Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Reaches Criticality In First Test
  2. The US Military Quietly Turned GPS Into a Global ‘Numbers Station,’ Evidence Suggests
  3. Google Will Pay SpaceX $920 Million Per Month For Compute
  4. Bitcoin Falls To $60,000 As Zcash Bug Rocks Crypto
  5. 340 Local News Outlets Now Blocking the Internet Archive
  6. GOV.UK Goes Dutch On Payments As It Dumps Stripe
  7. BSA Lashes Out At Mandatory Open-Source Licensing
  8. Google Says It Will Replenish More Water Than It Uses At Data Centers
  9. Valve Says Steam Machine ‘Shipping This Summer’
  10. ISS Astronauts Told To Prepare For Possible Evacuation Over Air Leak
  11. Used Waymo Robotaxi Batteries Become Backup Storage For Power Grids
  12. Bees Can Use Tools To Solve Problems, Study Finds
  13. Anthropic Urges Global Pause in AI Development, Flags ‘Self-Improvement’ Risk
  14. New IronWorm Malware Hits 36 Packages In npm Supply-Chain Attack
  15. Companies Are Using Reddit To Manipulate ChatGPT and Google AI Search

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.

Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Reaches Criticality In First Test

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Just over a year ago, the Trump Administration issued an executive order meant to accelerate the development of nuclear power in the US. While an entire startup ecosystem has developed around the use of different — and typically smaller — reactor designs, only one of them has been fully licensed so far, and there are no plans to actually build any instances of that design.

The executive order directed the Department of Energy to have three different reactor designs reach criticality in a bit over a year. On Thursday, a startup called Antares announced that a test reactor it had placed at the Idaho National Laboratory had reached criticality, making it the first new design to cross this threshold. Criticality means that the nuclear reactions inside the hardware had become self sustaining; it does not mean the reactor had started to generate power. […]

At the moment, Antares is just testing what it calls a Mark 0 reactor, which is not connected to the power-generation portion. Instead, it’s being used to validate the company’s modeling of the physical conditions in its reactors and generate safety data that can be used during licensing applications. Attempts to run the entire system, including electrical generation, are expected to happen next year. While the work was done at a Department of Energy Lab, the company is working with the Department of Defense’s Project Pele program for developing a mobile nuclear reactor. The company has also received support from NASA.

Out of control demand for power

By rsilvergun • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
A lax regulatory environment and a technology that is outclassed by wind and solar in virtually every single metric except space usage in a country with nothing but space?

Hey what could possibly go wrong?

Really looking forward to having nuclear powered data centers dropped in the middle of my community by finance Bros pretending to be tech Bros…

A fabulous plan with no possible downsides

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 3 Thread

“Just over a year ago, the Trump Administration issued an executive order meant to accelerate the development of nuclear power in the US.”

This sounds like a fabulous plan with no possible downsides, risks, or sharp edges.

Anyone will tell you that the one thing we need here in the US are lots more loosely-regulated mom-and-pop nuclear reactors with minimal security and oversight.

Meanwhile real SMRs are being built

By Kernel Kurtz • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Here in Canada OPG continues to move along on time and on time and on budget.

Site construction progress - Spring 2026

Excavation and blasting of all three major on-site shafts – tunnel boring machine launch shaft, reactor building shaft, and forebay shaft – is now complete. In April, the 2.1 million pound diaphragm plate steel composite basemat – the foundation of the Unit 1 reactor building – was successfully placed 35 metres down into the reactor shaft, allowing for construction on the reactor building to begin moving upwards. A dedicated crane foundation pad is being prepared beside the reactor shaft to support a tower crane which will be used for component installation and material handling activities at the reactor building. At the turbine building, pile installation is nearing completion, while construction of the Administration and Control Buildings remains on track. Construction of the Holt Switching Station continues to progress. This station will transmit electricity generated by Unit 1 to Ontario’s electricity grid until the planned SMR units are connected to the Bowmanville Switching Station. The tunnel boring machine – nicknamed Harriet Brooks - is being assembled ahead of tunneling commencement in support of the Condenser Cooling Water system later this summer.


https://www.opg.com/projects-s…

I’ll continue to post updates for the haters as construction continues.

The US Military Quietly Turned GPS Into a Global ‘Numbers Station,’ Evidence Suggests

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A security researcher says evidence suggests the U.S. military has been using an obscure GPS message field for nearly 20 years to broadcast encrypted key-distribution data, effectively turning GPS satellites into a global “numbers station.” The hidden-looking 176-bit messages appear tied to the Pentagon’s Over-the-Air Distribution system for remotely updating cryptographic keys, meaning ordinary GPS receivers may have been receiving the traffic all along without anyone outside the military noticing. The findings have been detailed by Steven Murdoch, an information security expert, in a new article in Inside GNSS. 404 Media reports:
[…] From the beginning, he suspected that the subframe field contained encrypted transmissions because the data was so random. “Random data is actually very unusual to get in nature,” Murdoch said. “If you see it, either it’s been carefully designed to be random — but then, why is someone sending out random data? — or it’s encrypted data. I thought encrypted data is by far the most likely explanation.” He returned to the subframe on and off over the years, and solicited guesses about its content on Stack Exchange in 2023. Ahmed Kamruddin, a master’s student at UCL, developed the project further in 2025. Then, this year, Murdoch put the last pieces of the puzzle together over several weeks by analyzing open archive Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) recordings collected since 2007 and kept by GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences.

This dataset included more than 12 million observations of Subframe 4, Page 17, yielding 3,994 unique 176-bit messages. Within this corpus, Murdoch pinpointed key-repeating “sentinels” including a pattern that appeared in February 2010 and was broadcast on and off across dozens of satellites for more than a decade. Murdoch discovered that this particular sentinel was transmitted by all 31 operational satellites within a window of a few hours on May 26, 2011, potentially heralding the activation of a new operational system. He confirmed that this timeline coincided with the rollout of the military’s Over-the-Air Distribution (OTAD) and the Over-the-Air Rekeying (OTAR) by cross-referencing declassified documents, including a 2015 presentation about the dates of the operation.

“There was a perfect match between the timeline and that presentation and the change points that were automatically identified from the data,” Murdoch said. “That was the smoking gun that made me think: This is what it’s for.” These automated systems replaced the cumbersome manual distribution of cryptographic keying material, allowing military GPS receivers around the world to be rekeyed remotely through satellite broadcasts rather than through onsite procedures. For the next 11 years, this expansive rekeying operation was overlooked in public GPS data. In 2022, the system entered a new phase, according to Murdoch’s analysis. The shift was characterized by a slowing in the message rotation rate. Later, in December 2023, broadcasts carrying a distinctive “TEXT” prefix emerged then gradually spread across the constellation.

Murdoch isn’t sure what explains the recent transition, though it could be a possible modernization of the infrastructure or the introduction of a new protocol. But to him, the bigger takeaway is that the signals were always available for anyone willing to take a closer look, a discovery that suggests that there could be more revelations hidden for the cryptographically curious among us. “Every receiver in the world decodes Subframe 4, Page 17,” Murdoch said in his new article. “Almost none of them have ever looked at it. The lesson generalizes: There is more to learn from the bytes already arriving at our antennas than from the bytes we wish were specified differently. The data are publicly available. The signal is overhead, twice a day, every day.”

And then …

By PPH • Score: 4, Funny Thread

… someone yelled “Bingo!”

As the old saying goes…

By GFS666 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
..the best way to hide a secret is to conceal it in plain sight within a mundane environment.

Re:As the old saying goes…

By OrangAsm • Score: 4, Funny Thread

..the best way to hide a secREt iS to cOnceaL it in Plain sight within a MUndane enviRonmenT.

No doubt about it.

Somebody deserves a Medal.

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

This was freakin’ genius. Not only did they hide a secret communication system inside a military radio system, but there is more. The US graciously ‘gave’ permission for civilian use of the previously military only technology, allowing it to be spread throughout the world.

This way their agents could openly use the ‘civilian’ equipment to receive encrypted military information.

There is some genius American out there that for decades has been unable to brag. Maybe they can give him a medal now.

Google Will Pay SpaceX $920 Million Per Month For Compute

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Ahead of its upcoming IPO, SpaceX announced that Google will pay the company $920 million per month for access to roughly 110,000 Nvidia GPUs and related compute infrastructure. Google says the agreement is short-term “bridge capacity” to meet stronger-than-expected demand for Gemini Enterprise, while SpaceX is using deals like this and its Anthropic contract to bolster its pitch for a historic public offering. TechCrunch reports:
The deal is similar in length and scope to the one SpaceX announced with Anthropic in late May. As part of that deal, Anthropic agreed to pay SpaceX $1.25 billion per month through 2029 to rent all the available compute from its Colossus 1 data center near Memphis, Tennessee that xAI — now part of SpaceX — originally built for its own artificial intelligence efforts.

Google’s deal appears to be paying for roughly half the amount of compute that Anthropic has access to at Colossus 1. SpaceX didn’t say which specific data center Google would be using. CEO Elon Musk has previously suggested his company would reserve the Colossus 2 data center for xAI. Anthropic was significantly limited in its compute capacity prior to its deal with SpaceX, raising usage limits on the same day the deal was announced. Google is in a very different position, with some estimates naming it as the world’s largest single owner of AI compute.

[…] Also like the Anthropic deal, the agreement with Google includes a cancellation clause. Both SpaceX and Google have the option to terminate the agreement with 90 days notice after December 31, 2026. Google’s access to the data center will ramp up “through September at a reduced fee,” according to the filing. “If we fail to deliver access to the committed amount of GPUs by September 30, 2026, then following a one-month grace period, Google may immediately terminate the agreement or accept the number of GPUs provided” with a reduction in the monthly fees, it reads.

What I’m reading

By MachineShedFred • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sounds like Musk bought a shitload of GPUs that he doesn’t need, because nobody is using Grok besides idiots on Twitter to make “sick memes.”

If they have all those GPUs energized and can afford to lease them to their competition, that just tells us nobody is using them.

Well.. Okay then…

By ndykman • Score: 3 Thread

Not sure that giving money to a third party to make your core product experience worse is the best of ideas. Google has the cash to see how it turns out, no question about it.

I am also very skeptical that there is any path to make the costs for LLM-based search the same as traditional search. I don’t think Google can charge much more for advertising services either.

Of course, my bias is that people want predictable results when interacting with a search engine. Maybe I am wrong about that.

+$8000 per GPU per month.

By thesjaakspoiler • Score: 4, Funny Thread

That should be enough to cover the electricity bill and get a100% ROI within 6 months.

I hope Dr. Forbin has stock options

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

Too soon to welcome our new Colossus overlord?

[Spoiler: It doesn’t end well for humanity.]

Bitcoin Falls To $60,000 As Zcash Bug Rocks Crypto

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Bitcoin briefly fell below $60,000 on Friday, “extending its weekly loss to nearly 20% and threatening to fall below $59,000,” reports CoinDesk. Crypto was also hit by a 40%-plus plunge in Zcash after Shielded Labs disclosed a years-old bug that could have allowed undetected counterfeit ZEC creation. From the report:
Now, with stocks in plunge mode — the Nasdaq down nearly 4% on Friday — bitcoin finds itself perfectly correlated. “Short term, Bitcoin feels like swallowing broken glass,” wrote Jeff Swanson Friday. “The chart goes up. It goes down. It makes grown men cry into their Robinhood accounts and CNBC anchors smugly declare the funeral, for the eleventh time.” “Here’s what uncomfortable people don’t understand: the discomfort is the yield. Every paper-handed panic seller is handing their future to someone with a longer time horizon and a colder storage device.”

[…] Earlier, Shielded Labs, a nonprofit developer on the privacy token system, disclosed a critical vulnerability in Zcash’s (ZEC) Orchard privacy pool that could have threatened the integrity of the token’s supply. The vulnerability, if exploited, could have allowed an attacker to create an unlimited number of counterfeit ZEC tokens, completely undetected. “Think of it as someone secretly gaining access to the Federal Reserve’s dollar printing press, except in this case, even the Fed wouldn’t be able to tell these extra dollars were printed,” wrote Omkar Godbole. Importantly, the vulnerability was discovered with help from Anthropic’s recently released Opus 4.8 AI model, raising difficult questions for the entire crypto industry. More to come on that. ZEC is now down 42% over the past 24 hours.
On Wednesday, the Zcash Foundation said: “The vulnerability was caught before any known exploitation occurred. There is no evidence of unauthorized value creation. Zcash’s turnstile mechanism (which tracks the total ZEC balance across all value pools) confirmed that the total supply remained intact throughout. User privacy was not affected. Sapling and transparent transactions continued operating normally throughout the incident.”

I was told this was a good investment

By wakeboarder • Score: 5, Funny Thread

better than gold…

Re:One day it started to fall, and didn’t stop

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Informative Thread

With top tier governments like the state of Texas, El Salvador, and even the US going all in with cryptocurrencies

You mean the top tier governments who bought near the top? The ones who, as the Texas Comptroller said, were buying bitcoin “that strengthens the state’s balance sheet”.

They’re already down over 30%. Not sure that’s considered “strengthening” the balance sheet.

Re:A 50% correction is mild for bitcoin …

By drnb • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Then crypto is meant to be a currency.

That is just the aspiration of many tech enthusiasts.

I am sure most people who invested over the last 3 years did not expect their stable currency trade for crypto to be worth 1/2 or less than what they went in for.

No one imagined it is stable. Even those who buy/sell goods/services with bitcoin tend not to hold it. Buy and transfer immediately, receive and sell immediately, it avoids the volatility risk. As mentioned earlier, “investors” tend to know it is high risk/reward, very speculative.

Some people at the top of this pyramid scheme …

It’s not a pyramid scheme. It’s a “greater fool” scheme. Pyramid involves some sort of interest or dividends, greater fool involves increasing prices.

But they didn’t plan for this severe of a systematic collapse.

75-80% drops are not systematic collapses for bitcoin, its a run of the mill post-run up correction.

Re:One day it started to fall, and didn’t stop

By MachineShedFred • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Which they were all told, very loudly, at the time they were making their purchases.

It’s almost like people that don’t know what the hell they’re doing, might also not listen to people who actually do know what they’re doing. Everyone except these idiots knew this was a play to turn government balance sheets into bagholders for well-assetted individuals.

Re: I was told this was a good investment

By broward • Score: 4, Informative Thread

98% of investors don’t realize that the bitcoin miners have been losing money for 20 of the past 25 months since the last coin halving. they’re spending around $18 billion in energy to mine 165k coins at $70k. Do the math

the miners have been redirected assets away from Bitcoin to AI, the Bitcoin network has been oversaturated since August and doubled saturation rate in May.

https://www.scry.llc/2026/05/2…

ie. bitcoin is probably dropping 10% of its transactions now.

340 Local News Outlets Now Blocking the Internet Archive

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Techdirt:
Earlier this year Nieman Lab broke the story that major news publishers, including The New York Times, The Guardian, and USA Today Co., had started blocking the Internet Archive for fear that AI companies might scrape the nonprofit’s repositories for training data. As one of the last bastions of archival history, that is, in case you’re not aware, not very good for the public interest. Four months later and Nieman Lab now notes that the number of news outlets blocking the archive has soared to around 340 organizations:

“Our new analysis shows that more than 340 local news sites across the United States are now limiting the Internet Archive’s ability to access and preserve their stories. Many sites in our sample are owned by five of the seven largest local news publishers in the country: USA Today Co., McClatchy, Advance Local, MediaNews Group, and Tribune Publishing. The latter two are both subsidiaries of the “vulture hedge fund” Alden Global Capital.”

[…] Regardless of motivation, hiding whatever local news remains behind paywalls, then blocking it from the Internet Archive, in turn makes it harder for everyone else to do real journalism that relies on the historical record, local journalists tell Nieman Lab: “I cover news within a larger news desert in New York’s Rockland, Sullivan, and Rockland counties. This means I need to heavily rely on archival data of old news articles from now deceased, or zombie-fied, media outlets,” wrote B.J. Mendelson, the editor of The Monroe Gazette newsletter, in one recent petition signed by over 200 journalists. “Without the Internet Archive, my [work] would be incredibly difficult to do.”
The Internet Archive says it is listening to the concerns raised by local news outlets, while also partnering with journalism groups to train hundreds of newsrooms on archival preservation: “In December, the Internet Archive partnered with the Poynter Institute and Investigative Reporters and Editors to train a cohort of 33 local and national news outlets on how to develop and implement an archiving strategy. The initiative, funded through a Press Forward grant, aims to train 300 newsrooms in digital preservation and in using the Internet Archive’s services by the end of 2027.”

I’ll bet that isn’t the reason

By sheph • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The real reason is because they don’t want any record of their factual inaccuracies.

Stealth

By JBMcB • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The NYT has a track record of stealth-edits.

https://www.poynter.org/ethics…

Wiping the archive makes it much more difficult to detect this stuff.

Less to do with AI than with bypassing paywalls

By brunes69 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

N/T

Everyone knows that you use Archive.org to bypass a paywall.

Post war irony.

By Ostracus • Score: 3 Thread

Ah, the Guardian. The one that’s always going on about freedom and e-mailing me for money. Glad they’re sticking up for their principles.

Legislate archives?

By txsable • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Perhaps Congress can give the Library of Congress the authority to compel the news sources to archive their output to a system run by the LoC, that escrows it for say… 30 days then makes it public? Also, the archive is immutable and once a story is pushed there it cannot be changed, so they can’t be rewriting history.....

GOV.UK Goes Dutch On Payments As It Dumps Stripe

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The UK’s Government Digital Service is replacing Stripe with Dutch payments provider Adyen for many GOV.UK Pay transactions, including local authorities, police forces, and armed forces units. The three-year deal covers about 1,000 services and is meant to make payments more flexible while keeping the user experience largely unchanged. The Register reports:
According to the tender notice published in February 2025, the contract covers around 17 percent of payments made through GOV.UK Pay but more than 70 percent of its organizations and includes the only option allowing users to start taking payments within one working day. At that point the contract had an estimated maximum value of £49 million, although with no guarantees over volume.

In a blogpost about the contract award on 2 June, GDS said it will migrate around 1,000 services to the new supplier. “We will make migration as straightforward as possible while complying with Know Your Customer legislation that protects everyone from fraud,” wrote Alan Maddrell, senior content designer for the service. “Most importantly, there will be no discernible difference for paying users and no loss in functionality.”

He added that the change of supplier will help introduce new options including pay by bank, which transfers money directly between bank accounts using open banking services and avoids the need to type in card details. GDS will continue to use WorldPay to process payments for central government, linked organizations and NHS bodies.

Re:Cost?

By tlhIngan • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Well, I’m sure governments get better rates. But yes, it’s likely a nationalism thing. Stripe, being American and Adyen being European. People are dropping American tech when they can switch, and I’m guessing the UK contract was up.

And while they may be expensive, it’s probably cheaper since they can handle card payments online without having to do all the PCI security stuff.

Re:Cost?

By Njovich • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Generally speaking Adyen rates are not expensive per transaction at all. Just you need a certain scale to make Adyen feasible, they basically only want to work with large parties.

BSA Lashes Out At Mandatory Open-Source Licensing

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader Elektroschock writes:
The American Business Software Alliance (BSA) does not consider mandatory open-source licensing to be an appropriate indicator of sovereignty. This is among the “pointed messages” they sent to the French government consultation (closed) today. “What protects Europe is the ability to govern, audit, and mitigate risk, not where a company files its corporate papers,” said Thomas Boue of BSA. “Criteria of this kind raise costs, reduce access to best-in-class security solutions, and risk conflicting with the EU’s international trade commitments.”

They are just afraid

By Z00L00K • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They are just afraid that if they lose the European market then the rest of the world will follow.

I’m confused

By almitydave • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Isn’t “the ability to govern, audit, and mitigate risk” a big reason to use open-source software over proprietary? I though the point of the move was to eliminate dependence on opaque softare from US-based (and potentially US gov-compromised) companies. It sounds like they’re advocating for the EU’s actions here.

Business is freedom’s natural economic enemy.

By couchslug • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Businesses want captive audiences so they act accordingly.

That’s why their assertions should be seen as malicious.

Of course

By abulafia • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
BSA is a sock with googley eyes glues on. Microsoft, Adobe, Oracle and other software audit enthusiasts are the hand inside.

Of course they don’t want Europe breaking dependency. It is like asking your dealer if you should get clean.

Re:That would be true

By JaredOfEuropa • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Example: Microsoft shared personal details, emails and meeting minutes of Dutch regulatory officials with the US House of Representatives, under the CLOUD Act. MS (and a few other BSA members) supported the act when it was proposed. So now they can lie in the bed they made.

Google Says It Will Replenish More Water Than It Uses At Data Centers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 9to5Google:
There’s been a lot of pushback in recent months around the impact of AI data centers on local communities, with the use of water being a key issue for many. Google, in an expansion of its “water stewardship” programs, is making commitments that include replenishing more water than it uses at its data center sites. AI data centers go through a lot of water use in cooling the hardware used to power models, and Google is no exception. While Google stands by saying that the impact of AI data centers on U.S. water consumption is “small,” it also says it is focusing on “protecting local water resources in all aspects of our data center operations.”

In a post, Google explains five new commitments regarding water use at its data centers in the U.S. These include replenishing more water than is consumed at data centers, helping local utilities to modernize water infrastructure, using air-cooled solutions in areas where watersheds are at risk, “transparently” reporting water use at data centers, and focusing on “alternative and reclaimed” water solutions. […] In a linked paper (PDF), Google says it will replenish 120% of the water it uses at data center sites by 2030. Google is also committing $17 million to new water stewardship projects in Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, and Texas in addition to 165 other projects already in place throughout the U.S.

No they won’t

By CEC-P • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Reroute a river? Cloud seeding? Just lying about it and making it look correct on paper like Carbon Credits? You can’t just create water. This is such utter horse shit. As a hardware-oriented IT worker, what I want to know, is how the fuck you lose water in a closed loop cooling system? Are they just evaporating it? How the heck do you keep that water clean enough? Or is the water lost at power plant when the turbine spins and that’s what they’re talking about? How does a data center “use” water? They don’t.

Re:No they won’t

By Fly Swatter • Score: 5, Informative Thread
from the linked paper in the summary:

The Colorado River Indian Tribes project is a replenishment initiative that conserves water for Lake Mead through reduced withdrawals

Nope, that’s not replenishment - that’s just using less somewhere else. It’s like the carbon credits farce. You can’t replenish more than you used, which makes 120% just some number they pulled out of their ass for marketing. At least be honest and say ‘google will try to use less than currently.’

-Do no evil my ass

Re:Where does it go?

By jonathantn • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Typically the water go to an evaporative cooling tower outside to reduce the heat. As with all evaporative cooling, you lose some of that to evaporation and that has to be replenished. Some data centers perform rain water collection from their large roofs and use that to offset. Some data centers take the waste water treatment plant output and use that. Some data centers use geothermal to reject the heat into the ground (more niche but gaining momentum). I would encourage people to go research the amount of water consumed by data centers (including the power generation to run them) vs golf courses and almond farms in the United States. Something tells me that if you do that it will be eye opening numbers.

Re:No they won’t

By silentbozo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I can’t find the citation for it, but in at least one case, part of the reported allocation of water for datacenters was due to the water consumed during construction. I would consider this kind of consumption legit if called out as a temporary usage of water, but FUD if just assumed as part of the overall calculation of ongoing water demand.

As for creating/destroying water:

https://www.fwpcoa.org/content…

“Air cooling (water-free): Many smaller or older data centers rely on air conditioning and chilled air circulation to remove heat. These use mechanical chillers or heat exchangers and do not consume water for cooling (aside from minimal water for humidification). Air cooling is common in cooler climates or where water is scarce, but it can require more electricity to run compressors or fans.
Evaporative cooling (open-loop): A majority of large, modern data centers use water-based cooling for better energy efficiency. This often involves cooling towers or evaporative chillers: warm water absorbs heat from servers and is then cooled by evaporation in a tower. As water evaporates into the air, it carries away heat â" dramatically cutting the electrical power needed for cooling. The trade-off is high water consumption. Most big data centers today use some form of evaporative cooling because it’s energy-efficient, especially in hot climates, but it directly uses water (often drawn from municipal supply).
Closed-loop water cooling: In closed-loop systems, water circulates in sealed pipes or coils that cool the servers without directly exposing water to air. Because the water isn’t evaporated to the environment, losses are minimal â" it’s mostly the same water recirculating (with some makeup water added occasionally). These systems can include water-cooled heat exchangers or liquid-to-liquid cooling loops. Closed-loop cooling can reduce freshwater use by up to 70% compared to traditional open evaporative methods. The downside is higher cost and complexity, but they are far more water-efficient since water isn’t âoeburned offâ into the air.”

“However, a growing number of data centers are now shifting to recycled water. Tech giants have begun partnering with utilities to use treated wastewater (effluent) for cooling instead of fresh drinking water. For instance, Google uses reclaimed or non-potable water at over 25% of its data center campuses (one notable example is its Douglas County, Georgia data center, which runs on recycled municipal wastewater). Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced in 2023 that 20 of its data centers are cooling with purified wastewater instead of potable water. After cycling through the cooling system, this water is sent back to the treatment plant to be cleaned and reused again. These initiatives leave more drinking-quality water for the community and exemplify the industry’s trend toward âoestrategic water sourcing.â Still, as of today, reclaimed water use is the exception. Most data centers worldwide are still using fresh water for cooling, although this is slowly changing with new projects and local regulations.”

So evaporative cooling “destroys” water. And using treated wastewater (pure enough to use for datacenter usage and probably irrigation, but still too ick for some people to drink directly - aka toilet to tap), if part of their investments were to purify even more water than the municipality was already processing, combined with closed loop usage could be considered “creating” water.

Your guess is as good as mine though, it all sounds like marketing hype in an attempt to combat FUD.

Re:Where does it go?

By fropenn • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I would encourage people to go research the amount of water consumed by data centers (including the power generation to run them) vs golf courses and almond farms

And beaches, don’t forget beaches, they use huge amounts of water!

The issue is that these wealthy companies want to exploit local water sources, often in lower-income communities that already struggle to produce enough clean, inexpensive water for the people who already live there. There are no new golf courses being built (acres of courses in the U.S. is relatively stable), and acres of almond trees have gone down considerably in the last few years. So try proposing a new golf course or almond farm in the same community that is opposed to water-hogging data warehouses, and I think you’ll find the same response -> don’t exploit us for our water!

Valve Says Steam Machine ‘Shipping This Summer’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Valve says its long-awaited Steam Machine and Steam Frame are both “shipping this summer.” The company is also expanding its Verified program beyond Steam Deck to cover the new hardware. “Steam Verified is a developer-focused program where game makers ensure that their titles are capable of running on the Deck (meaning they’ll run fine under Linux), that the UI elements and text are readable at standard resolutions, and that sensible default graphics settings are used,” notes Tom’s Hardware. From the report:
The news should ease the worries of many an expecting gamer, given today’s constant worries about AI servers slurping every RAM and NAND chip on the face of the earth, as well as Valve’s own statements about component scarcity delaying the release. Plus, the company always works on its own schedule, so much so that Valve Time is a term.

The release of the Machine has been taking flak, given that while Valve was initially hoping for an estimated $600 to $800 price — in the ballpark of the higher-end consoles — the rumored pricing is climbing around or over $1000. This fact is somewhat corroborated by a February statement from a Valve executive who, like most anyone in the world, stated the price revision was due to the AI-driven component shortage.

Re:unresolved: steam deck’s issue with displays

By ichthus • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

…1080 pixel monitors…

And you think you’re going to be a tech journalist? Yeah, I guess that tracks.

ISS Astronauts Told To Prepare For Possible Evacuation Over Air Leak

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
NASA ordered astronauts on the International Space Station to shelter in their spacecraft and prepare for possible evacuation after a worsening air leak in the Russian Zvezda service module’s transfer tunnel. The Guardian reports:
The four astronauts of NASA’s Crew-12 mission on the station — two US astronauts, a French astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut — received orders from NASA mission control at 9.04am ET (2pm BST) on Friday to enter their Crew Dragon spacecraft docked to the station and don their spacesuits in case the air leak warranted an emergency evacuation, a NASA official said.

NASA and Russia’s space agency Roscosmos, the station’s two primary operators, have debated for months over the cause and potential fixes of small air leaks onboard Russia’s Zvezda service module, a key structure of the football-pitch-sized laboratory. The air leaks have been relatively minor in recent months. But on Monday the problem escalated from a pound of air per day to two pounds (0.9kg) a senior Nasa official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
UPDATE: “Roscosmos has paused Friday’s structural repair efforts inside the Zvezda service module transfer tunnel, known as PrK, as more measurements and data is assessed,” Bethany Stevens, a spokesperson for NASA, posted on X.

“Given this development, NASA has instructed the crew members inside the Dragon spacecraft to end the safe haven procedures and return to planned operations aboard the International Space Station. We look forward to working with Roscosmos on a collaborative approach to address the leaks.”

Developing…

Re:Question

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Informative Thread

My math(assuming 94kPa to vaccuum) puts the “hole” at 0.2mm to leak 1kg per day.

Re:Question

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
My guess is, and I’m just going off of the obvious, that you don’t know dick about what’s going on or how to fix it.

Russians broke it, let them fix it

By Thud457 • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Close the hatch to the Russian section, not our problem.

Oh, NOW they want international cooperation.

Vacuum Exposure

By hwstar • Score: 3 Thread

You know you’re in trouble when you feel the saliva boiling on your tongue.

“In 1966, NASA aerospace engineer and spacesuit technician Jim LeBlanc experienced the terrifying reality of vacuum exposure during a spacesuit test in a vacuum chamber at Johnson Space Center. When a pressurization hose accidentally disconnected, his suit depressurized to a near-vacuum. Before passing out from hypoxia in about 14 seconds, his last conscious memory was feeling the saliva on his tongue begin to boil.”

Re: ISS was a mistake born of wishful thinking.

By WaffleMonster • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Oh please get your head out of your ass, the west is just as much responsible for the war in Ukraine as Russia is.

Russia and Russia alone is responsible for their war of genocide and conquest against Ukraine. Here is one of my all time favorite clips from the Russians on the Ukraine war. Not even the Indians who DGAF were buying his nonsense. Also listen to what horse face says about cooperation with the west.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?…

To this day Russians continue to push absurd it wasn’t us, we didn’t start it propaganda. Occasionally you get people in the west dumb enough to fall for it… CTR biolabs, Donbas, NATO, Victoria Nuland… ad nausea.

Why deorbit the station at all, why not reuse parts of it with newer stations or sent it to towards the moon. Or just keep it as a rescue haven. Getting new stations up there will be easier when vehicles like Starship are ready, but for now we need more stations up there. And instead of banning everything russian try to cooperate more, hostility doesn’t work.

I disagree, ISS is scheduled for termination in four years anyway. Russians waging wars of conquest against other sovereign states who have done nothing to provoke invasion is a good enough reason not to cooperate or help them in any way until they stop. There is no practical means of salvaging parts of the station and it can’t be operated by either the Russians or the Americans alone.

Used Waymo Robotaxi Batteries Become Backup Storage For Power Grids

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Waymo and B2U Storage Solutions have struck a “strategic supply agreement” to repurpose used batteries from Waymo’s electric robotaxi fleet into stationary storage for California and Texas power grids. The arrangement could give robotaxi batteries a second life storing renewable energy after they’re no longer suitable for vehicle use. It will also “support B2U projects in regions where Waymo’s autonomous robotaxis operate — meaning the used Waymo batteries could bolster the local power grids that Waymo vehicles rely upon for charging,” reports Ars Technica. From the report:
Waymo’s “proactive maintenance” for its autonomous vehicles includes identifying opportunities to “refresh the battery to improve efficiency overall for our fleet,” Adam Lenz, head of sustainability and environment at Waymo, told Ars. “That’s when we look to these second-life applications, because there’s still a lot of life left in the battery,” he said.

Waymo did not specify the average mileage at which it swaps out batteries or retires vehicles from service. But Waymo robotaxis drive around much more each day than the typical EV, which means the Waymo fleet is likely to experience faster usage-related degradation of battery capacity over time. The company confirmed to Ars that “some of these vehicles have now been serving riders for years and have mileage beyond what a normal consumer drives.”

[…] “Put a little haircut on that in terms of degradation and the effective capacity that would be left in those batteries when they’re suitable for repurposing, and we’re still talking about pretty significant capacity per battery,” Hall said. The growing Waymo robotaxi fleet could lead to “pretty large numbers in terms of megawatt hours of capacity that can be deployed pretty quickly” for stationary energy storage supporting power grids, he suggested.

The agreement gives Waymo discretion over when and how many used batteries will be turned over to B2U. But the companies confirmed that B2U has “already started receiving smaller initial quantities of batteries” from the Waymo fleet. Over time, the agreement could give B2U “hundreds of megawatt-hours” of additional storage capacity from Waymo’s thousands of electric vehicles, Lenz said.

Re:Life Expectancy Study.

By wildstoo • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Did you really just try to make a point by citing Copilot? Why didn’t you just slaughter a chicken and read the entrails?

Re:Life Expectancy Study.

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

just how long will an EV owner drive before running face first into that five-figure maintenance bill?

We know that answer already, it’s “forever” for the typical consumer. Replacing an EV battery is done out of damage or faults, not out of degradation. EV batteries statistically outlast the useful life of the rest of the car.

Will that be before or after the 7-year auto loan is paid on an asset that has depreciated like milk.

Given that many manufacturers offer warranties on their batteries longer than 7 years we can categorically say after. In fact Tesla’s battery warranty is within the error bars of the average scrapping distance travelled for a car (150k-200k miles) so you can expect even second hand buyers to never end up replacing the battery.

And before someone points out they’ve had their car for 50 years and has 600k miles on it, you’re not average. You’re a special little boy. *pats head*

Re: Life Expectancy Study.

By PsychoSlashDot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Feel free to cite references if it is wrong.

Nope. Doesn’t work that way. You get to cite your references. LLMs scrape the Internet at large, including FUD and troll content and assemble plausible responses based on linguistic probability, in addition to be being biased by whatever prompt they’re given. They aren’t primary sources.

Re:It’s a Huge Win

By meringuoid • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Seems to me ‘dead’ for a taxi isn’t ‘dead’ for a static power bank. If I’m running a taxi I’ve got hard limits on how large my battery can be and how heavy, and I want to maximise the mileage I get between charges, because while my taxi is charging it’s not out on the road earning money. When that battery is keeping only maybe 80% of its original design charge, and now I have to schedule one recharge too many per working day? Bang goes my business plan, so I’m replacing it.

If I’m storing energy for the grid I’m a lot less worried about that. It only stores 80% of what it did when new? Better than nothing, and the taxi firm is selling them off cheap. I’ll stack them up!

Re:Translation: No thought given to recycling

By swillden • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Already, the battery are too depleted to be used for what they were intended; what happens when they can’t even shore up the power grid by a significant amount. If they were perfectly usable—they’d still be in the cabs.

Not at all.

Car batteries have to have high storage to weight ratios. A reduced-capacity battery holds less power but still weighs just as much.

But weight doesn’t matter for grid storage. If the batteries only have half as much capacity, just stack up twice as many of them. And in fact it’s not a case of “half capacity”. I’d bet Waymo retires them when they get to 80-90% of capacity, because reduced capacity means more time spent charging and less time spent working. If the grid storage system gets a battery with 80% of its original capacity, it can likely use that battery for decades before it has to be retired and recycled.

And, of course, lithium ion batteries are highly recyclable, so there’s no reason not to expect them to be recycled when they’re finally taken out of service in 2060 or so.

Bees Can Use Tools To Solve Problems, Study Finds

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
Bumblebees can use tools to solve a problem, according to experiments that demonstrate their remarkably advanced cognitive abilities. The bees were given an adapted version of an experiment that, 100 years ago, first demonstrated chimpanzees could work out how to retrieve an out-of-reach banana by stacking boxes. Since then, various other primates, elephants and crows have joined an elite cohort of species known to be capable of this level of insight and spontaneous problem solving. In the latest research, bees were shown to be able to roll a polystyrene ball to a specific location and climb on to it in order to access an artificial flower on a low ceiling. The findings challenge the longstanding assumption that insects operate purely on instinct and mindless trial-and-error learning.
“Most people think insects are reflex-based machines,” said Dr Olli Loukola, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Oulu, Finland, and senior author. “That they can’t have any emotional states or feel pain. Some people don’t even realize that they have brains. I hope that these results change the worldview about that.”
“We are not claiming that bees think like humans,” added Loukola. “But our findings show that miniature brains can generate flexible solutions to novel problems in ways we are only beginning to understand.”

The findings are published in the journal Science.

Re:F-ing duh

By Aighearach • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It may be that the users have already learned, through trial and error, that game designers are more likely to include poorly-considered gimmicks as “puzzles” instead of real puzzles. And that even when they try to create real puzzles, they suck at it.

If bees can really use tools…

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

They should learn to wield tiny swords to fend off those Asian Murder Hornets.

Re:If bees can really use tools…

By Rei • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I mean, bees attack small hive beetles by building prisons of propolis around them, that’s something :)

I’m not convinced

By Synonymous Homonym • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

There are experiments that have shown insects to not modify their behaviour in certain situations when any mammal would lose patience and try a better way. That is probably the reason why “people” “assume” that insects are “reflex-based machines.”

Of course it is also known that bees can learn. They learn of the locations of sources of nectar, for example, and communicate that to their hive through dance. But it has also been shown that individual bees retain that information only for half an hour. The hive can retain it for much longer.

That’s not trial-and-error learning.

I don’t think anybody questions that insects have emotions. Emotions are hormones. Insects have those. Plants do, too.
And insects have pain receptors, so they are able to feel pain, but the effect is not the same as in mammals. (Or in plants, for that matter.)

Brains are central organs. Insects have nerve nodules that serve the same purpose, but they are not as centralised. In that sense, insects do not have brains, but they have something similar that might as well be called a brain. (And there are fungi that are specialised in manipulating those, physically, to elicit specific behaviour in ants, which works only because their “brain” structure is not as flexible as actual brains.)

That bees can move obstacles and climb on things does not in itself prove that they plan those solutions through abstract thinking.
So this seems like another paper that has been published for the readers to have a good laugh.
Even if it were evidence of abstract thinking, that has no implications for emotions or pain.

I for one…

By alleycat0 • Score: 3 Thread
…welcome our new insect overlords!

Anthropic Urges Global Pause in AI Development, Flags ‘Self-Improvement’ Risk

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic is urging leading AI labs to consider slowing development, warning that frontier models are advancing fast enough that they may soon be able to improve themselves without direct human intervention. The company says a global ability to pause or slow AI development would “likely be a good thing,” citing internal data about accelerating model capabilities. From a blog post:
Using public benchmarks and previously unreported data from within Anthropic, The Anthropic Institute is showing that AI is already accelerating the development of AI systems. To take just one example: today, Anthropic engineers on average ship 8x as much code per quarter as they did from 2021-2025.

The technical trends discussed in this piece suggest that AI systems are going to become much more capable in coming years. These trends have huge implications. AI that can build itself would be a major development in the history of technology — one that could bring enormous good for the world in science, healthcare, and beyond. But full recursive self-improvement also might increase the risks of humans losing control over AI systems. If systems are capable of fully building their own successors, the ways we secure them, monitor them, and shape their behavior all grow much more important. […]

If it were possible to effectively slow the development of this technology to give ourselves more time to deal with its immense implications, we think that would likely be a good thing. But if a slowdown simply lets the least cautious actors catch up technologically, it could leave everyone less safe. Without a global coordination mechanism, companies and governments will have to make difficult decisions about safety while under competitive and geopolitical pressures.

We believe it would be good for the world to have the option to slow or temporarily pause frontier AI development to enable societal structures and alignment research to keep up with the advance of the technology. The Anthropic Institute will conduct research — in collaboration with many others — and take actions to help build the systems that a credible slowdown or pause would require. These systems would enable frontier AI developers to verify that others globally have actually stopped or slowed, and that a bad actor could not use the auspices of a coordinated slowdown to jump ahead in secret. If such systems existed, we expect that we would slow down or temporarily pause, if other developers at or near the frontier also did so in a verifiable manner…

Stupidity

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

1) We do NOT have AI. We have Large Language Models and similar predictive software.

2) When it attempts recursive improvements we get recursive deterioration. LLM fed the output of other LLM get worse, not better. This will NOT change. The best they can obtain is 0 deterioration. Why? Because prediction needs good data. Predictions based on other predictions is like making a copy of a copy. The best it can do is stay even. The LLM did the best possible prediction in the first round, using it again without more data does NOT work.

3) We already are seeing this problem as so much of the internet has become AI slop that it is feeding AI slop as input for other AI, resulting in worse slop. Example:
Not a robot, not an android, but instead a Large Language Module -> Not a machine, not a phone, but instead a huge English component.

4) AI can be helpful for a lot of tedious work, such as going through theoretical chemicals looking for possible medicinal drugs. But the idea that it is actually becoming intelligent leads people to over-estimate it’s capabilities and it’s fears.

5) An AI that tries to take over the world is likely to threaten us with an anti-matter bomb it swears it made using a Mr. Fusion machine, a bannana peel and 12 oz of beer. Do NOT fall for it.

Re:The real problem

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
No the real problem is that it guzzles water and electricity while devouring jobs.

I don’t think the billionaires give a shit if AI cost more than an equivalent or even a better human being. They are sick and tired of being dependent on and having to pay lip service to us commoners. So any amount of money they have to spend to get true absolute freedom and true absolute power will be worth it.

As an added bonus we as a species have been so distracted by culture War bullshit for the last 30 or 40 years that we have been falling over ourselves backwards to give all the money in the world to the top 0.1%. so it literally costs them nothing to replace us all with AI and automation.

Even if I can’t do everything it’s a pretty safe bet it can do enough. Go look up the percentage of white collar workers and ask yourself what’s going to happen if even a quarter of them become unemployable. How that’s going to reverberate through the economy.

And no, we can’t all be plumbers. Blue collar guys don’t hire a lot of blue collar guys to do work. And that’s before we talk about the actual wages those guys make when you look at the median instead of the average and take out a few crazy outliers working on oil rigs until they’re late twenties when they have to give it up because it’s too hard on their bodies

Re: They can only self-improve if they are capable

By meringuoid • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The interesting thing about the Terminator movies is that when AI researcher Miles Dyson became convinced that his work had a high probability of resulting in an artificial general intelligence attempting to replace humanity, he did not go and post a ten thousand word essay on LessWrong about how he had updated his timeline and p(doom) estimates and discussing the full Bayesian analysis of the situation. He went to the lab that very night with some heavily armed companions and he blew the place up.

I keep hearing that one AI researcher or another claims that they believe as Dyson came to believe. Until one of them takes similar action, I simply do not believe that they actually think their research carries such a risk.

You have access to the lab where the work is being done? You regularly meet in person with leading researchers and talents driving the project forward? You are an American and you have the Second Amendment? And the entire future light cone is at stake? Quintillions of hypothetical future lives riding on the outcome of this project here and now?

What’s the most effective, altruistic thing you could do for them?

Yeah, exactly. I’ve never heard of anyone shooting up their AI lab. Which tells me they don’t believe their AI is at all likely to wipe us all out.

Economic terms and prisoner’s dilemma

By enriquevagu • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

This statement only makes sense when viewed in economic terms. If every player keeps training ever-larger models, any company that falls behind will end up with an inferior product and lose market share. As a result, everyone is forced to continue scaling up. However, AI model training has become so expensive that it can no longer be funded through revenue from AI services alone. This competitive race therefore leads all participants toward eventual bankruptcy.

The only economically sustainable solution is to slow the pace—which is exactly what Anthropic is proposing.

That said, this is a textbook example of the prisoner’s dilemma: If everyone pauses, everyone receives a modest reward. But if others pause while one player continues training, that player can become the dominant force, drive competitors out of the market, and reap a far greater reward. I bet the collective pause won’t happen—and that many major players will ultimately go bankrupt, potentially triggering a major economic crisis.

Re: They can only self-improve if they are capabl

By dfarrow • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Unlike a movie, blowing up a building won’t get rid of software that is backed up all over the world.

New IronWorm Malware Hits 36 Packages In npm Supply-Chain Attack

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A new npm supply-chain attack has infected 36 packages with Rust-based infostealer malware called IronWorm. According to BleepingComputer, the malware “targets 86 environment variables (key-value pairs) and 20 credential files that may contain OpenAI, AWS, Anthropic, and npm credentials, vault configuration files, SSH keys, and Exodus cryptocurrency wallet files.” From the report:
According to researchers at supply-chain and devops company JFrog, IronWorm is written in Rust, hides behind an eBPF kernel rootkit, and communicates with the operator over the Tor network. The Rust-based malware self-propagates by using stolen credentials for publishing on npm; this includes secrets associated with npm’s Trusted Publishing workflow. Once it compromises a developer or CI environment, it can publish trojanized versions of packages owned by the victim, which then infect additional developers and CI systems.

This behavior is conceptually similar to Shai Hulud, which had its code published on GitHub recently. Although JFrog researchers did not find a clear connection between IronWorm and Shai Hulud, they observed the same commit names in both supply-chain attacks. This opens the possibility that the new malware is an evolution of TeamPCP’s payload, since IronWorm appears to be “a custom, carefully built implant from an operation with its own infrastructure.”

[…] The company provides a list of all impacted package names and their versions in the report and recommends that developers upgrade to fixed releases, rotate their keys, and enable two-factor authentication (2FA) for all accounts. At the same time, Endor Labs and StepSecurity have spotted a very similar but distinct attack involving a JavaScript-based malware named binding.gyp, performing registry poisoning and GitHub Actions infection, unfolding during the same time-frame.

too bad you linked that garbage

By drinkypoo • Score: 3 Thread

The link we wanted was actually in that story, which is worthless by comparison

https://www.ox.security/blog/i…

Remotely downloaded code

By innocent_white_lamb • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

What, exactly, is the point or purpose of including code in your program that is downloaded from a third-party website every time you execute the program?

If you want to include a function or subroutine or library in your program, why wouldn’t you just download it and use that?

“Lets drag in random code every time we run the program” is a huge security hole on its own and I genuinely don’t understand why anyone would do that, or would even consider it as a worthwhile idea.

Re:Remotely downloaded code

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

What, exactly, is the point or purpose of including code in your program that is downloaded from a third-party website every time you execute the program?

No, npm is literally the opposite of that.

If you want to include a function or subroutine or library in your program, why wouldn’t you just download it and use that?

I run Drupal and it uses composer, which does basically the same thing. But then I want some javascript libraries that you can’t get through composer repos itself, you need to get them from npm. So every time there’s one of these npm exploit stories I say oh shit, some more shit I need to read. Luckily I’m only pulling in literally two packages from there. But I don’t need to do this, I only do it specifically for the purpose of not having my site refer to some other site for those javascript libraries. That way, someone else changing their library doesn’t automatically screw up my site, or more plausibly since I am not running any javascript on the server side, start back dooring other people who visit there. So npm is exactly the kind of thing you think people should be using, except with less oversight which is why we keep hearing about loads of compromised packages.

Re:Remotely downloaded code

By echo123 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Another Drupal developer here, with some experience working with the Feds. Most government websites as I am aware of are Drupal websites.

Writing as a developer, I can tell you we are not allowed any access to live systems, which is good. That allows us to work in our sandboxes and break things before we commit to the GIT repository branch we’re developing to eventually be merged into the main branch and released one day. In other words, the only connectivity we’re allowed is uploading to the git server.

In a perfect world, we’d have resources including time to scan everything for everything prior to our GIT commit to the repo. I hear ai (and mythos) are a thing.

I’m just sayin’.

That said the NPM vendor directory is generally excluded by GIT, because none of that stuff belongs in the repo because it can easily be rebuilt on the staging server that gets tested prior to going into production. And the admins upstream aren’t supposed to trust anything, period. In a perfect world.

Companies Are Using Reddit To Manipulate ChatGPT and Google AI Search

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media:
The moderators of the biohacking subreddit say that peptide and hormone replacement therapy companies have been surreptitiously spamming Reddit in an attempt to get their posts scraped by AI chatbots. The strategy is an effort to systematically manipulate the answers provided by chatbots by manipulating the underlying source material that those chatbots will scrape — in this case, a popular Reddit community. In a post last week, the moderators of r/biohackers said they would be banning new posts about peptides and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) because of attempted manipulation by the companies that make, market, and sell them. […] “As AI search engines increasingly pull answers from Reddit, companies are using us for AEO. On top of that, there’s been an explosion of peptide interest and AI usage flooding the sub. Together, this has put serious pressure on content quality,” a post by the moderators read.

[…] It has become incredibly difficult to stop Reddit manipulation, because the firms doing it are getting more sophisticated. The moderator said that there are really standard and long-running strategies where brands will hop in the comments and suggest their products: “That type of marketing has always existed and if people want to try something new because the brand resonated with them, cool. That’s the way marketing should flow in my mind,” they said. “But what I’m seeing that is way scarier to me is that there are companies that will reverse-engineer the actual prompt patterns that are prioritized by LLMs, and so you’ll see someone post a super clickbait, high-traction, vague question like ‘Is all the hype around Vitamin D actually worth it?” they added. “And that thread will do really well because everyone on biohackers actually has an opinion, so it gets engagement and prioritized by LLMs, and then brands will sneak in and they’ll embed their brand mentions in those threads in the exact right places in a seemingly organic way. But none of it is organic, the entire thing is a strategy by an agency to prioritize brand mentions or a narrative within an LLM.”

The Reddit accounts that are doing this are “warmed up” or are made to seem human, meaning they have a posting history that is not just promotional. This makes them much harder to detect and moderate against. Some of the agencies doing this are paying real people to post promotional content, or have built communities where people are incentivized to post promotional content. The moderator said that Reddit’s automated moderation tools have been helpful, but that the type of promotion happening has become so sophisticated that it has become more of a you-know-it-if-you-see it kind of thing. “A lot of it has become pattern recognition,” they said. “You literally just sort of know what to look for. But the problem is you don’t want to become punitive to the people who aren’t doing this maliciously, and so I think the over-moderation risk is very real.”

It’s insane reddit is “source of truth”

By XaXXon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s crazy how many AI responses i get that source reddit posts as a source of truth.

Unreliable Sources

By Deep Esophagus • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I got involved in a contentious topic on Reddit recently (amazing, right?) and I went to AI… can’t remember if I used Gemini or ChatGPT that day, but I asked it to provide evidence supporting or refuting the redditor’s claim.

It cited as evidence in support of the claim the very post I was disputing.

Full disclosure, I use AI daily (almost always for work, because our corporate overlords require it, but also for one-off jokes when accuracy doesn’t matter.) But I loathe ubiquitous, unsolicted use of AI in my daily activities and I never trust what AI tells me; at best I use it as a suggestion list of topics I can research in depth on my own.

Re:Gee…

By 0123456 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

> Someone’s gotta build a website that is made to magnet all the AIs to scrape it, but all the content is total BS (with some clever commands to break the AIs or pollute them).

So like Reddit, then?

What is a good source?

By Himmy32 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Active sources of quality discussion with a wide range of topics and moderation are pretty few and far between.

Luckily, I don’t need that wide range of topics, so Slashdot is a pretty quality source for my AI searches. As it has the latest and best minable data on systemd conspiracy theories, projects being embraced and extinguished by Microsoft, confirmation on how bad AI should make me feel, and important armchair musings on economic theory. All with that healthy dose of grey bearded cynicism to flavor my LLM output.

this is everywhere

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

You can see this on every popular forum and social network. And as far as I can tell, the only people they ever try to verify actually exist are the real ones