Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Microsoft’s Latest AI Chip Claims Performance Edge Over Amazon and Google
  2. California Tech CEO and EV Pioneer Arrested, Accused of Murder
  3. Gemini In Google Calendar Now Helps You Find the Best Meeting Time For All Attendees
  4. Google Settles $68 Million Lawsuit Claiming It Recorded Private Conversations
  5. DOT Plans To Use Google Gemini AI To Write Regulations
  6. Valve Facing UK Lawsuit Over Pricing and Commissions
  7. New California Law Means Big Changes For Photos of Homes in Real Estate Listings
  8. GTA 6’s Physical Release Could Be Delayed To 2027 Because of Leaks
  9. Nike Says It’s Investigating Possible Data Breach
  10. Television Turns 100
  11. How a 15,000-Person Island Stumbled Into a $70 Million AI Windfall
  12. Fixing Retail With Land Value Capture
  13. World Not Ready For Rise In Extreme Heat, Scientists Say
  14. Saudi Arabia To Scale Back Neom Megaproject
  15. AI is Hitting UK Harder Than Other Big Economies, Study Finds

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.

Microsoft’s Latest AI Chip Claims Performance Edge Over Amazon and Google

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from GeekWire:
Microsoft on Monday announced Maia 200, the second generation of its custom AI chip, claiming it’s the most powerful first-party silicon from any major cloud provider. The company says Maia 200 delivers three times the performance of Amazon’s latest Trainium chip on certain benchmarks, and exceeds Google’s most recent tensor processing unit (TPU) on others. The chip is already running workloads at Microsoft’s data center near Des Moines, Iowa. Microsoft says Maia 200 is powering OpenAI’s GPT-5.2 models, Microsoft 365 Copilot, and internal projects from its Superintelligence team. A second deployment at a data center near Phoenix is planned next.

It’s part of the larger trend among cloud giants to build their own custom silicon for AI rather than rely solely on Nvidia. […] The company says Maia 200 offers 30% better performance-per-dollar than its current hardware. Maia 200 also builds on the first-generation chip with a more specific focus on inference, the process of running AI models after they’ve been trained. […] Microsoft is also opening the door to outside developers. The company announced a software development kit that will let AI startups and researchers optimize their models for Maia 200. Developers and academics can sign up for an early preview starting today.

California Tech CEO and EV Pioneer Arrested, Accused of Murder

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
California tech executive Gordon Abas Goodarzi has been arrested and charged with murder in the death of his estranged wife, Aryan Papoli, whose body was found last November down an embankment off Highway 138 in San Bernardino County. Authorities initially believed the injuries were consistent with a fall, but the case was later ruled a homicide following a months-long investigation by the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department. “Arrest records show that Goodarzi is currently in custody without bail and faces a murder charge and that he is set to appear in court Monday,” reports SFGATE. From the report:
Goodarzi, a California tech executive with ties to BattleBots, is publicly listed as the president and CEO of Magmotor, which describes itself as a "proud" supporter of the combat robot community and claims to support several teams each year. According to his LinkedIn, Goodarzi also previously worked as a research affiliate at UCLA‘s B. John Garrick Institute for the Risk Sciences since 2023.

Originally from Iran, Papoli and Goodarzi settled in Los Angeles County’s verdant Rolling Hills community because of its tranquility and natural beauty, Papoli previously wrote. […] She described her husband, Goodarzi, as a pioneer in the world of renewable energy, developing both electric and hybrid vehicles since the 1980s. According to Papoli, he also worked as the technical director at Hughes Electronics, which developed and manufactured the EV1, an early iteration of the electric car, in the 1990s.

Gemini In Google Calendar Now Helps You Find the Best Meeting Time For All Attendees

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Google is adding Gemini-powered “Suggested times” to Google Calendar, automatically scanning attendees’ calendars to surface the best meeting slots based on availability, work hours, and conflicts. The feature also streamlines rescheduling with one-click alternatives when invitees decline. Digital Trends reports:
According to a recent post on the Workspace Updates blog, Gemini in Google Calendar can now help you quickly identify optimal meeting times when creating an event, as long as you have access to the attendees’ calendars. The new “Suggested times” feature scans everyone’s calendars and highlights the best time slots based on availability, working hours, and potential conflicts, eliminating the need to manually check schedules. Google has also made rescheduling simpler. The company explains that if multiple attendees decline your invite, you’ll see a banner in the event showing a time when everyone is available, letting you update the invite with a single click.
The feature is being rolled out starting today to eligible Workspace tiers. It will be enabled by default and is expected to reach all eligible users over the next few weeks.

Nothing new?

By SoCalChris • Score: 3 Thread

Hasn’t Exchange offered this for decades? Wasn’t that one of the main “benefits” of locking yourself into the MS ecosystem?

Timely

By Kernel Kurtz • Score: 3 Thread
A vulnerability in Google’s AI assistant Gemini allowed attackers to leak a victim’s private meetings via Google Calendar events, cybersecurity firm Miggo reports.

Letting AI agents have access to your data is going to be a whole new level of security nightmare that will make today’s malware seem quaint.

Google Knows Best

By ebunga • Score: 3 Thread

They know where you are. They know where you’ve been. They know what you bought. They know what you’re doing. They know what you’re wearing. They know what you’re watching. They know what you’re browsing. They know what you wrote. They know what you deleted. Google knows best because they know everything about you.

Re:Perfect for?

By jhoegl • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Huh? Use Google email/calendar/etc at work.

I will also note that this article is BS, because we can already see others calendars that are in our environment and select a time. We have been able to do this for at least 10 years.

Google Settles $68 Million Lawsuit Claiming It Recorded Private Conversations

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the BBC:
Google has agreed to pay $68 million to settle a lawsuit claiming it secretly listened to people’s private conversations through their phones. […] the lawsuit claimed Google Assistant would sometimes turn on by mistake — the phone thinking someone had said its activation phrase when they had not — and recorded conversations intended to be private. They alleged the recordings were then sent to advertisers for the purpose of creating targeted advertising. The proposed settlement was filed on Friday in a California federal court, and requires approval by US District Judge Beth Labson Freeman.

The claim has been brought as a class action lawsuit rather than an individual case — meaning if it is approved, the money will be paid out across many different claimants. Those eligible for a payout will have owned Google devices dating back to May 2016. But lawyers for the plaintiffs may ask for up to one-third of the settlement — amounting to about $22 million in legal fees. The tech firm also denied any wrongdoing, as well as claims that it “recorded, disclosed to third parties, or failed to delete, conversations recorded as the result of a Siri activation” without consent.

DOT Plans To Use Google Gemini AI To Write Regulations

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Trump administration is planning to use AI to write federal transportation regulations, ProPublica reported on Monday, citing the U.S. Department of Transportation records and interviews with six agency staffers. From the report:
The plan was presented to DOT staff last month at a demonstration of AI’s “potential to revolutionize the way we draft rulemakings,” agency attorney Daniel Cohen wrote to colleagues. The demonstration, Cohen wrote, would showcase “exciting new AI tools available to DOT rule writers to help us do our job better and faster.”

Discussion of the plan continued among agency leadership last week, according to meeting notes reviewed by ProPublica. Gregory Zerzan, the agency’s general counsel, said at that meeting that President Donald Trump is “very excited about this initiative.” Zerzan seemed to suggest that the DOT was at the vanguard of a broader federal effort, calling the department the “point of the spear” and “the first agency that is fully enabled to use AI to draft rules.” Zerzan appeared interested mainly in the quantity of regulations that AI could produce, not their quality. “We don’t need the perfect rule on XYZ. We don’t even need a very good rule on XYZ,” he said, according to the meeting notes. “We want good enough.” Zerzan added, “We’re flooding the zone.”

These developments have alarmed some at DOT. The agency’s rules touch virtually every facet of transportation safety, including regulations that keep airplanes in the sky, prevent gas pipelines from exploding and stop freight trains carrying toxic chemicals from skidding off the rails. Why, some staffers wondered, would the federal government outsource the writing of such critical standards to a nascent technology notorious for making mistakes? The answer from the plan’s boosters is simple: speed. Writing and revising complex federal regulations can take months, sometimes years. But, with DOT’s version of Google Gemini, employees could generate a proposed rule in a matter of minutes or even seconds, two DOT staffers who attended the December demonstration remembered the presenter saying.

Re: Federal Regulations

By dknj • Score: 5, Funny Thread

This is what an LLM would want us to believe. You’re not fooling anyone, bot

Re:Not the worst idea

By LuniticusTheSane • Score: 5, Funny Thread
What’s the worst that could happen with a (checks notes) 30% hallucination rate?

Can’t spell “revolution” without… well, at all.

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

‘Zerzan appeared interested mainly in the quantity of regulations that AI could produce, not their quality. “We don’t need the perfect rule on XYZ. We don’t even need a very good rule on XYZ,” he said, according to the meeting notes. “We want good enough.” Zerzan added, “We’re flooding the zone.”'

This is self-satire. “Good enough”? Good enough for what? “Government work”? The point of that joke is that it’s not really good enough!

And “We’re flooding the zone”? The end of that sentence is “with shit”. That’s not me editorializing. That’s just a fact.

If text requires no thought to write, if it contributes no semantic data, it shouldn’t be written in the first place.

The more I hear about this, the more I think that the “AI Revolution” is really just people not knowing how to type.

Re:Can’t spell “revolution” without… well, at al

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Also, when rules are being written thoughtlessly, the fact that you can write them faster is BAD. Everybody KNOWS that, right? Because then you’ve got tons of thoughless rules. That’s bad! That’s clearly bad!

AUUAUAAHAAGH!

Re:Federal Regulations

By taustin • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

As long as someone bothers to proofread the resulting document,

And what are the odds of that? Seriously, lawyers are going to be getting disbarred soon because they don’t do that, with repeat offenders who certainly know better. Government employees are even harder to fire.

What, really, are the odds that any human eye will see these new regs before they are implemented?

Valve Facing UK Lawsuit Over Pricing and Commissions

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Video game developer and distributor Valve must face a 656 million-pound ($897.7 million) lawsuit in Britain, which alleges it charged publishers excessive commissions for its Steam online store, after a tribunal ruled on Monday the case could continue. Valve was sued in 2024 on behalf of up to 14 million people in the United Kingdom who bought games or additional content through Steam or other platforms since 2018.

Lawyers representing children’s welfare advocate Vicki Shotbolt, who is bringing the case, allege Valve prevents publishers selling products more cheaply or earlier on rival platforms to Steam by imposing conditions on them. They say Valve requires users to buy all additional content through Steam if they’ve bought that game through the platform, effectively “locking in” users to make purchases on its platform. This allows Valve to charge “unfair and excessive” commissions of up to 30%, Shotbolt’s lawyers said at a hearing in October.

As someone who has released a game on Steam…

By Dracolytch • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

They took care of content distribution. They took care of international sales / taxes / etc. They took care of currency conversions. They took care of folks who wanted returns (not many, but still).

They made my game accessible world-wide with almost zero effort on my part.

Did I give them a 30% commission to sell my game? Yes. Would I like that percentage to be lower? Sure. Would I call it excessive? Hell no. Especially since retail stores get a similar cut, and I didn’t have to worry about manufacturing, distribution, stock, returns, etc.

~D

Re:As someone who has released a game on Steam…

By TwistedGreen • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yeah I don’t understand this recent backlash against Steam. They provide an amazing service. They’re #1 because all competitors were horrible. I still remember when services like EA Downloader and Direct2Drive would try to charge you an additional fee for “download insurance,” otherwise you couldn’t re-download your game. Valve never pulled stuff like that, just consistently gives a great customer experience. Is all this just paid-for FUD from Epic?

New California Law Means Big Changes For Photos of Homes in Real Estate Listings

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
California house hunters now have legal protection against the kind of real estate photo trickery that has long plagued the home-buying process, as a new state law requiring disclosure of digitally altered listing images took effect on January 1.

Assembly Bill 723 mandates that real estate agents and brokers include a “reasonably conspicuous” statement whenever photos have been altered using editing software or AI to add, remove, or change elements like furniture, appliances, flooring, views or landscaping. Agents must also provide access to the original, unaltered image through a QR code, link, or placement next to the altered photo.

The law does not cover wide-angle lenses — a perennial complaint among buyers who find rooms smaller than they appeared — nor does it apply to routine adjustments like cropping, color correction or exposure. California is the first state to require such disclosures, though Wisconsin passed a similar law in December that takes effect next year.

Glorious real-estate photos

By isj • Score: 3 Thread

There was a local forum about houses etc, and a 800+ post thread with “glorious” photos from real estate agents. It wasn’t just altered photos but also weird camera angles and odd photos. My favourites:
- TV lying on its side in the basement for storage. With the picture on.
- Several photos of the garden but none that showed the whole thing. In one of the photos inside you could see out of the window that the garden photos avoided a 1 meter tall light-blue concrete snail sculpture.
- Stove top edited to look like kitchen table. They forgot to remove the knobs on the front.
- A brothel with all the equipment (presumably bankrupt due to covid-19)

Why do we need these laws?

By bussdriver • Score: 3 Thread

The fools who buy houses like it’s something on amazon are why we need laws like this. My neighbor bought his house online without looking at it and it sits empty because they ended up disliking it. They didn’t move in just looked at it once and realized they couldn’t fit and his wife never has been seen again after that 1st visit.

GTA 6’s Physical Release Could Be Delayed To 2027 Because of Leaks

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
An insider who correctly leaked information about Oblivion: Remastered and other titles is warning that GTA 6’s physical release could be pushed back. GTA 6 is set to finally launch on November 19, 2026, but fans hoping to get their hands on a physical copy could be stuck waiting even longer.

According to a report from Polish site PPE, insider Graczdari says Rockstar’s parent company, Take-Two, isn’t planning to release a physical edition of GTA 6 at launch. “We are getting more and more information that the box version will not be released simultaneously with the digital version to prevent leaks,” the report says.

Empty Discs

By TwistedGreen • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Don’t most “physical copies” nowadays just come with an essentially empty disc? For example, the physical release of Doom: The Dark Ages had no data on disc, just a stub so it could validate you own the game and let you download it. Pretty shady, but you’d have had to download a 100GB day-zero patch anyways so why put anything on the disc at all?

Re:hate to say it

By jhoegl • Score: 4, Informative Thread
No, because a terrible solution distracts from the fact that they fired 30 developers in a union busting effort.

Release it in an unplayable state…

By jonwil • Score: 3 Thread

We all know that any physical release of a game as big as GTA6 is going to need a day-one patch anyway. So make it that the game wont play until it’s been patched.

If disks leak early, they will be useless to anyone until release day anyway.

Nike Says It’s Investigating Possible Data Breach

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Nike says it is investigating a potential data breach, after a group known for cyber attacks reportedly claimed to have leaked a trove of data related to its business operations. From a report:
“We always take consumer privacy and data security very seriously,” Nike said in a statement. “We are investigating a potential cyber security incident and are actively assessing the situation.”

The ransomware group World Leaks said on its website that it had published 1.4 terabytes of data from Nike.

They would not have had this problem

By Megahard • Score: 4, Funny Thread

If they had used in-house sneakernet.

Television Turns 100

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Television marks its centenary today, exactly 100 years after Scottish inventor John Logie Baird first demonstrated his electro-mechanical system to journalists and members of the Royal Institution in a cramped attic workshop above what is now Bar Italia in London’s Soho.

On January 26, 1926, small groups of visitors climbed to 22 Frith Street and watched fuzzy images of a ventriloquist’s dummy called Stooky Bill appear on screen, followed by each other’s faces transmitted from a separate room. One visitor got too close to the spinning discs and ended up with a sliced beard. The Times published a short account two days later.

Baird had built his first transmitting equipment in Hastings in 1923 using a hatbox, tea chest, darning needles and bicycle light lenses. A 1000-volt electric shock and a displeased landlord pushed him to London, where Gordon Selfridge soon invited him to demonstrate the device during the store’s Birthday Week celebrations. The building at 22 Frith Street now carries three plaques commemorating the invention.

Ahead of its time

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Sadly, his business failed because his television lacked any internet connectivity that would have enabled him to monetize his users’ personal info.

Re:yea but

By TwistedGreen • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Just the opposite—the article says: “It rapidly became clear that the Marconi system was far superior and Baird’s was dropped after just three months.”

Re:Ahead of its time

By taustin • Score: 4, Funny Thread

And there wasn’t any porn available on it.

Phonovision recordings

By uncle slacky • Score: 5, Informative Thread
This site goes into some detail and includes the recovered recordings (which weren’t playable at the time of recording) - it gives you an idea of the quality of even 30-line pictures: http://www.tvdawn.com/earliest…

Re:yea but

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The Baird system was just an evolution of the Nipkow disc from the 1880s. It took more than 40 years for someone to make it even somewhat viable for some reason, but if you include mechanical transmission, I’d argue that it was invented in 1883.

But practically speaking, I would say that the 100-year anniversary of TV is in 2027, 100 years after Farnsworth transmitted the first electronically scanned TV signal.

The Marconi system (1930s) was an improved version of Farnsworth’s system from 1927 (as proven by patent lawsuits).

How a 15,000-Person Island Stumbled Into a $70 Million AI Windfall

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
From Sandisk shareholders to vibe coders, AI is making — and breaking — fortunes at a rapid pace. One unlikely beneficiary has been the British Overseas Territory of Anguilla, which lucked into a future fortune when ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, gave the island the ".ai” top-level domain in the mid-1990s. Indeed, since ChatGPT’s launch at the end of 2022, the gold rush for websites to associate themselves with the burgeoning AI technology has seen a flood of revenue for the island of just ~15,000 people.

In 2023, Anguilla generated 87 million East Caribbean dollars (~$32 million) from domain name sales, some 22% of its total government revenue that year, with 354,000 ".ai” domains registered. As of January 2, 2026, the number of ".ai” domains surpassed 1 million, per data from Domain Name Stat — suggesting that the nation’s revenue from ".ai” has likely soared, too. This is confirmed in the government’s 2026 budget address, in which Cora Richardson Hodge, the premier of Anguilla, said, “Revenue from domain name registration continues to exceed expectations.”

Tuvalu

By nealric • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This is similar to what happened to the Pacific Island of Tuvalu back in the 1990s. They had the ".tv” domain. On a per-capita basis, it was a lot more than this.

I note that ai.ai.ai.ai

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

… is owned by the Frito Bandito.

Fixing Retail With Land Value Capture

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The independent coffee shops and quirky boutiques that make neighborhoods like Hayes Valley in San Francisco or Williamsburg in Brooklyn desirable are caught in a frustrating economic trap: they create value that ends up in the pockets of nearby homeowners rather than their own cash registers.

An essay in Works in Progress magazine argues that when an interesting new store or restaurant opens, commercial and residential property values rise in the surrounding area, but the retailer itself captures only a fraction of that value through its actual sales. Almost half of stores in one San Francisco shopping district shuttered within four years even as the neighborhood thrived and rents climbed.

The authors propose several fixes drawn from historical and international practice. Shopping malls and mixed-use developments solve this through unified ownership, allowing a single entity to cross-subsidize interesting tenants. Hong Kong’s Mass Transit Railway buys land around new stations before building begins, making it one of the few profitable transit systems in the world. Business Improvement Districts let businesses tax themselves for shared amenities, though they currently don’t capture value that spills over to nearby residents.

The essay suggests creating hybrid institutions — something between homeowners’ associations and business improvement districts — that could levy hyperlocal taxes to keep valued retail alive.

Mixed use example misses the point

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Coffeeshops and quirky stores do not capture the value in a mixed-use building because they are tenants. It’s insanely rare for a business in a city to own the actual space in the building in which they reside.

This isn’t just a general poor people’s case, or some modern startup business failing, but rather includes some truly historic situations too.

Café Griensteidl in Vienna which indirectly traces its roots back to 1847 and was ultimately closed because rents rose more than they could afford to pay.
Tea shop ‘t Zonnetje in Amsterdam closed after 450 years operating in the same location due to rising rents.

These are businesses that have seen empires rise and fall and yet suddenly can’t afford rent because of land value increases.

Businesses usually simply don’t own the buildings they operate from. They capture no value, not by themselves, not in mixed use dwellings (both the examples I gave are mixed use).

Re:total batshit

By TWX • Score: 5, Informative Thread

There was also a time when Main Street business buildings featured business on the ground floor and residence on the next floor up, where the small business was a sole-proprietorship and the owner lived above the store. In other configurations it was a front/back divide, with the shop on the front facing the boulevard and the home on the back facing the side-street or the alley.

The modern shopping-center doesn’t generally seem to cater to that, and cities don’t seem to zone for that kind of arrangement much anymore.

Re:total batshit

By fropenn • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s time to recognize that rent is theft.

Someone took the risk, bought the land, built the infrastructure, the building, parking lot, etc. all with the hope that they would recoup that investment through renting the space to retailers. Sometimes this works, sometimes it doesn’t. There are plenty of malls right now who are struggling to fill their huge sq. ft. space with anything at all, and those owners are losing piles of money. This also keeps the cost of starting a business much lower because you can simply rent prepared space and don’t have to invest in building all of that yourself. And yes, that convenience takes a share of your profits (but owning and maintaining your own land, parking lot, infrastructure, etc. would also take a share of your profits). AND, property doesn’t always go up in value. So there’s the risk that even if you invest, own, and maintain your owned property, that the new highway or entertainment district or etc. will be built somewhere else and your property will suddenly be worth much less. With renting, you can pay less rent or just move on to a new location. If your customers value what you offer, they’ll find you in your new location, too.

HOAs are the bane of most homeowners’ existence. Many businesses already participate in these sorts of groups (such as Downtown Business association, etc.), and adding more will only increase the complexity and costs.

Hayes Valley

By YetanotherUID • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I immediately knew when I saw “one San Francisco shopping district” that they were talking about Hayes Valley. When I lived there in the early aughts, most of the retail shops and restaurants along Hayes street were relatively longstanding, having been there for a decade or more. Now every time I go back every year or two, the retail establishments are completely different.

I’m a teacher, so clearly

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I should get a cut of the wages of every student that went through one of my classrooms. I mean, it was *my* effort that made them productive, and I’m only harvesting a tiny fraction of the gains that I create. Unfair!

I’m a surgeon, and I basically save the lives of several people per day. Without me, their productivity would drop to zero. But, my salary only captures a teeny tiny fraction of the gains from my work. We should force every patient of mine to sign over a chunk of their lifetime income to me, and use the power of government to enforce it.

I could keep coming up with examples of why this is a bad idea, but it’s already gotten too easy.

World Not Ready For Rise In Extreme Heat, Scientists Say

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Nearly 3.8 billion people could face extreme heat by 2050 and while tropical countries will bear the brunt cooler regions will also need to adapt, scientists said Monday. From a report:
Demand for cooling will “drastically” increase in giant countries like Brazil, Indonesia and Nigeria, where hundreds of millions of people lack air conditioning or other means of beating the heat. But even a moderate increase in hotter days could have a “severe impact” in nations not used to such conditions like Canada, Russia and Finland, said scientists from the University of Oxford.

In a new study, they looked at different global warming scenarios to project how often people in future might experience temperatures considered uncomfortably hot or cold. They found “that the population experiencing extreme heat conditions is projected to nearly double” by 2050 if global average temperatures rise 2C above preindustrial times.

Re:Another chicken-little story

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Back in the real world, anyone who knows about the “CO2 Global Warming” theory knows that it predicts most of the warming to happen in cold areas at night, so this is obvious nonsense.

Only for people with really simple minds. Things are a bit more complicated than that. You skipped over about 95% of the book and now think you understand the subject.

Re:heat

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You really do not. But I guess you are not smart enough to understand that.

Re:Of course we’re ready

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Authoritarians rely on ambivalence just as much as they rely on out and out supporters. This farcical stance of being above it all helps them more than you realize.

Re:Another chicken-little story

By nealric • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The media hyped a few proposals for “global cooling” at one point but it was never anything like a scientific consensus. The majority of scientific studies have always argued for net warming from carbon emissions going back to at least the 1970s.

Science can only work to explain what is and attempt to predict may happen. It does not propose policies to deal with what might happen. “Give the government more power” is hardly the only potential reaction to global warming, but it is a political reaction not a scientific one.

Re:Another chicken-little story

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The odd thing is that when I was a kid and we were going to enter The New Ice Age, the solution was to… reduce hydrocarbon fuel usage, build more windmills, raise taxes and give the government more power.

None of this is true. Actual scientists did not predict we were going to enter an ice age, although there was some media hype about that (media loves catastrophe stories). And absolutely nobody ever suggested that the response to an incipient ice age would be to reduce hydrocarbon fuel usage and build more windmills. Nor, for that matter, to raise taxes or give the government more power.

Saudi Arabia To Scale Back Neom Megaproject

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Saudi Arabia is preparing to significantly scale back Neom, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s flagship development that sprawls across a Belgium-sized stretch of Red Sea coastline and was once billed as the world’s largest construction site. Financial Times is reporting that Prince Mohammed, who chairs the project, now envisions something “far smaller” as a year-long review nears completion. The Line, a futuristic 170-kilometer linear city that served as Neom’s centerpiece, will be radically reimagined as a result, the report added.

Architects are already working on a more modest design that would repurpose infrastructure built over the past few years. Neom could pivot toward becoming a data center hub, taking advantage of seawater cooling from its coastal location as Saudi Arabia pushes to become a leading AI player. The Trojena ski resort is also being downsized and will no longer host the 2029 Asian Winter Games as originally planned. Construction largely stalled after longtime CEO Nadhmi al-Nasr abruptly departed in November 2024.

Belgium-sized

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s flagship development that sprawls across a Belgium-sized stretch of Red Sea coastline and was once billed as the world’s largest construction site.

That is about 4.3 million football fields.

Re:Claustrophobia

By Computershack • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What I do wonder is how many Saudis have the skills needed to provide the services needed by this project?

None. The vast majority of work done in Saudi is done by immigrant slave labour. I say slave labour because they take their passports from them when they enter the country so they can’t leave. They’re also forced to live in poor conditions and work horrific hours. The rate of work injuries and deaths is shocking.

AI is Hitting UK Harder Than Other Big Economies, Study Finds

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
The UK is losing more jobs than it is creating because of AI and is being hit harder than rival large economies, new research suggests. From a report: British companies reported that AI had resulted in net job losses over the past 12 months, down 8% — the highest rate among other leading economies including the US, Japan, Germany and Australia, according to a study by the investment bank Morgan Stanley. The research surveyed companies using AI for at least a year across five industries: consumer staples and retail, real estate, transport, healthcare equipment and cars.

It found that British businesses reported an average 11.5% increase in productivity aided by AI. US businesses reported similar gains, but created more jobs than they cut. It suggests UK workers are being hit particularly hard by the rise of AI, as higher costs and taxes also weigh on the job market. Unemployment is at a four-year high, as rises in the minimum wage and employer national insurance contributions squeeze hiring.

The cover up

By SumDog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
We all know AI doesn’t increase “productivity” and has nothing to do with any of these layoffs. Sales are down, the global economy is tanking, and people are using AI as an excuse to just cut people they over-hired for too much. It’s just another aspect of “bullshit” that comes from all this AI slop media and reporting.

Re:STFU

By Zocalo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Brexit is a factor for sure. The UK’s economy has generally underperformed compared to its peers since the result was announced, let alone the actual exit, but it’s definitely not the only factor. It also overlaps with the decision to increase the minimum wage and various inflation busting public and private sector payrises which, while maybe warranted, also have the flipside of increasing costs and that is often clawed back through headcount reduction. That’s particularly noticeable in the hospitality sector which always runs on thin margins and has been hit pretty hard; AI isn’t making beds and prepping food. Another factor would be all the uncertainty over the US, one of the UK’s largest trading partners, putting a lot of focus on business development elsewhere and that doesn’t yield results, let alone jobs, overnight if you don’t already have a foothold to build from; I’m seeing a *lot* more Brits at overseas BD events than 12-18 months ago because of this.

I know we like to hate on AI a lot here, but while I’m sure it’s contributed to shifts in the job market it’s incredibly disingenous to claim AI is responsible for the entirely of the UK’s current employment woes, and frankly I’m not even sure who would really benefit from making that claim. Companies using it as a convenient excuse for layoffs because of other reasons on the otherhand… Yeah, I can totally see that.

Re:STFU

By greytree • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
No, no.

According to the demented/evil/both backers of Brexit, it’s not that the UK Brexited, it’s that they Brexited wrong.

Of course, that means that people shouldn’t have voted for Brexit when clearly nobody knew what it actually meant.

At least Brexit is a useful lesson for the world - don’t let stupid people decide complex issues, and half the population are stupider than average. Or 52% of those who voted, in the case of Brexit.

Tax the robots

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Look I know you don’t want to have to think about it but you’re going to have to deal with the fact that we are heading for permanent 25 to 40% unemployment. We simply do not need all the people that we have. There is literally nothing profitable for them to do. Now there’s plenty of productive things for them to do but that would involve government spending because it’s not profitable it’s productive.

I know you’ve got your hand full of guns and your pension plan from the government that you pretend you earned whatever and you sit around all day watching right wing media and getting angry and that’s lots of fun.

Those guns are not going to protect you from tens of millions of people with nothing to lose and neither are the police because when we hit 25% permanent unemployment there won’t be enough money to pay for those police.

You’ll kill the first guys. Maybe even the second. The third guys are going to shoot you in your arm and then you can’t hold your rifle. The next batch of going to get your wife. You can probably get another anyway. The last batch though one of them is going to put a bullet right in your head.

Because that’s the problem. They only have to kill you once and you lose. You have to kill them over and over and over again to win.

Society collapsing sounds fun when you’re approaching it with the mentality of a 12-year-old.

It’s not a lot of fun when it’s actually happening. Ask yourself if you would like to live in Iran right now.

So you better figure out a solution or you better hurry up and become old and die before all the shit you’re dumb decisions made come to bite you in the ass.

Because you are in charge and you are responsible for all of this

Re:The cover up

By gweihir • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yes. At this time, it has become pretty clear that outside of very special and limited applications, use of LLM-type AI is between a small gain in productivity (but quality may suffer and you may just fail to educate the junior people you need tomorrow as senior ones) and a definitive loss. There are tons oof people deep in denial, but any actual research is clear on the effects.

LLM-type AI is used as pretext to get rid of people and to decrease investments. The ages-old (pretty dumb) reflex of those trained in economics, but not actually understanding it. Since almost all of them are doing it, that creates a herd effect and eventually leads to a really large crisis.