Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Meta Is Charging a Subscription for Smart Glasses Features
  2. OpenAI ‘In Early Talks To Give 5% Stake To US Government’
  3. WhatsApp Usernames Are Already Raising Impersonation Red Flags
  4. OnePlus Is Quietly Steering Customers Toward OPPO Products
  5. The Space-Based Data Center Hype Machine Is Already In Orbit
  6. SpaceX Reportedly Has an AI Device Prototype
  7. US Home Battery Installations Hit Record High On Rising Electricity Costs
  8. T-Mobile Appears To Be Quitting VMware Amid Support Rights Lawsuit With Broadcom
  9. Meta Is Reportedly Building Its Own Cloud Business
  10. Cloudflare Pushes AI Companies To Pay For Publishers’ Content
  11. Scientists Made a Cell From Scratch For First Time
  12. Reddit Will Require You To Log In To Use Old Reddit
  13. Sony PlayStation Will Stop Releasing Games On Discs In 2028
  14. Meta Loses Bid To Dismiss US States’ Claims That Facebook, Instagram Addict Children
  15. NASA Wants To Send Spare Nuclear-Powered Mars Rover To the Moon

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.

Meta Is Charging a Subscription for Smart Glasses Features

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is introducing a subscription for expanded access to advanced smart-glasses features. According to Wired, "[U]sers will need the Meta One Premium Plan to unlock expanded access to some features for their smart glasses, whether it’s the Ray-Ban, Oakley, or Meta-branded version.” They’ll still be usable with a subscription, but “certain features will be limited,” the report says. From the report:
Specifically, a feature called Conversation Focus, which boosts the audio of the person you’re speaking with so you can hear them better in loud environments. You’ll get three hours per month without a subscription, but if you want to use it more often, then you’ll need to pay up. Though even then, you’re still capped at 15 hours. Subscribing also nets you “Premium Device Support,” where you’ll get faster access to what Meta says are “human experts” trained on the smart glasses’ features, should any problems arise. Guess humans are better at some things after all.

A Meta spokesperson tells WIRED that this is “not an AI rate limit.” Rate limits are common on other AI platforms — users get free access to a feature until they hit a certain cap, then they’ll need to subscribe to use it more until the limit resets at the end of the month. However, the Conversation Focus feature runs on-device, meaning it doesn’t need to head to Meta’s servers for AI processing. There’s no real-time way to monitor how many hours you’ve used Conversation Focus, but you’ll receive a notification when you get near the limit.

“The subscription supports that ongoing work and gives power users expanded access along with premium device support,” the spokesperson says. “We’re going to start testing new optional subscription plans that offer more premium features and advanced capabilities for those who want to unlock more from our apps and AI glasses.”

OpenAI ‘In Early Talks To Give 5% Stake To US Government’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI is reportedly in early talks to give the U.S. government a 5% stake, potentially alongside similar contributions from other major AI companies. “Such a deal would help improve the industry’s relations with the Trump administration and could help garner political support by sharing wealth generated by the AI boom with the public,” reports The Guardian. From the report:
[OpenAI CEO Sam Altman] and other OpenAI bosses have suggested that each of the biggest AI developers in the US should give 5% to their equity to an investment vehicle such as the Alaska Permanent Fund, a sovereign fund that invests US oil wealth into stocks and pays dividends to the state, the FT reported.

The talks are “conceptual” and in early stages, it said, and any deal could require an act of Congress to implement. Both OpenAI and Anthropic have previously suggested in policy papers that a public or sovereign wealth fund may be required in the future to distribute shares to the public. In April, OpenAI said that a “public wealth fund” could provide “every citizen — including those not invested in financial markets — with a stake in AI-driven economic growth.”
Further reading: Bernie Sanders Unveils $7 Trillion Plan To Give Americans Control of AI Industry

Naked Graft

By crunchy_one • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I used to think that graft this naked could never happen, especially at the Federal level. Guess I was wrong.

The government

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I pay taxes. Where is my cut?

Richard Nixon wondering why he resigned....

By MikeDataLink • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Ole Nixon is down there in hell asking himself why the hell he resigned. In today’s presidential administrations you have to resign if you’re not corrupt enough.

Re:Richard Nixon wondering why he resigned....

By caseih • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

In the last few weeks republican politicians and their supporters have publicly said Nixon shouldn’t have resigned and was treated unfairly. Apparently what he did was totally fine by them. Vance in particular expressed sympathy for Nixon. Who’s woke now? Surreal.

Why do we want 5% of their debt?

By Fly Swatter • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Unless they pay a dividend - why would the taxpayer be interested? To take advantage of an appreciating stock you have to sell, then you don’t have it anymore to appreciate…

WhatsApp Usernames Are Already Raising Impersonation Red Flags

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
WhatsApp this week started rolling out username reservations ahead of the broader launch planned later this year. The feature — which lets people find and message each other by handle instead of phone number — is already raising impersonation concerns, drawing scrutiny from security experts and regulators in India, the app’s largest market, with more than 500 million users. The rollout marks a shift in how people identify one another on WhatsApp. Instead of relying on phone numbers as the primary identifier, users will increasingly interact through platform-managed usernames, a change that Meta says improves privacy but that critics argue could create new opportunities for impersonation.

[…] Asked about how it protects against impersonation, Meta told TechCrunch it reserves usernames for public figures, government entities, and “some variations” of those names so only the legitimate owner can claim them. The company did not explain, however, how it decides which lookalike usernames get proactively reserved and which don’t. The concerns have already reached regulators in India, where cyber fraud schemes frequently exploit messaging platforms to impersonate police, banks, and government officials. […] Rachel Tobac, chief executive of SocialProof Security, called usernames a net privacy gain because they reduce the need to share phone numbers, which can expose users to SIM-swap attacks, phishing, and account takeovers. Still, she said, lookalike usernames still create opportunities for impersonation. “Ultimately, usernames are a great idea to avoid leaking your phone number to folks you don’t know, but it’s important to verify identity with the username function too,” Tobac told TechCrunch. Her advice for most users: Pick a username that isn’t easily guessable, so it’s harder for attackers to find you, message you cold, or harass and spam you.

[…] The Mozilla Foundation said the introduction of usernames is likely to bring new tradeoffs. “Increased scams and impersonation from fake handles are potentially a big one,” it told TechCrunch. “Checking a phone number can be a useful verification tool, but these harms are also permitted by the platform’s fundamental design choices.” Mozilla also flagged a broader interoperability question — one worth logging if you’re building on top of, or competing with, Meta’s ecosystem. While letting users claim their existing Facebook and Instagram usernames may cut down on impersonation, it also shows how easily Meta can stitch identity together across its own apps, even as users still can’t take that identity, or their contacts, to a rival platform. For now, WhatsApp says it is taking a gradual approach to the rollout. “We’re taking our time and listening to feedback so that when it rolls out later this year we get it right,” the company said in its FAQ.

Cry me a river

By allo • Score: 3 Thread

So john.doe.32@yahoo and john.doe.33@yahoo can be confused? Save the handle in your address book, if you aren’t sure you can remember it correctly. It’s not the provider’s job to force users to choose distinct names. The hamming distance between valid phone numbers is also smaller than many people assume.

Re:Ya know…

By Moryath • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Numerous data breach notification laws just for starters, you dishonest Anonymous Meta-Employee Trash Troll Coward.

OnePlus Is Quietly Steering Customers Toward OPPO Products

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OnePlus is directing customers in some European markets toward OPPO devices, with its German website presenting OPPO as the natural upgrade path for existing users. The regional handoff adds to “months of speculation that the smartphone brand is slowly being folded into its parent company,” reports Android Authority. From the report:
The banner, seen on OnePlus’ German website, tells visitors seeking “the experience you trust” that OPPO offers the same speed, performance, and compatibility that OnePlus users have come to expect. It hosts devices ranging from earbuds and tablets to OPPO’s latest foldables, with each button taking users straight to OPPO’s website. Particularly revealing is the wording. Instead of pushing future OnePlus hardware, the company focuses on the fact that OPPO’s products are built on the hardware and software that users already know, while promising seamless compatibility with current OnePlus devices. In other words, if you’re up for your next upgrade, OnePlus seems to be saying OPPO has what you’re looking for right now.

Reports in the past several months have said OnePlus has been scaling back operations in several global markets. Previous restructuring reportedly included cutting headcount, a more focused regional strategy, and greater dependence on OPPO’s infrastructure. The two brands have been sharing engineering resources, software development, and supply chains for years now, particularly as OxygenOS and ColorOS have begun to look more and more alike.

Interestingly, the change appears to be regional. OPPO already has a retail footprint in Germany, so the handoff is fairly straightforward. In the United States, however, things are very different, where OPPO does not officially sell smartphones. That means American OnePlus customers aren’t getting the same messaging, mostly because there isn’t an OPPO lineup waiting to step in.

The Space-Based Data Center Hype Machine Is Already In Orbit

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
IEEE Spectrum argues that orbital data centers remain far from economically or technically practical despite Elon Musk’s prediction that space will become the cheapest place to run AI within a few years. Deploying SpaceX’s proposed million-satellite constellation would require enormous increases in launch and manufacturing capacity, while cooling, radiation, maintenance, latency, orbital debris, and astronomical interference present major unresolved obstacles. Longtime Slashdot reader xetdog shares the report:
Consider this: There are roughly 14,500 active satellites in orbit. Musk’s Starlink constellation accounts for about two thirds of those. Both the launch cadences and satellite-manufacturing capacity would have to scale up astronomically to deploy a million orbital data center satellites. For context, there have been roughly 7,000 orbital launches in all of human history. To loft 1 million satellites into low Earth orbit on SpaceX’s Starship, which is designed to carry up to 60 satellites per vehicle, would require 16,666 launches exclusively devoted to satellite deployments. Considering that SpaceX launched a record 165 orbital missions in 2025, even at 10 times that cadence, it would take a decade. And how long would it take to build 1 million satellites, given Starlink’s current pace of around 4,000 per year and a generous tenfold increase in capacity? Short of a manufacturing revolution, try 25 years.
Dissipating heat in space also requires enormous radiators. As IEEE Spectrum editor Dina Genkina noted, startup Starcloud has sent only one Nvidia H100 GPU into orbit, and “their radiator was too weak to let the chip run at full power.” A single 700-watt H100 would require about 1.4 square meters of radiator area, while a 100-megawatt data center could need 2,500 radiators measuring 80 square meters each.

So, why are the hyperscalers hyping orbital data centers? Answer: because it’s lucrative. “The Elon Musk part of it is honestly genius because he’s got xAI building the data centers, SpaceX sending them to space, and Tesla building solar panels,” Genkina says. “It’s almost like he’s paying himself.”

Re: Bet against Elon if you like

By AleRunner • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Size is free unlike on earth

This is the kind of assumption that people are making which shows how this is wrong

* the bigger it is, the directly proportionally higher chance some part of it it will get hit by something, which has a decent chance of having a cascading effect on the other components
* you’ve pointed out weight, which obviously comes with size - but you haven’t pointed out that size =>weight => fuel needed to maintain orbit. Even with ionic thrusters using electricity and very very low fuel use this will matter.

Guess who has the data to do forward predictions.

people who are working on optimizing the energy needed by AI models - specifically the Chinese AI researchers and probably Google. If model sizes can be reduced with very limited loss of performance then the costs of putting them in space - especially latency as opposed to a local model - will be hugely damaging.

So I am guessing they have a target pricing on lbs that they can hit to make that business viable.

There’s one business model which is absolutely crucial and everyone needs to understand that Elon is fundamentally sucking on the government teat, whatever people pretend. Military people need to run AI models in situations of compromised ground communication. Running, for example target identification and data selection in space makes 100% sense. Elon will be doing this in the knowledge that he’s got a series of guaranteed government contracts that will pay for all the development he’s doing. The risk in this case is that if a non-corrupt government does ever return in the US, they may audit his contracts and punish him for getting them through what they will consider to be illegal influence.

Re:So basically…

By evanh • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The scary part is Musk isn’t alone. The insanity of the LLM data-centre build out has got far too much money thrown at it already. There’s no way it will be recouped. It can only end badly now.

Re:Bet against Elon if you like

By caseih • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Silly assumptions? A matter of Engineering? What about physics? Maybe listen to real engineers for once. They’ve been showing us the actual numbers that state clearly this AI data centers are not possible. Sure you can get lots of solar power, but that’s not the issue. The issue is cooling, requiring huge radiators that are far bigger than each satellite. Besides the impracticality of it, you have other issues like air pollution (already a problem with starlink deorbiting), light pollution (who needs the stars anyway). Apparently no on in Musk’s circle is asking, “but should we do this?”

Re: Bet against Elon if you like

By cmseagle • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Military people need to run AI models in situations of compromised ground communication. Running, for example target identification and data selection in space makes 100% sense

That seems like a benefit of relying on satellite communication rather than a benefit of putting the data center in space.

What’s the benefit over running the computation on the ground in a “normal” data center, beaming the results up to a satellite constellation, and then beaming them back down to those who need it? Starlink/Starshield already enable that.

Re: Bet against Elon if you like

By caseih • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Giant black-body radiators are required. This is the the number one reason why space data centers are not practical. The radiators would be many times bigger than the satellites themselves. Every watt of energy generated by the solar panels has to be radiated into space. This is not something that can simply be engineered around, as the OP seems to think.

SpaceX Reportedly Has an AI Device Prototype

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
According to the Wall Street Journal, SpaceX showed investors an early prototype of a slim, “handset-like” AI device running a proprietary operating system and integrating xAI technology. Elon Musk, however, denied the report, calling it "utterly false.” TechCrunch reports:
SpaceX, alongside sister company Tesla, does have the manufacturing expertise to pull off mass-producing a bunch of AI devices — not to mention access to the chips needed to power any on-device compute. SpaceX has also signaled that it’s keen to expand into wireless, with Starlink Mobile as a potential competitor to Verizon and AT&T. One analyst even went as far as to speculate that T-Mobile or AT&T would make fine acquisition targets for the rocket builder, though such a purchase would, undoubtedly, be pricey.

It’s also not clear if SpaceX is just throwing spaghetti at the wall or if it will attempt to really mass-produce and market such a device. But one thing that seems clearer is that if OpenAI is doing it, Musk would, perhaps, want to try to do it better. […]

Like OpenAI, SpaceX’s prototype is reportedly designed to run on a proprietary operating system and integrate technology from xAI, Musk’s AI company that SpaceX acquired earlier this year. This would prevent these new devices from being trapped inside another company’s platforms (like Google’s Android). But the intent also appears to be to create something new, with native AI interfaces. That said, the graveyard is crowded with the unsuccessful launches of AI devices from companies like Humane and Rabbit. A company wanting to sell an AI device does not equate to consumers wanting to buy such a thing. Yet.

AI

By ledow • Score: 3 Thread

Gosh, that must be worth at least a trillion dollars.

Better scramble and invest in their hype of… a handheld box that can run AI… like… phones do.

Musky apples

By fluffernutter • Score: 3 Thread
I guess Musk finally figured out that too many people figured out he tells bold-faced lies about great things he will make so now he is following the “Apple leak” playbook?

US Home Battery Installations Hit Record High On Rising Electricity Costs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
US homeowners have embraced home batteries in record-breaking numbers in early 2026, spurred on by state incentives while seeking to offset rising residential electricity costs. The trend could even unlock a more flexible energy supply for power grid operators and even AI data centers. New home battery installations reached a record 673 megawatts of energy storage in the first quarter of 2026, according to the US Energy Information Administration. That trend was driven by states with high electricity prices that have implemented policies to incentivize home battery installation, Bloomberg News reported.

This residential battery trend stands out as a natural next step for states that have already successfully boosted rooftop solar adoption among homeowners, given how batteries enable homeowners to use stored solar energy at night. California and Hawaii accounted for the majority of new residential battery storage, while Texas and Arizona also saw significantly higher numbers of installations. California incentivizes homeowners with solar panels to also install batteries by offering better pricing for residential electricity exported to the grid after sunset, Bloomberg reported. Hawaii offers a one-time payment of $400 for every kilowatt of battery storage that homeowners install.

However, the record-breaking home battery installations coincided with a slowdown in residential installations of solar panels — the result of the Trump administration and Republican-driven One Big Beautiful Bill having eliminated a 30 percent federal solar tax credit for homeowners. Nonetheless, US electricity generation from solar power continues to rise and even surpassed coal-fired generation in April. The battery installation spree also coincides with rising electricity costs for US residential customers. The Energy Information Administration’s latest data shows that the nationwide average for residential electricity costs increased by more than 7 percent in April 2026 when compared to electricity costs in April 2025. So homeowners with smart home battery-management systems could benefit from storing energy when electricity prices are lowest and draining them during peak demand periods.

The reason I got it

By OrangeTide • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

It got a lot cheaper compared to what it cost 5 years ago. Also, for people who don’t have net metering, it’s often (always?) better to charge your own battery than sell solar back to the power company.

Re:Kilowatt

By dsgrntlxmply • Score: 5, Informative Thread
It looks like abridged reporting. A quick search suggests that it is a one time payment of $400 / kW capacity feedable back to the grid for a 2 hour interval daily, with a contractual commitment of some number of years. BYOD Plus

Re:The reason I got it

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It got a lot cheaper compared to what it cost 5 years ago.

Last time I looked at it, the time-of-use rate plan offered by my utility worked out to where the savings would just about pay for the cost of a battery installation right around the time the batteries are pretty much shot. You’re also gambling that there isn’t going to be any out-of-warranty failures with the inverter/charging equipment before you’ve achieved ROI, too. Plus if you have to add financing into the mix to pull it off, forget it - then the only entity actually making any money from this scheme is the damn bank.

Obviously, if you got a subsidy or use an insane amount of power so the savings adds up more quickly, batteries might end up being worth it. Here in Florida though, batteries aren’t likely to save you any money, but solar might (again though, you’re kind of gambling that a hurricane isn’t going to trash your panels).

Re:The reason I got it

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I save a bit of gasoline on the 15 or so days I’m without power. I already had solar, so it seemed a little silly sitting in the dark with nothing to run my water pump to flush the toilet. I was also in a situation where the inverter on my solar system had died and the original manufacturer was out of business. There was not a huge cost difference in getting an refurbished identical replacement versus something fancier that switches between house battery, EV battery, generator, solar, and grid tied. Pays for itself in 60 years, if I go by time of use billing, but I arranged to keep net metering so it’s more like a 27 year break-even for me in part because my battery system is oversized and expensive.

For rural living, it’s worth it, makes a huge difference for us. As an investment that saves you money, it depends, answer is often “no”. But it is insured and warrantied. So not really so much of a gamble, most scenarios are covered.

Re:Silver linings

By Sique • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Additionally, diesel generators need regular diesel transport, while a solar+battery installation, once in place, does not require outside resources. You could even transport solar panels and batteries with a motorcycle along a foot path, which is much more complicated with a diesel generator. And a solar+battery installation is easily scalable, while a diesel generator is not.

T-Mobile Appears To Be Quitting VMware Amid Support Rights Lawsuit With Broadcom

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
T-Mobile appears to be migrating its 303,000-core VMware environment to another platform while fighting Broadcom in court for the extended support it says its perpetual-license agreement guarantees. “The matter is somewhat urgent,” The Register reports, because a court-ordered support arrangement expires August 3, “so T-Mobile may soon be unable to get support for its very substantial VMware estate.” The Register reports:
The dispute relates to a deal T-Mobile struck with VMware in August 2023, which saw the telco acquire perpetual licenses and two years of support for some software, plus the option for a further year of support. When Broadcom acquired VMware in 2023, it stopped selling perpetual licenses and standalone support deals for customers with those licenses. Broadcom also reduced the virtualization giant’s product range from over 150 products to two subscription-only bundles. Broadcom now mostly sells its Cloud Foundation (VCF) private cloud suite. Customers including AT&T and Tesco tried to exercise their right to extended support, but Broadcom declined to do so. AT&T settled on confidential terms. Tesco is pursuing the matter in the courts.

When customers exercise their option for extended support, Broadcom argues it can’t deliver because the products covered by the contract don’t exist anymore, its contracts allow it to deny support for dead products, and subscriptions are now the industry standard. T-Mobile started using VMware’s products in 2008. In one hearing, the carrier’s counsel described T-Mobile’s VMware implementation as “the base of the entire internal network” and “the place where 1,000 applications reside.” Another filing, from Broadcom, says the telco runs VMware software on over 303,000 CPU cores.

Court documents allege that in 2024 Broadcom notified T-Mobile it would not renew support after the initial two-year deal expired in 2025. The two parties kept talking about possible new arrangements. T-Mobile also sought an injunction that would compel Broadcom to provide extended support. Broadcom opposed the injunction, arguing that T-Mobile deliberately waited too long to seek it. At one point T-Mobile suggested a $20 million deal for another two years of support. An affirmation filed last week by T-Mobile vice president of technology Kevin Luu says the carrier sought that arrangement “to be able to complete T-Mobile’s transition away from VMware at a more deliberate pace.”

The court eventually granted the injunction forcing Broadcom to offer support beyond August 2025, but required T-Mobile to pay $5.28 million and post a $500,000 undertaking. Broadcom continued to provide support but also sought damages on grounds that the injunction meant it missed out on a new deal with T-Mobile. The telco has rubbished that argument in part because the two parties were still talking about a new deal. Broadcom later proposed to charge $24 million for extended support covering six products, a sum it said would cover over 20 staff needed to support T-Mobile. The carrier fired back by pointing out that it has made just two support calls in 2026, which hardly justifies such a massive staff and expense.

Get off of VMWARE ASAP, but be warned

By williamyf • Score: 5, Informative Thread

VMWare is more than virtualization.

OpenStack technical trainer here:

If you think of VMWare in 2026 as virtualization only solution, like we still are in 2006, then sure, KVM, or QUEMU, Xen, BSD’s VMM, or Hyper-V are cromulent options.

But nowadays, VMWare, XenServer/Xencloud, on Premises Azure et al are used to make Private Clouds, or the fleets running on them use a few advanced functions beyond virtualization, with all that implies. Very few workloads are “virtualization only”, not touching any of the advanced or the cloud-dy functions .

The linux equivalent would be OpenStack, with all the load that implies.

And yes, many of the FOSS solutions run KVM under the hood, with a few exceptions like Xen based ones, or BSD’s vmm and vmmd, but again, what really counts in 2026 is not the Hypervisor, but all the other advanced stuff built atop of it.

There is another aspect in this too, and it is Application support. Many ISVs certify their platforms/apps on specific OSs/Distros running on Specific Hypervisors.

So, for instance, your ISV may say: Only Windows Server 2022 or 2025 only, RHEL 10, or Suse 16, on top of VMWare, Openstack or Azure.

And there you are, for those workloads, you can forget about all the other solutions (obscure or not) that homelabbers love to peddle. Big corpos can pressure smaller ISVs to support their preferred solution, but the big ISVs will most likely put a few options on offer, and that’s it.

In those cases, large intitutions (like T-Mobile, the focus of the article) have 100s or even 1000s of ISVs some more crititcal than others, and they need to reach commonality of solutions, or personel requirements ballon (the legacy VMWare group, the Openstack group, the XenCloud group, the ProxMox group, the Azure group, the Nutanix group, the....) along with all the other support functions (negotiations and keeping track of support contracts for each technology). A veritable nightmare. So, unlike homelabbers, Big corpos will probably go to a one or two vendor solution for their internal clouds.

Since VMWare was the leader, and for many lustres a model citizen, pretty muche every single ISV offered them as a supported option, therfore, it was the easier default.

So, get out of VMWare ASAP, but be warned it will be hard, as you need to provide alternatives to the advanced functions, and align certification requirements for support.

Also, use this as a clean-up opportunity . Retire redundant APPs, retire inhouse stuff with big technical debt, move it to either functions inside SW you already own (even if they are not completely taylor made) or to SaaS. That way your VM stable will be smaller, migration will be faster and easier, and the bill from whatever replaces VMWare will be “even moar” cheaper.

Broadcom told us all it was going to scam us…

By MikeDataLink • Score: 5, Informative Thread

They didn’t even try to hide it. They were very public about this acquisition being about milking their customer base who would not be able to migrate away in time to avoid paying them.

My company ditched VMware within 3 months of the announcement. We moved with all deliberate speed to Proxmox and to be honest, we’re happier there. Wish they had forced us sooner.

Oh the irony! Hurt Corpos hurt Corpos

By Jumperalex • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Broadcom: We are altering the deal. Pray we do not alter it further
T-Mobile: Fuck you we’re leaving
Also T-Mobile: We’re cancelling all legacy phone contracts despite promising we wouldn’t.

‘Pharma Bro’ Martin Shkreli modus operandi

By Gavino • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Broadcom are the tech equivalent of ‘Pharma Bro’ Martin Shkreli, who became infamous and earned the nickname after he hiked the price of a potentially lifesaving antiparasitic medication in 2015.

Pharma bro logic: The people who pay the massive price hikes will be more than enough to offset the people who die because they cannot afford the medication, and this short-term revenue boost will cover the purchase price, and from that point on it’s all free money.
Broadcom bro logic: The companies who pay the massive price hikes will be more than enough to offset the companies who leave because they cannot afford the subscription, and this short-term revenue boost will cover the purchase price, and from that point on it’s all free money.

It’s the exact same playbook.

Re:Everyone Saw This Coming

By grasshoppa • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I guarantee there’s someone, or a few someones, at t-mobile who saw this coming. They’re mid level support or engineers. I’m sure they were screaming to all that they could find about what was coming, but upper management and the powers that be ignored them. None could confront the mass migration that was necessary if this group of someones were right, so they must be wrong.

Until they weren’t.

And so this group will be rewarded with all the shit-work needed to get the migration done, while the very same people that ignored the timebomb ticking in their closet will be rewarded for their “vision” and “decisiveness”.

God I don’t miss corporate.

Meta Is Reportedly Building Its Own Cloud Business

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is reportedly developing its own cloud business that could sell access to its AI models and lease data-center computing capacity to other companies. The move would put Meta in direct competition with Amazon, Google, and SpaceX. Engadget reports:
The cloud business could offer multiple services, according to [Bloomberg], like selling access to AI models run on Meta’s infrastructure, or leasing the computing power of its data centers to other companies looking to train AI. Offering something akin to Amazon Web Services could help make back some of what Meta has already spent on its new bet. As part of its AI plans, the company has committed to investing $600 billion in the US by 2028. Meta has also already made more than a few expensive hires to build its AI superintelligence team. Meta Compute, the data center and AI-focused initiative Meta created in January, is currently developing the new cloud business, according to Bloomberg.

Whoops spent too much money

By hsmith • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Now they need to figure out how to recover some. Brilliant work Mark.

I have an idea!

By paul_engr • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Build it in the metaverse!

Suckerburg

By bubblyceiling • Score: 3 Thread
Bought too much compute. Now he is wondering what to do with it

It’s all going to change

By Baron_Yam • Score: 3 Thread

The US is too belligerent and unreliable - nations will be switching to sovereign cloud systems and the step after that will be sovereign social media (not to control privacy, but to limit propaganda), and then the sovereign desktop (nationally maintained Linux in most cases).

Might take a decade, unless international relations get even more hostile with the US, but we’re not far from a world where an American HQ is a global business liability.

where all your data are belong to us

By awwshit • Score: 3 Thread

Oh sure, let me sign the company up for the ‘all your data are belong to us’ datacenter. If they get all of my data, will it be ad supported and free?

Cloudflare Pushes AI Companies To Pay For Publishers’ Content

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Cloudflare announced new controls that give publishers more say over how AI companies access and use their content. Beginning September 15, new Cloudflare sites will allow traditional search indexing while blocking AI training and AI agent access on ad supported pages by default. The company is also expanding its monetization efforts with a Pay-Per-Use model that aims to compensate publishers when their content contributes to AI generated answers rather than simply being crawled. Cloudflare argues that publishers should not have to choose between being discoverable online and giving away their work for free to AI systems.

Annoying as F

By SuperDre • Score: 3 Thread
These days Cloudfare is one of those brands that really annoy me as f. They make our internet experience even worse these days, just below the cookiewall....

Have they solved the stack overflow apocalypse?

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
I’ve used chat GTP a bit and 99% of its responses are pretty obviously coming from old stack overflow posts. The problem is there is a lot less traffic on stack overflow because all the programmers are using chat GTP.

When AI has to rely on the raw documentation for a technology, documentation that is almost always written overseas by people who don’t speak whatever language the documentation is written in natively because fuck if a company is going to pay for documentation, the end results are pretty terrible and pretty useless. It’s really just summarizing the doc. Occasionally if the documents are a meandering mess it can be useful because it’ll pick out the piece of information you want out of hundreds of HTML pages spread across the internet but for the most part worthless.

So it’s all the training material gets cut off from AI how are they going to keep it up to date? Is there some trick I don’t know about? I don’t think you can just pointed it code and have it magically work it’s got to have context.

Re: Annoying as F

By allo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

That’s the neat part: You don’t.

A webhoster decides they have too much traffic and firewall everyone but Cloudflare. Then Cloudflare is a proxy to their website and they put the Cloudflare IPs in the DNS. Cloudflare shows everyone captchas and the webhoster doesn’t get that much traffic because of caching at the Cloudflare server and users not being motivated to solve captchas.

Nice side effect: Cloudflare gets to read all traffic, as it decrypts and reencrypts it to enable caching and relaying a copy to the NSA.

wah we cant steal your content to profit of

By Growlley • Score: 3 Thread
why do you hate captialism?

Scientists Made a Cell From Scratch For First Time

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AleRunner writes:
The first fully synthetic cell ("SpudCell") has been created in the Department of Genetics at the University of Minnesota. Strictly speaking, it’s described as a “cell-like system constructed entirely from known chemical components that can perform a complete cell cycle.” It is able to replicate, but only for approximately five generations.

The key advance is that the cell is “built entirely bottom-up from individually purified, non-living components,” although it still contains material from E. coli bacteria. “PURE is a defined mixture of 36 purified enzymes from E. coli bacteria,” including ribosomes, that provides the infrastructure for genetic replication.

CNN has an article on the advance, including interview material with Professor Kate Adamala, who led the research. “I know the full ingredient list of the cell. I know exactly what chemicals, what molecules, at what concentrations,” she said. “It is fully defined, which means we can engineer it.”
“Humans did not create life,” notes an anonymous Slashdot reader. “Researchers call it a constructed cell, not ‘life created in the lab’ but a ‘genuine milestone on the road toward that question.’ It lacks full autonomy (needs feeding, no independent evolution).”

Special thanks to Slashdot readers kemosabi and AleRunner for submitting the story and additional sources, including reports from The New York Times and The Guardian, as well as information from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities.

Re: Self-healing materials

By jddj • Score: 4, Informative Thread

“sealing/gaskets”

Worked the other way in The Andromeda Strain.

Re:This is the plot for “The Blob”, isn’t it?

By TWX • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I didn’t get the feeling that the GP post was claiming it was valueless. I got the feeling that the concern was it would get out of the control of its creators, manage to mutate or evolve past a death in five generations, and become a threat to everything we know and love.

“From scratch”

By Darren Hiebert • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
…except for all of the 36 enzymes we borrowed from another living cell, yet still cannot do what that cell we borrowed it all from can do.

Ribosomes are awesome

By unfortunateson • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Starting with a ribosome seems a bit like cheating — they’re extremely complex, probably Turing-complete biocomputers.

If there’s proof of a supreme being, or aliens seeding life here (is there a difference), it’s the ribosome.

Re:Ribosomes are awesome

By Tablizer • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

People seem to think that the first living organism to evolve has to be as complex as the simplest cells we know, but more likely it was much simpler. We just don’t have any living examples because such protocells probably can’t compete with modern ones. The first life-forms can be slow, inefficient, inaccurate at reproducing, etc. because they had zero competition. Somebody joked “union workers evolved first!”

One interesting theory is that the first living thing(s) were actually a set of complimentary proto-cells where reproduction happened in cycled stages say: A to B to C back to A, because self-replicating is hard to get right in a single step. Each stage may have fed off different chemicals. Eventually they evolved into a single unit.

Reddit Will Require You To Log In To Use Old Reddit

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Reddit will start requiring people to be logged into Reddit to use old.reddit.com. The new requirement will take effect “over the next month,” a Reddit employee going by the username boat-botany announced on the social media platform today. The person claimed that the change is part of an ongoing effort to “tighten how automated systems access Reddit.”

The Reddit employee wrote: “Old Reddit’s logged-out experience is a significant source of abusive scraping and automated traffic on the platform. It’s also an important interface for many long-time mods and Redditors. To strike the right balance between preserving your access to Old Reddit while preventing abusive scraping and automated traffic, over the next month we will start requiring everyone to log in.”

In a follow-up comment, boat-botany defined abusive behavior as that which violates Reddit’s rule prohibiting activity that interferes with the platform’s “normal use” or that “create[s] programs or applications” that break Reddit’s (controversial) API rules. “By logging in, we get a lot more signal that allows us to detect whether an account is breaking the rules, and then we can block that traffic or enforce those accounts,” boat-botany said.
Asked why boat-botany scrapes New Reddit less frequently than Old Reddit, the Reddit employee pointed to another commenter’s explanation. "[T]he shape of malicious traffic is always changing,” the user, Nestramutat, wrote. “It’s going to be a constant cat and mouse game[.] As you ban one method, a new one gets developed. It’s easy to see abusive traffic in hindsight, but it’s harder to pre-emptively block it. Given that they’re claiming Old Reddit doesn’t have the modern security stack, this is likely proving to be an even greater challenge.”

Nestramutat said that the login requirement will add a barrier against threat actors. “You’re also now attaching an account ID to every malicious request, plus account creation is only available on New Reddit (with the enhanced security stack).”

As for how long Old Reddit will exist, boat-botany left the door open for its retirement. “We can’t promise it will be around forever, but [Reddit CEO Steve Huffman] himself has said we’ll keep supporting it while folks are still using it,” boat-botany wrote. “That said, it doesn’t have the same modern security tech stack reddit.com has, so we need to tighten security on old reddit to keep it viable.”

Maybe you’re the issue? + complaining about porn??

By Somervillain • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Hive mind / echo chamber hell is all Reddit is these days.

I haven’t had that experience at all, but I don’t do political or racist rants. Reddit is a treasure trove of information for my various hobbies and I learned a lot of extremely specialized knowledge for very specialized interests....plus free porn! I just feel bad for you…a website let’s you follow your interests to an intensely specialized and niche degree…AND offers unlimited free boobies and you get upset about their politics? You must be one miserable prick!

As they say “If you run into an asshole in the morning, you ran into an asshole. If you run into assholes all day, you’re the asshole.”

Re:Maybe you’re the issue? + complaining about por

By Cyrano de Maniac • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I must 100% agree with this. I’ve never subscribed to any of various politics, religion, pop culture, or other such subs that are sure to be a cesspool. But I’ve found great value in homeowner, personal finance, robot lawn mower, retirement (crossing my fingers), tech, hobby, and other special interest subs. The only ones that get crappy with any regularity are the local state/city ones, as political bowels inevitably dump their load there.

Risky Business

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Reddit isn’t wrong about bots but odds are what they really want is your identity. That earns money.

The trouble is people in Saudi Arabia will use old. to read about liberation topics or people in the US will read about drug topics, or whatever the mala prohibita are that will land you in prison for things that are perfectly legal in other jurisdictions.

Even people with accounts who read other subs logged in.

“Just create a new anonymous account” is what people will say who don’t understand how identity correlation works. Sure there are ways that 0.0000001% of the population can manage securely, but that’s not how this will go down.

The UK just arrested an American attorney who was critical of UK politics and they have multiple people in prison for clicking ‘Like’. If you think they won’t arrest somebody for reading the wrong sub, give it a few months.

Also, don’t connect through Heathrow ever again.

Smells Like Bullshit

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

No anonymous reading of old.reddit. “Cuz bots.”

  But, they’ll still allow anonymous reading of new reddit?

Thai smells like bullshit.

there is one fix and you won’t do it

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The fix is to come up with a news reader with cryptographically managed identities (not verified, just consistent) and go back to USENET with it. This does everything valuable that social networking does, but without the malevolent overlord.

Sony PlayStation Will Stop Releasing Games On Discs In 2028

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from the BBC:
New PlayStation games will no longer be released on discs from January 2028, the gaming giant has announced. Sony said in a blog post new games would still be able to be bought in shops, but they would come with a digital code. It comes just days after Rockstar announced the hotly-anticipated Grand Theft Auto VI would similarly launch without a physical disc.

It marks a significant moment for the gaming industry, which has in recent years begun to rely more and more on digital distribution. Sony said the move came “as consumer preferences and the broader entertainment industry continue to shift away from physical discs to digital.” “This is a natural direction for Sony Interactive Entertainment to adapt to consumer trends as the general preference for digital media significantly outpaces physical discs,” it added. […] PlayStation said the move would have no impact on games which are already released, or would be released before January 2028.

Re:My emotions are validated

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So just to be clear, you have always downloaded digitally and now that discs are no longer going to be available you will continue to download digitally?

Incidentally how were you pirating on the PS5? - Is your post even relevant to the topic or are you using a company unrelated to what you play as a scapegoat to feel better about yourself?

Fool Me Once…

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Fool Me Once: Sony Rootkit 2005,

Fool Me Twice: Sony Linux Removal 2010,

Won’t be fooled again!

The end of actually owning games

By Artem S. Tashkinov • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

You now only own a license that can be revoked at any time.

And, of course, you won’t be able to play anything if your internet connection goes down.

PC gaming has never looked so attractive. That is if you buy your games on GOG.

Re:Fool Me Once…

By RitchCraft • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It only took the rootkit incident to convince me that Sony needed to be pulled from my purchase list. I used to love Sony products until the leadership showed their true colors. Treating your customers as the enemy is no way to do business.

Irrevocable license per 17 USC 117

By tepples • Score: 4, Informative Thread

The copyright statute of Slashdot’s home country defines a “copy” as a physical object in which a work is embodied, such as a book, ROM cartridge, or optical disc. The statutory license associated with ownership of a copy of a computer program includes making intermediate copies “as an essential step” in the use of the program. Title 17, United States Code, section 117. Historically, console makers and game publishers have lacked power to revoke this license with respect to a particular copy of a game that isn’t online-only. With the end of video game distribution on optical disc, this license becomes revocable, and that’s the problem.

Meta Loses Bid To Dismiss US States’ Claims That Facebook, Instagram Addict Children

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A federal judge rejected Meta’s bid to dismiss claims from 29 state attorneys general alleging that Facebook and Instagram were designed to addict children while concealing the harms. The judge found significant factual disputes that must be decided at trial. They also ruled that Meta failed to comply with federal parental notice and consent requirements for children under 13, “and granted summary judgement to the states on that issue,” reports Reuters. From the report:
In a separate statement, California Attorney General Rob Bonta called the decision a “critical win” in holding Meta accountable for fueling a mental health crisis among American children. Gonzalez Rogers also oversees related multidistrict litigation by more than 2,600 individuals, school districts and local governments over whether social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, Google and YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok addict children.

The states said research has shown that children’s use of Facebook and Instagram could lead to depression, anxiety, insomnia, interference with education and daily life, and self-harm including suicide. Meta countered that the attorneys general had no evidence it misled consumers about its platforms’ alleged addictiveness, including in congressional testimony by Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg. The Menlo Park, California-based company said this was because “social media addiction” is not an established psychiatric condition, and therefore statements that its platforms are not addictive could not be false. Meta also said it didn’t violate the children’s online privacy law because it directed Facebook and Instagram to a general audience, not just children under age 13.

In a 38-page decision, Gonzalez Rogers found material factual disputes over whether Meta’s social media platforms are addictive, whether Meta falsely denied it designed them that way, and whether it “partially” directed the platforms at children. “The AGs present a reasonable interpretation of [Meta’s] statements that Facebook and Instagram are not designed in ways that cause teens to compulsively use the platforms to their detriment,” the judge wrote. “To the extent plaintiffs’ evidence shows that the platforms are in fact designed to do just that, a jury could reasonably find the statements were untrue to a reasonable person,” she added. A trial over California, Colorado, Kentucky and New Jersey’s claims against Meta is scheduled for August 18, court records show.
Further reading: Will Social Media Change After YouTube and Meta’s Court Defeat?

“Children”, they say

By joaommp • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s not just children. It’s every age demographic. Maybe children might be more susceptible, but every single age group is a target.

Re:“Children”, they say

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Yes. That is part of their defense:

Meta also said it didn’t violate the children’s online privacy law because it directed Facebook and Instagram to a general audience, not just children under age 13.

“We harm everyone, not just kids!”

NASA Wants To Send Spare Nuclear-Powered Mars Rover To the Moon

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Space.com:
NASA provided an Artemis update today (June 30), announcing new lunar landing contracts for its Moon Base initiative and a surprise new possible rover mission that could be headed to the moon’s south pole. During the second monthly update that NASA has provided for its moon base plans, the agency named Astrobotic, Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines as the providers of four robotic landers that will deliver scientific payloads to the surface of the moon, as NASA tests and expands the technologies needed for a permanent human outpost. “This is this drawing on the playbook that worked very well for NASA during the 1960s,” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said during the livestreamed update, explaining the experiential approach to a crewed lunar return. “We didn’t just jump right to Apollo 11.”

Isaacman also announced the potential repurposing of an engineering development model built to mirror the agency’s Perseverance and Curiosity rovers on Mars. “There is another,” Isaacman said, quoting Yoda’s line from “Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back.” That test rover is called PROMISE, short for “Polar Rover for Observation, Mapping, and In-Situ Exploration” (though it was formerly known as Optimism). PROMISE was developed at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California, where it has been used as a test platform for fixes or commands that engineers want to try on the ground before permanently sending them to Perseverance and Curiosity. Now, NASA wants to send PROMISE on a mission of its own. Though sending PROMISE to the moon would leave Perseverance and Curiosity — both of which remain active on Mars — without an Earth-based testbed, Isaacman thinks it would be worth it. “We’ve had years now of experience operating the two rovers on the surface of Mars, and we’ve got this hardware that the taxpayers have invested a lot in,” he said. “So the question was posed: ‘What if we send it to the moon?’"

With a little refurbishment, PROMISE would help advance NASA’s lunar plans, Isaacman added. Like Perseverance and Curiosity, the test rover is powered by a radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG), which converts heat from naturally decaying radioactive material into electricity. So it wouldn’t require sunlight to operate — a real benefit on the moon, where most locations experience long stretches of darkness. (NASA plans to build its Artemis base near the moon’s south pole, which is thought to harbor an abundance of water ice and also has a relatively complex lighting environment.) The other robots currently in the works to launch on future missions to the moon, including the landers announced during today’s update, are all solar powered. Through 2029, NASA hopes to launch up to 20 such missions as part of the CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative to support the first phase of the agency’s moon base plans, and the landers announced today will be some of the first in that lineup.

Isaacman is not immune to the disease

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 3 Thread

Of having to make stupid choices to appease one man’s ego.

In a lot of ways I don’t mind Isaacman so far at NASA, he seems to have a passion and he understands the issues NASA faces but thiis shows he is not an independent head of the agency because everything about this proposal is kindof silly and I can only imagine it comes from a need to “get something on the moon” in the next 2 years. I doubt JPL wants this, I mean, who would ditch their test platform while both units are active on Mars?

Odd choice

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s designed for the wrong atmosphere, wrong g, wrong instrumentation, probably the wrong nav system.

Oh, and it is the reference model for some currently deployed devices that can’t be physically accessed for diagnostics.

It has the nice attribute of already existing, I’ll give it that.