Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. NASA Launches Artemis II Astronauts Around the Moon
  2. UFC-Que Choisir Takes Ubisoft To French Court Over the Crew Shutdown
  3. AI Can Clone Open-Source Software In Minutes
  4. Cloudflare Announces EmDash As Open-Source ‘Spiritual Successor’ To WordPress
  5. Sweden Swaps Screens For Books In the Classroom
  6. OnlyOffice Suspends Nextcloud Partnership For Forking Its Project Without Approval
  7. Anthropic Issues Copyright Takedown Requests To Remove 8,000+ Copies of Claude Code Source Code
  8. CEO of America’s Largest Public Hospital System Says He’s Ready To Replace Radiologists With AI
  9. Robotaxi Outage In China Leaves Passengers Stranded On Highways
  10. Startup Pitches ‘Brainless Clones’ To Serve the Role of Backup Human Bodies
  11. SpaceX Starlink Satellite Suffers Mysterious ‘Anomaly’ In Orbit
  12. Russia Goes After VPNs As ‘Great Crackdown’ Gathers Pace
  13. Volvo Shifts Polestar 3 Production Entirely To the US
  14. Oracle Cuts Thousands of Jobs Across Sales, Engineering, Security
  15. Top Brussels Official Urges Europeans To Work From Home, Drive Less As Energy Crisis Deepens

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.

NASA Launches Artemis II Astronauts Around the Moon

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
NASA’s Artemis II mission has launched four astronauts around the moon and back, marking humanity’s first crewed lunar voyage in 53 years and the first test flight of NASA’s Orion capsule and Space Launch System (SLS) with people on board. Five minutes into the flight, Commander Reid Wiseman saw the team’s target: “We have a beautiful moonrise, we’re headed right at it,” he said from the capsule. The Associated Press reports:
Artemis II set sail from the same Florida launch site that sent Apollo’s explorers to the moon so long ago. The handful still alive cheered this next generation’s grand adventure as the Space Launch System rocket thundered into the early evening sky, a nearly full moon beckoning some 248,000 miles (400,000 kilometers) away.

Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman led the charge into space with “Let’s go to the moon!” accompanied by pilot Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canada’s Jeremy Hansen. It was the most diverse lunar crew ever with the first woman, person of color and non-U.S. citizen riding in NASA’s new Orion capsule.

Carrying three Americans and one Canadian, the 32-story rocket rose from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center where tens of thousands gathered to witness the dawn of this new era. Crowds also jammed the surrounding roads and beaches, reminiscent of the Apollo moonshots in the 1960s and ‘70s. It is NASA’s biggest step yet toward establishing a permanent lunar presence.
Visit NASA’s Artemis II Launch Day blog for the latest updates.

Developing…

UFC-Que Choisir Takes Ubisoft To French Court Over the Crew Shutdown

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader Elektroschock writes:
When Ubisoft pulled the plug on The Crew’s servers without warning, players were left with a worthless game they’d already paid for. Now, consumer watchdog UFC-Que Choisir is fighting back, demanding gamers’ right to play regardless of publisher whims. Supported by the "Stop Killing Games” movement, this landmark case challenges unfair terms before the Creteil Judicial Court (Val-de-Marne near Paris), and aims to protect players from disappearing games.
The lawsuit that UFC-Que Choisir filed against Ubisoft on Tuesday alleges that the video game publisher “misled consumers about the permanence of their purchase and imposed abusive contractual clauses stripping players of ownership rights,” reports Reuters.

AI Can Clone Open-Source Software In Minutes

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
ZipNada writes:
Two software researchers recently demonstrated how modern AI tools can reproduce entire open-source projects, creating proprietary versions that appear both functional and legally distinct. The partly-satirical demonstration shows how quickly artificial intelligence can blur long-standing boundaries between coding innovation, copyright law, and the open-source principles that underpin much of the modern internet.

In their presentation, Dylan Ayrey, founder of Truffle Security, and Mike Nolan, a software architect with the UN Development Program, introduced a tool they call malus.sh. For a small fee, the service can “recreate any open-source project,” generating what its website describes as “legally distinct code with corporate-friendly licensing. No attribution. No copyleft. No problems.” It’s a test case in how intellectual property law — still rooted in 19th-century precedent — collides with 21st-century automation. Since the US Supreme Court’s Baker v. Selden ruling, copyright has been understood to guard expression, not ideas.

That boundary gave rise to clean-room design, a method by which engineers reverse-engineer systems without accessing the original source code. Phoenix Technologies famously used the technique to build its version of the PC BIOS during the 1980s. Ayrey and Nolan’s experiment shows how AI can perform a clean-room process in minutes rather than months. But faster doesn’t necessarily mean fair. Traditional clean-room efforts required human teams to document and replicate functionality — a process that demanded both legal oversight and significant labor. By contrast, an AI-mediated “clean room” can be invoked through a few prompts, raising questions about whether such replication still counts as fair use or independent creation.

Can AI clone lawyers & judges?

By haruchai • Score: 4, Funny Thread

because it seems there’s going to be a lot more IP infringement and it won’t be limited to open source

Clean room?

By Pinky’s Brain • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Even if you use an AI to extract an extremely condensed specification out of the source code, it’s hardly clean room if the LLM was pre-trained on the source code any way.

Not tested in court…

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“legally distinct code with corporate-friendly licensing. No attribution. No copyleft. No problems.”

They can claim that it is legally distinct, but until they win the lawsuit and appeals to set a legal precedent -it is not safe to make the assumption.

Re:Please start w/ ReactOS

By organgtool • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
How do you expect ReactOS to be stable and working when the purpose is to achieve feature-parity with Windows?

Is it really?

By Princeofcups • Score: 3 Thread

So it’s slow as fuck, with memory leaks, impossible to maintain, lacking comments, nasty race conditions, 10 times bigger than the original, uses 10 times the memory, freeze trying to open files.... you know, the coding stuff.

Let me know when we can see some head to head QA. Hey, maybe we are there. But I’ve not seen anything more than vague “proofs of concept.” I still want to see AI produce microcode for a new undocumented chop/board. Do you read it the API like a nursery rhyme?

Or to put it another way, if it relies on samples of code to exploit, how is it going to produce NEW code?

Cloudflare Announces EmDash As Open-Source ‘Spiritual Successor’ To WordPress

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
In classic Cloudflare fashion, the CDN provider used April Fool’s Day to unveil an actual, “not a joke” product. Today, the company announced EmDash — an open-source “spiritual successor” to WordPress that aims to solve plugin security. Phoronix reports:
With the help of AI coding agents, Cloudflare engineers have been rebuilding the WordPress open-source project “from the ground up.” EmDash is written entirely in TypeScript and is a server-less design. Making plug-ins more secure than the WordPress architecture, EmDash plug-ins are sandboxed and run in their own isolate. EmDash builds upon the Astro web framework. EmDash doesn’t rely on any WordPress code but is designed to be compatible with WordPress functionality. EmDash is open-source now under the MIT license.
The EmDash code is available on GitHub.

My inner editor is incensed.

By nightflameauto • Score: 3 Thread

Making plug-ins more secure than the WordPress architecture, EmDash plug-ins are sandboxed and run in their own isolate.

While technically you can use “isolate” as a noun, the usage here is in such an awkward state that it would make a line editor do the line editor equivalent of flipping a table and throwing a bottle of expensive scotch at the writer’s head while screaming, “Fix your shit!”

Also, let’s not burden EmDash with the historical baggage of Wordpress just because people are looking for an alternative. I mean, it sicks in its own special way, but it’s not *THAT* terrible. Yet. Move enough people to it and I’m sure it can get there, but no reason to start its race with all the baggage of Wordpress hanging on its neck.

Sweden Swaps Screens For Books In the Classroom

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
In 2023, the Swedish government announced that the country’s schools would be going back to basics, emphasizing skills such as reading and writing, particularly in early grades. After mostly being sidelined, physical books are now being reintroduced into classrooms, and students are learning to write the old-fashioned way: by hand, with a pencil or pen, on sheets of paper. The Swedish government also plans to make schools cellphone-free throughout the country.

Educational authorities have been investing heavily. Last year alone, the education ministry allocated $83 million to purchase textbooks and teachers’ guides. In a country with about 11 million people, the aim is for every student to have a physical textbook for each subject. The government also put $54 million towards the purchase of fiction and non-fiction books for students.

These moves represent a dramatic pivot from previous decades, during which Sweden — and many other nations — moved away from physical books in favor of tablets and digital resources in an effort to prepare students for life in an online world. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Nordic country’s efforts have sparked a debate on the role of digital technology in education, one that extends well beyond the country’s borders. US parents in districts that have adopted digital technology to a great extent may be wondering if educators will reverse course, too.
As for why Sweden is pivoting away from digital devices, researcher Linda Falth said the move was driven by several factors, including concerns over whether the digitization of classrooms had been evidence-based. “There was also a broader cultural reassessment,” Falth said. “Sweden had positioned itself as a frontrunner in digital education, but over time concerns emerged about screen time, distraction, reduced deep reading, and the erosion of foundational skills such as sustained attention and handwriting.”
Falth noted that proponents of reform believe that “basic skills — especially reading, writing, and numeracy — must be firmly established first, and that physical textbooks are often better suited for that purpose.”

Further reading: Digital Platforms Correlate With Cognitive Decline in Young Users

Too many distractions

By fropenn • Score: 3 Thread
The biggest problem with screen-based classrooms is that the devices themselves are not designed for that purpose. There’s too many games, chats, reminders, notices, updates, etc. etc. etc. that make it a fun and engaging device as a toy but terrible for maintaining concentration and focus on specific content. It is also more difficult for the teacher to be able to quickly look across a group of 30 and see who is doing the assigned task when the screens are all pointed away from the teacher (toward the student).

There are some features that are missing in physical books, such as the ability to long-tap on a word and get a definition, but those sorts of benefits do not outweigh the downsides.

Infinite scrolling …

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

… is broken on these book things. You reach the end of the text, then there’s this stupid number. And then what?

OnlyOffice Suspends Nextcloud Partnership For Forking Its Project Without Approval

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
darwinmac writes:
OnlyOffice has suspended its partnership with Nextcloud after the latter forked its editors into a new project called Euro-Office, according to a report from Neowin. The move comes just days after Nextcloud and partners like IONOS announced the fork as part of a broader push for European digital sovereignty. In a statement, the company accused the project of violating its licensing terms and international intellectual property law, claiming that Euro-Office uses its technology without proper compliance. OnlyOffice also pointed to missing attribution requirements and branding obligations tied to its AGPL-based licensing model.

As a result, its 8-year-old partnership, which allowed Nextcloud users to edit and collaborate on office documents right inside their own instance, has been suspended. OnlyOffice also accused Nextcloud of not behaving in a manner expected of a partner, alleging attempts to poach its employees and influence customers against the company. Nextcloud said it forked the OnlyOffice repository instead of collaborating with the company because the project is notoriously difficult to contribute to. It also pointed out that OnlyOffice is a Russian company with Russian employees who leave code comments in Russian. In addition to that, some users may feel uncomfortable using software that could be linked to the Russian government.

hmm

By nomadic • Score: 4, Funny Thread

At some point it just seems less exhausting to just use Office.

OnlyOffice

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

For people who like OnlyFans and/or The Office, you’re going to be disappointed. :-)

Re:hmm

By nashv • Score: 4, Informative Thread

There isn’t one. But there IS a need to be able to edit a single document with collaboratively with multiple people, and have decent reliability in changes being preserved and getting updated asynchronously.

At the moment, only Microsoft Office and Google Docs allow that. The browser is just a side-effect/perk of using web technologies to facilitate the above, and the fact that Google does everything in the browser as far as possible.

Online collab

By Elektroschock • Score: 3 Thread

Let’s face it, we now have four products:
- Then we have LibeOffice Online (resurrected)
- Collabora which originaed as a LO online fork.
- OnlyOffice , the Russians stranded in the Baltics
and
- Euro-Office - a fork of onlyoffice

plus from the public sector french La suite includes Cryptpad an no proper office suite
- Open desk is the German alternative at ZenDIS and includes Collabora.

I think Euro-Office will just be fine but the crucial question is how much staff they are able to amass to bring it up to speed.

Re:hmm

By higuita • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I notice that many people still point to openoffice… they should not! :)

OpenOffice is mostly abandoned, the latest Apache OpenOffice is v4.1.16, from November 2025, but 4.1 was released in 2014 !! 12 years and you only got minor bug fixes. There are almost no developers and changes in OpenOffice. Everything moved to LibreOffice! Oracle killed the OpenOffice by being oracle and when it was dead already, dump it to Apache Foundation that little could do. The brand is still in the mind of many people but everyone should really move to libreoffice already

check this timeline: https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

So people still in OpenOffice should migrate to LibreOffice, that i suspect will solve many of the problems compatibility they have in OpenOffice and get lot more new features and performance. OnlyOffice is also good and lets see the Euro-Office

Anthropic Issues Copyright Takedown Requests To Remove 8,000+ Copies of Claude Code Source Code

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic is using copyright takedown notices to try to contain an accidental leak of the underlying instructions for its Claude Code AI agent. According to the Wall Street Journal, “Anthropic representatives had used a copyright takedown request to force the removal of more than 8,000 copies and adaptations of the raw Claude Code instructions … that developers had shared on programming platform GitHub.” From the report:
Programmers combing through the source code so far have marveled on social media at some of Anthropic’s tricks for getting its Claude AI models to operate as Claude Code. One feature asks the models to go back periodically through tasks and consolidate their memories — a process it calls dreaming. Another appears to instruct Claude Code in some cases to go “undercover” and not reveal that it is an AI when publishing code to platforms like GitHub. Others found tags in the code that appeared pointed at future product releases. The code even included a Tamagotchi-style pet called “Buddy” that users could interact with.

After Anthropic requested that GitHub remove copies of its proprietary code, another programmer used other AI tools to rewrite the Claude Code functionality in other programming languages. Writing on GitHub, the programmer said the effort was aimed at keeping the information available without risking a takedown. That new version has itself become popular on the programming platform.

hohoho

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

After Anthropic requested that GitHub remove copies of its proprietary code, another programmer used other AI tools to rewrite the Claude Code functionality in other programming languages. Writing on GitHub, the programmer said the effort was aimed at keeping the information available without risking a takedown. That new version has itself become popular on the programming platform.

Talk about a money shot. If Anthropic argues that this use doesn’t wash away restrictions, then they’re also arguing that their software is illegal. Shades of copyleft.

John Gilmore

By Locke2005 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
“The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it”.

I went to a party at his very nice Victorian house in San Francisco once, when I used to hang out with Sun nerds.

Re:hohoho

By SumDog • Score: 4 Thread
The article is paywalled and every other article I found was obviously LLM generated shit and didn’t link to this new implementation. It took me a bit, but I found at least one of the Rust implementations of Claude’s CLI:

https://github.com/Outcomefocu…

I was to see Anthropic choke on this so bad.

Courts still haven’t really ruled on AI generated code in any big countries yet, as far as I can tell. Courts could view AI code the same as AI generated images: non-copyrightable. Generated images can still be subject to trademark if you try to commercialize them, but code not so much. If code ever gets rules as non-copyrightable, any generated code is open game if it gets leaked. Courts could also rule it is subject to copyright of the original training data holders.

Both of these outcomes would be equally devastating to the entire industry in entirely different ways. I’m kinda read to see it all burn.

Re:Stupid

By nomadic • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This is actually a smart move if they envision ever trying to go after other companies for using their code. “If it wasn’t for public use, why didn’t you even try to get the distributor to take it down?”

Oh the Irony ..

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 3 Thread
Oh the Irony. a company whose business is built on other peoples works is suing for copyright infringement.

CEO of America’s Largest Public Hospital System Says He’s Ready To Replace Radiologists With AI

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Mitchell H. Katz, MD, president and CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals, said hospitals could already replace many radiologists with AI for some imaging tasks — if regulators allowed it. He argued the technology presents an opportunity to simultaneously cut costs and expand access. Radiology Business reports:
Katz — who has led the 11-hospital organization since 2018 — said he sees great potential for AI to increase access to breast cancer screening. Hospitals could potentially produce “major savings” by letting the technology handle first reads, with radiologists then double-checking any abnormal screenings. Fellow panelist David Lubarsky, MD, MBA, president and CEO of the Westchester Medical Center Health Network, said his system is already seeing great success in deploying such technology. The AI Westchester uses misses very few breast cancers and is “actually better than human beings,” he told the audience. “For women who aren’t considered high risk, if the test comes back negative, it’s wrong only about 3 times out of 10,000,” Lubarsky said.

Katz asked fellow hospital CEOs if there is any reason why they shouldn’t be pushing for changes to New York state regulations, allowing AI to read images “without a radiologist,” Crain’s reported. In this scenario, rads could then provide second opinions, if AI flags any images as abnormal. Sandra Scott, MD, CEO of the One Brooklyn Health, a small hospital facing tight margins, agreed with this line of thinking, according to Crain’s. “I mean, I’m in charge of a safety-net institution. It would be a game-changer,” Scott said about AI being used to replace rads.

Radiologists

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Say they’re ready to replace their CEO with AI. Patient outcomes have improved significantly. Shareholders are crying.

Re:Radiologists

By geekmux • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Shareholders are crying.

Really?

If we’re looking for an actual downside here, fire all the radiologists and put CEOs in their place to be personally liable for ALL diagnostic readings until AI gets it perfect enough to be defended 100% in every court case.

Perhaps then we’ll see how much of a loophole “AI” is with regards to dismissing a Recession.

False Positives Vs False Negatives

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There are two distinctly different types of errors when it comes to these kind of tests:

False Positives: This is where the test in question falsely says “You have Cancer!” when in fact you do not have it.

False Negatives: This is where the test in question falsely says “You are Healthy” when in fact you have cancer.

False Positives cost money and time, but it is fairly easy to double check them as they should be uncommon.

False Negatives cost human lives and are almost impossible to double check them as most people should test negative for cancer.

For an AI test, you want to have false positives. If it saves you money by not requiring humans to look things over, then costing you money and time to double check things is a fair trade. If it costs too much to double check, then do not use the AI.

False Negatives should be a no no. If the AI has more false negatives than human radiologists do, then do not use the AI test. No one cares how much money you are saving if people are dying.

Note, with regards to jobs, this will likely be relatively flat. There are not that many humans doing this job - they take the results from radiologist exams from all over the country and send them to just a few companies. Those companies find the few people that do it best and hire them. I bet we are talking about less than a hundred people in the US, especially as the best of the best will be kept to double check the results.

All radiologists do is analyze digital images

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
For years now, radiology has been a poor career choice, but it only makes sense to send those digital images to the place with the cheapest doctors. Turns out one thing AI is really much better at than humans is analyzing digital images, so yes, radiology careers will soon be extent. All the job growth is in health care, but it’s all in the jobs that require you to be in the same room as the patient. Administrators and back office staff are all getting laid off. The people that clean the rooms, body fluids and all? Hospitals can’t get enough of them. (Five of my relatives all work at OSHU. Four are housekeeping, one is a pharmacy technician. They have pharmacy robots now…)

This isn’t exactly new

By DrStrangluv • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I worked as a programmer at a medical billing company back in 2009, and let me tell you it was eye opening. We had radiologists working remotely (in 2009!) with mutliscreen setups that would show an original image on the left of one screen, a computer-enhanced version on the other side of the screen, with a computer generated opinion pre-generated at the bottom of the image (again: 2009 already had this). The other screen, usually rotated 90 degrees, would show minimal required relevant patient history/demographic on the top and offer a place to enter the radiologists opinion below, along with a button to copy over the computer-generated opinion.

Let’s game out their options.

Let’s say the agree with the computer, and they’re right. No extra reward, they’re just doing their job.
Let’s say they agree with the computer, and they’re wrong. Well, that must have been a hard case. Oh well.
Let’s say they disagree with the computer, and they’re right. Again, just doing their job./
But now if they disagree with the computer, and they’re wrong, that is a world of malpractice lawsuit about to drop on their heads.

That is, every incentive this person has is to just always agree with the computer. There is no great bonus for doing better, and potentially huge consequences when they disagree. (And, by the way, this is now the training data for more recent AI options).

And it’s this context we had at least one doctor billing $300,000.

Per month.

So, in this case at least, yes please bring on the AI. Because it’s already doing it, and I’m sure the AI won’t have to cost as much.

Robotaxi Outage In China Leaves Passengers Stranded On Highways

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
An unknown technical problem caused a number of robotaxis owned by the Chinese tech giant Baidu to freeze on Tuesday in the middle of traffic, trapping some passengers in the vehicles for more than an hour. In Wuhan, a city in central China where Baidu has deployed hundreds of its Apollo Go self-driving taxis, people on Chinese social media reported witnessing the cars suddenly malfunction and stop operating. Photos and videos shared online show the Baidu cars halted on busy highways, often in the fast lane.

[…] Local police in Wuhan issued a statement around midnight in China that said the situation was “likely caused by a system malfunction,” but the incident is still under investigation. No one was injured, and all passengers have exited the vehicles, the police added. It’s unclear how many of Baidu’s robotaxis may have been impacted. […] There were at least two other collisions on the same day, according to photos and videos posted on Chinese social media. A RedNote user in Wuhan confirmed to WIRED that she drove past a white minivan that had gotten into a rear-end collision with a parked robotaxi. The back of the Baidu car was badly damaged, but the two people standing beside the scene looked unharmed, she says. She added that she estimates she also saw at least a dozen more parked robotaxies.

Fundamentally Untrustworthy

By drinkypoo • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

Humans have flaws. Taxi drivers sometimes commit crimes. Nothing I will say here is meant to imply that humans are perfect. But they can at least be trusted to do something predictable most of the time. A computer cannot, so you can’t trust it on its OR even as much as a human. But you also can’t trust central management. QED, you simply cannot ever trust an autonomous taxi.

Finding ways to replace human work is the backbone of progress, but sometimes replacing a human is not actually a good idea.

Interesting

By GoTeam • Score: 3 Thread

In Wuhan, a city in central China

Never heard of it. Maybe this incident will put it on the map

Startup Pitches ‘Brainless Clones’ To Serve the Role of Backup Human Bodies

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
MIT Technology Review discovered that startup R3 Bio has pitched an ethically and scientifically explosive long-term vision beyond its public work on non-sentient monkey “organ sacks”: creating human “brainless clones” or replacement bodies for organs as part of an extreme life-extension agenda. From the report:
Imagine it like this: a baby version of yourself with only enough of a brain structure to be alive in case you ever need a new kidney or liver. Or, alternatively, he has speculated, you might one day get your brain placed into a younger clone. That could be a way to gain a second lifespan through a still hypothetical procedure known as a body transplant.

The fuller context of R3’s proposals, as well as activities of another stealth startup with related goals, have not previously been reported. They’ve been kept secret by a circle of extreme life-extension proponents who fear that their plans for immortality could be derailed by clickbait headlines and public backlash. And that’s because the idea can sound like something straight from a creepy science fiction film. One person who heard R3’s clone presentation, and spoke on the condition of anonymity, was left reeling by its implications and shaken by [R3 founder John Schloendorn’s] enthusiastic delivery. The briefing, this person said, was like a “close encounter of the third kind” with “Dr. Strangelove.” […]

MIT Technology Review found no evidence that R3 has cloned anyone, or even any animal bigger than a rodent. What we did find were documents, additional meeting agendas, and other sources outlining a technical road map for what R3 called “body replacement cloning” in a 2023 letter to supporters. That road map involved improvements to the cloning process and genetic wiring diagrams for how to create animals without complete brains. A main purpose of the fundraising, investors say, was to support efforts to try these techniques in monkeys from a base in the Caribbean. That offered a path to a nearer-term business plan for more ethical medical experiments and toxicology testing — if the company could develop what it now calls monkey “organ sacks.” However, this work would clearly inform any possible human version.

I’ve seen this movie

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The Island. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0…

But…

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Funny Thread

But what if I need a piece of brain? Abby what, you say?

The God-fearing and the Accountants

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’d love to have a nice slab of spare parts, custom made for me in case of injury.

You’d have to fight back the idiots who would claim the bodies had souls. That’s probably the biggest hurdle, the people who would violently try to stop you because of their sky daddy fantasy.

But even if you defeat them, you have the accountants. That spare body isn’t going to grow and remain healthy without a lot of effort. It will need to be fed and cleaned and exercised. During growth it will need to be monitored and probably adjusted with chemical cocktails to ensure it turns out similarly to you - you did want all the bones to be the same size as yours so you can harvest those, right? As long as you’re cloning an entire body, you’ll want to correct any genetic defects you can - especially for those things that might lead to needing a clone body for spare parts. You don’t want to get liver cancer only to find your clone has it too. That’s all going to cost a lot of money.

In the end, the real solution is to be able to grow parts as they’re needed, not grow an entire body requiring expensive maintenance that you might have to throw away after you harvest one critical part.

Old news!

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Funny Thread

This technology has been around for decades. I know because my boss is definitely one of these brainless clones.

Re: I’ve seen this movie

By Z00L00K • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The book Altered Carbon also uses this theme.

SpaceX Starlink Satellite Suffers Mysterious ‘Anomaly’ In Orbit

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A Starlink satellite broke apart in orbit after suffering an unexplained “anomaly,” apparently due to an “internal energetic source” rather than a collision. “The incident appears to have created some debris, with fragments likely to fall to Earth over the next few weeks,” reports Scientific American. From the report:
The satellite lost communication at about 560 kilometers above Earth, Starlink said. While the statement from Starlink, which is a subsidiary of Musk’s rocket company SpaceX, merely noted that investigations are ongoing, LeoLabs said its radar observations of the event indicated an “internal energetic source” as the likely cause rather than a collision.

The incident underscores the potential hazards of the increasingly large numbers of satellites and other spacecraft in low-Earth orbit — some 10,000 Starlinks are currently in orbit and counting. Starlink’s statement said that “the event poses no new risk” to the International Space Station or to the upcoming launch of NASA’s Artemis II mission, targeted for April 1.

Here it comes

By spaceman375 • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

Might this be patient zero for kessler syndrome?

Re:Here it comes

By ctilsie242 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Starlink is pretty low in orbit, so that may be a mitigating factor. Now, something higher up would be a problem, especially geosync sats.

Re:Here it comes

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Informative Thread

No. One of the benefits of the orbit for Starlink is that it is well within the drag of the earth’s atmosphere. That’s one of the reason these satellites have only a 5 year life time anyway, without any propulsion they drop into the atmosphere and burn up.

These particulates will be short lived, and even if they take out all satellites in their orbit in a chain reaction, the impact will be at most a couple of years.

Re:Internal ? Form radar ?

By BuGless • Score: 4, Informative Thread

The trajectory of the debris would cleanly define the difference. If there is an internal source, it will be exploding in all directions equally. If there is an impact preceding it, then the debris will have a slight preference in accordance with the law of preservation of impulse-momentum.

Re:Here it comes

By Rei • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Yeah. In particular:

with fragments likely to fall to Earth over the next few weeks

LEO FTW. Kessler Syndrome is primarily a risk if you put too much stuff with too poor of an end-of-life disposal rate in GEO. End-of-life without proper disposal rates have declined exponentially since Kessler Syndrome was first proposed (manufacturers both understand the importance more, and do a better job, of decreasing the rate of failures before deorbit - in the past, sometimes there wasn’t even attempts to dispose of a craft at end-of-life). And now we’re increasingly putting stuff in LEO, where debris falls out of orbit relatively quickly. It’s not impossible in LEO, esp. with higher LEO orbits - but it’s much more difficult.

Or to put it another way: fragments can’t build up to hit other things if they’re gone after just a couple weeks.

And this trend is likely to continue - a lower percentage of premature failures, and decreasing altitudes / reentry times. Concerning ever-decreasing altitudes, we’ve already been doing this via use of ion engines to provide more reboost (with mission lifespans designed for only several years before running out of propellant, instead of decades like the giant GEO ones), but there’s an increasing interest in “sky skimming” satellites that function in a way somewhat reminiscent of a ramjet - instead of krypton or xenon as the propellant for an ion engine, the sparse atmospheric air itself is the propellant, so the craft can in effect fly indefinitely until it fails, wherein it quite rapidly enters the denser atmosphere and burns up.

Russia Goes After VPNs As ‘Great Crackdown’ Gathers Pace

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Russia is going to further clamp down Virtual Private Networks (VPNs), which are used by millions of Russians to get around internet controls and censorship, Russia’s digital minister said. In what has been cast by diplomats as Russia’s “great crackdown,” the authorities have repeatedly blocked mobile internet and jammed major messenger services while giving sweeping powers to cut off mass communications. “The task is reduce VPN usage,” Digital Minister Maksut Shadayev said on state-backed messenger MAX late on Monday, adding that his ministry was trying to impose the limits with minimal impact on users. He said decisions had been taken to restrict access to a number of unidentified foreign platforms without giving details.

Food shortages

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Trump’s stupid illegal war is on track to start causing food shortages. This is Putin getting out ahead of that. No matter how much you oppress people if they’re starving to death they will act against you. You can cut them down with machine guns but you run the risk of the rest of the world using that as an excuse to turn against you. At a certain point no matter how much dirt Putin has on Trump he won’t be able to keep letting him bypass sanctions then.

Re:different mindsets

By Retired Chemist • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The Russians have always been afraid of their government, with good reason. The secret police in Russia go back to Ivan the Terrible in the fifteen hundreds. The government has always been some sort of monarchy or dictatorship. They have only the illusion of voting and democracy, and no tradition to tell them it should be different. And do not tell me it is the same everywhere. In the US we do have real choices, sometimes both bad but real. It is our own fault if we keep electing crooks and idiots.

Re:Food shortages

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

Certainly not the brave and the free, empowered by their 2nd amendment, that much we know.

They are using packet shaping

By comrade.putin • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I have gone through an evolution of VPN setups to help my mother in law avoid the information blockades.
At first, an account with a regular VPN service was sufficient.
Then, I had to set up strong swan at my house, as ip block lists were regularly updated.
then one day, even that stopped working. Nmap from her computer to UDP 500/4500 worked fine, but as soon as you tried to send Ike auth packet, the packet was dropped.
Currently, sslvpn to my house is the only thing that works, but I wonder if I get a message soon that even that is now blocked.

Re:They are using packet shaping

By ras • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I’d be trying a QUIC based VPN. Done well, port 443 still serves web pages - but hit the right URL and you have a VPN instead.

Volvo Shifts Polestar 3 Production Entirely To the US

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Polestar and Volvo are ending Polestar 3 production in Chengdu, China, and consolidating all output of the electric SUV at Volvo’s plant in South Carolina. “The move to consolidate global Polestar 3 production in Charleston help[s] generate efficiencies for both companies, whilst also underscoring our confidence in the plant and the role it plays in our manufacturing footprint,” said Hakan Samuelsson, chief executive of Volvo Cars. “The U.S. is a very important market for Volvo Cars, both to support our growth ambitions as well as a strategic production site to meet regional and export demands.” Ars Technica reports:
Volvo had a challenging 2025, with sales falling by 7 percent. Meanwhile, Polestar, which was spun out from the Swedish OEM’s performance arm into a standalone startup in 2017, had a rather good 2025, seeing a 34 percent increase in sales. So increasing the proportion of Polestar 3s to come out of South Carolina seems sensible. And as we learned last September, the midsize electric Volvo EX60 will also go into production at the South Carolina site later this year, and then we’ll see a still-unnamed hybrid Volvo in 2030.

The two companies also announced today that Volvo agreed to extend part of a shareholder loan it made to Polestar and will convert the rest into Polestar shares. Polestar will still owe Volvo $661 million, due at the end of 2031, and another $274 million will become Polestar stock now, with a further $65 million in the second quarter of the year. Since December, Polestar has also raised $1 billion through three equity financing investments.

… after almost being delisted from NASDAQ…

By rta • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Alright. I don’t have anything against Polestar, but again, wtf happened to basic journalism?

It seemed strange that consolidating production in the US would save anyone money, but also this line about raising equity financing was weird:
  " Since December, Polestar has also raised $1 billion through three equity financing investments”.

A quick search or two later we find out (maybe it is known to some, but i didn’t know) that they had to do a 30:1 reverse split in Dec 2025 to get their share price above the $1 threshold NASDAQ requires (and they got a new CEOs in a bit before that too).

And while that “34 percent increase in sales.” in 2025 MAY have been good… they still lost ~$35000 per vehicle sold.
I wish them the best and maybe they’ll pull it out, but the upbeat tone of the article is kinda misleading.

Re:A MASSIVE Trump WIN

By spitzak • Score: 4, Funny Thread

But electric cars are WOKE! Seems like a massive failure by Trump.

I’d rather

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
have a motherboard made in the US.

Oracle Cuts Thousands of Jobs Across Sales, Engineering, Security

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
bobthesungeek76036 shares a report from the Register:
Oracle laid off thousands of employees on Tuesday as it ramps spending on AI infrastructure projects internally and with major technology partners. The layoffs were carried out via email, according to copies of the message viewed by Business Insider. The email told affected workers they would be terminated immediately and to provide a personal email for follow-up.

The cuts echo a TD Cowen forecast earlier this year, when the investment bank questioned how Oracle would finance its expanding AI datacenter buildout and suggested headcount reductions could reach 20,000 to 30,000. It is not clear how many employees were notified on Tuesday, but one screenshot that purports to show the number of internal Slack users showed a drop of 10,000 overnight.

[…] Oracle employs about 162,000 people, with 58,000 of those in the US and approximately 104,000 internationally. If the rumored cuts of 30,000 are correct, it would amount to 18 percent of the company’s workforce. According to posts from Oracle workers on LinkedIn, the cuts were spread through multiple departments around the country, with employees in Kansas, Tennessee, and Texas taking to social media to say they were among those chopped.
“This news didn’t seem to affect stock price,” adds bobthesungeek76036. "ORCL is up 6% for the day.”

Re:Stop blaming AI

By nedlohs • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Oracle has poured money into AI. Into the datacenter side even, you know the side the hyperscalers who don’t make a profit selling to the AI model companies who lose money selling the use of their models for less than it costs them to run them so those customers can also lose money.

It is everything to do with AI. The big silver lining of the whole AI bubble is that it just might destroy Oracle for the good of all mankind.

This is different than people using say Claude Code - spending $200 to get $2000 worth of compute is probably pretty good for as long as the subsidy chain lasts.

Re:Stop blaming AI

By bloodhawk • Score: 5, Informative Thread
They aren’t blaming AI, they are blaming AI Investment, Oracle is in debt up to their eyeballs and is betting it all on AI.

Bad stuff happening for Oracle?

By Travco • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I sure hope so.
The college I used to work for was defrauded of a fairly large sum of money by Oracle.
They had purchased our director of IT who recommended a “new product” they had for handling basically all the accounting, grading and assorted other functions that a college could need.
After something like 2 years of promising “next quarter” they never delivered anything and when Our IT director was fired from the college he was suddenly working for Oracle.

Only 100+ H1B worker visas requested in 2026

By will4 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Oracle has asked for over 100 H1B visas in 2026.

If they are laying off in the USA, they should be prevented from requesting any H1B or other visas for 4 years for themselves, parent companies, child companies, spin off companies, ....

Re:Who needs employees if you can have AI agents?

By sg_oneill • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Next up : Who needs Oracle if you can have PostgreSQL

Fixed that for you

Top Brussels Official Urges Europeans To Work From Home, Drive Less As Energy Crisis Deepens

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
A top EU official is urging Europeans to work from home, drive less, and cut air travel as the bloc braces for a prolonged energy crisis triggered by the Gulf conflict. The European Commission is also pushing member states to accelerate renewables and other energy-security measures as oil and gas disruptions continue. Politico reports:
In a speech with echoes of the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, EU energy chief Dan Jorgensen said Europe was facing a “very serious situation” with no clear end in sight. “Even if … peace is here tomorrow, still we will not go back to normal in the foreseeable future,” he said, following an extraordinary meeting of the EU’s 27 energy ministers on Tuesday to discuss the crisis. “The more you can do to save oil, especially diesel, especially jet fuel, the better we are off,” Jorgensen said, confirming an earlier report by POLITICO that Brussels wanted Europeans to travel less.

He urged member countries to follow the advice of the International Energy Agency, which he said included “work from home where possible, reduce highway speed limits by ten kilometers [an hour], encourage public transport, alternate private car access … increase car sharing and adopt efficient driving practices.” Longer term, he urged EU countries to double down on building more renewables, saying “this must be the time we finally turn the tide and truly become energy independent.”

If only

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Most of us would love to go back to working from home but the bellends at the top have to justify paying rent on a big building(or existing) so say we can’t :(.

We keep trying!

By GeekWithAKnife • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

With some jobs requiring physical presence aside lots of people stuck in the past keep trying to get everyone into the office…because #InsertBSReasonHere

I hear it from people working in IT all the time. “They want us in at least 3 days a a week” or worse because otherwise they get confused. How will support staff that work on remote systems work on remote systems remotely from home if they are not working on remote systems remotely from the office?!

How will vain shiny shoes managers look over the shoulder of plebs and see they’re sweating??

Office work is essential to uhm productivity? Nope. Uhm happiness? Nope. Uhm engagement? Nope. Customer satisfaction? Nope. Onboarding?! Nope.

If remote work was a problem we’d all be working from inside a data centre and manually transfer information to customers by delivering in person.

The good news is that soon AI will be able to replace these people completely because their dogma is easy to procedurally replicate.

The bad news is that AI will soon be able to monitor so many things constantly that it’ll know how many beads of sweat you might have in your nether regions to assess if you have been squeezed enough to be a “keeper” this time around…

Re:If only

By karmawarrior • Score: 5, Informative Thread

> Funny how that once-in-a-life-time switch to work from home, didn’t stick, and all the corporate morons wanted to go back to the office, because they don’t care about fuel and energy costs.

I think the theory that a lot of this was about forcing people out has some truth to it. They’re psychopaths but it’s, for some reason, easier on them if they don’t have to make the decision about who gets made redundant and if they pretend the employee made the decision themselves.

There’s also some truth that external investors, who had a lot of money tied up in commercial real estate, were demanding RTO policies.

The one thing I don’t buy are the excuses they gave. For the most part, WFH resulted in substantial productivity gains for the businesses that implemented it properly. It’s unfortunate but the reality is that most businesses do not seem to prioritize the needs of the business over the need to stay in line with what they think people want to hear.

Re:If only

By tlhIngan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you can’t, or won’t work from home, having work from home still benefits you.

First, if people around you are working from home, suddenly rush hour stops being such. You benefit because the roads are less busy so you get a smoother commute. Less traffic on the roads means you get to your destination way quicker and time spent commuting goes down.

Second, if you have to fight for parking, well, less people to fight with which means you probably can find a parking space much quicker or it’s just less packed overall so you’re not hunting for that one empty space.

Third, if you’re packed in the office, fewer people means more space.

All this means everyone saves on gas - working from home people save on gas. Everyone having to go into the office means gas isn’t wasted in traffic jams of hunting for parking as well.

It’s just like how improving public transit options helps those who have to commute by car as well - someone taking the bus means one less car on the road. A full bus means several blocks worth of cars are taken off the road making the road less congested overall.

Benefits all around. Even better, it doesn’t actually cost taxpayer money to implement - no one has to build new roads. Heck, make it so employers who want people in the office should provide electric cars to their employees or pay a gas tax and RTO will suddenly reverse.

Re: Gulf conflict?

By WaffleMonster • Score: 5, Informative Thread

They themselves openly admitted to enriching uranium well beyond the agreed amount. What part of that is a success?

Trump unilaterally pulled out of the JCPOA in 2018 reimposing its nuclear related sanctions. The admissions you are referring to occurred some four years after the US bailed.