Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Uber Pulls Back From Electric Cars, Slashing Incentives for Drivers
  2. GPT-5.2 Arrives as OpenAI Scrambles To Respond To Gemini 3’s Gains
  3. College Campuses Have Become a Front Line in America’s Sports-Betting Boom
  4. The Game Awards Are Losing Their Luster
  5. Why Switzerland Is Weighing a 10 Million Population Limit
  6. AI Hackers Are Coming Dangerously Close to Beating Humans
  7. Disney Puts $1 Billion Into OpenAI, Licenses 200+ Characters for AI-Generated Videos and Images
  8. Opera Wants You To Pay $20 a Month For Its AI Browser
  9. US Could Ask Foreign Tourists For Five-Year Social Media History Before Entry
  10. New OpenAI Models Likely Pose ‘High’ Cybersecurity Risk, Company Says
  11. Sperm Donor With Cancer-Causing Gene Fathered Nearly 200 Children Across Europe
  12. NASA Loses Contact With MAVEN Mars Orbiter
  13. ChatGPT Is Apple’s Most Downloaded App of 2025
  14. Operation Bluebird Wants To Relaunch ‘Twitter’ For a New Social Network
  15. Google Faces Fines Over Google Play If It Doesn’t Make More Concessions

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.

Uber Pulls Back From Electric Cars, Slashing Incentives for Drivers

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Uber has discontinued its monthly electric vehicle bonuses for drivers in the United States and Canada, marking the latest in a series of rollbacks from a company that once pledged to pour $800 million into helping its drivers transition away from gasoline-powered cars. The ride-hailing giant had previously eliminated its $1-per-ride EV perk last year, replacing it with monthly bonuses that required drivers to complete 200 rides. Those monthly payments are now gone too.

The company is far behind its self-imposed climate targets. Uber had pledged to reach 100% EVs in London by 2025 and across North America and Europe by 2030. Current figures paint a different picture: roughly 40% of miles in London come from EVs, while Europe sits at about 15% and North America at just 9%. The company’s emissions have nearly doubled over the past three years and now exceed Denmark’s total carbon footprint. Uber executives acknowledged to Bloomberg that they will likely miss their green targets. The company has doled out $539 million of its $800 million pledge through the end of 2024. Meanwhile, Uber’s operating profits are set to double this year, and the company recently committed $20 billion to stock buybacks.

GPT-5.2 Arrives as OpenAI Scrambles To Respond To Gemini 3’s Gains

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI on Thursday released GPT-5.2, its latest and what the company calls its “best model yet for everyday professional use,” just days after CEO Sam Altman declared a “code red” internally to marshal resources toward improving ChatGPT amid intensifying competition from Google’s well-received Gemini 3 model. The GPT-5.2 series ships in three tiers: Instant, designed for faster responses and information retrieval; Thinking, optimized for coding, math, and planning; and Pro, the most powerful tier targeting difficult questions requiring high accuracy.

OpenAI says the Thinking model hallucinated 38% less than GPT-5.1 on benchmarks measuring factual accuracy. Fidji Simo, OpenAI’s CEO of applications, denied that the launch was moved up in response to the code red, saying the company has been working on GPT-5.2 for “many, many months.” She described the internal directive as a way to “really signal to the company that we want to marshal resources in this one particular area.”

The competitive pressure is real. Google’s Gemini app now has more than 650 million monthly active users, compared to OpenAI’s 800 million weekly active users. In October, OpenAI’s head of ChatGPT Nick Turley sent an internal memo declaring the company was facing “the greatest competitive pressure we’ve ever seen,” setting a goal to increase daily active users by 5 percent before 2026. GPT-5.2 is rolling out to paid ChatGPT users starting Thursday, and GPT-5.1 will remain available under “legacy models” for three months before being sunset.

College Campuses Have Become a Front Line in America’s Sports-Betting Boom

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Since the Supreme Court struck down the federal prohibition on sports betting in 2018, 39 states have legalized the activity, and college campuses have emerged as ground zero for what appears to be a generational gambling problem among young men. A 2023 NCAA survey found that 60% of college students have gambled on sports, and 16% of 18-to-22-year-olds engage in what the organization classifies as problematic gambling. A Siena University poll from January found that 28% of men aged 18-to-34 who use sports-betting apps have had trouble meeting a financial obligation because of a lost bet.

Timothy Fong, a psychiatry professor at UCLA, says every one of his recent clients has been an 18-to-24-year-old man seeking help for a sports-betting or cryptocurrency addiction. John Simonian, a personal-bankruptcy lawyer in Rhode Island, says he never used to see young men filing for bankruptcy — now it’s common. On November 7th, the NCAA announced it had uncovered three separate betting scandals in men’s basketball where athletes intentionally played poorly in games on which they or a friend had placed wagers.

The Game Awards Are Losing Their Luster

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Game Awards, which broadcasts tonight on Twitch, YouTube, and Prime Video, has become the biggest night on the video game calendar since launching in 2014, but the show’s treatment of developers has drawn increasing criticism. At the 2023 ceremony, acceptance speeches were often cut off after roughly 30 seconds while Hideo Kojima received five minutes to discuss his upcoming game OD — enough time for 13 acceptance speeches, Aftermath calculated. That year’s show also ignored the industry’s mass layoffs entirely; host Geoff Keighley acknowledged the labor crisis only at the 2024 ceremony.

The show’s Future Class program, launched in 2020 to celebrate game makers representing an inclusive future for the industry, has quietly ended. No new class has been named for two years. “At this time, we are not planning a new Future Class for this year,” organizer Emily Weir told Game Developer.

Can’t lose what you never had.

By Bill, Shooter of Bul • Score: 3 Thread
There never was any luster. Not something I’ve ever heard anyone discuss in any context.

Why Switzerland Is Weighing a 10 Million Population Limit

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Growing support for far-right parties is pressuring European governments to introduce stricter controls on immigration. Switzerland is set to vote on a proposal that would take the idea to the next level — imposing a cap on its population [non-paywalled link]. The initiative could lead eventually to a blanket ban on new arrivals if the number of residents rises from around 9 million currently to above 10 million, with little distinction made between refugees, skilled workers and top managers on six-figure salaries.

Citizens will likely vote on the proposal next year under the country’s unique system of plebiscites on constitutional amendments and policy, and polls suggest there’s a chance they’ll approve it. The risk is it could lead to shortages of critical skills that end up harming Switzerland’s competitiveness. The outcome will show how far citizens are willing to go to preserve some of the traits that made their country such an appealing destination. […] The right-wing Swiss People’s Party, or SVP, won 28% of the vote in the last election with a campaign that presented Swiss citizenship as a privilege, not a right. It came up with the idea of a population limit in 2023, presenting it as a way to preserve the Swiss lifestyle and protect its environment from excessive human activity.

Such a lack of commitment…

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 3 Thread
It’s unsurprising; but I see that the law has several stages of dealing with foreign overcrowding if the 10 million line is breached; but nothing about how locally produced human resources will be stack ranged for headcount reduction should the population remain above the target. Surely anyone who really cares about crowding needs to have a contingency plan for endogenous losers as well?

Sounds great

By sarren1901 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Switzerland isn’t exactly increasing in land size nor are their natural resources becoming more abundant. I see zero problems with restricting immigration. That’s a choice they as a population get to make.

Open borders are a joke and only serve the business owners. Immigrants are almost always cheaper to exploit and if these same immigrants don’t assimilate to the culture of the land they are migrating to, they weaken the overall stickiness of the society.

When a country has most of it’s citizens all looking the same, speaking the same, and worshiping the same, adding in a culture that doesn’t want to change, doesn’t speak your language and doesn’t look or dress like you do just adds pressure to social cohesion.

Humans are deeply tribalistic and that’s not changing any time soon. We “other” each other in all sorts of ways. It’s what humans do.

Coming soon everywhere

By cellocgw • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Root cause: way too many humans, and far too many of those in regions where resources are collapsing due to a combination of population growth and changes in climate are trying to emigrate elsewhere. Sooner or later every country will realize that, politics and racism aside, there simply isn’t the capability to absorb more immigrants. Excessive population will lead to catastrophic collapse of the nations currently accepting immigrants.

There is no easy answer to this situation.

Re:Coming soon everywhere

By j-beda • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Siberia in Russia, Northern Canada are huge and sparsely populated. Yet there is no migration to these areas. Why? Because current migrant crisis is all about economic migration and not climate migration.

The lack of migration to Siberia and Northern Canada are not persuasive proofs that climate is not a driver of migration - as neither place is particularly friendly in the “local climate” aspects of living there.

Article has cause and effect backward

By SomePoorSchmuck • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Growing support for far-right parties is pressuring European governments to introduce stricter controls on immigration.

No.

Growing concerns among over how global migration patterns over the past 40 years impact the economic and cultural futures of every country on the planet, is pressuring the rise of “far-right” parties.

Spontaneous combustion doesn’t exist. Combustion only occurs when things like fuel, heat/pressure, and oxygen are all shoved together.

Every time you dismissively hand-wave away those concerns because you don’t think other people’s feelings, drives, fears, and aspirations for the future are valid compared to your more-enlightened opinions, you are adding to the population reservoirs of sentiment that fuel “far-right” parties.

Try listening.
Try acknowledging.
Try reflecting.
Try redirecting.
Try doing the work of actual empathy, not just the performative convenient pseudo-empathy that people talk about on social media but only apply to those who already believe like you.

Or don’t. Insist that you are right, that you are more enlightened, that you are better, that others aren’t worth listening to, that their concerns are fabricated.
Understand that when you choose that, you’ve left the path of empathy or democracy or historical dialectic or whatever else you profess to believe in.
Understand that you’ve left no other alternative; it’s Shark vs. Jets, pistols at dawn, might makes right. The biggest guns and highest body count wins.
Tonight when you’re doomscrolling and wondering how did we get here, how the world once seemed troubled-but-bright, and now everything just seems to keep spiralling out — understand that all of us are having the world we all voted for. Yes, even you. We built this together.

AI Hackers Are Coming Dangerously Close to Beating Humans

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Stanford researchers spent much of the past year building an AI bot called Artemis that scans networks for software vulnerabilities, and when they pitted it against ten professional penetration testers on the university’s own engineering network, the bot outperformed nine of them. The experiment offers a window into how rapidly AI hacking tools have improved after years of underwhelming performance.

“We thought it would probably be below average,” said Justin Lin, a Stanford cybersecurity researcher. Artemis found bugs at a fraction of human cost — just under $60 per hour compared to the $2,000 to $2,500 per day that professional pen testers typically charge. But its performance wasn’t flawless. About 18% of its bug reports were false positives, and it completely missed an obvious vulnerability on a webpage that most human testers caught. In one case, Artemis found a bug on an outdated page that didn’t render in standard browsers; it used a command-line tool called Curl instead of Chrome or Firefox.

Dan Boneh, a Stanford computer science professor who advised the researchers, noted that vast amounts of software shipped without being vetted by LLMs could now be at risk. “We’re in this moment of time where many actors can increase their productivity to find bugs at an extreme scale,” said Jacob Klein, head of threat intelligence at Anthropic.

Script Kiddies

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Yet again. AI improves the world.

Bonus: Modern script kiddies will be more powerful than ever.

Make a problem, sell the solution

By AmazingRuss • Score: 3 Thread
“We’re in this moment of time where many actors can increase their productivity to find bugs at an extreme scale,” … so subscribe now!

One in ten

By alleycat0 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
If I was that one guy that beat the AI, I’d be asking for a raise right now.

Disney Puts $1 Billion Into OpenAI, Licenses 200+ Characters for AI-Generated Videos and Images

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Disney is investing $1 billion in OpenAI and has entered into a three-year licensing deal that will let users generate AI-powered short videos and images featuring more than 200 characters from its Disney, Marvel, Star Wars and Pixar franchises.

The new features are expected to launch in 2026 through Sora, OpenAI’s short-form video platform, and ChatGPT. A selection of user-generated short videos will also be available to stream on Disney+. The licensing agreement excludes any talent likenesses or voices. Disney will receive warrants to purchase additional OpenAI equity as part of the arrangement, and its employees will gain access to OpenAI tools including ChatGPT for building new products.

‘Hot Grits’ Keywords

By Gilmoure • Score: 4, Funny Thread

are specifically excluded.

Great, just what I always wanted!

By almitydave • Score: 3 Thread

You know, the one thing I always thought was missing from my overpriced Disney+ subscription was user-generated “AI” slop.

Need to fix the headline

By nucrash • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Disney blows $1 billion on AI is probably more accurate

How wonderful

By smooth wombat • Score: 3 Thread

Better versions of Rule 34 will now be in play.

Opera Wants You To Pay $20 a Month For Its AI Browser

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Opera has opened its AI-powered browser Neon to the public after a couple of months of testing, and anyone interested in trying it will need to pay $19.90 per month. The Norway-based company first unveiled Neon in May and launched it in early access to select users in October. Like Perplexity’s Comet, OpenAI’s Atlas, and The Browser Company’s Dia, Neon bakes an AI chatbot into its interface that can answer questions about pages, create mini apps and videos, and perform tasks. The browser uses your browsing history as context, so you can ask it to fetch details from a YouTube video you watched last week. The subscription also grants access to AI models including Gemini 3 Pro and GPT-5.1.

get screwed for free

By Big Hairy Gorilla • Score: 5, Funny Thread
use Perplexity browser

Back when

By Paul Neubauer • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

BLINK and animated GIF were being abused by so-called web “designers” I paid for Opera since it could freeze the spaminationed GIF after one cycle. I stayed with Opera for year. Then the Marketeers took over and I stayed with an older version for far too long… and shopped around for a while, being continually disappointed (no, Firefox was not good enough.. not then anyway). When Vivaldi showed up.. ragged, experimental, but with the RIGHT attitude… I at least had it as an option. Today, I run Vivaldi snapshot as main, stable as backup and Firefox only for Special Cases. Opera… died long ago, alas. It just has’t stopped twitching yet.

Re:No thanks

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Yes, but unlike the $20 a month version with AI, it costs $40 a month… /s

Shoud be “the Chinese owned, Norway-based company”

By applique • Score: 5, Informative Thread
James Yahui Zhou, the controlling shareholder of Kunlun, is both Chair of Opera’s Board and its CEO: “As of the date of this annual report, Kunlun, a Chinese public company listed on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, indirectly owns 68.8% of our issued and outstanding ordinary shares.

Norway based?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This is the first I’ve heard of that. By all accounts they are based in the Cayman Islands and a subsidiary of a Chinese owner Kunlun Tech. Also is it really a browser anymore? The Chinese parent calls the entire subsidiary an “Overseas information distribution and metaverse platform”. I wish I was kidding. https://www.kunlun.com/en/#

US Could Ask Foreign Tourists For Five-Year Social Media History Before Entry

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Tourists from dozens of countries including the UK could be asked to provide a five-year social media history as a condition of entry to the United States, under a new proposal unveiled by American officials. From a report:
The new condition would affect people from dozens of countries who are eligible to visit the US for 90 days without a visa, as long as they have filled out an Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) form. Since returning to the White House in January, President Donald Trump has moved to toughen US borders more generally - citing national security as a reason.

Analysts say the new plan could pose an obstacle to potential visitors, or harm their digital rights. Asked whether the proposal could lead to a steep drop-off in tourism to the US, Trump said he was not concerned. “No. We’re doing so well,” the president said on Wednesday. “We just want people to come over here, and safe. We want safety. We want security. We want to make sure we’re not letting the wrong people come enter our country.”

Re:Proving a Nagative

By TwistedGreen • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Heaven forbid, you might have to show them your Slashdot account!

Re:Ihre Papiere

By CohibaVancouver • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The fake-dems letting in all of these people with refugee papers is just the other side of the coin

The challenge is this: If someone presents themselves at a nation’s border and declares themselves a refugee from persecution that nation has two options -

1) Let them in, evaluate their situation and then based on that allow them to stay or tell them they have to go back - Which may lead thousands and thousands of economic migrants to declare themselves as “refugees” leading to years-long waits for a review.

2) Say “I don’t care what’s going to happen to you, go away” - Which may lead to legitimate refugees and their families being tortured and killed.

There is no easy solution and to simply write “fake-dems letting in all of these people with refugee papers” is grossly simplistic to the point of it being childish.

Re:“Country”

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This. Trump has his head up his ass regarding many things, but regarding this statement about tourism in particular.

Tourism has in fact dropped off significantly from the rest of the world since he took office, especially from Canada. And it’s not the tariffs or the currency exchange-rate, or even the unwelcome (and unwelcoming) fees and secondary-inspections at the border for some visitors. It’s the “51st-state” rhetoric and the disrespect for Canada’s sovereignty.

And it’s not just tourism. There are widespread boycotts in Canada against goods made in the USA. Some clever US companies have, with limited success, engaged in “maple-washing” — labeling their products to make them appear to be sourced in Canada. US liquor is absent form stores in many provinces, and sells poorly where it is available.

Trump is reaping what he has sown, but as usual, he’s engaging in denial.

And business people

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Informative Thread

And stop coming over to the headquarters of our multinational companies, making business deals and acquisitions that creates some of the largest corporations in the world.

The US doesn’t like money anymore, at least not as much as it likes xenophobia.

Re:Ihre Papiere

By omnichad • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The US is responsible for most of the regimes south of Mexico existing in the first place. US history is full of meddling in other countries’ politics to our financial advantage. Including banana republics earlier on, but later the CIA was more or less founded to overthrow governments. It’s not the stated purpose, but it’s what happens all the same. Supposedly we are for democracy, but if it hurts a fruit company, we’re getting rid of democratically elected leaders and installing a dictator.

New OpenAI Models Likely Pose ‘High’ Cybersecurity Risk, Company Says

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Axios:
OpenAI says the cyber capabilities of its frontier AI models are accelerating and warns Wednesday that upcoming models are likely to pose a “high” risk, according to a report shared first with Axios. The models’ growing capabilities could significantly expand the number of people able to carry out cyberattacks. OpenAI said it has already seen a significant increase in capabilities in recent releases, particularly as models are able to operate longer autonomously, paving the way for brute force attacks.

The company notes that GPT-5 scored a 27% on a capture-the-flag exercise in August, GPT-5.1-Codex-Max was able to score 76% last month. “We expect that upcoming AI models will continue on this trajectory,” the company says in the report. “In preparation, we are planning and evaluating as though each new model could reach ‘high’ levels of cybersecurity capability as measured by our Preparedness Framework.” “High” is the second-highest level, below the “critical” level at which models are unsafe to be released publicly.
“What I would explicitly call out as the forcing function for this is the model’s ability to work for extended periods of time,” said OpenAI’s Fouad Matin.

shameless platforming

By dfghjk • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This is nothing more than platforming an advertisement disguised as news of a threat. Warning, our product is really good!

Re:CVE process must step up

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sure, the solution is to fully automate everything, because we’ve seen how automation of software development has resulted in zero bugs. Let’s not talk about code quality, let’s talk about not having to do any work.

Sperm Donor With Cancer-Causing Gene Fathered Nearly 200 Children Across Europe

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
schwit1 shares a report from CBS News:
perm from a donor who unknowingly carried a cancer-causing gene has been used to conceive nearly 200 babies across Europe, an investigation by 14 European public service broadcasters, including CBS News’ partner network BBC News, has revealed. Some children conceived using the sperm have already died from cancer, and the vast majority of those who inherited the gene will develop cancer in their lifetimes, geneticists said. The man carrying the gene passed screening checks before he became a donor at the European Sperm Bank when he was a student in 2005. His sperm has been used by women trying to conceive for 17 years across multiple countries.

The cancer-causing mutation occurred in the donor’s TP53 gene — which prevents cells in the body from turning cancerous — before his birth, according to the investigation. It causes Li Fraumeni syndrome, which gives affected people a 90% chance of developing cancers, particularly during childhood, as well as breast cancer in later life. Up to 20% of the donor’s sperm contained the mutated TP53 gene. Any children conceived with affected sperm will have the dangerous mutation in every cell of their body. The affected donor sperm was discovered when doctors seeing children with cancers linked to sperm donation raised concerns at this year’s European Society of Human Genetics.

At the time, 23 children with the genetic mutation had been discovered, out of 67 children linked to the donor. Ten of those children with the mutation had already been diagnosed with cancer. Freedom of Information requests submitted by journalists across multiple countries revealed at least 197 children were affected, though it is not known how many inherited the genetic mutation. More affected children could be discovered as more data becomes available.

Unfair title

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The title suggests it was the donor’s fault. It wasn’t. It was the sperm bank that didn’t do the necessary checks and the sperm bank that shared his genetic material 200 times. The guy had nothing to do with the result.

Re:f**k around, find out

By ShanghaiBill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I was a sperm donor back in the 1990s.

The donors aren’t “random”.

They are screened for general health, genetic defects, and academic achievement. I had to show my college transcripts, provide a blood sample, and have a medical examination.

TFA describes a screwup that only happened because a test for the condition wasn’t available. But many other tests were done, so the odds were still better than an old-fashioned insemination.

Many of the recipients are women in nuclear families, whose husbands have fertility problems.

Re:Unfair title

By ShanghaiBill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It was the sperm bank that didn’t do the necessary checks

Was the test available at the time? Did other sperm banks check for this mutation?

and the sperm bank that shared his genetic material 200 times.

Way more than that. It was 200 babies, not 200 attempts. The success rate of artificial insemination is about 20%, so that’s 1000 squirts.

perm

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Funny Thread

perm from a donor who unknowingly carried a cancer-causing gene has been used to conceive nearly 200 babies across Europe

And their hair is amazing.

Re: perm

By ThurstonMoore • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Was he your daddy? You seem to share a lot in common with cancer.

NASA Loses Contact With MAVEN Mars Orbiter

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
NASA has lost contact with its MAVEN Mars orbiter after it passed behind Mars. When it remerged from behind the planet, the spacecraft never resumed communications. SpaceNews reports:
MAVEN launched in November 2013 and entered orbit around Mars in September 2014. The spacecraft’s primary science mission is to study the planet’s upper atmosphere and interactions with the solar wind, including how the atmosphere escapes into space. That is intended to help scientists understand how the planet changes from early in its history, when it had a much thicker atmosphere and was warm enough to support liquid water on its surface.

MAVEN additionally serves as a communications relay, using a UHF antenna to link the Curiosity and Perseverance rovers on the Martian surface with the Deep Space Network. NASA’s Mars Odyssey and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft also serve as communications relays for the rovers, but are both significantly older than MAVEN. The spacecraft has suffered some technical problems in the past, notably with its inertial measurement units (IMUs) used for navigation. In 2022, MAVEN switched to an “all-stellar” navigation system to minimize the use of the IMUs.

MAVEN has enough propellant to maintain its orbit through at least the end of the decade. NASA’s fiscal year 2026 budget proposal, though, zeroed out funding for MAVEN, which cost $22.6 million to operate in 2024. MAVEN was one of several missions “operating well past the end of prime mission” the proposal would terminate, despite MAVEN’s role as a communications relay.

Here we go again!

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

NASA’s fiscal year 2026 budget proposal, though, zeroed out funding for MAVEN, which cost $22.6 million to operate in 2024. MAVEN was one of several missions “operating well past the end of prime mission” the proposal would terminate, despite MAVEN’s role as a communications relay.

Even more winning! It’s wearing me out!!

Re:Here we go again!

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Obviously MAVEN received the news of this great cost-saving, efficiency-improving measure in the wrong spirit and decided to preemptively retire on its own.

Last words it whispered to the landers: “I don’t want to hear from this Earth anymore”.

How?

By SuperDre • Score: 4, Informative Thread
How does MAVEN still cost 22mil a year when it actually only sends some data to antennas here which are also used for other satellites? Does it have a full dedicated crew of tens of people with a hefty salary, as I would suspect it be part of a crew of several ongoing missions. I have a feeling somebody is inflating their budget without any need.

ChatGPT Is Apple’s Most Downloaded App of 2025

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
Apple on Wednesday released its annual list of the most downloaded apps and games for the year. For the U.S. market, OpenAI’s ChatGPT topped the ranks of free iPhone apps (not including games) with the most installs in 2025. The AI app was followed by Threads, Google, TikTok, WhatsApp, Instagram, YouTube, Google Maps, Gmail, and Google’s Gemini. ChatGPT made it to No. 4 last year, but the top spot was taken by Chinese shopping app Temu. In 2023, the AI app didn’t make the top-10 list despite being released on the iPhone in May 2023 to a strong debut.

This is not really good

By gtall • Score: 3 Thread

From https://www.theregister.com/20…, we learn that AI use is making young people in the U.S. weaker in their thinking skills. Why think when you can just ask some dumb oracle and paste its answers into whatever. The same fate awaits U.S. companies who go all in on this crap.

Operation Bluebird Wants To Relaunch ‘Twitter’ For a New Social Network

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A startup called Operation Bluebird is petitioning the US Patent and Trademark Office to strip X Corp of the “Twitter” and “tweet” trademarks, hoping to relaunch a new Twitter with the old brand, bird logo, and “town square” vibe. “The TWITTER and TWEET brands have been eradicated from X Corp.‘s products, services, and marketing, effectively abandoning the storied brand, with no intention to resume use of the mark,” the petition states. “The TWITTER bird was grounded.” Ars Technica reports:
If successful, two leaders of the group tell Ars, Operation Bluebird would launch a social network under the name Twitter.new, possibly as early as late next year. (Twitter.new has created a working prototype and is already inviting users to reserve handles.)

Michael Peroff, an Illinois attorney and founder of Operation Bluebird, said that in the intervening years, more Twitter-like social media networks have sprung up or gained traction — like Threads, Mastodon, and Bluesky. But none have the scale or brand recognition that Twitter did prior to Musk’s takeover. “There certainly are alternatives,” Peroff said. “I don’t know that any of them at this point in time are at the scale that would make a difference in the national conversation, whereas a new Twitter really could.”

Similarly, Peroff’s business partner, Stephen Coates, an attorney who formerly served as Twitter’s general counsel, said that Operation Bluebird aims to recreate some of the magic that Twitter once had. “I remember some time ago, I’ve had celebrities react to my content on Twitter during the Super Bowl or events,” he told Ars. “And we want that experience to come back, that whole town square, where we are all meshed in there.”
“Mere ‘token use’ won’t be enough to reserve the mark,” said Mark Lemley, a Stanford Law professor and expert in trademark law. “Or [X] could defend if it can show that it plans to go back to using Twitter. Consumers obviously still know the brand name. It seems weird to think someone else could grab the name when consumers still associate it with the ex-social media site of that name. But that’s what the law says.”

It’s not about the platform

By wickerprints • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The problem with all of these platforms is not what what they’re called or what they look like, or even how they function for the most part. The so-called “magic” is gone because these services are flooded with inauthentic content and behaviors. Everything is either an advertisement, propaganda, or influencer/AI slop. The signal-to-noise ratio is too low, which drives away genuine contributors and stops new people from joining and gaining critical mass.

The current state of social media is a reflection of the inability of its users to simultaneously discern what is inauthentic behavior and to free themselves of its effects. If you ask a reasonable person if they actively desire being lied to and manipulated for financial gain, they would say no; but when such deception is packaged in a tantalizing form, they find that not only can they not resist, they don’t WANT to resist. Like an addict, they want and embrace the deception, to the point where they get angry at anyone who dares to pull back the curtain. The result is an abundance of weaponized and optimized inauthentic content that is being used to manipulate and monetize.

So no, bringing back the “Twitter” name and functionality is not going to do anything, because even before it was made into the hellscape that is called X, it was its own special cesspool.

Poor choice.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“Many users continue to refer to X as ‘Twitter’ and posts on X as ‘tweets,’ which demonstrates continued association and strengthens the case for residual goodwill,” [Alexandra Roberts, a professor of law and media at Northeastern University School of Law] says. She points to a 2020 case where a party attempted to register “Aunt Jemima” for breakfast foods, but was rejected “based on a likelihood of confusion” with Quaker Oats’ Aunt Jemima marks, even though the company had announced earlier that year that it was discontinuing the name and logo.

Beyond this, X has the resources to keep Operation Bluebird in court longer than Operation Bluebird can afford legal representation.

Re:It’s not about the platform

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I don’t think it’s really about any of this. This smells to me like a pump and dump scheme. Get investors thinking this idea is hot shit because it’s based on a well-established brand, and then make off with the money before anyone realizes the world didn’t really need yet another microblogging service.

Re:Honestly

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I will never call it “X”; it will always be Twitter.

I call it “Twit-X”; both as an homage to its old name, and in reference to the twit named Musk who gave it a new name while turning it into a steaming pile of dogshit.

Re:All for it.

By abulafia • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Musk’s real “innovation” in the category is paying shitposters for engagement, thereby outsourcing the gaslighting. He’s literally paying people in developing countries to pretend to be US Americans ranting about keeping out people from developing countries.

Americans can’t even go on our own frothing racist diatribes anymore, we just pay someone else to do it.

Google Faces Fines Over Google Play If It Doesn’t Make More Concessions

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
EU regulators say Google’s Play Store changes still don’t meet fairness rules and are preparing a potentially hefty 2026 fine unless Google makes deeper concessions. Reuters reports:
Google Play has been in the European Commission’s crosshairs since March, with regulators singling out technical restrictions preventing app developers from steering users to other channels for cheaper offers. Another issue is the service fee charged by Google for facilitating an app developer’s initial acquisition of a new customer via Google Play which the regulator said goes beyond what is justified.

Tweaks to Google Play announced in August to make it easier for app developers to direct customers to other channels and choose a fee model are still falling short, the people said, with the EU antitrust regulator viewing Apple’s recent changes to its App Store as a benchmark. […] Google can still offer to make more changes before regulators impose a fine, likely in the first quarter of the next year, the people said, adding that the timing of any sanction can still change.
“We continue to work closely with the European Commission in its ongoing investigation but have serious concerns that further changes would put Android and Play users at risk of malware, scams and data theft. Unlike iOS, Android is already open by design,” a Google spokesperson said.

Open for now

By Hentes • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Unlike iOS, Android is already open by design

That’s not an argument they will be able to make once they block sideloading.

GDPR

By locofungus • Score: 3 Thread

There’s absolutely no reason for google to require you to have a google account and register your phone with them just so you can install packages from the playstore.