Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. ‘Forget Coders. The Real AI Threat Is In the Back Office’
  2. Linus Torvalds on AI, Junk Patches, Humans, and Godzilla
  3. Elon Musk And Sam Altman Spar On X After Apple Files OpenAI Lawsuit
  4. SK Hynix CEO Warns 2027 Will Be Memory’s ‘Worst Year’ Ever. Shortages May Outlast the Decade
  5. WSJ Reports on ‘Hard-line Activists Ramping Up for the War With AI’
  6. Is the COSMIC Desktop Getting Better Than KDE and GNOME?
  7. AI-driven Datacenter Builds Increased Microsoft’s Emissions 25% In One Year
  8. Id Co-founders Carmack and Romero Respond to Microsoft’s Layoffs
  9. Facial Recognition in UK Shops Will Soon Instantly Alert Police About Offenders
  10. 10 Million Cubans Suffer Nationwide Blackout - For The Second Time This Week
  11. Meta Removes Controversial AI Feature On Instagram After Backlash
  12. People Keep Sneaking Into an Empty IBM Campus - and Then Getting Arrested
  13. How the FSF Sysadmins are Blocking Botnets with reaction
  14. DuckDuckGo’s Browser Now Blocks Most YouTube Ads
  15. Orbital Datacenter Plans Need an Environmental Review, FCC Told

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.

‘Forget Coders. The Real AI Threat Is In the Back Office’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Which jobs are most threatened by AI? “Programmers, software engineers and other tech industry employees,” goes one common answer.

“But many economists are more concerned about a different, larger group of white-collar workers,” reports the New York Times: customer service reps, bookkeepers, payroll clerks and HR specialists, “who fly under the radar but collectively account for tens of millions of jobs…”
They are spread across the country and throughout the economy, working in every industry, in big cities and small towns, at major corporations and mom-and-pop businesses… These jobs typically offer a middle-class salary or a pathway to achieving one — much as manufacturing jobs did for men before decades of globalisation and automation wiped many of them away… For now, such an outcome is a fear, not a forecast. Despite high-profile layoffs in tech and finance, there is little firm evidence that AI has hurt the labour market as a whole.

Economists have become increasingly convinced that disruptions are likely, but they say it is too early to know where or how widespread they will be. They remain broadly sceptical of claims that the technology will lead to mass unemployment in the near future. Some AI industry leaders have walked back such predictions in recent weeks. But given the extraordinary pace at which companies are adopting AI — and at which the technology is improving — economists say policymakers need to consider the potential effects on the labour market. And they say they are concerned that the public debate has focused too much on software engineers and a relative handful of other high-status careers — lawyers, consultants, economists — rather than the workers who could be most vulnerable…

Economists at Northwestern University recently recalculated measures of AI exposure based on the makeup of the total workforce, not just the people using the technology. Administrative and front-line roles, such as customer service representatives, rose to the top of the list. “The most affected jobs are secretaries, are routine clerks,” said Michelle Yin, one of the working paper’s authors. “They’re not computer scientists or data scientists at all.”
The article also includes this counterpoint from an economist at the University of Illinois who has studied earlier waves of white-collar automation: that like other disruptive technologies, AI likely will also create new jobs. So the possibility exists AI will make workers more productive and allow them to earn more. “I would be cautious about just focusing on what are we losing as opposed to what are we going to gain on the other side.”

Linus Torvalds on AI, Junk Patches, Humans, and Godzilla

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Linus Torvalds once said LLMs might bring a 10X increase to programmer productivity. But speaking at Open Source Summit India 2026, he now says that number was “not scientific,” reports ZDNet. “That was pulled out of my ass number, obviously.”
Today, he continued, “we’re at the point where hopefully it creates more productivity than it takes away,” but “we certainly saw more junk being generated by LLMs than we saw useful code up until the like early this year.... it can actually be a huge drain on resources when it takes humans a lot of effort to figure out that, hey, this machine-generated report was not true.” Even now, he said, “most of the good ones require more than just the LLM,” because “we’ve had to push back quite a bit… if you find a bug with an LLM, it’s not enough to just ask the LLM to make a bug report and then throw it over the fence to us. We want to see a suggested patch; we want to see the human who ran the LLM act as a kind of back-and-forth.”

Torvalds described many AI-generated patches as “mindless band-aid kind of patches… they may fix the immediate problem, but the kind of bug remains, and it just is waiting in the hallway to hit you in another place.” For his own toy projects, he uses LLMs as prototypers: “I use them as a way to prototype things… quite often the code is not usable in that form, but it’s a great way to try something out,” while insisting that for kernel-level fixes, “LLMs, in my experience, have not been at that level yet.”

Torvalds acknowledged that some AI-found issues have been “absolutely, stunningly, I mean, interesting in a painful kind of way,” especially security problems that “show up in the technology press two days later.” Despite the embarrassment, he said, “I’m very much not a shoot-the-messenger kind of person. I think we’re much better off with LLMs finding bugs, even when they are embarrassing, and they are things that we should probably have found two decades ago.”
Torvalds also said he’s using AI “for my own toy projects… Every time I travel to some new place, and this is the first time I’ve been to India, I send the kids pictures of where I am, and for some strange reason, Godzilla seems to follow me around and gets added to those pictures.”

ZDNet notes that Torvalds concluded, “There are many useful and less useful uses for AI,” and “I think Godzilla is a great place to stop.”

Thanks to Slashdot reader joshuark for sharing the article.

Elon Musk And Sam Altman Spar On X After Apple Files OpenAI Lawsuit

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Elon Musk and Sam Altman criticized each other in new posts on X,” reports CNBC, “highlighting the billionaires’ long-standing tussle over OpenAI’s evolution.”
This week, SpaceX released the Grok 4.5 generative AI model, while OpenAI debuted its own GPT-5.6 Sol. For days, Musk and Altman have hyped up their respective releases, but on Saturday the rivalry got personal. In response to a post about Apple filing suit against OpenAI on Friday over alleged theft of trade secrets, Musk wrote, “Scam Altman strikes again ....” Minutes after his post, Musk doubled down, writing, “He takes scamming to a whole new level.” Next, Musk published a photo of Altman that included the words, “I’m doing this because I love it.”

“By ‘this’ he means scamming,” Musk wrote, including two rolling-on-the-floor-laughing emojis. Musk then replied to that post, writing, “He might literally love scamming more than any human alive!”

The flurry of social activity got Altman’s attention. "[H]omeboy you’re the one sellling public market investors on short-term space datacenters,” Altman wrote in an X post of his own that garnered over 11 million views.

“We start flying them next year. Maybe you can come see them if your parole officer approves,” Musk fired back.

Separately, Altman put Musk’s fresh wave of attention in the context of OpenAI’s fresh model release. "[T]here are a lot of benchmarks that suggest 5.6 sol is the best model in the world right now, but the most reliable way to tell is that elon is obsessed with me again,” Altman wrote on X.
Reacting to another post, Altman wrote that he was “not afraid of apple, but i have tremendous respect for them. s-tier company,” CNBC reports — leading to a sarcastic response from X’s head of product. “Incredible trade secrets as well, some of the best.”

And CNBC notes that Musk "replied with a face-with-tears-of-joy emoji.”

Yeah OpenAI is a scam

By thegarbz • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

How many years in a row has Musk promised FSD? How many people did he actually take money from only to never deliver the feature?

It just goes to show that money can’t make someone not a pathetic crybaby.

Awful people are trading insults on Twitter

By subreality • Score: 4, Funny Thread

This is not news for nerds. This is not stuff that matters.

I know that ship sailed long ago, and slashdot is kinda mid-grade engagement bait these days, but come on, there is no pretense of substance in this one. It’s monkeys flinging poo on the front page. Please try to be better than this.

Cost

By eggstasy • Score: 3 Thread

Right now, we have AI models that are good enough, what we need is for someone to focus on making them affordable, because even the Enterprise level for Github Copilot doesn’t let you do anything remotely resembling the level of usage I was at before they changed their business model. I used to talk to Copilot all day long and I didn’t really do anything manually anymore, with excellent results. It coded a lot better than I ever did and since it freed me from mundane work I could focus on making an excellent OOP architecture with great performance and security. Including refactoring legacy code to bring it up to the level of quality you can get in minutes. Now instead of minutes everything takes me entire weeks. Ah the joys of old-fashioned artisanal coding. After 3 years I barely know how to code anymore.

Alien vs. Predator

By backslashdot • Score: 4 Thread

Whoever wins, we lose.

This is like the Gambino and Genovese crime families going at each other.

SK Hynix CEO Warns 2027 Will Be Memory’s ‘Worst Year’ Ever. Shortages May Outlast the Decade

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The CEO of SK Hynix, one of the three largest DRAM producers, predicted to Reuters that the memory industry will see its “worst-ever” supply shortages in 2027, reports the hardware/gaming news site Wccftech:
SK Hynix has also forecasted that, given the current market demand, they will fall way short of fulfilling the market demand, and that will continue beyond 2030. The comments from SK Hynix are in line with what Samsung and Micron executives have already said. Samsung has warned of 2027 being the worst year in terms of shortages and that things will continue this way till 2028 and beyond. Meanwhile, Micron has said that the current shortages are only the "first innings" and that both DRAM/NAND supply will be tight, as they are only able to meet 40-50% of the total market demand in the coming years.

Heightened demand from AI customers and multi-year agreements further put pressure on the market. The big three DRAM makers have already prioritized premium DRAM segments such as HBM and LPDDR5X, while commodity memory such as DDR5, DDR4, and entry-level LPDDR RAM has taken a back seat. While these have boosted the profits of SK Hynix, Micron, and Samsung, they have devastated the consumer segment, which is facing the worst kind of price hikes that are affecting all sorts of components and platforms, including PCs, Smartphones, Consoles, etc…

SK Hynix, like Samsung and Micron, is also preparing to embark on a multi-year and multi-billion dollar expansion plan with new fabs and facilities being laid out across South Korea. SK Hynix is also considering the construction of Fabs in the US, Japan, and Southeast Asia, though the final plans are yet to be cemented. Micron recently started construction of its new facility that will be used for DRAM production. As SK Hynix proudly marks its Nasdaq debut, its CEO’s sobering forecast serves as a clear reminder: the memory industry is entering its most challenging chapter yet. With 2027 poised to bring the worst supply shortages in history and tight conditions likely persisting beyond 2030, the AI boom is reshaping the entire semiconductor landscape.

This AI thing can go downhill in a week or less

By itsme1234 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

… not that you’d want that with the way they’re entrenched in all the financial everything going around us but it’s possible for this to pop way faster than it built up.

Boom and Bust

By mistergrumpy • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
While the current situation seems unprecedented, semiconductor manufacturing has been a cyclical boom-bust business for pretty much forever. Ramp up as fast as possible for a year, make a giant backlog of parts the next year, lay almost everyone off, and then in another year start the cycle over. I’m glad I was able to work on the edges of the field and avoid the worst of it.

Hmm sounds legit..

By Mass Overkiller • Score: 3 Thread
CEO of memory company on the eve of their IPO says memory is in short supply and the prices are going to get worse (ie: higher). Yeah that’s not suspicious at all.

Re:Compulsory Licensing

By hwstar • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

No need to increase the workforce, just reallocate what is currently being produced or face compulsory licensing. Many countries have done this for pharmaceuticals, but it isn’t just limited to those. Just the mere threat of compulsory licensing should cause the memory companies to start re-allocating more memory to the PC and server sector. They will do anything to avoid the government taking away control of their IP. They would rather reallocate and retain control then be subject to compulsory licensing.

Nations that have formally utilized compulsory licensing in the past include:

Canada: Long used compulsory licensing, especially for pharmaceuticals, and streamlined its usage during public health crises like the COVID-19 pandemic.

United States: Has used or threatened to use compulsory licensing for medical products and government uses.

Germany & Italy: Have issued compulsory licenses, with Germany utilizing them for patents relating to medical treatments.Israel: Invoked compulsory licenses during health emergencies to secure medications.Middle-Income Countries:India: Issued a famous compulsory license in 2012 for a life-saving cancer drug (Sorafenibtosylate).

Thailand & Indonesia: Have a history of issuing compulsory licenses to lower the costs of HIV/AIDS and hepatitis treatments.

Russia: Has used compulsory licensing for critical drugs such as Remdesivir and continues to utilize it as an active legal tool.Brazil: Issued compulsory licenses in the past to combat high prices on essential antiretroviral medications.

Re:Stop selling it to AI datacenters

By alvinrod • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Why shouldn’t they sell to whoever is willing to pay them the most? At best a few honest people get some cheap RAM and a bunch of scalpers make a tidy profit selling the RAM they bought to the data centers. At least if the manufacturers are the ones making the additional money they can invest back into production capacity. The same cannot be said when it’s the scalpers who are soaking up the excess money being left on the table.

WSJ Reports on ‘Hard-line Activists Ramping Up for the War With AI’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Wall Street Journal says “an intense 27-year-old activist who had been leading sit-ins at OpenAI to protest the dangers of AI” was just part of a larger movement.

“The Bay Area’s AI boom is drawing young disillusioned men and women to join the fight against it. They are upending their lives and leaving behind careers for think tanks, nonprofits and street protest groups.”
Their cause is now riding a surge of anti-AI backlash. Many Americans are souring on the technology amid mass layoffs, data center sprawl, reports of chatbot-fueled attacks by unstable users and hacking tools that have panicked cybersecurity professionals. Seventy percent of U.S. adults believe AI will cost jobs, and 55% believe it will do more harm than good in their daily lives, according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll. But for activists on the front lines, the driving fear is often more dramatic: human extinction. They cling to dire predictions, like Geoffrey Hinton’s. The Nobel laureate, dubbed the “godfather of AI” for his work on artificial neural networks, warns of a 10% to 20% chance AI will wipe out humans.

At its most extreme and troubling end, some believe they must stop an AI apocalypse by any means necessary. In April, an unknown assailant fired 13 shots at the home of an Indianapolis councilman, leaving a note: “no data centers.” That same month, authorities arrested a 20-year-old Texas college student for an attack on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home in San Francisco, and charged him with attempted murder and arson. The student was carrying an anti-AI document with a section on “our impending extinction,” according to a federal criminal complaint. He has pleaded not guilty and his lawyers have said his actions appear to have been driven by an “acute mental-health crisis, not a desire to harm.”

Disingenuous

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The vast majority of activists appear worried about a financial apocalypse not a human one. The vision where AI takes jobs and fucks over the environment whilst simultaneous oppressing us via improvements in mass surveillance. It’s not a war on AI it’s a war on the morons pushing flawed AI.

Responsibility not terror

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The real problem is that the companies are going to try and refuse the responsibility for the AI actions.

As in:

Yes my AI was empowered to set prices, but we did not want it to set a price less than a $1000 and it set a price of 10 cents. No we do not want to give up all other transactions the AI approved.

Yes the AI hired only christian white woman and illegally asked if they had children, but we did not mean to break the law. That was the LLM, not our fault.

Yes the AI illegally rejected every rental applicant that was single but we did not mean to violate the Fair Housing Law. We never told it to do that, it is just the algorithm.

You can’t sue us if we did not intend to break the law.

No. They can definitely sue you for unintenionally breaking the law.

smh

By boneglorious • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I’m just throwing out ideas here, but maybe the current crop of AI execs shouldn’t have gone around issuing dire warnings while claiming they had no choice but to continue developing the very technology they were warning about. That has pretty predictable consequences.

Re:Disingenuous

By ambrandt12 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The financial apocalypse will cause the human one.
It’s a war on those who think that AI should control every aspect of our lives.

Poor logic

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

They are upending their lives and leaving behind careers for think tanks, nonprofits and street protest groups.

That should read “for think tanks, nonprofits or street protest groups”. The Venn diagram of people smart enough to work for think tanks and those who engage in street protests is the empty set.

Is the COSMIC Desktop Getting Better Than KDE and GNOME?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“While KDE and GNOME dominate the landscape, a relative newcomer is starting to make waves with features other desktops still don’t fully support,” argues XDA Developers:
Linux 7.0 was the first release of the kernel to officially support Rust, but COSMIC has been all-in on Rust since the very beginning, and COSMIC 1.1 finally stripped all the leftovers of C language from the desktop. It no longer has any traces of Nautilus (the GNOME file manager), and then there’s now a COSMIC-native system monitor to replace the GNOME System Monitor, so you have even fewer chances of being afflicted by C-related problems. [The article calls COSMIC’s system monitor “much better at showing detailed information about everything from processes to network and disk usage compared to the GNOME and KDE alternatives.”]

Stacking Windows
As someone who used to love following Windows news, one of the most disheartening announcements was when Microsoft gave up on Sets, a feature that essentially turned every app window into a tab you could combine with other apps in the same window. I never thought I’d see that feature again, until COSMIC came along. Simply called “stacking”, COSMIC has a feature that is exactly what Sets was supposed to be, though this time, you have more control. By default, apps still open in their proper, typical windows, with a title bar as you’d expect. But if you do want to combine multiple apps into one, you can right-click the title bar (or press Super + S) to enable stacking for that window. Then, simply drag another window over that one to start stacking them as tabs. This essentially gives you a whole new way to create “workspaces”, as you can have a single window with all the tools you need, so you don’t need to jump between different windows all the time, and you can keep a given window focused on a specific workload, but have multiple apps within it. It’s a great reminder of what Microsoft took from us, too.

Tiling, But On Demand
Tiling windows is one of those features some power users simply love, and yes, there are ways to make it happen on KDE and GNOME with third-party apps or extensions, but those aren’t ideal. It’s an extra step to set them up, and very often they don’t play nice with all the features those desktops offer, especially as new updates come out and those tools may have a hard time keeping up with the development of the desktops themselves. COSMIC is fantastic because not only does it have built-in window tiling, it’s entirely controllable by the user. You can set any workspace to use tiling or floating windows depending on your preference, all completely independent of each other, and you can also choose the new default behavior for new workspaces so things are always tuned to your preferences. You can turn tiling on or off for a given workspace easily, and of course, even while tiling is on, you can allow certain apps to ignore it and still float above others. Not all these capabilities are exclusive to COSMIC, but to have this kind of feature built in with this level of control is still leagues better than anything KDE or GNOME offer in this regard.
The article argues COSMIC also makes customization extremely simple without stifling your options (like tweaking color options for your desktop). “This desktop environment just keeps getting better, and it’s quickly establishing itself as a major competitor to long-standing alternatives.”

Cosmic is not ready for prime time

By Cray • Score: 5, Informative Thread

After waiting on upgrading Pop!_OS 22.04 to Pop!_OS 24.04 with Cosmic for as long as I could (in hopes of avoiding the bugs I assumed would come with moving from Gnome to a brand new desktop environment) I finally did.

Cosmic is not ready for prime time. The number of bugs and PRs I’ve had to submit since switching to it is a deal breaker if this is your daily driver OS and desktop environment.

The components of Cosmic release very very frequently (every couple weeks). Upside is, when you encounter a bug, if you can write the PR to fix it and submit it, it’ll get merged and deployed to the global user base of Cosmic in a couple weeks. Downside is that at this release frequency, the software isn’t getting vetted at the level a production desktop environment needs to be. Example, I reported a bug in the compositor, a core developer fixed the bug and deployed it, but introduced a new bug (that is obvious as soon as you use Cosmic).

I have System76 hardware and so I’d like to run Pop!_OS, but I’m thinking of switching to Ubuntu 24.04 just so I can be on 24.04 but not be running Cosmic.

Some examples
* Delete a line in the editor and it crashes : https://github.com/pop-os/cosm…
* Page-up and Page-down don’t work in the file browser : https://github.com/pop-os/cosm…
* Windows shrink each time you move them : https://github.com/pop-os/cosm…
* After fixing the shrinking windows, windows when maximized extend outside the display : https://github.com/pop-os/cosm…

The guy doesn’t know a first thing about Plasma 6

By sombragris • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Tiling windows is one of those features some power users simply love, and yes, there are ways to make it happen on KDE and GNOME with third-party apps or extensions,

For KDE Plasma, tiling is available natively via a dragging/snapping mechanism since well… basically forever. No need for any extension, special script, or extra plugin. There are stuff that improve tiling, but basic tiling functionality is there right from the start.

I work as a translator, and I usually have a virtual desktop with two windows side by side, one for the source text, other for the ongoing translation, and I use KWin’s tiling mechanics that come in Plasma by default to arrange these windows.

This is just an example. TFA guy obviously is talking about something he doesn’t know at all.

AI-driven Datacenter Builds Increased Microsoft’s Emissions 25% In One Year

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft released its 2026 Environmental Sustainability Report showing that last year it matched its entire electricity consumption with renewable energy, reports The Register. “The bad news is it also increased greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 25%" — mostly due to datacenter construction and a decision to stop purchasing some renewable energy certificates:
In 2020, Microsoft set itself the goal of becoming “carbon-negative" by 2030. Its own figures show emissions heading only upwards, from 13 million tons of CO2 equivalent in 2020, to 20 million tons in 2025. However, Microsoft estimates that without the carbon reduction initiatives it has already put in place, emissions would now stand at 34 million tons…

For the first time, Microsoft claims to have replenished more [water] than it withdrew during 2025, returning 14,278 million liters (3,771 million gallons). Elsewhere, the corporation says its Circular Centers program reused 92% of decommissioned servers and their components.

And after all that.....

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 3 Thread

copilot is still a mess.

Id Co-founders Carmack and Romero Respond to Microsoft’s Layoffs

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“I have been trying to find something meaningful to say about the Id Software layoffs,” John Carmack posted Thursday to his 2.8 million followers on X.com:
My “Microsoft will probably be a good steward of the brand” statement isn’t aging well, and this is certainly going to dampen the mood of the founder reunion at QuakeCon next month.

I’m saddened, but I can’t muster anger or outrage over it. I don’t have access to the books, but I suspect that Id Software was a marginal business from Microsoft’s perspective. I believe the reports that Minecraft revenues have been carrying several other studios.

To continue being produced long term, games need to succeed, not just be beloved. Games are competing with every other option for spending your leisure time and money, and the competition is brutal. You can’t rule out the possibility that executives are idiots, but that shouldn’t be your default belief. I don’t think there is any obvious path that would have doubled the revenue from Id games.

Could they have gotten more with a different pricing strategy? Could they have created more things for fans to buy? Could they have cost effectively marketed in a way that reached more players that would have loved and bought the games? Could they have changed the game designs and broadened the appeal to more players without alienating existing ones? Could they have produced the games at a lower cost, faster or cheaper? I really don’t know.

The game isn’t over yet, and I hope the studio rallies through.
Id Software co-founder John Romero also shared his thoughts on X.com:
I’m so sorry for everyone at id Software affected by these layoffs. I know what it feels like to leave id while id goes on. It’s a strange and painful thing to step away from a place that holds so much of your work, friendships and history.

The people at id have done a great job moving that legacy forward. DOOM, Quake, and Wolfenstein are not easy names to carry on, especially in today’s industry. The last few games showed real care, skill and respect for what those worlds mean to people.
Romero also expressed his hope for “digital preservation” of Id’s ongoing history (including code and assets). “I’m thinking of everyone at id today, and everyone else affected by yesterday’s layoffs. Romero Games was there a year ago. I know how devastating it is, and my heart’s with all of you.

“Four Xbox studios are already out the door,” noted IGN, but shared some thoughts about the future:
Some have expressed concern that id Software would be unable to lead development on any new games in its current state, and that it might be relegated to support studio status. But in a new statement [posted to id Software’s page on X.com] id Software said it was now at the staffing level it was back when it made the much-loved 2016 Doom reboot — and insisted it was still capable of making “great games.”

“While our studio was impacted, those changes were spread across teams. We still have the crew we need to build the games and tech we’re known for… We’re going to keep building the great games and tech that have defined us for the past 35 years, and we’re looking forward to seeing you at QuakeCon this August.”

Carmack makes a good point

By cascadingstylesheet • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

To continue being produced long term, games need to succeed, not just be beloved.

Romero

By geek • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

“I know what it feels like to leave id while id goes on. It’s a strange and painful thing to step away "

They aren’t “stepping away” John. They are being kicked to the fucking curb

What an insightful comment…

By Pollux • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“Games are competing with every other option for spending your leisure time and money, and the competition is brutal.” —John Carmack

I had never thought about games in this way before. When I fell in love with Doom (and gaming) as a teenager, I didn’t have any social media & smartphones competing for my time, because they didn’t exist. Lots more time for gaming. The games back then were made to reward you for investing more time in the game itself. There was a joy in it, discovering all the hidden places that rewarded you with power-ups. Finish a level only to find out you found 87% of the secrets? That’s when the OCD in your brain kicks in, you re-load the level, and hit spacebar on every inch of wall space you can can muster until you find that hidden BFG-9000.

Today’s “games” don’t try to reward you in that classic sense anymore. They’ve turned gameplay into a casino, where you grind away for six hours hoping for that rare-item drop. They can’t beat the addictive components that make up social media, so instead they incorporated some of them into the gameplay…If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em, I guess. The only winning move is not to play.

Ok sure

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Certainly appreciate the history of these two in the industry but Romero was canned, what, like 30 years ago because of ego issues? He obviously didn’t care about the places legacy that much. Both of them are ego monsters tbh so they really must be soaking in folks asking them for their opinions here.

Carmack also didn’t have to sell to Zenimax in the first place and if they were in need of an acquisition to survive then it would have been him making those layoffs instead. He also apparently made the call that Bethesda couldn’t use id’s engines for Elder Scrolls or Fallout, probably a mistake in the long term i think driven by ego as id had just as much if not more success as a tool develop than a game developer. And then he goes to work for Facebook of all places and threw his lot 100% with Zuck and Palmer Luckey. A talented programmer but obviously suspect judgement. He got his money.

There’s a Ship Of Theseus question with game studios, once you’ve replaced all the key members is it still the same besides the name?

Re:Romero

By serafean • Score: 4, Funny Thread

They are being given an offer they cannot refuse of a new and exciting opportunity to go up and forward in their professional lives.

Facial Recognition in UK Shops Will Soon Instantly Alert Police About Offenders

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Facial recognition technology in U.K. shops “will soon alert police in real time to the presence of serious offenders,” reports The Guardian, “with civil liberties groups warning of a ‘dangerous escalation’ towards surveillance and criminalisation in the retail sector.”
Facewatch, a facial recognition system used by more than 100 businesses including Sainsbury’s, B&M and Spar to monitor thieves, said it was launching a UK-first feature to “alert police instantly when the most serious offenders trigger a live facial recognition match”. Facewatch’s chief executive, Nick Fisher, said the “unique technical development” would be launched in autumn and would warn police in an average of four seconds when the “worst offenders” were flagged on its network… Charlie Whelton, the policy and campaigns officer at [civil liberties nonprofit] Liberty, said it was concerned about this “untested, opaque development” and the way facial recognition technology had been allowed to “proliferate without anything to govern it”.

“It’s not against the law to walk into a shop even if you’ve committed crimes in the past,” he said. “The idea of calling the police on somebody who hasn’t committed a crime, but there’s a concern they might, is really upending the way we do things. And of course, it’s not infallible. These systems do make mistakes, and it’s very hard to argue with that when it happens to you.” A number of people have been forced to leave shops after being falsely identified by Facewatch technology as a shoplifter, with some describing it as “Orwellian” and saying they felt as though they were “guilty until proven innocent”…

The use of the Facewatch technology looks set to quickly expand, with Sainsbury’s recently announcing plans to increase its use from 55 stores to more than 200 by the end of the year. Facewatch said it alerted retailers almost 300,000 times that a “known repeat offender” had entered a store during the first six months of 2026, and that its system allowed staff to intervene “before theft, abuse or violence could occur or escalate”… [E]xperts argue the use of facial recognition technology in shops to catch shoplifters is disproportionate. Nuala Polo, the UK public policy lead at the Ada Lovelace Institute, which studies the impact of AI on society, said: “There are other, much less intrusive means that you can use to catch shoplifters where you don’t need to be scanning millions of faces every day, virtually without consent....”

The campaign group Big Brother Watch has criticised police for “inserting themselves into this cowboy operation” and said people would be matched against “a secret blacklist compiled by unaccountable businesses and private security guards”.

Re:it’s always the “worst”

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It already has been making false positive matches. There have been several stories about people randomly accosted as they entered stores like B&M, with the security staff claiming they were criminals and often breaking the law themselves in the process.

Because the database is shared by several different chains, it’s something that you can’t ignore if it falsely flags you. You need to get them to remove your face from it, and ideally claim some compensation for the misuse of your biometric data. The baseline is £250, but I’d be looking for at least £750 due to the hassle and embarrassment caused.

“disproportionate”

By Arnonyrnous Covvard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s cheaper than the loss to shoplifting. It’s not disproportionate.

Anybody who has ever tried to run a business knows that there is an absolute deluge of scammers and thieves targeting businesses of any size, and getting some authority to act even on direct evidence is next to impossible. Facial recognition systems on top of pervasive video surveillance are a form of vigilantism and exist because as a society we seem to have decided that “petty” crime is just fine - not even fined. If you don’t fend for yourself, you get fleeced. Being allowed to go into a shop, without being personally known and no other form of reputation, is a privilege born from trust created through a functioning society with laws that are enforced. Take away the enforcement, and in some cases even the laws, then the trust and privileges they afford us all are going away.

Police reaction?

By TJHook3r • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Given that British police routinely fail to be interested in burglaries, bike thefts, car thefts etc, at they really going to pay any attention to an alert that an offender is in a store? Shop security are toothless - if a shoplifter gets hurt, guess who gets penalized?

Re:Makes false positives expensive

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

English courts use guideline figures for wrongful arrest/false imprisonment: the starting point is around £500 for the first hour of loss of liberty, with a full 24-hour wrongful detention normally attracting about £3,000 total (some firms cite closer to £1,000-1,400 for the first hour, £6-7k for 24 hours, depending on aggravating factors). Even five-minute detentions have resulted in payouts around £200. Rates taper the longer detention goes on, the first hour is compensated more heavily than hour 20, on the logic that initial shock matters more than continued duration. On top of basic damages, courts can add aggravated damages (distress, humiliation) and, rarely, exemplary damages up to around £50,000 for serious police misconduct, though that requires proving something like malice or oppressive conduct, not just an honest mistake.

Re:Makes false positives expensive

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Like the US, the UK HAS NO ID cards.

10 Million Cubans Suffer Nationwide Blackout - For The Second Time This Week

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Associated Press reports:
An islandwide blackout struck Cuba on Friday for the second time this week as the nation of nearly 10 million people grapples with a crumbling power grid and fuel shortages stemming from a U.S. energy blockade…

Authorities reported that they have already begun restoring power to some areas. On Monday, another massive blackout affected nearly 10 million people nationwide. Authorities reported during the week that service was gradually being restored from that outage.
“While total blackouts have become increasingly common in the Caribbean country, it’s unusual for back-to-back ones to hit just days apart…”

The US strategy

By peterww • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

10 million people within spitting distance of America who now have a *renewed* reason for revenge. This administration is filled with geniuses.

Re:Picking on Cuba

By arglebargle_xiv • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you want to understand international politics right now, it’s the US led world in favor of Pax Americana

That may have been the case until about 20-30 years ago, but now it’s most of the world wanting rules-based order up against an increasingly isolationist US led, if you can call it that, by a rapidly dementing authoritarian. The position “leader of the free world” has been vacant for at least 20 years.

Re:Picking on Cuba

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 5, Informative Thread

… spread of democracy.

That was never the point of US policy: The history of Iran and Cuba is ample evidence of that.

It was about making every tinpot dictator protect the US economy, not the Russian economy, usually at significant cost to the local people. That’s precisely what caused the ‘rogue’ nations of Iran and Cuba.

Re:Picking on Cuba

By Epeeist • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

While I understand that Cuba is currently under the thumb of an oppressive communist dictatorship

How long (in decades) has the US had Cuba under sanctions? It is a hypothetical, but what do you think the country would have been like had those sanctions not existed?

Re:Picking on Cuba

By gtall • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“Trump has been taking out the vassal states (or allies) of China one by one.”

Bullshit, la Presidenta has been taking out targets of opportunity because he thinks he will get political gain out of doing it. Venezuela was easy, they were looking the other way when their dictator got stolen. And la Presidenta left the dictator’s regime in place to continue to terrorize its people. China will have no trouble funding the new government which is the same as the old government.

Iran is just sheer stupidity. All the experts said precisely what Iran would do and Iran did precisely that. Unfortunately for la Presidenta, he and his rodent, Hegseth, fired all the experts or at least the ones willing to give truthful advice. Now we have an even more virulent regime in Iran, but la Presidenta did unify its people. Before this, they wanted to see the regime’s heads on pikes. Now they want to see his head on a pike.

And if that dumbass wanted to screw China, he’d screw Russia which is now getting into bed with China, N. Korea is just icing for the Great Putini. Now Putin has his bitch in the Oval Office, Israel is an outcast, and the U.S. economy is headed down the rat hole with the rest of la Presidenta’s “businesses”.

Meta Removes Controversial AI Feature On Instagram After Backlash

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Meta has axed a controversial feature that allowed users to modify photos from public Instagram accounts using AI,” reports TechCrunch:
The feature, which wasn’t designed to alert a user if their photos were used in this way, prompted immediate backlash… The company issued a blog post Friday announcing that it was removing the feature. Puck News founding partner Dylan Byers was the first to share the company’s decision… Byers notes that the decision to do away with the feature came “amid scrutiny from users and talent agencies, including CAA.”

What reallu impresses me in this story

By Pope Raymond Lama • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Is that with all the data they collect, anyone in there could ever imagine any other outcome for the public reception of this feature.

People Keep Sneaking Into an Empty IBM Campus - and Then Getting Arrested

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Since February, New York state police have arrested 48 people for trespassing on a former IBM campus in Somers, New York, reports the Wall Street Journal. 30 of the arrests were teenagers.
The long-vacant site has become a magnet for so-called urban explorers, who prowl abandoned malls, hospitals, power plants, amusement parks, factories and any other disused structure they can breach… [I]t’s been turbocharged by artsy videos on Instagram and TikTok that spur others to create their own posts, luring still more curiosity seekers… In Somers, social-media images of the old IBM campus — a sprawling, pyramid-studded 1980s complex designed by the late I.M. Pei’s firm — show dystopian scenes: busted windows, tossed rooms and graffitied walls. But they also give eerie glimpses of conference rooms and cubicles unchanged since IBM left a decade ago, as if employees had fled the daily grind one day and never returned…

One man in his mid-20s faces felony charges; police allege he had a loaded 9mm gun and took a Sony camera and power strip among other souvenirs. Andrew Proto, a defense lawyer, said “a 15-second clip” isn’t worth a criminal record… Proto said he has represented or advised several minors arrested on the campus. The Somers town court clerk said some defendants received a 6-month “adjournment in contemplation of dismissal,” meaning charges will be dropped and their arrest sealed if they avoid trouble. Some explorers who have posted about the IBM site say they follow an observe-and-preserve ethos and reject vandalism. They say they’re driven by curiosity, the thrill of roaming forbidden spaces and a zeal to document discoveries — and that they’re careful and know their limits.

“It actually gives me hope when I hear that kids are out there getting into trouble,” says Bradley Garrett, a cultural geographer and author of the book “Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City,” about his own urbex adventures. He sees urban exploration as “a gateway drug in a good way, sometimes, into intellectual curiosity about history and culture.” But Garrett said popular spots can be “loved to death” online — and then shut down, looted or set ablaze.
“Trespassers were blamed for a March 30 fire, reports a local newspaper, “that damaged one of the buildings and required volunteer firefighters to spend three hours extinguishing the blaze.”

He loved that thing!

By Tablizer • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I was just looking for Milton’s Swingline stapler.

There are probably cooler old IBM sites to visit

By leonbev • Score: 5, Informative Thread

That old Somers site has to be pretty picked over and vandalized by this point. Urban explorers should probably check out the old IBM data center in Southbury instead, which wasn’t abandoned until late 2024.

I wonder if my old OS/2 mouse pad is still in the file cabinet where I left it…

Good video

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Here’s a good video about the site. It’s rather impressive. https://youtu.be/DjQ2PAgUcM8?i…

I Explored Em’!

By Arzaboa • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I explored IBM campuses LONG before they were defunct. I was there when people roamed them halls and tunnels.

I had blueprints, and plans and I knew all the hidey holes.

Pretty much, physically boring. Tunnels were only for the pipes and wires. No big secrets or bunkers.

The only interesting stuff was on the raised floor; who was doing what and where.

That’s all virtually gone. Not worth getting arrested anymore for that stuff in an old IBM data center. Its all in a different data center now.


A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots. - Quote Marcus Garvey

Re:Aren’t guns legal?

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Yeah, that’s why they mentioned the ancient Sony camera he lifted.

“Crime with a gun” is a separate crime according to NY.

SCOTUS will strike those down eventually. It’s like saying “crime while praying” if it’s a right.

Obviously he wasn’t using the gun to jack a Betacam. He was probably worried about crackheads in there for the copper.

How the FSF Sysadmins are Blocking Botnets with reaction

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
For nearly two years the Free Software Foundation has been fighting web crawlers (including many aggressively scraping training data for AI models). A botnet controlling about five million IPs hit one system for six months in 2025. Their systems administrator wrote this week that they view these as distributed denial-of-service attacks.

How are they fighting back?
We noticed patterns in the scrapers that were abnormal, which gave us material for writing regular expressions. Searching for the regular expression then gave us a large lists of IP addresses. Looking up the origin of those IP addresses revealed that some of the crawlers were using botnets of residential IP addresses to scrape faster and avoid detection. We looked for what kinds of botnets might be generating the kind of traffic that we were seeing, and one that we suspected was called the “Vo1d” botnet, comprised of smart TVs running some sort of compromised app… We got confirmation that at least some of the botnet traffic hitting GNU Savannah was originating through the Vo1d/Popa botnet.

We placed our regular expressions in fail2ban, and found that we were hitting the maximum rules that could be added to UFW firewall rules on our systems which showed degradation around 65,000 rules… We learned about ipset and configured fail2ban to add IP addresses that it found to IP sets. Using ipset, we kept building larger IP sets and did not find instability with as large as five million rules…

We eventually found a promising project on Framasoft’s forge Framagit called reaction written by ppom… After we ran into scaling issues with our initial implementation, we developed a much faster implementation where the reaction shutdown process would export the IP sets to disk and the reaction startup process would restore the IP sets. This allowed us to have nearly instantaneous restarts of the service to apply new rules. We published both of our configurations upstream to reaction’s wiki so that everyone can benefit from it. reaction’s getting started documentation now leads to the method that we proposed…

Many sysadmins know about fail2ban, but not enough people know about reaction. I am very grateful to ppom for the help they have provided and for the tremendous project they have released to the world with reaction. We have implemented other defenses as well, but reaction is doing the majority of the automated work keeping our sites online.

CGNAT

By Bert64 • Score: 3 Thread

Much of the world is forced to use CGNAT to access legacy IPv4 sites, and many users are stuck with either no IPv6 or very lousy implementations (eg rapidly changing prefixes etc)…
You have one infected machine and it gets the shared gateway blocked, and then other users of the same provider are unable to access anything.

A lot of people are affected by this, but often don’t know the reason. Site operators in developed countries often don’t care or don’t understand how users elsewhere have to suffer with CGNAT.

Example: https://www.reddit.com/r/Conve…

Follow the money

By ISayWeOnlyToBePolite • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Paying someone for data scraped by compromised smart TVs to train your AI sound if not downright illegal like several lawsuit waiting to happen. Not laying this at the FSF doorstep, but asking is there any movement on this from anywhere?

Re:Follow the money

By ewhac • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Oh, no, it’s perfectly “legal.” You “agreed” to allow your TV to be used like this in the EULA when you installed the app. ( https://blog.includesecurity.c… )

Centralise the karma

By buchner.johannes • Score: 3 Thread

Where do the lists created by fail2ban and reaction ultimately go? I understand that these are local, but would it make sense to make a karma server where people can look up whether an IP is likely untrustworthy? Such a karma list may help prioritize traffic and help ISPs/providers identify that they are infected.

DuckDuckGo’s Browser Now Blocks Most YouTube Ads

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Nerds.xyz reports:
DuckDuckGo just gave its browser a feature that a lot of people have been waiting for. The privacy-focused browser can now block most video ads on YouTube, letting users watch videos without sitting through the pre-roll and mid-roll interruptions that have become part of everyday life on the platform. The feature is already enabled by default for iPhone, Windows, and Mac users running the latest version of the browser. Android users can turn it on manually… with DuckDuckGo planning to enable it by default in a future update…

To make it work, DuckDuckGo relies on the same community-maintained filter lists used by uBlock Origin, along with some of its own compatibility rules. The company says you might notice a bit of extra buffering before a video starts, but once playback begins, most ads should be gone.
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli argues that the feature raises questions about how creators are compensated when ad revenue is bypassed.

In the beginning

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Informative Thread

In the beginning, websites hosted their own ads. Then they farmed them out to someone else to manage, then that was (almost instantly) abused to deliver malware, then people started using adblockers and websites started implementing adblocker detection and refusing to serve people with such protections enabled.

Nobody seems to be willing to route both the original video and the ads through the same server to seamlessly splice the ads in and make ad detection and suppression more or less impossible.

Pffft

By spaceman375 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I use firefox under linux with ublock origin and Privacy Badger. I haven’t seen any of these ads since people started bitching about them, and I watch youtube almost every day. I suppose this makes it easier for windows & mac users, but they should probably be running their browsers in a vm anyway just to avoid malware.

Firefox + uBlock Origin

By kbahey • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I use Firefox + uBlock Origin , on Linux as well as Android.
No ads in YouTube at all …

And there is a bonus: videos continue to play, even when the tab isn’t the on that has focus. Handy for listening to music, while reading.

is Brian living under a rock?

By snowshovelboy • Score: 3 Thread

Slashdot reader Brian Fagioli argues that the feature raises questions about how creators are compensated when ad revenue is bypassed.

Creators can make sponsored content, they can run their own ads inside their video, they can do patreon, they can paywall their content. Most creators on youtube don’t see any ad revenue at all, so I’m not sure Brian’s question is in good faith.

I’d guess what he really wants to know is how google shareholders will be compensated.

“part of every day life”

By diffract • Score: 3 Thread
not for those of us with uBlock Origin and SponsorBlock

Orbital Datacenter Plans Need an Environmental Review, FCC Told

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Environmental groups want America’s FCC “to slam the brakes on orbital datacenters,” writes The Register.

They’re arguing for an environmental impact assessment for what could be 1 million satellites:
Earthjustice, acting on behalf of DarkSky International, Environment America, and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), filed a petition this week… The filing doesn’t target any single company. Instead, it asks the regulator to put the entire emerging orbital datacenter sector on hold while it assesses the cumulative effects of proposals from SpaceX, Starcloud, Blue Origin, Cowboy Space, and any similar applications that follow. According to the petition, those proposals collectively seek “well over a million datacenter satellites” in low Earth orbit.... " increasing the existing volume of satellites in low-earth orbit by multiple orders of magnitude.”

The groups argue that the FCC is trying to apply licensing rules written for much smaller satellite constellations to an entirely new class of infrastructure. “If ever a situation warranted a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement [PEIS], it is this one,” the petition says. It argues that a single review would allow the agency to examine “the risks, alternatives, needs, costs, and impacts of this sudden transformation of Earth’s exosphere” before deciding whether any of the projects are in the public interest. The petition raises concerns about rocket launch emissions, pollutants released as satellites burn up during atmospheric reentry, depletion of the ozone layer, orbital debris, light pollution, impacts on wildlife, and interference with astronomy.

It also argues that the combined effects of these constellations cannot be understood by evaluating applications one at a time.... “It is difficult to imagine a better example of multiple projects presenting essentially identical impacts and risks that compound synergistically and cumulatively than the present proposals…” The petition argues that the FCC’s current approach, which generally treats satellite licenses as categorically excluded from detailed environmental review, is no longer fit for proposals measured not in dozens or thousands of spacecraft but in hundreds of thousands and, potentially, millions.

If the FCC agrees, orbital datacenter operators will have a mountain of paperwork to clear before sending their hardware skyward.

Solar fricken roadways all over again

By Powercntrl • Score: 3 Thread

I’m really not seeing what the advantage is of putting data centers in space that can’t be accomplished less expensively down here on good old terra firma. That was the same problem with solar roadways. You want to put up solar panels? Great - we’ve yet to run out of places you can put them where they aren’t going to be driven over by cars.

I realize there’s some NIMBYism over data centers lately, but surely putting them somewhere in the middle of nowhere where nobody will complain is still orders of magnitude cheaper than space. Space is really, really not cheap.

There’s a bigger issue

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Orbital datacenters make no sense when you consider power consumption, radiator requirements, and speed of light delay communicating with the ground. The laws of physics say an orbital datacenter cannot work as efficiently as a terrestrial one.

My question, given that the datacenter concept is obviously a cover story, is what is it a cover story for? The most obvious is that it’s to cover stock market fraud, but if satellites actually go up, then there are other, more sinister possibilities.

Re:No jurisdiction

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Per the United Nations Outer Space Treaty, anything launched from a nation, or by a party under its authority, is the property and responsibility of that nation. If the companies launching or operating the satellites are American, then the USA is supposed to regulate them.

Re: Solar fricken roadways all over again

By bloodhawk • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Cooling in space is actually a lot harder than on earth. despite the movies depicting you instantly freezing in space it is actually the opposite that is the problem, a vaccuum is a perfect insulator, heat dissipation is very difficult in space.