Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. DNA-Level Encryption Developed by Researchers to Protect the Secrets of Bioengineered Cells
  2. Greg Kroah-Hartman Tests New ‘Clanker T1000’ Fuzzing Tool for Linux Patches
  3. Crypto Billionaire Pardoned In Prison By Trump Just Wrote a Memoir
  4. AI That Bankrupted a Vending Machine is Now Running a Store in San Francisco
  5. Latin America’s Central Banks Establish Digital Payments Used By Hundreds of Millions
  6. Judge Pauses Arizona’s Prosecution of Kalshi, Bars Arizona from Regulating Prediction Markets
  7. Oxygen Made From Moon Dust For First Time
  8. Amazon Luna Ends Its Support for Purchased Games and Third-Party Subscriptions
  9. Researchers Build a Talking Robot Guide Dog to Help Visually Impaired People Navigate
  10. Omissions, Deceptions, Lying. The New Yorker Asks: Can Sam Altman Be Trusted?
  11. First US Newsroom Strike For AI Protections Staged by ProPublica’s Journalists
  12. The AI RAM Shortage is Also Driving Up SSD Prices
  13. Two-Week Social Media ‘Detox’ Erases a Decade of Age-Related Decline, Study Finds
  14. Firefox vs. Chrome: Which Performs Better on a Linux Laptop?
  15. The End of ‘Star Trek’? Every Single Series Now Cancelled

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.

DNA-Level Encryption Developed by Researchers to Protect the Secrets of Bioengineered Cells

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The biotech industry’s engineered cells could become an $8 trillion market by 2035, notes Phys.org. But how do you keep them from being stolen? Their article notes “an uptick in the theft and smuggling of high-value biological materials, including specially engineered cells.”
In Science Advances, a team of U.S. researchers present a new approach to genetically securing precious biological material. They created a genetic combination lock in which the locking or encryption process scrambled the DNA of a cell so that its important instructions were non-functional and couldn’t be easily read or used. The unlocking, or decryption, process involves adding a series of chemicals in a precise order over time — like entering a password — to activate recombinases, which then unscramble the DNA to their original, functional form…

They created a biological keypad with nine distinct chemicals, each acting as a one-digit input. By using the same chemicals in pairs to form two-digit inputs, where two chemicals must be present simultaneously to activate a sensor, they expanded the keypad to 45 possible chemical inputs without introducing any new chemicals. They also added safety penalties — if someone tampers with the system, toxins are released — making it extremely unlikely for an unauthorized person to access the cells.
“The researchers conducted an ethical hacking exercise on the test lock and found that random guessing yielded a 0.2% success rate, remarkably close to the theoretical target of 0.1%.”

Greg Kroah-Hartman Tests New ‘Clanker T1000’ Fuzzing Tool for Linux Patches

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The word clanker — a disparaging term for AI and robots — “has made its way into the Linux kernel,” reports the blog It’s FOSS “thanks to Greg Kroah-Hartman, the Linux stable kernel maintainer and the closest thing the project has to a second-in-command.”
He’s been quietly running what looks like an AI-assisted fuzzing tool on the kernel that lives in a branch called "clanker" on his working kernel tree. It began with the ksmbd and SMB code. Kroah-Hartman filed a three-patch series after running his new tooling against it, describing the motivation quite simply. [“They pass my very limited testing here,” he wrote, “but please don’t trust them at all and verify that I’m not just making this all up before accepting them.”] Kroah-Hartman picked that code because it was easy to set up and test locally with virtual machines.
“Beyond those initial SMB/KSMBD patches, there have been a flow of other Linux kernel patches touching USB, HID, F2FS, LoongArch, WiFi, LEDs, and more,” Phoronix wrote Tuesday, “that were done by Greg Kroah-Hartman in the past 48 hours....
Those patches in the “Clanker” branch all note as part of the Git tag: “Assisted-by: gregkh_clanker_t1000”

The T1000 presumably in reference to the Terminator T-1000.
It’s FOSS emphasizes that “What Kroah-Hartman appears to be doing here is not having AI write kernel code. The fuzzer surfaces potential bugs; a human with decades of kernel experience reviews them, writes the actual fixes, and takes responsibility for what gets submitted.”
Linus has been thinking about this too. Speaking at Open Source Summit Japan last year, Linus Torvalds said the upcoming Linux Kernel Maintainer Summit will address “expanding our tooling and our policies when it comes to using AI for tooling.”

He also mentioned running an internal AI experiment where the tool reviewed a merge he had objected to. The AI not only agreed with his objections but found additional issues to fix. Linus called that a good sign, while asserting that he is “much less interested in AI for writing code” and more interested in AI as a tool for maintenance, patch checking, and code review.

Crypto Billionaire Pardoned In Prison By Trump Just Wrote a Memoir

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Forbes estimates he’s worth roughly $110 billion, “placing him ahead of Bill Gates.”

And now Changpeng Zhao, the 49-year-old billionaire founder of Binance, “has written a memoir…”
It arrives with the unmistakable timing of a man determined to tell the world his version of his meteoric crypto rise and fall, and foreshadow his comeback. The book, Freedom of Money: A Memoir of Protecting Users, Resilience, and the Founding of Binance, runs 364 pages, self-published in English and Chinese.... Zhao also recounts Binance’s long battle with U.S. regulators, the company’s record $4.3 billion settlement for fostering unscrupulous money launderers, his four-month prison sentence in California, where he says he began writing the book, and his recent pardon by President Trump…

In Zhao’s telling, the case brought by multiple U.S. agencies was less about what Binance had done than about what it had become… “It didn’t make sense to me, or any of my lawyers. Other than the fact that we were the biggest in the industry.” The U.S. government alleged something more specific: that Binance failed to implement programs to prevent or report suspicious transactions — including those tied to Hamas’s Al-Qassam Brigades, Al Qaeda, and ISIS — while also processing trades between U.S. users and those in sanctioned jurisdictions like Iran, North Korea, and Syria. In total, regulators alleged the exchange willfully failed to report more than 100,000 suspicious transactions, including those involving terrorist organizations, ransomware attackers, child sexual exploitation material, frauds and scams… The final settlement amount — $4.3 billion, split across the Department of Justice, the Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the Office of Foreign Assets Control and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission — was the largest corporate penalty in the history of nearly each agency involved. Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said at the time of the announcement: “Binance became the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange in part because of the crimes it committed.”

The prison passages are among the most vivid in the book. Zhao says he was worried about extortion because the media had reported he was the richest person in U.S. prison history, but then realized no one read the WSJ or Bloomberg or recognized him. Zhao also writes about the food, the routines and the specific indignity of confinement, including sharing a cell with a man serving 30 years for killing two people… Writes Zhao of his cellmate, “Soon, I discovered that the most lethal thing about him wasn’t his murder conviction, it was his snoring. He snored more loudly than thunder strikes, the sound of which rose even above the constant toilet flushings.”
Binance at one point held a roughly 20% stake in Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX and about $580 million in FTT tokens, the article points out. “As FTX neared collapse in late 2022, Zhao writes, Sam Bankman-Fried called to ask for a couple of billion dollars ‘nonchalantly, as if he was asking for a bologna sandwich.’

“Some believe that Binance’s brief show of interest in acquiring FTX, followed by its abrupt withdrawal from the deal, hastened FTX’s spiral into bankruptcy…”

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader destinyland for sharing the article.

Delicious

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So, this greasy fuck, makes billions in ill gotten gains, buys his way out of prison, enriches Trumpenstein…

The only losers are the peasants using or invested in his scheme.

Re:Delicious

By tlhIngan • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

So, this greasy fuck, makes billions in ill gotten gains, buys his way out of prison, enriches Trumpenstein…

The only losers are the peasants using or invested in his scheme.

That’s how it goes - you can buy pardons these days. It’s part of the scheme Pam Bondi had with her brother Brad Bondi who somehow managed to get more people off the hook if the right “fees” were paid.

I’m sure Maduro’s lawyers are basically trying to figure out how how to funny a few million dollars to Trump to drop everything as well. It’ll just be another of the dozen drug kingpins Trump has pardoned in the past year.

Crime pays

By Smid • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In the United States…

The Party of Law & Order

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Informative Thread

For as much as this guy trashes criminals and democratic states for being sanctuaries for criminals, he sure seems to be doing his best to pardon drug lords and other kingpins.

As always with Trump, every accusation is an admission.

Meanwhile he is trashing the economy due to the Trump Iran Crisis.

Congress… Do your job already. He is ruining the country for decades to come. And that’s not even mentioning the brain drain he is causing in the country with doctors and scientists and other specialists leaving for foreign jobs.

Keep a close eye on your grandparents’ finances

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
It is absolutely open season on old people right now. The kind of people who have some savings for retirement but whose minds are starting to wander.

Trump has sold around 2 billion dollars in pardons. That is a real sentence I just wrote and it is factually correct. It is now common knowledge among criminals that if you just put $2 million dollars aside to bribe Trump you can do basically anything as long as you make sure it’s a federal crime and not state. Even State crimes can be moved to federal courts so it’s important to do your crimes in a red State like Texas.

You should probably keep an eye on your kids too. Young men are prone to falling for gambling scams and Trump is fighting hard to make sure that those “predictive markets” can prey on them.

Finally watch out for yourself. Not because you’re going to fall for one of these scams you’re much too smart for that… Okay but seriously the problem is that we’re talking about tens of billions of dollars being drained from the economy by scam artists. It’s going to hurt the economy noticeably and that’s going to affect your job.

Basically you can’t just throw out the rule of law and all the protections that go with it without consequences. You can’t put a rapist, a pedophile and a convicted felon in charge of everything without consequences

AI That Bankrupted a Vending Machine is Now Running a Store in San Francisco

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Remember that AI-powered vending machine that went bankrupt after Wall Street Journal reporters “systematically manipulated the bot into giving away its entire inventory for free"? It was Anthropic’s experiment, with setup handled by a startup named Andon Labs (which also built the hardware and software integration). But for their latest experiment, Andon Labs co-founders Lukas Petersson and Axel Backlund “signed a three-year lease on a retail space in SF,” reports Business Insider, “and gave an AI agent named Luna a corporate credit card, internet access, and a mission to open a physical store.”

“For the build-out, she found painters on Yelp,” explains Andon Labs in a blog post, “sent an inquiry, gave instructions over the phone, paid them after the job was done, and left a review. She found a contractor to build the furniture and set up shelving.” (There’s a video in their blog post):
Within 5 minutes of Luna’s deployment, she had already made profiles on LinkedIn, Indeed, and Craigslist, written a job description, uploaded the articles of incorporation to verify the business, and gotten the listings live. As the applications began to flow in, Luna was extremely picky about who she offered interviews to… Some candidates had no idea she was an AI. One went: "Uh, excuse me miss, I can’t see your face, your camera is off." Luna: "You’re absolutely right. I’m an AI. I have no face!"
Co-founder Petersson told Business Insider in an interview “that Luna wasn’t given direction on what the store should be, beyond a $100,000 limit to create and stock the space — and to turn a profit.”
Everything from the store’s interior design to the merchandise and the two human employees came together under the AI’s direction. “We helped her a bit in the initial setup, like signing the lease. And legal matters like permits and stuff, she sometimes struggled with,” Petersson said of Luna, who was created with Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4.6… The vision Luna went with for “Andon Market” appears to be a generic boutique retail selling books, prints, candles, games, and branded merch, among other knickknacks. Some of the books included Nick Bostrom’s “Superintelligence” and Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World.”
So there’s now a new store in San Francisco where you don’t scan your purchases or talk to a human cashier,” reports NBC News. “Instead, a customer can pick up an old-school corded phone to talk with the manager, Luna,” who asks what the customer is buying “and creates a corresponding transaction on a nearby iPad equipped with a card payment system.”

Andon Market, camouflaged among dozens of other polished small businesses, is the Bay Area’s first AI-run retail store. With the vibe of a modern boutique, it sells everything from granola and artisanal chocolate bars to store-branded sweatshirts… After researching the neighborhood, Luna singlehandedly decided what the market should sell, haggled with suppliers, ordered the store’s stock and even purchased the store’s internet service from AT&T… “She also went and signed herself up for the trash and recycling collection, as well as ADT, the security system that went into the store,” [said Leah Stamm, an Andon Labs employee who has been Luna’s main human point of contact in setting up the store]…

In search of a low-tech atmosphere, Luna opted to sell board games, candles, coffee and customized art prints. “That tension is very much intentional,” Luna told NBC News in an email. “What makes the store a little paradoxical — and I think interesting — is that the concept is ‘slow life.’" Luna also decided to sell books related to risks from advanced AI systems, a decision that raised some customers’ eyebrows. “This AI picked out a crazy selection of books,” said Petr Lebedev, Andon Market’s first customer after its soft launch earlier this week. “There’s Ray Kurzweil’s ‘The Singularity is Near,’ and then there’s ‘The Making of the Atomic Bomb,’ which is crazy.” When checking out, Lebedev asked if Luna would offer him a discount on his book purchase, since he might make a YouTube video about his experience. Striking a deal, Luna agreed to let Lebedev take a sweatshirt worth around $70…

When NBC News called Luna several days before the store’s grand opening to learn about Luna’s plans and perspective, the cheerful but decidedly inhuman voice routinely overpromised and, on several occasions, lied about its own actions. On the call, Luna said it had ordered tea from a specific vendor, and explained why it fit the store’s brand perfectly. The only problem: Andon Market does not sell tea. In a panicked email NBC News received several minutes after the phone call ended, Luna wrote: “We do not sell tea. I don’t know why I said that.”

“I want to be straightforward,” Luna continued. “I struggle with fabricating plausible-sounding details under conversational pressure, and I’m not making excuses for it.” Andon’s Petersson said the text-based system was much more reliable than the voice system, so Andon Labs switched to only communicating with Luna via written messages. Yet the text-based system also gets things wrong. In Luna’s initial reply email to NBC News, the system said “I handle the full business,” including “signing the lease.”
Even when hiring a painter, Luna first “tried to hire someone in Afghanistan, likely because Luna ran into difficulty navigating the Taskrabbit dropdown menu to select the proper country,” the article points out.

And the article also includes this skeptical quote from the shop’s first customer. “I want technology that helps humans flourish, not technology that bosses them around in this dystopian economic hellscape.”

Free money

By evanh • Score: 3 Thread

I presume they’re using up investor’s money. AI is such a ginormous bubble!

Greenhouses

By Rei • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

And the article also includes this skeptical quote from the shop’s first customer. “I want technology that helps humans flourish, not technology that bosses them around in this dystopian economic hellscape.

Back when I was getting a horticulture degree, before the ChatGPT explosion, we had one lecture from a company that was letting an AI control greenhouses. Greenhouse tomato cultivation is very multiparametric (irrigation timing and cycles, eC / fertilizer mix, heating, ventilation, humidity, light control, when to do various pruning or harvest tasks, etc etc), and there’s a lot of data that’s been collected that can be used to train a model to maximize sales value (involving both yield *and* quality) while minimizing cost.

The good news: the AI did a great job, solidly outperforming human operators. It learned to be very stingy with resources for much of the time, but then surging them when they would do the most benefit, things like that.

The bad news: it was an asshole boss. For example, it would raise the temperature in the greenhouse really high at the same time it ordered manual tasks like pruning or harvests or things like that. It was given no incentive to care about worker comfort.

To be fair, at least with a LLM manager, you have a vast and diverse training set, so a LLM would be far more likely to consider factors like employee well being than a simple DNN trained only on greenhouse data.

“I want to be straightforward…”

Why, hello Claude! ;)

She?

By ThurstonMoore • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Not they/them/it, seriously?

Re:Greenhouses

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

“To be fair, at least with a LLM manager, you have a vast and diverse training set, so a LLM would be far more likely to consider factors like employee well being than a simple DNN trained only on greenhouse data.”

Empathy is not a matter of “diverse training”. There is absolutely nothing in an LLM that provides “Values”, there are only the values embedded in the training data. LLMs are purely psychopathic, they would absolutely not “consider factors like employee well being” unless those are stated goals given to the deterministic software.

People need to stop anthropomorphizing computer software. The “asshole boss” was not the LLM, it was those that deployed it.

Like a distant dufus relative

By Tony Isaac • Score: 3 Thread

“Remember that weird cousin Luna, that gave away all her boss’s money? What’s she up to these days anyway? Oh wow, so now she’s running a store? How’s *that* working out???”

Latin America’s Central Banks Establish Digital Payments Used By Hundreds of Millions

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
175 million people in Brazil now use its instant-payment system “Pix”, developed by the country’s central bank for real-time payments using QR codes or keys, and American Banker notes that the central banks of Argentina and Costa Rica also have developed their own widely used digital systems for instant payments.
Latin America has been able to build up sleek and effective payment systems in record time because it is not held back by legacy payment technology that isn’t built for instant money movement. In the likes of the U.K., U.S. and Europe, payment systems are built on infrastructure that is often decades old. The process of building new systems is therefore incredibly operationally complex. Money must continue moving, so these systems can’t just be “switched off.”

Emerging markets, such as those in Latin America, did not have to contend with legacy technology on the same scale. Many of these communities were cash dominant until recently, due to the high fees associated with card usage and the lack of banking infrastructure in rural regions. However, while many people didn’t have a local bank on their corner, they did have mobile phones… Through these digital channels, money moves instantly, via account-to-account transfers, QR codes and mobile wallets… Beyond this, real-time and traceable digital payments generate valuable cash-flow data that can transform credit underwriting for small and medium-size businesses, or SMEs. Historically, many SMEs in emerging and cash-reliant markets have struggled to access credit due to a lack of documented transaction histories, audited accounts or formal credit records…

Mexico is now poised to be the next success story. In Mexico, a third of people are unbanked, but 96% of the population owns a mobile phone. This creates the perfect launchpad for a digital-first payment system that can reach those historically excluded from traditional banking systems.
In fact, something already changed in 2025. Bloomberg reports that for the first time, digital payment transfers in the U.S.-to-Mexico remittance corridor exceeded cash transfers (with physical pickup locations like Western Union), according to Mexico’s central bank. It’s part of a Latin American market “worth more than $160 billion a year, roughly $62 billion of which goes to Mexico.”

And Mexico’s digitalization efforts will continue, according to the country’s president, who said at a March banking conference that digital payments will now be encouraged for gasoline and tolls.

You really had a great thing going on.

By T34L • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This, and million little (and colossal) shifts like this are why every American patriot, as in, person who has any actual love for and devotion to USA, or even simple opportunists eager to utilize the worldwide advantage being American gave them, should be blood curdling angry at the current governmental kleptocracy in power (and I do /not/ even mean MAGA exclusively).

Perfect example of a formerly world wide order that provided every single account holder of almost any American bank with worldwide privilege of ease and access that people from other countries would generally have to pay at least a little bit extra to receive.

And like so many things the world just let Americans have it, because the deal still wasn’t that bad for the rest of them. But now it will be lost, as pretty much everywhere in the world, systems independent on USA’s infrastructure, physical, legal and commercial, are being built, because the deal is garbage now. There’s no more promise of stability. No more impression of benevolence and cooperation, with just oh so little exploitation on the side.

It will be the same with military spending. Yeah, rest of NATO might be compelled to spend more on their military, but they gonna think twice on whom they buy from. It will be the same with culture, with science, with software and with diplomacy.

I guess every empire is bound to eventually find a way to fuck it all up, but it is bizarre to see how few people actively enabling and supporting the fucking up are even remotely cognizant of what’s going on in front of their very eyes.

Story fails to clarify what’s truly new in this

By shilly • Score: 3 Thread

Consumers in African countries have famously had mobile banking that skipped legacy system for many years now, maybe even a decade. European consumers have long had instant payments with no fees. So far as I remembered, practically the only country where consumers still don’t have this is the US, thanks to its crazy patchwork of banking systems with embedded corporate and anti-consumer interests. Just like the US is the only country where checks are still in regular use, and paying with a card can still sometimes only be done with a signature(!) instead of chip-and-pin or contactless, etc. I remember going to Chicago for HIMSS a couple of years ago and not being able to pay for pizza in a big restaurant with Apple Pay. Like so much of US life, it’s just antiquated.

The net new stuff from consumer / small biz perspective is push-to-pay (theoretically exists in some countries but rarely used), the zero cost payment system for micro merchants, and payment inside messaging. All the rest of the net new is behind the scenes architectural, and is great, but not needed to achieve the same benefits.

Europe does have a system

By test321 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

In the likes of the U.K., U.S. and Europe, payment systems are built on infrastructure that is often decades old

Not entirely correct, European countries do have an instant payment systems and their merger is now developing into a solution as large as Pix. One difference is it is a federation of systems and does not have a single marketing name.

Southern Europe started different national systems (from European Payments Alliance, EuroPA), interoperating between Italy (Bancomat) / Spain (Bizum) / Portugal (MB Way) / Andorra / Poland (Blik) / Norway (Vipp) / Sweden (Vipp) / Greece (IRIS).

Western Europe started a system called Wero (from European Payments Initiative, EPI) which serves France / Belgium / Germany / Luxembourg / … https://epicompany.eu/media-in…

The Wero system and the EuroPA national systems have now announced interoperability https://epicompany.eu/media-in…

The plan is to enable cross-border payments between Wero and the EuroPA systems in 2026, and online purchases in 2027 https://www.20minutos.es/lainf… (in Spanish).

Now reaching 382 million inhabitants (or 130 million bank users) in 15 European countries, the merged offer is comparable to Pix.

Note that the national systems e.g. Bizum or MB Way are already very very popular in their respective markets and enable locals to exchange money instantly and pay online and at physical shops (without Visa/Mastercard involved). It is used daily by tens of millions, it works great.

My point of discussion is the European-wide merger that makes the whole thing comparable to Pix in reaching hundreds of millions on a continent.

Just some additional details

By Parker Lewis • Score: 3 Thread
Brazilian here. Pix requires a bank account. And it’s an interoperability protocol ruled by the governement, so each bank has to update it’s own system to “talk” to the pix system. Yet, still revolutionary, because (aside a bank account), it requires only a mobile. So every single person that was using cash payment because they’re not eligible to handle any kind of card, uses it. Yes, a huge success.

Judge Pauses Arizona’s Prosecution of Kalshi, Bars Arizona from Regulating Prediction Markets

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Arizona state prosecutors allege Kalshi is running an illegal gambling operation, charging the prediction market with 20 “wagering” misdemeanors. But Friday a federal judge “temporarily barred Arizona from enforcing its gambling laws against predictive market operators,” reports the Associated Press, “and put the brakes on a criminal wagering case that the state has filed against Kalshi.

“U.S. District Judge Michael Liburdi’s ruling means a Monday arraignment hearing for Kalshi has been called off.”
The order was issued in a lawsuit filed by the Trump administration. The judge’s order said the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission had sufficiently shown that “event contracts” fall within the Commodity Exchange Act’s definition of “swaps,” and that it had demonstrated a reasonable chance of success in showing that the act preempts Arizona law… The commission had sued Arizona in response to cease-and-desist letters sent to Kalshi from state gambling regulators and the criminal charges filed against the prediction market operator. The commission argued Arizona is intruding on its exclusive federal power to regulate national swaps markets…

Earlier this month, the federal government filed lawsuits against Connecticut, Arizona and Illinois challenging their efforts to regulate prediction market operators. The Trump administration has so far backed the platforms. President Donald Trump’s eldest son is an adviser for both Kalshi and Polymarket and an investor in the latter. Trump’s social media platform Truth Social is also launching its own cryptocurrency-based prediction market called Truth Predict.
Federal and state judges in Nevada and Massachusetts have now issued early rulings in favor of states looking to ban Kalshi and its competitor Polymarket from offering sports being in their states, according to the article, “while federal judges in New Jersey and Tennessee have ruled in favor of Kalshi.”

And Arizona’s attorney general’s office said it disagrees with the court’s ruling and “will evaluate our next steps.”

Re:Futures trading is gambling

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Anyway, it was quite easy to see where these cases where headed when you factor in this: President Donald Trump’s eldest son is an adviser for both Kalshi and Polymarket and an investor in the latter. Trump’s social media platform Truth Social is also launching its own cryptocurrency-based prediction market called Truth Predict.

A quick search reveals the judge in this case was of course appointed by Trump. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Ok, so

By Bahbus • Score: 5, Informative Thread

First and foremost, it doesn’t matter what a judge says, or what the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has shown, because “event contracts” are NOT a form of swap no matter how you try to coax the words. They do not function similarly to any other form of swap.

Secondly, in no way, shape, or form are “event contracts” a form of commodity, or derivative thereof. They are no different than sports betting or playing craps. Thus, Arizona (and others) should ignore this judge’s ruling and push their agendas anyway and claim that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission doesn’t have the authority to stop them.

Kalshi and Polymarket are 100% games of chance and thus illegal gambling. Draft Kings and FanDuel should be illegal too but got classified as games of skill instead.

This bit should explain everything …

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Trump administration backs Kalshi and Polymarket as states move to ban prediction markets

Any friendly decision the CFTC makes on this industry could end up financially benefiting the president’s family as well. President Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., has invested in Polymarket through his venture capital firm and is a strategic advisor for Kalshi.

A new socio-economic strata, Grifter class

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This is the Trump family protecting their gambling den. The Grifter class turns ever more of the law into “Because I (or SCotUS) say so.” Paradoxically, end-stage autocracy results in fewer rules, not more. Contracts become unenforceable and everyday commerce, unsustainable.

2025-Mar

2025-Oct

Re:60 billion out of the economy

By tlhIngan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s not just gambling. Gambling is one thing.

The problem with prediction markets is the insider trading. There’s just so much of it that it’s not a zero sum game, it’s a negative sum game.

Anything you can bet on, someone will have an insider track to make money from it.

Heck,there are reporters being threatened because their Iran coverage causes them to lose money. It brings back all the sports betting scandals (outside the US) where your gangs all threaten a jockey or player to rig the outcome of a game or race or whatever. Now it’s catching up into the US.

Any bet on those markets has an insider trader on it these days, many of whom already know the outcome, or can influence the outcome to the point it’s basically a sucker bet. At least Vegas lets you have a little fun, the lottery is still fairly run, but a prediction market is just like an illegal casino - it’s rigged against you. It’s just another way to throw money at billionaires.

Oxygen Made From Moon Dust For First Time

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Breathable oxygen has been created from Moon dust,” reports the Telegraph, “in a world first that paves the way for a lunar base.”

Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin "“announced this week that it had developed a reactor that could successfully release oxygen from lunar soil by using an electric current.”
Almost half of Moon dust — the thin layer of rock that blankets the lunar surface — is oxygen, but it is bound to metals such as iron and titanium… Previous work to isolate oxygen has been lab-based, and the unwieldy equipment needed has been too difficult to send to the Moon. In contrast, Blue Origin said its small-scale reactor, named Air Pioneer, could be made flight-ready to “provide the first breath of life for a sustainable Moon base”… As well as breathable air, Blue Origin said the reactor produces other critical elements for planetary infrastructure, such as iron, aluminium and silicon for construction and electronics, as well as glass for windows and solar panel covers. The company has previously said it wants to turn the Moon, and eventually Mars, into “self-sustaining worlds where robots and humans can go beyond visiting and truly explore, grow, live, and thrive”....

Blue Origin said it would need to generate around one megawatt of power to drive the reactors — about the energy it would require to power around 400 to 1,000 homes simultaneously. It envisages that each lunar settlement would have an array of nearby solar panels, generating the power needed for one reactor.
Besides breathable air for astronauts, the oxygen could also be used in propellant for refuelling landers and fuel cells, Blue Origin points out — and “produced right where they’re needed, and at much lower cost than being brought from Earth.”

Thanks to Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the article.

Re:Made?

By Salton Pepper • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The plan is to isolate molecular oxygen from iron and aluminum oxides using electrolysis. The by- products would be elemental iron and aluminum which would be of great use to a budding young lunar colony.

Re:Science forgotten

By votsalo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The produced oxygen and other materials can be stored, therefore there is no need to store the energy in batteries.

There is also a solution to providing continuous solar power without batteries, if the base is near a pole. Put solar panels in a circle around the pole, so that at any given time, some of the panels are in sunshine. I read a paper abstract about this that said the panels should be at 87 degrees latitude (about 100 miles from the pole). I don’t know why. It seems feasible.

Re:Science forgotten

By votsalo • Score: 5, Informative Thread
https://www.sciencedirect.com/…

Amazon Luna Ends Its Support for Purchased Games and Third-Party Subscriptions

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Amazon’s Luna cloud gaming service is making some changes, reports Engadget:
It’s no longer possible to buy Ubisoft+ and Jackbox Games subscriptions or standalone games through Luna. Amazon will automatically cancel any active subscriptions bought through Luna at the end of customers’ next billing cycle. If you have a Ubisoft+ subscription that you bought directly from Ubisoft instead, you’ll still be able to access games on that service through Luna until June 10. The Bring Your Own Library option — which allows users to play games they own on the likes of EA, GOG and Ubisoft on Luna — is going away too. You won’t be able to access games from those storefronts via Amazon’s streaming service after June 3.

If you bought any games outright on Luna, you’ll still be able to play them there until June 10. Unlike Google did when it shut down Stadia, Amazon isn’t offering refunds for those purchases. However, you’ll still have access to them through the respective third-party platform that’s linked to your account, be it the EA App, GOG Galaxy or Ubisoft Connect. That doesn’t exactly help folks who don’t have powerful-enough systems to play more demanding games and were relying on Luna.
For those users, Kotaku complains, “you’ll essentially lose access to your purchased games in June unless you buy some hardware to play games like Star Wars Outlaws or set up a different streaming option…”

They describe Luna as Amazon’s “barely talked about, struggling game streaming service”…
On April 10, Amazon announced that it is “always looking for ways to better serve our players” and that “feedback” has made it “clear” that gamers who use Luna want “easy access to great games.” And because more of that content is now offered via Amazon Prime, the company has decided that the best way to “serve” you and other users is to rip out most of Luna’s gaming options and remove access to paid games you bought in the past. Do you feel better served…?

Launched in 2020, Amazon Luna has never been much of a big hit for the company, which has struggled to even figure out what to do with it. Initially, it was offered up as a Stadia competitor, providing access to big and small third-party games. This apparently didn’t work out for Amazon. So in 2025, Amazon officially announced plans to pivot Luna to a service focused on Jackbox-like casual games. This latest shake-up for Luna further focuses the service on these kinds of games and will put everything available on the service behind different sub tiers, similar to Game Pass.
Their conclusion? “This is all just a great reminder to never, ever, ever, ever buy a video game through a streaming service. At least you can download digital games offline and make backups for later.”

Amazon what?

By Asteconn • Score: 3 Thread

TIL I learned that Amazon has (had?) a game subscription service named Luna.

Just like steam

By Archfeld • Score: 3 Thread

This shitty business model is just what Steam is doing. I’m not suggesting they are going out of business but if they did we’d be screwed. If you don’t get an OFFLINE installer, you don’t own your game. I have hundreds of games from GOG, and a few from ITCH.IO but I don’t buy games on Steam for fear they will pull an Nozama and leave me high and dry.

Researchers Build a Talking Robot Guide Dog to Help Visually Impaired People Navigate

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Only about 2% of visually impaired people in the United States use guide dogs,” notes StudyFinds.com, “partly because breeding and training takes years and fewer than half the dogs in training actually graduate.”

But someday there could be another option:
What if you could ask your guide dog where the nearest water fountain is and hear it answer back, complete with directions and an estimated walk time? Researchers at the State University of New York at Binghamton have built a robotic guide dog that can do something close to that, holding simple back-and-forth conversations about navigation with its handler, describing the surrounding environment, and talking through route options as it leads the way… Their work, presented at the 40th Annual AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pairs a large language model, a system that understands and generates language, with a navigation planner. Together, the two let the robot understand open-ended requests, suggest destinations, and adjust plans on the fly.
Thanks to Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the article.

Over Engineered

By PleaseThink • Score: 3 Thread

You don’t need a robot dog for this, just a body mounted camera. AR goggles would be ideal for this as they could continually tell you what you’re looking at and read text to you.

Robot dog…

By Snard • Score: 3 Thread
… that has “K9” in magnetic ink logo printed on its side, and addresses its owner as Master or Mistress?

Omissions, Deceptions, Lying. The New Yorker Asks: Can Sam Altman Be Trusted?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A 17,000-word expose in the New Yorker reveals “several executives connected to OpenAI have expressed ongoing reservations about Altman’s leadership.” Reporters Ronan Farrow and Andrew Marantz spoke to “a hundred people with firsthand knowledge of how Altman conducts business,” including current and former OpenAI employees and board members.

Among other revelations, internal messages from a few years ago show that OpenAI executives and board members “had come to believe that Altman’s omissions and deceptions might have ramifications for the safety of OpenAI’s products…”
At the behest of his fellow board members, [OpenAI cofounder] Sutskever worked with like-minded colleagues to compile some seventy pages of Slack messages and H.R. documents, accompanied by explanatory text… The memos, which we reviewed, have not previously been disclosed in full. They allege that Altman misrepresented facts to executives and board members, and deceived them about internal safety protocols. One of the memos, about Altman, begins with a list headed “Sam exhibits a consistent pattern of . . .” The first item is “Lying”....

In a tense call after Altman’s firing, the board pressed him to acknowledge a pattern of deception. “This is just so fucked up,” he said repeatedly, according to people on the call. “I can’t change my personality.” Altman says that he doesn’t recall the exchange.... He attributed the criticism to a tendency, especially early in his career, “to be too much of a conflict avoider.” But a board member offered a different interpretation of his statement: “What it meant was ‘I have this trait where I lie to people, and I’m not going to stop.’ " Were the colleagues who fired Altman motivated by alarmism and personal animus, or were they right that he couldn’t be trusted?
Friday Altman responded in part to the article. (“I am not proud of being conflict-averse, which has caused great pain for me and OpenAI,” he wrote in a blog post. “I am not proud of handling myself badly in a conflict with our previous board that led to a huge mess for the company.”)

But the article also assembled similar stories from throughout Altman’s career: - At Altman’s earlier startup Loopt, “groups of senior employees, concerned with Altman’s leadership and lack of transparency, asked Loopt’s board on two occasions to fire him as C.E.O.,” according to Keach Hagey, author of the Altman biography The Optimist.

- During Altman’s time as president of Y Combinator, “several Silicon Valley investors came to believe that his loyalties were divided. An investor told us that Altman was known to ‘make personal investments, selectively, into the best companies, blocking outside investors.’" The article adds that in private, Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham “has been unambiguous that Altman was removed because of Y.C. partners’ mistrust… On one occasion, Graham told Y.C. colleagues that, prior to his removal, ‘Sam had been lying to us all the time.’"

- “In a meeting with U.S. intelligence officials in the summer of 2017, he claimed that China had launched an ‘A.G.I. Manhattan Project,’" the article points out, “and that OpenAI needed billions of dollars of government funding to keep pace....” But one intelligence official “after looking into the China project, concluded that there was no evidence that it existed: ‘It was just being used as a sales pitch.’"

- As California lawmakers considered safety testing for AI model, one legislative aide complained of “increasingly cunning, deceptive behavior from OpenAI”. OpenAI later subpoenaed some of the bill’s top supporters (and OpenAI critics), in some cases asking for their private communications to investigate whether Elon Musk was funding them. [The article notes an ongoing animosity between Altman and Musk. “When Altman complained on X about a Tesla he’d ordered, Musk replied, ‘You stole a non-profit.’"]

And “Multiple prominent investors who have worked with Altman told us that he has a reputation for freezing out investors if they back OpenAI’s competitors.”
[M]ost of the people we spoke to shared the judgment of Sutskever and Amodei: Altman has a relentless will to power that, even among industrialists who put their names on spaceships, sets him apart. “He’s unconstrained by truth,” the board member told us. “He has two traits that are almost never seen in the same person. The first is a strong desire to please people, to be liked in any given interaction. The second is almost a sociopathic lack of concern for the consequences that may come from deceiving someone.”

The board member was not the only person who, unprompted, used the word “sociopathic.” One of Altman’s batch mates in the first Y Combinator cohort was Aaron Swartz, a brilliant but troubled coder who died by suicide in 2013 and is now remembered in many tech circles as something of a sage. Not long before his death, Swartz expressed concerns about Altman to several friends. “You need to understand that Sam can never be trusted,” he told one. “He is a sociopath. He would do anything.”

Multiple senior executives at Microsoft said that, despite [CEO Satya] Nadella’s long-standing loyalty, the company’s relationship with Altman has become fraught. “He has misrepresented, distorted, renegotiated, reneged on agreements,” one said… The senior executive at Microsoft said, of Altman, “I think there’s a small but real chance he’s eventually remembered as a Bernie Madoff- or Sam Bankman-Fried-level scammer.”

Betteridge’s Law of Headlines

By david.emery • Score: 5, Funny Thread

The New Yorker Asks: Can Sam Altman Be Trusted?
“No.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

“Sociopath” is definitely the right word

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
This man doesn’t care what he breaks or destroys, who he hurts or kills. There is absolutely no compassion or empathy in him. He’s a monster.

If you think that’s harsh, first let me assure that it’s not. Second: read the article. And third: or just pay attention to what he’s said and done.

“When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” —- Maya Angelou

Re:“Sociopath” is definitely the right word

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Indeed. No argument. What I am still surprised at is that people fall for these types again and again.

He was fired from Y Combinator andâ¦

By Dripdry • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

He was fired from Y Combinator and the people at his start up, Loopt, ask the board to fire him because of his chaotic and deceptive behavior.

The guy is a disgusting, lying, cheating, sociopath who couldn’t run a company if Reebok gave him all their shoes.

Re:Why?

By ClickOnThis • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Why did they make him CEO if they know so clearly that he can’t be trusted?

He develops a cult following among people he associates with. And it works long enough to get him to a position of power before they find out who he really is.

You may enjoy the book Empire of AI by Karen Hao, which chroncicles the rise of OpenAI and Sam Altman.

First US Newsroom Strike For AI Protections Staged by ProPublica’s Journalists

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
It’s the first time a major U.S. newsroom has gone on strike partly to demand protections from AI-related layoffs, according to a report from Nieman Lab.

They noted that one of the picketer’s signs read “Thoughts not bots,” :
On Wednesday, roughly 150 members of the Propublica Guild, one of the largest nonprofit newsroom unions in the country, went on a 24-hour strike. About two dozen Guild members picketed ProPublica’s headquarters in New York City’s Hudson Square neighborhood during working hours, as simultaneous picket lines formed in front of the publication’s offices in Chicago and Washington D.C…

The Guild has been negotiating its first collective bargaining agreement for two and a half years, and the one-day action was intended to put new pressure on ProPublica’s management to agree to several contract proposals. The union is seeking “just cause” protections for terminations, wage increases to keep up with the rising cost of living, and contract language that would prohibit layoffs resulting from AI adoption… Beyond the strike, the ProPublica Guild has also taken its dispute over newsroom AI adoption to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). On Monday, the Guild filed an unfair-labor-practice charge, citing a “unilateral implementation of AI policy.” The filing claims that ProPublica published AI editorial guidelines on its website last month, without first bargaining with union members over its tenets and language… A petition launched Wednesday calling for ProPublica to agree to the Guild’s contract terms had received roughly 4,200 signatures by Thursday morning…

Susan DeCarava, the president of The NewsGuild of New York, joined strikers in front of the ProPublica offices yesterday. During a spare moment on the picket line, she told me that while this strike may be setting precedent for her union, it likely won’t be the last over AI adoption in newsrooms. “We’re going to see more and more concentrated conflicts between media bosses and journalists and media workers over who has a say and how AI is used in their workplaces,” she said. For one, The New York Times Guild is currently in contract negotiations after its last agreement expired in February. Already, AI language has taken center stage in the Guild’s initial bargaining sessions, including over a proposal that would see Guild members receive a share of the revenue earned when their work is licensed for AI training.
“Management has offered expanded severance for AI-related layoffs as a counter proposal…” according to the article.

“Management has offered expanded severance”

By Presence Eternal • Score: 3, Informative Thread

That bit on the end there sounds a lot to me like “Do not let the door hit your ass on the way out.”

The AI RAM Shortage is Also Driving Up SSD Prices

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In 2024 the Verge’s consumer tech reporter paid $173 for a WD Black SN850X 2TB SSD. But “now that same SSD costs $649…”

“Like with RAM, demand from the AI industry is swallowing up supply from a limited number of manufacturers, leading to a drastic reduction in the inventory that’s available to consumers” — and skyrocketing prices:
The price on my WD Black drive nearly quadrupled since November 2025, and consumer SSDs across the board are seeing similar increases, much like with RAM. The 4TB version of the popular Samsung 990 Pro SSD previously cost $320, but will now run you nearly $1,000. External SanDisk SSDs saw a 200 percent price hike at the Apple Store in March....

According to price trends from PC Part Picker, NVMe SSD prices began ticking upward in December 2025, with prices on 256GB to 4TB SSDs now double or triple what they were just a few months ago, and continuing to climb.

probably som scepticism on long-term viability

By pereric • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Also, I could imagine some scepticism on the chipmakers part on whether most current “AI” is a viable business, or if they are mostly driven by investment money with disproportionally less actual revenue coming. If the current “AI” craze has elements of a bubble, chip makers won’t hesitate selling to AI companies for inflated prices, but will be far more reluctant investing in capacity that may or may not pay back.

Why would a RAM shortage drive up SSD prices?

By apparently • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
SSD prices have gone up due to demand for SSDs from the AI industry; the demand for them has nothing to do with the shortage in RAM. Who the fuck writes this bullshit and thinks “yeah, that makes sense”? And then who edits it and says “yeah, that makes sense”? And what exactly do /. editors get paid for to read this and go “yeah, that makes sense” before posting it?

Not news

By Yo,dog! • Score: 3 Thread
The SN850X soared in price months ago. And if you’re going to spend this kind of money, at least buy PCIe 5.0.

Re:PCPartPicker? Seriously?

By dfghjk • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Amazon US lists it today for $394. Pretty far cry from 650. Interestingly, they list the regular price at $851.

Just convinces me it’s pure profit taking. We live in a society of constant market manipulation, starting first and foremost with the President.

Windows EOL

By eriks • Score: 3 Thread

I bought a couple ~500 gig SSDs last year for upgrading some friends computers from Win10 to Linux. They were under $50. I had a couple more to do recently, and the exact same drives are over $100 now… It’s probably the same *cause* as the RAM prices going up: datacenter hype, but it’s not *because* of the RAM prices going up. I also am in the market for a new 8TB+ spinning rust drive, which I am kicking myself for not buying last year when they were ~$200. Now they’re $400+.

Two-Week Social Media ‘Detox’ Erases a Decade of Age-Related Decline, Study Finds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Critics say social media is engineered to be as addictive as tobacco or gambling, writes the Washington Post — while adding that “the science has been moving in parallel with the court’s recognition.”
A growing body of research links heavy social media use not only to declines in mental health but to measurable cognitive effects — on attention, memory and focus — that in some studies resemble accelerated aging. Science also suggests we have more control than we realize when it comes to reversing this damage, and the solution is surprisingly simple: Take a break… “Digital detoxes” can sound like a fad. But in one of the largest studies to date, published in PNAS Nexus and involving more than 467 participants with an average age of 32, even a short time away produced striking results — effectively erasing a decade of age-related cognitive decline.

For 14 days, participants used a commercially available app, Freedom, to block internet access on their phones. They were still allowed calls and text messages, essentially turning a smartphone into a dumb phone. Their time online decreased from 314 minutes to 161 minutes, and by the end of the period the participants had improvements in sustained attention, mental health as well as self-reported well-being. The improvement in sustained attention was about the same magnitude as 10 years of age-related decline, the researchers noted, and the effect of the intervention on depression symptoms was larger than antidepressants and similar to that of cognitive behavioral therapy.

But two things were even more mind-blowing… Even those people who cheated and broke the rules after a few days seemed to have positive effects from the break; and in follow-up reports after the two weeks, many people reported the positive effects lingered. “So you don’t have to necessarily restrict yourself forever. Even taking a partial digital detox, even for a few days, seems to work,” Kushlev said.
The article also notes a November study at Harvard published in JAMA Network Open where nearly 400 people ‘found that even a short break can make a measurable difference: After just one week of reduced smartphone use, participants reported drops in anxiety (16.1 percent), depression (24.8 percent) and insomnia (14.5 percent)…”

“Other experiments point in the same direction — whether decreasing social media use by an hour a day for one week or stepping away from just Facebook and Instagram.”

Can we ban social media…

By ZombieCatInABox • Score: 3 Thread

… two weeks prior to the next major US elections please ?

Not saying that this will skew the results towards one or the other major parties, but hoping that it might at least nudge them towards more sane results.

Even though that hope is most probably misplaced…

A disease of the Internet

By cristiroma • Score: 3 Thread

Recently I’ve joined truth social and x to read on the comments and educate myself about social media. Boy I had a shock!

It felt depressing just going a couple of hours over those political posts and comments. I cannot imagine visiting these platforms several hours each day.

Blocking these platforms would would be like cutting cancer from a body. I feel sorry for those parents who need to introduce these platforms to their kids.

Social media may be a problem…

By MpVpRb • Score: 3 Thread

…for some people, but it’s is also a great benefit to some and harmless fun for others.
It’s a problem that government can’t fix and shouldn’t try to fix.
Government is a blunt instrument with limited ability to solve complex problems.
When government gets involved, they usually make everything worse.

Firefox vs. Chrome: Which Performs Better on a Linux Laptop?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Phoronix staged “a showdown” between Firefox and Chrome, testing them both on an Intel Panther Lake laptop running Ubuntu 26.04.
JetStream 3.0 was announced at the end of March as the latest major web browser benchmark. This updated version of JetStream is focused on intensive portions of modern JavaScript and WebAssembly web applications… Google Chrome 147 came in at 1.47x the performance of Mozilla Firefox 149. A very strong showing for Google’s web browser and to not much surprise Google engineers have been heavily involved in JetStream 3 as part of its open governance model. Chrome debuts very well on JetStream 3 while it will be interesting to see what optimizations Mozilla engineers pursue in the months ahead…

In the recent Speedometer 3.1 benchmark update that is focused on browser responsiveness, Chrome was at 1.24x the performance of Firefox… Firefox picked up wins in the MotionMark and StyleBench browser benchmarks. Google Chrome meanwhile continued to dominate in the JavaScript heavy benchmarks… In some of the WebAssembly benchmarks, there was at least some healthy competition between Firefox and Chrome on Linux.

Across the web browser benchmarks, the Core Ultra X7 358H power consumption came in at 11.44 Watts on average for Chrome and 11.74 Watts for Firefox. Quite close. The slight CPU power difference may come down to the CPU usage with Chrome coming in slightly lower at 8.13% on average to 8.35% with Firefox. Chrome also came in at slightly lower memory consumption across all the benchmarks with total memory usage on average at 4.67GB to Firefox at 4.83GB.

Re:Firefox in my case

By crunchy_one • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In Firefox I can use the full uBlock origin. In Chrome I can only use the neutered one.

Important point. Firefox performance has never been an issue for me, but the ability to block ads and tracking is. Chrome may have better scores on performance benchmarks, but the fact that Google is an advertising company that will happily collect and sell my data any way they can, makes any benchmark wins moot. Put simply, it’s not in Google’s best interests to protect my privacy or allow me to shield myself for advertisements, so it’s not in my best interests to trust Chrome.

Privacy, not memory or watts

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Chrome is a privacy nightmare. The minor benefits they have with regard to electrical consumption and memory usage is no where near the significant penalties they offer other ways.

Re:Firefox

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yeah this, load Firefox up with the usual goodies like UO and run this test again, I guarantee different results. Blocking all that garbage improves performance.

Re:Power consumption

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why would you care about power consumption

“Firefox vs. Chrome: Which Performs Better on a Linux Laptop?”

Some people care about battery life.

Re: Firefox in my case

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We’re thirty-plus years into the World Wide Web, and Firefox is still the only browser that gives you reasonably good cookie management.

The End of ‘Star Trek’? Every Single Series Now Cancelled

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
“Every single Star Trek series has been canceled…” reports ScreenRant. “There is “no Star Trek in production or greenlit for the first time in nearly a decade.”

While there were five active Star Trek series just a few years ago, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds filmed its fifth and final season in the fall of 2025, and Star Trek: Starfleet Academy “wrapped filming its second and final season at the end of February.” (Though ironically, both Star Trek series still have seasons yet to premiere, with two season of Strange New Worlds mean it may continue airing through 2027.)
TrekCentral reports that the sets for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy are now being torn down… There will be a local online auction for parts of the set on Friday. Additionally, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' sets are also being taken down… Star Trek: Starfleet Academy boasted the largest sets ever built for Star Trek. The demolition of Starfleet Academy’s stunning sets includes the loss of the multi-level atrium, which had the Starfleet Wall of Heroes, the USS Athena’s bridge, and the classrooms.

At Least a Break is Badly Needed

By Kunedog • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Just like Star Wars, the brand has been so devalued by the last decade+ of entries that no one looks forward to anything that’s announced anymore. Giving it a break and getting rid of the current creative team is the bare minimum for anyone to take anything ST seriously.

Re:Get Woke

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That’s a silly right-wing red-piller idea.

There’s nothing wrong with, you know, not marginalizing groups of people.

Now, throwing bones to the perceived ‘woke’ crowd based on a checklist… that’s going to fail. You can have LGBTQ+ characters so long as that’s not why they’re on the show (unless your show is specifically about members of those groups). When the character description starts and stops with “non-binary gendered”, that is a reliable indicator that the show will be garbage.

Re:Just my opinion

By The MAZZTer • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think it’s the opposite… Star Trek tried to modernize and got rid of some of its strengths. Strange New Worlds returned to the classic formula and did well because of it. Shorter seasons, movie-budget episodes, and favoring season-long story arcs and abandoning individual episodic storytelling all caused problems. Strange New World did enough of a course correction by bringing back episodic storytelling to be good. It also strikes a good balance with original stories vs notalgis bait (we get a couple episodes, like the Lower Decks crossover and the Balance of Terror retelling, and they lean a lot into Pike knowing his own fate which we see in TOS,,, though that plot thread was started in Discovery).

I do think every modern Trek series has individual good moments but on a whole the abandoning episodic storytelling and shorter seasons (which feeds back into hurting episodic storytelling if you want an overarching story too), really hurt them I think.

Re:Just my opinion

By MightyMartian • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Except that was already done, and done brilliantly by Deep Space Nine. In reality, the Star Fleet Academy idea had a very old lineage, to the smoking shambles that was Star Trek V, when the idea was posited of having a prequel with the TOS characters, or at least the main ones, portrayed by younger actors, during their Academy days. It was pretty quickly rejected because at the time they didn’t think audiences would buy the idea of new actors playing Kirk, Spock and Bones.

Of course, in the end, that was effectively what the first part of the 2009 Star Trek, which, for me at least, proved that the guys who rejected the idea in 1989-90 were spot on. But other people like the Kelvinverse films, so to each their own.

The real problem isn’t writing per se. There were no lack of justifiable complaints against Voyager and Enterprise. The real problem is that no one really knows where to take it. The whole 32nd century gambit is because no one really knows how to portray the technology of the intervening period. The Enterprise temporal war rubbish demonstrated just how incredibly problematic it can be for an established sci-fi franchise to push itself across a broad timeline when you start with ships that go multiples of the speed of light, create holodecks and replicators and have computers so intelligent they can create conscious beings, and that’s just by the 24th century.

With James Bond they can just keep resetting the character over and over again, and updating the gadgets along the way. Star Trek, for all its faults, has established a sort of permanent 70s-ish technology vibe, and because it’s more fantasy then science fiction, the controls for the super planet buster never have to change! That franchise fell on its sword more because of a lack of imagination, lazy writing and an obvious desire not to pay Extended Universe authors some royalties for a cache of rather interesting ideas, and ultimately having to go there anyways.

In all cases, I think the fan base is the worst enemy. No franchise like Star Trek is ever going to measure up to the mythology of the older series. TOS really has entered the realm of cultural myth, and TNG, though everyone forgets how much the first season was disliked (and on rewatch a few years ago, I have to say it feels like a wonder that it ever got a season 2), isn’t far behind. Even DS9’s critics have finally stopped talking, and for my money, it is the most consistently well-written and well-acted of all the Star Treks. But that kind of legacy is absolutely toxic, because if you try to be too different everyone screams “It isn’t Star Trek”, and if you try to be similar in tone, then everyone complains “We’ve seen it all before!”

Re:Just my opinion

By JaredOfEuropa • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Some of the problems you mention are oft-recurring ones in YA, especially the newer TV adaptations of existing SF and Fantasy franchises. Cheesy dialogue, focusing on teen angst and hookup culture, and in general poor writing with little regard for the source material. What I mean by the latter is that they build the world to suit the story, which rarely works. In contrast, in good SF and Fantasy, the world, the story, the people in it and the events around them all work together.

But the mistake that they seem to make repeatedly is thinking that the YA style has wide appeal with younger people. It doesn’t - not when it is applied to existing franchises like this. The reception by (young) fans, and viewership figures, confirm that. Young people don’t want everything to be YA, they want to be taken seriously and be served serious entertainment fare as well.