed As Regular Li-Ion

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A battery researcher’s investigation, backed by more than 20 independent experts, claims Donut Lab’s much-hyped “solid-state” battery is actually a conventional lithium-ion cell, with voltage curves and expansion data matching high-nickel NCM chemistry rather than the promised sodium-ion solid-state design. Electrek reports the company raised about $25 million from more than 1,300 mostly small investors on claims of 400 Wh/kg energy density, 100,000-cycle life, and 5-minute charging that now appear unsupported. From the report:
The investigation consulted over 20 independent battery experts, including Julian Zanau from the Fraunhofer Research Institute, Dr. Yahim San from Justus-Liebig University, Tom Bicha from Leona, and Dr. Yuo Hesca from Seinajoki University of Applied Sciences. Every single one confirmed the tested cell is lithium-ion. There are two key pieces of evidence. First, the voltage curves from VTT testing match high-nickel lithium-ion cells (NCM chemistry). The cell sits at 3.7-3.8 volts at 50% state of charge — right where lithium-ion cells operate. Sodium-ion cells don’t go significantly past 3.5 volts at 50% SOC.

The second piece of evidence is even more damning: VTT’s cell expansion data. When a battery charges, ions squeeze into the anode material, causing it to expand in a predictable pattern. A graphite anode produces a distinctive “kink” in the expansion curve around 50-70% state of charge, caused by how ions reorder themselves in graphite’s layered structure. The Donut Lab cell shows exactly that kink.

This is critical because sodium ions are physically too large to fit into graphite layers. The graphite anode signature proves the cell uses lithium ions. The investigation puts it well: “it’s like we have a slightly noisy fingerprint and a picture of the suspect’s face. And yet again, it’s a match.” The calculated energy density? About 298 Wh/kg — what you’d expect from a good lithium-ion cell, not the 400 Wh/kg claimed.

The investigation reveals that the battery technology traces back to CT Coatings, a German company with an “eclectic” array of patents — including inventions for screen-printed paving slabs, menu folders, and warning triangles. CT Coatings promised Nordic Nano and Donut Lab a screen-printed sodium-ion solid-state battery. What it delivered was a lithium-ion pouch cell.

This Donut Tastes Funny

By guesstral • Score: 3, Informative Thread
Has nobody learned from Theranos? You can’t slap a new label on old tech and call it revolutionary. Well, you can try. But there’ll be some angry investors out for your sprinklesâ¦

Elizabeth Holmes ws not an outlier

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“Fake it ‘til you can make it… or at least until you can cash out” is the mantra of so many tech startups this millennium…

Re:This Donut Tastes Funny

By Tx • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I assume it’s the Ziroth video that’s linked, I watched it yesterday. This is a little different than Theranos in that there’s multiple companies involved, but yeah, fake it till you make it gone wrong once again. It sounds like at least at some point, Donut Labs genuinely believed that CT Coatings actually had a revolutionary battery tech, and would eventually be able to supply it to them, per leaked emails between the companies, and maybe the initial fakery by Donut was just trying to bridge the gap until CT Coatings delivered what they promised. However, it’s also clear that as time went on, the aggressive fundraising by Donut from small investors for a product that they continued to have no proof even existed, and the continued false claims about what they actually had, became hugely problematic. Exactly who knew what when within Donut Labs and the other involved companies, and what legal thresholds may have been crossed, remains to be seen.

Re:solid state

By jhoegl • Score: 4, Informative Thread
CATL is not donut labs.
And you can cry about EV all you want, the bank account shows how little is spent on EV recharging vs gas. So have fun with that.

CT Coatings is there for plausible deniability

By EreIamJH • Score: 3 Thread

When the lawyers arrive Donut will run the defence that they didn’t have the intention of scamming investors, it’s just that the investment failed because they believed CT’s lies. CT will say that they didn’t lie, but it’s all a misunderstanding, and anyway, we relied on a guy we met in a bar. The directors will blame the CEO and the board papers will omit any useful details.

Someone got the money though.

‘Severe’ Stress On Oceans As Rate of Sea Level Rise Doubles In 10 Years, UN Warns

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
The world’s oceans are under “severe and accelerating” pressure from human activities, with the rate of sea-level rise double that of a decade ago, according to a damning assessment from the United Nations. The “intensifying” stressors, which include pollution and large-scale industrial fishing, are cumulative, said the report, resulting in widespread biodiversity loss and putting ocean systems under “severe strain.”

The UN’s third World Ocean Assessment, which reflects the work of nearly 600 scientists from 86 countries, looked at the oceans’ health from 2021-25. The previous report, that covered up to 2018, found persistent degradation of the marine environment. Five years on, scientists know more about the cumulative impacts of anthropogenic pressures on the ocean, and the latest report shows just how much of the damage has been done in the past few years. The scientists’ key findings include:

- Sea levels continue to rise at an increasing rate, from 2mm a year prior to 2015 to 4.3mm a year in 2023.
- 16% of the increase in global ocean heat since 1955 occurred after 2018.
- The greatest relative warming has been observed in the Atlantic Ocean and the southern parts of the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
- Large gaps in knowledge persist — with only 27% of the ocean floor mapped by 2025, deep-sea ecosystems remain poorly understood.
Lukas Meus, Greenpeace’s global ocean campaigner, said: “We are calling on governments to create fully protected ocean sanctuaries that will close vast areas of the ocean off from extractive human activities. Governments have promised to protect 30% of the world’s ocean by 2030 — the minimum scientists say we need for the ocean to be able to recover.”

Doom

By symbolset • Score: 3 Thread

Super El Niño, AMOC shutting down. Mauna Loa CO2 shutting down reporting 432 PPM before we shut them up. The mighty Colorado river died. We drank it up. India has been over 95F for months, and parts are becoming uninhabitable reaching 114F.

Dinosaurs had 165 million years. Sea turtles 260 million. Genus Homo, 2 million. Sentience may be self defeating, which solves the Fermi Paradox.

Re: Here we go again …

By LindleyF • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Climate science is about more than looking out the window to see if it’s raining. There are hundreds of variables and our models are imperfect. But the thing skeptics don’t seem to get, is that by the time this stuff becomes so obvious as to be undeniable, it will be too late. So we project what we can. Sometimes it’s imperfect. That’s how science works. But the broad picture remains the same, and quite worrying. And it’s about way more than just sea level.

OpenAI Files For IPO

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI has confidentially filed for an IPO, “setting it up for what may be the most highly anticipated market debut in recent history and a massive payday for early investors,” reports CNN. The decision follows recent IPO announcements from Anthropic and SpaceX. From the report:
OpenAI said it has not decided on timing yet. And because the filing is confidential, it’s not yet clear how many shares the company plans to sell or at what price. “It may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company,” it said in a post on its newsroom page. But the company said the filing “gives us the option to go public sooner if that ends up being best.”

The transition to a public company will give Wall Street a window into OpenAI’s finances as the company pours billions into AI infrastructure and computing resources. Investors dumped tech stocks last week as they questioned whether a recent run-up in those shares had gone too far. OpenAI was last valued at $852 billion after raising $122 billion in March, but it’s faced pressure to demonstrate it can generate the cash to match that valuation.

Buckle up!

By Sebby • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

and a massive payday for early investors

Buckle up everyone - a bunch of new rich white assholes are about to join the fray…

You all will own these stocks

By CommunityMember • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
(Almost) anyone with a (401k) ETF will end up owning Space X and OpenAI and Anthropic now that NASDAQ will add those companies to Nasdaq 100 (and many ETFs include the Nasdaq in their portfolio). If you don’t want your investments to be subject to the various flavors of the month, move your money quickly. Or ride the ride (it will be wild).

Re: All based on fake values

By Bodrius • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Its not just who remains after the bubble pops - its we dont know yet *which product* will pay the bills, and *then* who remains selling that product.

OpenAI has more users overall, but they have mainly “sold” a free / loss leader product. Anthropic has become more popular on the enterprise “maybe eliza doesnt pay the bills” business model. OpenAI pivots but if this were “search” its too early to figure out if either of these is google or they’re yahoo and altavista.

Nvidia seems to be betting this is the PC + MPC redux and all these folks are trying to be IBM selling mainframes; which is less of a “worst timeline” but they’re biased since their valuation already priced in the “mainframe” market. Democratizing AI is a larger addressable market for a chips seller whether its a real market or not.

Or the real business model could be elsewhere altogether - I still remember the early aughts when the future of growth for the interwebs was telecoms and iTV and Netflix was shipping CDs and the video streaming business was licensing codecs.

payday

By Tom • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

and a massive payday for early investors

That seems to be the goal of all these massive IPOs recently. For early investors to cash out before the bubble bursts.

Re:Already spent my money on SpaceX

By outsider007 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

the only IPO worse than SpaceX

Huh? All SpaceX needs to do is find an asteroid made out of gold and diamonds and it will 10x the investment.

Meta Deletes Face-Recognition System From Its Smart Glasses App

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Last Thursday, Wired reported that Meta had quietly embedded an unreleased facial recognition system called NameTag into software installed on millions of phones. In a follow-up report, Wired says the tech giant has now removed the face-recognition-related code, while saying “no final decision” has been made about whether the feature will launch. From the report:
On Thursday, WIRED reported that Meta had quietly integrated substantial portions of the NameTag system into the Meta AI app. Though never publicly enabled, the feature was designed to convert faces captured by the glasses into unique biometric signatures, commonly known as faceprints, and compare them against a database of faceprints stored on the user’s device. WIRED also found that faces the system failed to recognize were cropped, indexed, and stored locally for future processing.

NameTag first surfaced in February, when The New York Times, citing internal Meta documents, reported that the company was developing face recognition for its smart glasses and weighing a launch as soon as this year. One memo reportedly described releasing it during a “dynamic political environment,” when privacy and civil liberties advocates would be distracted. Last week, WIRED reported that much of NameTag’s machinery was already built into the Meta AI app, downloaded by millions of users, as early as January, even as Meta publicly said it had made no final decision about face recognition. After WIRED’s report, Stone dismissed the findings, writing that the company couldn’t answer questions about how the system would work because “the feature does not exist.” Andrew Bosworth, Meta’s chief technology officer, called the reporting “incredibly misleading” and “absolutely dishonest.”

[…] The newly released version of Meta AI removes nearly all traces of the feature Meta said did not yet exist. Gone is the face-recognition software itself, along with the code that ran the NameTag recognition process and the “Person recognized” alert the app would have shown if someone were identified. The update also strips out a folder where the app would have stored the cropped images and biometric signatures of faces it captured but could not identify. […] A few fragments of the NameTag system remain in the version of latest Meta AI, including an internal debug menu label and a dormant link meant to open a recognized person’s profile. The leftover code points to parts of the system that are no longer there.

Easiest way to delete a feature

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Is to remove the user’s access to it. We can still log the data into the cloud of course.

the problem is

By ZipNada • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The problem is that this isn’t very hard to do these days. It’s pretty near impossible to prevent things that are easy to do.

The Meta device is constantly getting a stream of image frames from the camera in the glasses. Probably their device has enough compute horsepower to detect human faces, smartphones sure do. The faces can easily be cropped out of the images and passed along to whatever recognition system you happen to have on hand to develop a faceprint. It all goes into a database, local or remote, and then its a SMOP (simple matter of programming) to correlate a faceprint to a human identity. Gather all of that into a central database and presto.

You could just wander around with your cellphone in your shirt pocket recording everything and an app there could do much of this. Meta is getting some pushback because they are so visible and pervasive, but smaller players could definitely implement a mobile facial recognition system under the radar and probably have.

Re:Easiest way to delete a feature

By srmalloy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Well, of course Meta is going to remove it from the app; they don’t want the common users to be aware of how much data their smart glasses are collecting and sending to Meta’s servers to be processed and monetized. Now all the biometric data will simply be silently uploaded to the cloud, where Meta, having virtue-signaled their ‘rectitude’ by removing it from the app, will be publicly above reproach.

Re:the problem is

By sound+vision • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

You might be able to homebrew a device to recognize a face, but you won’t be able to associate that with an identity, short of API access to Facebook or similar data brokers.

It sounds like you might be proposing manually assigning a name to each faceprint, but that’s not what people are worried about. They’re worried about random people who don’t already know their name, getting it, and the associated data, instantaneously.

For now…

By Tony Isaac • Score: 3 Thread

Why would anyone think this “deletion” is permanent? As soon as the hubbub dies down, it’ll be back.

Xbox Game Exclusivity Will Be Decided on a ‘Case-by-Case’ Basis, Microsoft Says

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft executive Matt Booty says future Xbox exclusivity will be decided “case-by-case,” with Gears of War: E-Day and Clockwork Revolution remaining Xbox console exclusives while major multiplayer, live-service, and previously promised PlayStation releases stay multiplatform. But IGN’s Tom Phillips says Microsoft’s announcement still leaves numerous questions unanswered, like “why just Gears and Clockwork Revolution?” and “how will this policy be enforced in future?” From the report:
Last night’s Xbox Showcase featured the return of games specifically earmarked as exclusives for Xbox consoles (though, of course, they’ll still also be coming to PC). But why just Gears and Clockwork Revolution? And how will this policy be enforced in future? Microsoft’s announcement left numerous questions unanswered. “We want a reason for people to get on board with Xbox, we want them to have a reason to buy an Xbox, we want them to have a reason to be an Xbox fan,” Booty said. “At the same time, we want to reward all our players that have been with us for a long time — we know that exclusives are important, and that’s why we’ve got Gears coming in 2026 and Clockwork [Revolution] coming in 2027.”

“We also want to be clear that our big multiplayer games and live-service games are going to continue to be multiplatform,” he continued. “If we’ve promised something to players already, we’re going to honor that promise. And then — I think Asha said it — we’re going to make the right decision and not the fast decision. “We’re going to keep thinking about this going forward,” Booty continued, “and, I think you guys know already, our principle is when we announce the date, we announce the platforms. So, it’s going to be case-by-case, but we’re going to be clear, that when it’s got a date, it’s got a platform and you’ll know what the choice is going to be.”

Beyond those games already confirmed for PlayStation (such as the upcoming Halo: Campaign Evolved, and the PS5 version of Forza Horizon 6 due later this year), last night saw Microsoft make the call that other upcoming titles would still be coming to PS5 as well. While it had been assumed that State of Decay 3 would get a PS5 version, yesterday saw it made official. Hellblade threequel Senua was unveiled, and is getting a PS5 version. And, unsurprisingly, Spyro: A Realm Beyond is coming to Xbox, PS5 and Nintendo Switch 2.

A slow death? Xbox soon to joining the Zune?

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
Xbox 3rd qtr 2026 revenue down 5%

Apple Announces macOS 27 ‘Golden Gate’, Drops Support For Intel Macs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from AppleInsider:
Apple has unveiled its next Mac operating system, macOS Golden Gate, with Apple promising better performance, the improved Siri, and more. […] On the surface, macOS Golden Gate is not as significant an upgrade as macOS Big Sur, or even macOS Tahoe with its Liquid Glass redesign. But under the surface, it is much more significant than it seems. Apple has chosen this release to draw a line in the sand. For the first time, the new macOS Golden Gate will not support Macs that have Intel processors. […] Nonetheless, as of when this is released to the public in September or October, no Intel Macs will ever be supported again.
One of the most notable design tweaks in this new release is a refinement of macOS toolbars and sidebars: toolbars are now more distinct, sidebars can stretch all the way to the window edge, and sidebar icons have regained color. Apple is also tightening window corner radii to address complaints about resizing behavior.

No Intel fine by me

By ToasterTester • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I have multiple Macs and my oldest is my iMac i9 10-core abd I updated to the last Intel Mac OS the current Tahoe and actually wish I stayed on Sequoia. So not getting more of the Liquid Glass and no Apple Siri I’m good with. I work in audio so main reason I use Mac and after putting Tahoe on the one old Mac I think I’ll be leaving my other Mac on Sequoia for a long time.

Dear Apple please do like the Unix OS and an install option for a barebones install for us using Mac for a specific app/type of work. I don’t want all the background crap going on and disk space chewed up with useless apps. All you have to do is change the installer app and add the install option.

San Francisco

By bartoku • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Huh, made me think about a strait in California with an iconic bridge over it.
But you know maybe there is something wrong with me?

Re:Appeasment

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Funny Thread

If you believe that, I’ve got a bridge to sell you.

Re: Appeasment

By Charlotte • Score: 5, Funny Thread

If that were the case wouldn’t it be called Golden Shower?

Re:Appeasment

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Is the choice “Golden Gate” a way to appease Trump? Sounds like a combination of grifting and a certain arch…

And here I thought that the way to appease Trump was with a Golden Shower…

Apple Announces Siri AI, Next Generation of Apple Intelligence

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
At WWDC 2026, Apple announced a new “Siri AI,” describing it as a more conversational, personalized, and systemwide assistant that can understand on-screen context and interact with apps while relying on on-device processing or Private Cloud Compute. The relaunch comes two years after Apple’s original Apple Intelligence promises stumbled and "never fully materialized,” reports The Verge. MacRumors reports:
Siri is now embedded directly in the Dynamic Island, accessible by swiping down from it, pressing the side button, or saying “Hey Siri.” A revamped voice engine makes the assistant sound more expressive, with micro-adjustable voice settings available during initial setup.

During Apple’s keynote demo, presenters showed Siri handling chained, multi-step requests with apparent ease. In one sequence, a presenter asked about a Suki Waterhouse concert, was told tickets require a lottery entry, and asked Siri to set a reminder when the lottery opens, which it did. In another, the assistant identified a photo’s landmark, pulled up navigation to that location, and surfaced photos from a recent family trip, adding a specific image to a shared family album on request.

Another demo showcased Siri’s ability to synthesize information across apps. A presenter asked about a dessert he had heard about at an event, and Siri located the relevant details from his Messages history. It then compiled the information into a watch-party menu, drafted a message to his contacts with the menu included, and presented send and edit options. In a further demo, a presenter asked about something his son had shared in a message and followed it up by asking Siri to compose an email on the subject.

A new dedicated Siri app lets users scroll back through prior conversations and kick off new ones, with conversation history synced via iCloud so sessions carry seamlessly between devices. The app is also coming to watchOS. On the Mac, Siri is now also integrated into Spotlight and available via right-click context menus on any file or window. On visionOS, Siri AI gains a 3D visualization that users can place anywhere in their space.

Re: How Many Hats Do I Have?

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Yes, but it will only count the mfi ones. The rest aren’t compatible.

We’ve seen “demos” before

By misnohmer • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Is this general availability, or just demos? There were demos last time Apple Intelligence was announced too.

They were talking about this on the business news

By oldgraybeard • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
The Apple analyst was charged up because it would drive the product replacement cycle(Apple has many older devices still in use, like my old se). And drive service revenue by having Siri choose sponsored products where it can and Apple gets a cut.
So Apple AI is just like everyone else’s AI. Long on Artificial, No Intelligence, just Automation, an ad/paid sponsors platform used as a sales and marketing tool to drive the Apple revenue streams.
But with assurances, nothing will leave the Apple walled garden and only those paying for access to the Apple customers will be allowed in.

meh!

By Going_Digital • Score: 3 Thread
As long as I can turn the junk off, I really don’t care. So tired of all this AI nonsense, once the startup hype ends and people have to pay the true cost for the tokens burned the AI fad will be about as popular as 3D TV and virtual reality.

WhatsApp Catches Spyware Firm NSO Defying No-Hacking Court Order

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
wiredmikey shares a report from SecurityWeek:
Meta-owned communications app WhatsApp says it recently detected and disrupted a spear-phishing attempt linked to spyware company NSO Group. The attack is allegedly in defiance of a court order that bars the spyware maker from targeting WhatsApp. WhatsApp filed a lawsuit against NSO in 2019, after it came to light that a zero-day vulnerability had been exploited to deliver spyware to users. […] NSO has been seeking to overturn the order blocking it from targeting WhatsApp users, arguing that the company will “suffer irreparable harm.”

According to WhatsApp, the spyware maker has violated the permanent injunction. The messaging app reported on Monday that it had recently learned of a social engineering attack that attempted to trick users into clicking on malicious links. WhatsApp has only shared a few domains as an indicator of compromise (IoC), but says it was able to link the attack to NSO, pointing to similarities to previously reported one-click phishing campaigns tied to the spyware company. WhatsApp says it also caught the attackers creating test accounts and groups. Those accounts and groups have been disabled, but further action is also being taken.
WhatsApp says it is asking a federal court to hold NSO in contempt for allegedly violating a permanent injunction barring it from targeting WhatsApp and its users. The company also said it is making a “significant contribution” to the Spyware Accountability Initiative, a fund aimed at exposing and stopping spyware abuse.

Comical

By RitchCraft • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

A spyware company trying to stop another spyware company. It’s the modern day equivalent of Spy vs. Spy.

“the company will “suffer irreparable harm.”

By oic0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Are anyone’s feelings hurt if an Israeli spyware company goes under?

Bomb ‘Em

By Bahbus • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I can only hope NSO Group and every single employee gets bombed by Iran or whoever else Israel has pissed off.

Re:No jurisdiction

By jd • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Incorrect. Computer misuse within the US, regardless of where the individuals who are doing the misusing are located, is under US jurisdiction. This is long-established. Laws dealing with multi-jurisdictional issues (such as patents/copyrights, illicit interstate commerce, sex tourism, computer misuse) are old-hat.

Attacking US servers located in US territory is an attack carried out within the US, regardless of where the keyboard warrior is.

Now, if the servers attacked are in Ireland, then they’re also covered by EU jurisdiction (no matter what the US likes to think).

The law is the law, and nobody, in any nation, is immune. A fact a lot of nations like to pretend they’re somehow immune to. They aren’t and there will always be a price to pay for such cavalier attitudes.

Re:No jurisdiction

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

You’re part right, part wrong. It’s not a question of immune to the law, but it’s a question of reach of the law. Private people are not immune and not out of reach on the basis that they can be extradited if the law broken is a law in both countries and an extradition treaty exists and both sides are willing to engage in the extradition.

You can’t extradite a company.

Now what can you do to enforce the law beyond your borders? For multinationals this is easy. If they have a presence in your country you can fine them. It’s why Amazon needs to follow EU law, because they are in fact a French company, just like Microsoft is an Irish company.

NSO Group isn’t a multinational company, they have no presence in the USA.

So now we’re down to the last thing you can do: control the border. For physical goods that means banning imports. For virtual goods you’re shit out of luck. About the only thing you can now do is place the company on the foreign entity list effectively banning people from doing business with them.

NSO Group has been on the entity list for the past 5 years already.

So the OP is in fact right. The US courts have no jurisdiction over NSO Group. The US government does, but they’ve already exercised the upper limits of punishment they can exert.

Firefox Merges Support For Vulkan Video Decoding

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Firefox has merged initial support for Vulkan Video decoding, giving the browser a more cross-platform path for GPU-accelerated video playback beyond Linux’s long-running reliance on VA-API. Phoronix reports:
Firefox on Linux has long been focused on the Video Acceleration API (VA-API) that isn’t universally supported by Linux graphics drivers. This has left to efforts like NVIDIA-VAAPI-Driver to layer VA-API atop NVIDIA NVDEC interfaces to enjoy GPU-accelerated video playback in Firefox. Smaller Arm/embedded graphics drivers also have been largely left out of the game in the VA-API space. But with Vulkan Video we are beginning to see more adoption and in a cross-platform manner.

[…] The Firefox 153 release due out in July will have Vulkan Video decoding support available. The Vulkan Video activity in Firefox Git culminated this week with the work of NVIDIA engineer Tymur Boiko and Red Hat’s Martin Stransky. Firefox 153.0 is expected for release on 21 July with this Vulkan Video support assuming no last minute issues.

It’s actually cross-platform and cross-API compat

By MIPSPro • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Vulkan is friendly to both X11 (x11vk) and Wayland (waylandvk). It works on Linux (with Mesa or proprietary drivers), Windows, and elsewhere, regardless of the underlying display protocol. Thank you, Khronos for side stepping that quagmire.

No.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It is not cross-API compatible because it is an API. It’s implemented on multiple platforms and it’s only supported on platforms it’s implemented for.

Also, you seem to be forgetting there are a lot of API specific functions functions: e.g. vkCreateWaylandSurfaceKHR, vkCreateWin32SurfaceKHR, vkCreateXcbSurfaceKHR, vkCreateXlibSurfaceKHR.

Re:No.

By MIPSPro • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It is not cross-API compatible because it is an API.

While that’s technically true, what I’m asserting is that it’s being used by other API’s (various game and GL libraries) across platforms in a way that actually works.

you seem to be forgetting there are a lot of API specific functions functions

There are only a handful of ways to implement something like Vulkan across so many different display strategies. Frankly, I think they’ve adopted the most sane and straightforward solution: do first class support for all of them as best you can and abstract those behind your API. If Khronos were selling Wayland or X11, they’d be stuck in the same divide as all the ‘next gen’ solutions that are busy failing or building a walled garden.

Italy’s Bending Spoons, Owner of AOL and Vimeo, Files For Nasdaq IPO

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Bending Spoons, the Italian app studio behind acquisitions like Eventbrite, Vimeo, WeTransfer, Evernote, and AOL, has filed to go public in the U.S. after growing into a subscription-heavy app conglomerate with more than 500 million monthly active users. TechCrunch reports:
In its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Bending Spoons said it ended the year with $1.31 billion in revenue and has generated $601 million in Q1, a 132% year-on-year jump. The company gets the majority of its revenue from subscriptions, which account for 84% of its business. It generated $27.4 million in profit in Q1 2026. The company raised funding at an $11 billion valuation last year, up from $2.8 billion in 2024. In April, Reuters reported that the company could seek a $20 billion valuation with the IPO.

AOL Still Exists?

By Too Late for Cool ID • Score: 3 Thread
I though I took a long time to close my AOL zombie account, and that was in the 90s.

Re:Glad they got all that stuff in one place.

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Vimeo is and was pretty interesting. They were hosting high res videos like this https://vimeo.com/18280328 before youtube

Horrible customer support

By smooth wombat • Score: 3 Thread

My father has been locked out of his email account since last month. Multiple calls to support and now a second ticket for support have gone nowhere. They’re a bunch of script kiddies repeating the same things over and over and never listening to what is being said.

The issue is on AOL’s end, but they refuse to acknowledge it, let alone do anything.

Based on this experience, no way I’d buy company stock. With that kind of bad service, people will be leaving.

So basically

By DrXym • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Bending Spoons is a farm up North where brands you haven’t heard of in a while can go to run and play.

Re:AOL Still Exists?

By fropenn • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Oh trust me it’s dead. AOL is nothing more than a pointless news aggregator.

Kettle: Pot.

Jeff Bezos Is Funding a Wild Hunt for the Brain’s ‘Core Algorithm’

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Jeff Bezos is backing Flourish, a new “neuro AI” startup with $500 million in funding and a reported $2.5 billion valuation, that aims to reinvent AI by studying the brain’s architecture and building systems that learn continuously while using far less power than today’s large language models. The company’s long-term bet is that neuroscientists and AI researchers working together can uncover the brain’s “core algorithm” and eventually create brain-inspired AI that runs on a tiny fraction of current compute. Wired reports:
Rob Williams knows how to pitch Jeff Bezos: You write a press release as if your product has already been built. Bezos reads it and gives a thumbs up or down. Williams went through this process a lot as an executive on Amazon’s “S-team,” in charge of software products such as Alexa, until his departure last fall. But the pitch he made a few weeks later — in December 2025 — was different. Now he was collaborating with Thomas Reardon, a neuroscientist and repeat startup founder, and approaching Bezos as a funder, not a boss. Here’s what Bezos, sitting on his yacht somewhere, read while Williams anxiously watched on Zoom: “Flourish is a neuro AI company that is solving the two most difficult problems facing AI today: power efficiency and continuous learning. We are building Cortex AI, the first synthetic intelligence system designed to match the computational capacity, learning efficiency, and power budget of the human brain.”

A month later, I’m lunching with Reardon and Williams in the Flatiron neighborhood in New York City. Reardon gets right to the point. AI has dug itself into a hole, he says. Though increasingly powerful, large language models are greedy consumers of computer power and data. Though the inspiration for LLMs was rooted in biology, current frontier models have little in common with the human brain. A person uses about 20 watts of energy to process information; a single chip in an AI training cluster uses more than 30 times that amount. The hyperscalers require thousands of chips and gigawatts of energy, enough to power small cities. And those models need to suck up virtually all of what humans have written. Each new model requires more, more, more. For all of that, the models don’t learn. Once you train them, they’re stuck. The goal, Reardon tells me, is to build “a synthetic artificial intelligence brain that runs on 50 watts or less.” It should adapt to its conditions, be as nimble as a human mind, and burn a tiny fraction of an LLM’s compute power and energy. The proof of concept is thriving inside our skulls. “There’s something fundamentally wrong with saying, “I need to basically read every book ever written 20 times over in order to learn English,’" Reardon says. “A human baby does it with a couple hundred thousand utterances.”

Reardon and Williams haven’t figured out yet how to build systems that match the magic of a human brain. What they have is a belief that an expert, well-resourced team — of AI researchers and neuroscientists working essentially side by side — can find the answer. The neuroscientists will conduct original wet lab experiments with some of the most advanced lab equipment available, to hunt for usable intel on the brain’s architecture. They plan to release the models they’re currently developing as near-term products on the path to a full reinvention of AI. The fuzziness of the proposal didn’t bother Jeff Bezos. After reading Williams’ two-pager, he chipped in $50 million. Other funding came from Lux Capital, Google Ventures, and Catalio, among others. Bezos then almost doubled his initial stake and told Reardon he’d have given more if they’d asked. Now with a war chest of $500 million and a reported valuation of $2.5 billion, Flourish just needs to invent a new way to do AI.

Re:A human Algorithm?

By LainTouko • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
You know where all that “four humours medicine” came from? Hydraulics was a very impressive technology, so people tried to explain the human body with it. Certain idiots have recently started doing the same thing with computers and the human brain.

Re: Brain architecture

By LindleyF • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Welcome to a year ago. We understand the hallucination problem better now. Do not ever expect factual details from the model. If you want facts out, you have to put facts in, via the context. If you drop all the documentation that exists for $THING into the context, the AI is a great way to search that documentation. It rarely hallucinates when information answering your question really exists.

Advice…

By johnnys • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Do a woman’s algorithm first. It’s more useful.

Male algorithm is “100 think of boobs” then “200 goto 100”

And we ALL know that goto is considered harmful!

Doing it wrong

By Frissysan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
“And those models need to suck up virtually all of what humans have written.”
No, they dont. As a matter of fact sucking up everything they can beg borrow or steal is what causes ‘hallucinations’. They are doing it wrong. They should be using curated and task focused data and making task oriented AI. One for coding, another one for cooking, etc. Of course that is more difficult to build, so they dont bother. Just feed it more BS from reddit or wherever, that’ll fix it!

Re: Hmm

By getuid() • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We don’t need more productivity. As there was still some of the globe left to go and colonize we could use the extra productivity to occupy new markets, but now?… that everything is occupied? What need is there for the extra productivity?

But what we can do is the same productivity with fewer humans.

Questions remains: now that survival is tied to having an 40 h/week job, what do we do with with all those we don’t need.

Ruby Fights Supply-Chain Attacks With Filter Offering ‘Cooldown’ Before Installing New Packages

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Most supply-chain attacks using Ruby’s package hosting site "exploit a narrow window,” according to a new blog post form Ruby core maintainer Hiroshi Shibata.

So its packaging-managing Bundler tool now offers a filter that blocks new version until it’s been public “for at least N days. Releases too new to have been scrutinized are passed over in favor of ones that have aged past the window.”
The feature was designed in the open, drawing on how other ecosystems approach the same problem. It is opt-in, and complements rather than replaces existing defenses like mandatory 2FA and trusted publishing… Cooldown is unset by default, so a project without it keeps resolving to the newest versions.... Passing 0 disables cooldown for the run…

Cooldown is most useful as one part of the wider security investment happening on rubygems.org. The registry now validates gem contents at push time and checks logins against Have I Been Pwned so that compromised passwords cannot be reused, work described in Protecting rubygems.org from the outside in. A dedicated team is running AI-assisted vulnerability scanning against the most critical gems, backed by Alpha Omega and Anthropic, and the direction of all of this is tracked on a public roadmap. Trusted publishing and mandatory 2FA already raise the bar for who can push a release in the first place.

Will encourage sleeper attacks

By xack • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Where a malicious package waits a few days before deploying itself. An adversary can build up trust for years in some cases in order to catch a big fish.

Learn to pin your dependecies

By devslash0 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Just pin your dependencies. To an EXACT version, with a hash. No loose versioning or version auto-updates in the pipeline. Detect outdated versions automatically but update manually, after a full review, and a full av scan of the built environment before the release. Know and control what goes into the production environment. In other words, you’re a professional - act like it.

The state of Ruby supply chain security

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 5, Informative Thread
They don’t even sign or verify most packages and allow code execution on installation. This “cooldown” is lipstick on a pig and why I haven’t used Ruby in 10+ years. Package curation, code signing + public key management, and no code execution on installation are table stakes for any serious platform. Ruby isn’t a serious platform.

Re:And how will that help?

By Junta • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Well, it lets some people have long cooldowns make the rest of their ecosystem suckers.

Of course, this *also* means the people with high cooldowns get to be vulnerable to security problems longer because they will be applying cooldown to security fixes…

But yes, some sort of actual curation would be the best mitigation, particularly to allow trustworthy critical security updates through quickly instead of those getting caught in the cooldown.

A San Francisco Burglar Escaped in a Robotaxi - and Police Still Can’t Find Him

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A burglar took a self-driving Waymo taxi to rob a San Francisco yoga studio this past January, reports TechCrunch — “and police have still not caught them.”

Even the police officer assigned to the case thought it would be easier to solve, notes The San Francisco Chronicle, since Waymos are outfitted with multiple high-definition cameras and require users to make accounts with their credit card numbers:
It’s common for officers to seek video footage of a crime from any of the Waymos, Teslas and other high-tech vehicles that record their surroundings. That information can be crucial for identifying suspects or creating a reliable timeline of events. At times, police will go so far as to obtain search warrants to tow the vehicle “witnesses" to ensure they don’t lose valuable video evidence. In the Hot 8 Yoga burglary case, San Francisco police issued a search warrant that forced Waymo to turn over information on the account that ordered the ride and video footage from the white Jaguar that served as the getaway car, police records show.

Faye said that he couldn’t discuss certain details of the case, but that the Waymo user’s account information didn’t lead police to the suspect. In general, he said, it’s not unusual for a criminal to order a service with stolen information or a burner phone. The video evidence didn’t help much either, Faye said. He said that the company had not retained interior footage of the car by the time the search warrant was filed in April and that it had kept the faces seen outside the car blurred for privacy reasons… Waymo does not publicly disclose how long it retains video footage. The company blurs faces and license plates in the public-facing images it uses in a database designed for research....

Last year in Los Angeles, a person allegedly robbed a grocery store before hopping in a Waymo. Officers were able to chase down the vehicle after the suspect got inside, and the car pulled itself over after police turned on the car’s emergency lights, according to Los Angeles-area news outlets.
“Farah Issa, studio manager of Hot 8 Yoga, showed the Chronicle a copy of the surveillance video from her phone, noting how the Waymo dropped off the suspect and waited for him to finish the burglary before taking off again.”

Re:San Francisco police can’t find him

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
These robot taxis are the perfect weapon for Jihad. Put a bag full of C-4 in the passenger seat and instruct it to go to the nearest Israeli embassy.

Preservation letter?

By gavron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Typically a preservation letter is sent out to let the recipient know that a court order will be forthcoming, and to preserve all files, metadata, images, etc. If you Google “sample preservation letter” one such example is https://www.cliffordlaw.com/wp….

If the SFPD got this case in January, all they had to do is have some admin send some such letter to Waymo (and any nearby businesses with surveillance cameras) and then in March when they got their fat donut-eating asses on the case the evidence would be there. But they didn’t bother.

That’s police work in the US these days. They can’t be bothered to do police work. Someone has to walk in and hand them a ribbon-wrapped case for them to be bothered to look at it. “Solving a case” isn’t like on TV. On TV they have an hour to investigate, collate, deduce, confront, and arrest. In real life that’s 3 months of donuts and sitting around watching your ass get all triangle-like, THEN blame Waymo.

Disgusting. I’m sure the Yoga studio is overjoyed.

AI is Stealing Jobs!

By jpatters • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Not even getaway drivers jobs are safe!

Re:Criminal = Immigrant. DEPORT: save yourselves!

By gtall • Score: 5, Informative Thread

As the link of the poster below me reports, immigrants are significantly less likely to commit crimes than the home-grown. Let’s accept that, then your blurb is clearly racist towards minorities in the U.S. According to our Geheime Staatspolitzei (FBI), https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-t…, you are talking out of your ass. I’ll let you crunch the numbers, if your racism doesn’t prevent that.

The multiracial aspect of American society is a strength, not a weakness. And who gives a flying rat’s ass over how many of each group there are. We’re all Americans. That used to be a common feeling before la Presidenta found he could inflame the Whites’ inner racism and sell them a bag of stupid ideas. Remember Nazi Germany and how well that ended.

Re: Preservation letter?

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This has nothing to do with police competence. Like every organization and company nowadays, police departments are very short of manpower. This incident involved a guy stealing an armful of hot yoga pants. No violence, low property damage and very low value stolen. In terms of priority, this would rank above robbing a vending machine but lower than literally every other crime. Dealing with this stuff take time, and each cop only has 8 hours per workday. You do the math and this kind of thing gets neglected or straight up ignored. They choose to focus on the violent crime, drug stuff, and higher dollar value things.

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

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
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: 5, Insightful 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.

Re:Wait, what?

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I suspect it’s a straightforward incentives problem. If you can get away with making it the grid’s problem there’s not much incentive to pay for more expensive facility power setups. Presumably this is why ERCOT is testing current and prospective customers and making noise about it; and why there are at least some standards for how ill-behaved a load can be while still being allowed to hook up; with some awkward interactions between very large sites that also have the ability to shut down rapidly at relatively low cost. If you are ‘mining’ crypto you presumably prefer the gear to be online because it is depreciating by the minute regardless; but the risk and inconvenience of shutting it down and booting it up again isn’t particularly dramatic compared to having to cold start an aluminum smelter or something.

Re:Wait, what?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You are building a billion-dollar data center and you aren’t putting routine-but-poor-power-quality-tolerant power-conditioning uninterruptible power supplies between the grid and your sensitive equipment???

You misunderstood the problem. They *ARE* doing this. At the first sign of a voltage disturbance they switch from the grid to their UPS / own generators and keep running because they do care about themselves. This is the problem. During a period of grid instability having a massive load disconnect makes the instability worse. It’s literally one of the ways cascade failures on the grid can occur.

Re:Flywheel storage buffer

By Jumperalex • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Why should all the other customers have to pay for it?!?! Also that’s not how grid load balancing works.

It is a problem specific to the large user and that same large user should be held responsible for being a responsible part of the community.

Rework the demand charge structure

By hwstar • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Demand charges are charges the utility imposes on commercial and industrial customers when they attach large loads to the grid and they draw large startup currents.

Rework the demand charges to penalize dumping loads instantaneously and the problem should be solved.

I see no reason that data centers couldn’t manage their electrical loads more gracefully.