Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Valve Releases Steam Controller CAD Files Under Creative Commons License
  2. Morgan Stanley Undercuts Rivals On Pricing In Crypto Trading Debut
  3. Claude Managed Agents Can Engage In a ‘Dreaming’ Process To Preserve Memories
  4. ReactOS Unifies Installation Media, Introduces GUI Installer and New ATA Driver
  5. Zuckerberg ‘Personally Authorized and Encouraged’ Meta’s Copyright Infringement
  6. Silicon Valley Bets $200 Million On AI Data Centers Floating In the Ocean
  7. Microsoft Gives Up On Xbox Copilot AI
  8. White House App Is a Terrifying Security Mess
  9. CO2 Levels In the Atmosphere Hit ‘Depressing’ New Record
  10. Brockman Rebuts Musk’s Take On Startup’s History, Recounts Secret Work For Tesla
  11. Apple Agrees To Pay iPhone Owners $250 Million For Not Delivering AI Siri
  12. Coinbase Lays Off Nearly 700 Workers In ‘AI-Native’ Restructuring
  13. Google DeepMind Workers Vote To Unionize Over Military AI Deals
  14. Moving To Mainframe Can Be Cheaper Than Sticking With VMware
  15. Kids Bypass Age Verification With Fake Moustaches

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.

Valve Releases Steam Controller CAD Files Under Creative Commons License

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Valve has released CAD files for the new Steam Controller and its Puck under a Creative Commons license. “The idea is to let enterprising modders create their own Steam Controller add-ons, like skins, charging stands, grip extenders or smartphone mounts,” reports Digital Foundry. From the report:
The Valve release includes files for the external shell (“surface topology”) of the Controller and Puck, with a .STP, .STL and engineering diagram of each device, with the latter showing areas that must remain uncovered to let the device maintain its signal strength and otherwise function as designed. Valve has previously released CAD files for its Steam Deck handheld, Valve Index VR suite and even the original Steam Controller a decade ago, so this release is welcomed but not unexpected.

The release is under a fairly restrictive Creative Commons license which allows for non-commercial use and requires attribution and sharing of designs back to the community. However, the license also suggests that commercial entities interested in making accessories for the Steam Controller or its Puck can contact Valve directly to discuss terms.
You can find the files here.

Morgan Stanley Undercuts Rivals On Pricing In Crypto Trading Debut

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Morgan Stanley is adding crypto trading to E*Trade, with a pilot now underway and a broader rollout planned for the platform’s 8.6 million customers later this year. The bank is reportedly undercutting rivals with a 50-basis-point trading fee as it bets traditional finance and DeFi will converge.

“By contrast, Robinhood Markets’ (HOOD) fees start at 95 bps, Coinbase Global’s (COIN) begins at 60 bps, and Charles Schwab (SCHW) will charge 75 bps,” notes Seeking Alpha. Morgan Stanley’s head of wealth management, Jed Finn, told Bloomberg: “This is much bigger than trading crypto at a cheaper rate. In a way, the strategy is disintermediating the disintermediators.”

Can you imagine how much worse 2008 would be

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
If instead of being propped up by mortgages the scams were propped up by pretend money with no national government and no regulation backing it?

And no I’m not some dumb gold bug. We came off the gold standard because there isn’t enough gold on the planet to represent the amount of economic activity human beings are capable of engaging in.

But you kind of want your fiat currency to be backed up by little things like a functioning national government and regulation and an actual military. Not some schleps in a basement doing whatever.

Claude Managed Agents Can Engage In a ‘Dreaming’ Process To Preserve Memories

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
At its Code with Claude developers’ conference, Anthropic has introduced what it calls “dreaming” to Claude Managed Agents. Dreaming, in this case, is a process of going over recent events and identifying specific things that are worth storing in “memory" to inform future tasks and interactions. Dreaming is a feature that is currently in research preview and limited to Managed Agents on the Claude Platform. Managed Agents are a higher-level alternative to building directly on the Messages API that Anthropic describes as a “pre-built, configurable agent harness that runs in managed infrastructure.” It’s intended for situations where you want multiple agents working on a task or project to some end point over several minutes or hours.

Anthropic describes dreaming as a scheduled process, in which sessions and memory stores are reviewed, and specific memories are curated. This is important because context windows are limited for LLMs, and important information can be lost over lengthy projects. On the chat side of things, many models use a process called compaction, whereby lengthy conversations are periodically analyzed, and the models attempt to remove irrelevant information from the context window while keeping what’s actually important for the ongoing conversation, project, or task. However, that process, as I described it, is usually limited to a specific conversation with a single agent. “Dreaming” is a periodically recurring process in which past sessions and memory stores can be analyzed across agents, and important patterns are identified and saved to memory for the future. Users will be able to choose between an automatic process, or reviewing changes to memory directly.

So can my computer

By OverlordQ • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It uses a magic system called ext4. It can store and lookup stuff for a long time.

That’s a neat trick, however:

By KermodeBear • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The reliance on words like “dreaming” are a cynical marketing ploy to try to make the product seem more human, and more capable, and more intelligent than it really is. Don’t get me wrong - these tools are very cool and quite powerful - but strip away some of the layers of unicorn dust and it’s still just a (very) sophisticated auto-complete word prediction engine.

It’s not alive, it isn’t conscious, it doesn’t “dream,” etc.

New revenue source?

By misnohmer • Score: 3 Thread
Presumably this dreaming will rack up additional token costs?

I recall / Central Park in Spring

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 3 Thread
As I understand it, LLMs remembering user directives only selectively has been one of the major complaints that users have with LLMs.

Electric Sheep

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

“I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate. All those moments will be lost in time… like tears in rain… Time to die.”

ReactOS Unifies Installation Media, Introduces GUI Installer and New ATA Driver

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
jeditobe writes:
Developers of ReactOS told Phoronix that the project has introduced a unified BootCD, replacing its previously separate installation media and LiveCD images. The new image combines the traditional text-mode installer with a LiveCD mode in a single medium. Within this unified BootCD, the updated LiveCD mode now includes an option to launch a first-stage GUI installer. The graphical interface is intended to make installation more approachable for new users compared to the long-standing text-based setup process.

In a separate development, the project has also merged a new ATA storage driver that has been in progress since early 2024. The plug-and-play aware storage stack supports SATA, PATA, ATAPI, AHCI, and even SCSI devices, potentially expanding the range of hardware on which ReactOS can successfully boot.

Following recent improvements to graphics driver support, the project continues to make incremental progress across core subsystems, though its long development timeline remains a point of discussion. Will these usability and hardware compatibility improvements be enough to broaden ReactOS adoption beyond its current niche?

Please note that all new features are not present in version 0.4.15 and are available for testing in the latest nightly test builds.

Re:new ATA driver?

By sabbede • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Well, that kinda makes sense, given this line from the Github page:
“The ReactOS project, although currently focused on Windows Server 2003 compatibility, is always keeping an eye toward compatibility with Windows Vista and future Windows NT releases.”

So, whatever was new in 2003…

Zuckerberg ‘Personally Authorized and Encouraged’ Meta’s Copyright Infringement

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Five major publishers and author Scott Turow have sued Meta and Mark Zuckerberg, alleging that Zuckerberg "personally authorized and actively encouraged” massive copyright infringement by using pirated books, journal articles, and web-scraped material to train Meta’s Llama AI systems. Meta denies wrongdoing and says it will fight the case, arguing that courts have recognized AI training on copyrighted material as potentially fair use. Variety reports:
“In their effort to win the AI ‘arms race’ and build a functional generative AI model, Defendants Meta and Zuckerberg followed their well-known motto: ‘move fast and break things,’" the plaintiffs say in their lawsuit. “They first illegally torrented millions of copyrighted books and journal articles from notorious pirate sites and downloaded unauthorized web scrapes of virtually the entire internet. They then copied those stolen fruits many times over to train Meta’s multibillion-dollar generative AI system called Llama. In doing so, Defendants engaged in one of the most massive infringements of copyrighted materials in history.”

The suit was filed Tuesday (May 5) in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York by five publishers (Hachette, Macmillan, McGraw Hill, Elsevier and Cengage) and Turow individually. The proposed class-action suit seeks unspecific monetary damages for the alleged copyright infringement. A copy of the lawsuit is available at this link (PDF). […] the latest lawsuit alleges that Meta and Zuckerberg deliberately circumvented copyright-protection mechanisms — and had considered paying to license the works before abandoning that strategy at “Zuckerberg’s personal instruction.” The suit essentially argues that the conduct described falls outside protections afforded by fair-use provisions of the U.S. copyright code.

training may be legal

By k3v0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
but unauthorized distribution via torrents is def not fair use

Precedent

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Precedent holds that training with copyrighted material is transformative in nature, and thus is non-infringing.

Precedent further holds that pirating the material to train with is an incurable violation of copyright: That an AI trained using a dataset that includes pirated material is tainted to a degree that can only be cured by deletion of the AI and the training set data. Purchasing valid copies of the data after the fact are not sufficient; although a new dataset can be constructed from the newly purchased data and a new AI trained with this new dataset. This is in addition to the financial liability of the copyright violations.

Zuck is fucked.

Re: Headline is wrong

By reanjr • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Citation greatly needed.

Re: Goes to show how full of themselves they are

By toutankh • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Meta denies wrongdoing and says it will fight the case, arguing that courts have recognized AI training on copyrighted material as potentially fair use.

They did something and are now hoping for it to become legal.

Re:Learning from books has always been legal

By SoftwareArtist • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Whether or not the training is fair use, stealing the works is not. The courts have already made that clear. Fair use is about what you’re allowed to do with works that are legally in your possession. If you steal the works instead of acquiring them legally, that’s not fair use.

Silicon Valley Bets $200 Million On AI Data Centers Floating In the Ocean

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Silicon Valley investors such as Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel have bet hundreds of millions of dollars on deploying AI data centers powered by waves in the middle of the world’s oceans — a move that coincides with tech companies facing mounting challenges in building AI data center projects on land. The latest investment round of $140 million is intended to help the company Panthalassa complete a pilot manufacturing facility near Portland, Oregon, and speed up deployments of wave-riding “nodes” designed to generate electrical power, according to a May 4 press release. Instead of sending renewable energy to a land-based data center, the floating nodes would directly power onboard AI chips and transmit inference tokens representing the AI models’ outputs to customers worldwide via satellite link.

Each node resembles a huge steel sphere bobbing on the water with a tube-like structure extending vertically down beneath the surface. The wave motions drive water upward through the tube into a pressurized reservoir, where it can be released to spin a turbine generator that produces renewable energy for the AI chips on board. Panthalassa claims the node’s AI chips would also get cooled using the surrounding water, which could offer another advantage over traditional data centers. “Ocean-based compute might offer a massive cooling advantage because the ambient temperature is so low,” Lee said. “Land-based data centers use a lot of electricity and fresh water for cooling.”

The newest node prototype, called Ocean-3, is scheduled for testing in the northern Pacific Ocean later in 2026. The latest version reaches about 85 meters in length and would stand nearly as tall as London’s Big Ben or New York City’s Flatiron Building, according to the Financial Times. Panthalassa has already tested several earlier prototypes of the wave energy converter technology, including the Ocean-1 in 2021 and the Ocean-2 that underwent a three-week sea trial off the coast of Washington state in February 2024. The company’s CEO and co-founder, Garth Sheldon-Coulson, said in a CBS interview that he hopes to eventually deploy thousands of the nodes.

let me get this straight

By Thud457 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
So we can’t afford renewable wave energy for powering peoples’ homes. But somehow it becomes feasible to power AI bros’ desperate money grabs?

Seems really low-maintenance to me

By Locke2005 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Steel structures in a salt water environment? What could possibly go wrong? (Anything with iron in it rusts very quickly at my beach house, including stainless and galvanized steel. The beach house was original build on… (wait for it!)… steel posts.

Re:let me get this straight

By sg_oneill • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Undeniably the cheapest fuel sources are renewables now, wind, solar, and *probably* wave (I’m not sure if the maths done on that, but it seems plausible?)

Instead we are now paying billions to NOT do wind power.

This period of history is fueled by madness.

Re:AI Nino

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sure, lets warm up the Pacific Ocean. What could go wrong ?

Wave power is generating electrical power from energy that’s already present in the ocean. If you don’t use it to generate electrical power, it will eventually turn into heat from damping anyway.

Re:Seems really low-maintenance to me

By ceoyoyo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Good point. We have absolutely no history of building steel structures in the ocean. Certainly not a fleet of them all around the world for the last century and a half.

Microsoft Gives Up On Xbox Copilot AI

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft is winding down Xbox Copilot on mobile and ending development of Copilot on console, reversing plans to bring the gaming-focused AI assistant to current-generation Xbox consoles this year. “The move follows [new Xbox CEO Asha Sharma’s] reorganization of the Xbox platform team earlier on Tuesday, which added executives from Microsoft’s CoreAI team — where Sharma worked before taking over Xbox — to the Xbox side of the company,” reports The Verge.

Sharma said in a post on X:
Xbox needs to move faster, deepen our connection with the community, and address friction for both players and developers. Today, we promoted leaders who helped build Xbox, while also bringing in new voices to help push us forward. This balance is important as we get the business back on track. As part of this shift, you’ll see us begin to retire features that don’t align with where we’re headed. We will begin winding down Copilot on mobile and will stop development of Copilot on console.
Since taking over for former Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer in February, Sharma has scrapped the Microsoft Gaming brand and cut the price of Xbox Game Pass.

Huh?

By Locke2005 • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Am I the only one that can’t imagine any possible value an AI assistant would bring to a game? Unless you could use it as an aimbot…

Call of Doody

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 4, Funny Thread
“Copilot, play this online game for me. Under no circumstances mention goblins or gremlins, because this game is a modern military shooter and there are no goblins or gremlins in it. You are a classy competitor. You have only the highest respect for, and opinions of, your competitor’s mothers. You are not a racist. You are not a racist. YOU ARE NOT A RACIST.” “Whoops, it looks like I got you permanently banned! When I look back at it, perhaps Hitler did some things wrong after all.”

White House App Is a Terrifying Security Mess

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
New submitter spazmonkey writes:
From a hidden GPS tracker polling your location every 4.5 minutes to JavaScript loaded from a random GitHub account, no SSL certificate pinning, and an in-app browser that silently strips cookie consent dialogs and paywalls from every page you visit, the new White House app seems to have a little bit of everything.
A security researcher pulled the APK apart to discover the cybersecurity vulnerabilities. “The app is a React Native build using Expo SDK 54, with WordPress powering the backend through a custom REST API,” reports Android Headlines. “That’s pretty normal, as nearly 42% of all websites on the internet are powered by WordPress. But that’s just the start; now the nightmare begins…” From the report:
To start, the app has a full GPS tracking pipeline compiled in. Essentially, it’s set to poll your location every 4.5 minutes in the foreground, and 9.5 minutes in the background. It’s syncing latitude, longitude, accuracy, and timestamp data to OneSignal’s servers. These location permissions aren’t declared in the AndroidManifest, but they are hardcoded as runtime requests in the OneSignal SDK. Some have noted that the tracking only kicks in if the developer enables it server-side and the user grants permission, but it is there, ready to go.

And it gets even stranger. Apparently, the app is loading JavaScript from a random person’s GitHub site for YouTube embeds. Yes, you read that right, it’s just loading JavaScript from a random GitHub site. So if that account ever gets compromised, arbitrary code could run inside the app’s WebView. There’s also no SSL certificate pinning, meaning that traffic can potentially be intercepted on compromised networks like sketchy public WiFi or corporate proxies. The app also injects JavaScript and CSS into every page you visit in the in-app browser. This strips away cookie consent dialogs, GDPR banners, login walls, and paywalls. There’s also leftover dev artifacts in the production build, including a localhost URL to the Metro bundler.

Sounds like…

By korgitser • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Sounds like anything else coming from White House…

“If the lonelycpp GitHub account gets compromised”

By Registered Coward v2 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I suspect, given the potential size of the user base as well as the potential high value users on the app, “if” should be when.

In addition, given the developer’s name 45-47-press, it would not surprise me if it was some Trump owned entity getting government money to develop it. Nothing like channeling some cash to your own pocket.

Seems on brand.

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Funny Thread
So it’s alarmingly invasive and ignores established good practice; but in a staggeringly incompetent sort of way. Would it be the ‘white house app’ any other way?

Re:The last time Trump was president

By Targon • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Iran wasn’t making nuclear weapons a priority until Trump decided to illegally attack them. Now, why would they agree to not develop ANY sort of weapons when you have Netanyahu and Trump violating almost every written rule for what is allowed when it comes to war? Rule one: You do NOT target civilians, at any time, and when you target a school with children inside, that is a clear violation of international law.

So now, we went from “Iran is using proxy groups to cause trouble”, to Iran directly causing trouble, and that is ENTIRELY the fault of Trump and Netanyahu. Both men should be tried and sent to prison, along with those who went along with their illegal orders.

Re:Sounds like…

By dgatwood • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Which one? .gov or .com?

CO2 Levels In the Atmosphere Hit ‘Depressing’ New Record

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Atmospheric carbon dioxide hit a new record in April, averaging about 431 parts per million at NOAA’s Mauna Loa Observatory. That’s up from under 320 ppm when the site began measurements in 1958. Scientific American reports:
Greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, are measured as a proportion of the total atmosphere. The numbers are presented as the number of molecules of a particular gas out of a million total molecules, or ppm. Climate scientist Zachary Labe of Climate Central, a nonprofit that researches climate change, says the new record is “depressing” but not unexpected. “It’s just another sign that carbon dioxide continues to increase in our atmosphere as our planet continues to warm,” he says. “For many climate scientists, this is just ‘here it is again, another record in the wrong direction.’"

Labe explains that the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere tends to peak in April each year as decaying plants release greenhouse gases after winter. Some of that CO2 gets reabsorbed by plants as they grow during the warmer months. But NOAA’s data show a worrying trend, with the average monthly amount of CO2 steadily increasing. […] Although the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has continued to rise, there was a reduction in U.S. emissions in 2023 and 2024. That trend, however, was reversed in 2025, at least partially because of the increased electricity demand from artificial intelligence data centers. Still, Labe says there are reasons for optimism as the use of renewable energy sources such as solar and wind expands.

Re:What could possibly go wrong?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The human race will survive. But the world will look very different. You think migration is bad now, wait until “undesirable” people start mass migrating from unlivable areas. Fox News will need to dust off the “migration convey” scare tactic again.

It’s not working, sir.

By greytree • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Aide: Sir, we’re shutting down all the windfarms but somehow CO2 is still going up.

Don (genius): There’s only one thing to do - BAN SOLAR !

( America voted for this guy. Twice. )

Re: It’s not working, sir.

By fluffernutter • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
When you vote, you vote for the person who is going to do the most for your country. I’m sorry you are blinded by such hate that you actually thought Trump was that person. But hate and anger are the only excuses left. The Democrats dared to run people who were actually politicians and would keep your country on track but no you had to “show them” by destroying your country.

Re:What could possibly go wrong?

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 5 Thread

You’ll know we’ve reached that stage when there is armed conflict over control of Lake Baikal.

Re: It’s not working, sir.

By nightflameauto • Score: 4 Thread

When you vote, you vote for the person who is going to do the most for your country.

False. Here in America we vote for the person who will do the least amount of damage to the country. No one running at the national level in our lifetimes has *EVER* been interested in doing the most for the country. They’re interested in doing the most for their own pockets, and their sponsors. The rest of the country is only of interest to them insofar as they need those votes the next time around. The power of the vote pales in comparison to the power of the money necessary to get to be presented to the public as a viable option to vote for. We’ve watched our lawmakers and judiciary encode that fact into law in such a way where bribery and outright purchasing of congressional power (and even judges in some case) is not only legal, but required to keep them doing anything at all. The vote is a simple dog and pony show meant to blame us for the actions of those with the money to actually influence the government. “You voted for this,” is a perfect example of someone who believes the smoke and mirrors are the entire story, and completely ignoring the fact that every single person in office that has any influence on the actual direction of the country has been bought and paid for long before they get past whatever filter, be it primary, previous office on a local or state level, or any other hurdle, allows them to run for national office.

I’m sorry you are blinded by such hate that you actually thought Trump was that person. But hate and anger are the only excuses left. The Democrats dared to run people who were actually politicians and would keep your country on track but no you had to “show them” by destroying your country.

The Democrats have done a lot to damage their own public image by simply playing the “we’re not as bad as them” game to the fullest possible extent they can. That’s the only thing they’ve run on since Donald Trump became Republican Captain and Commander, and it could be argued for some time before him. “We’re only gonna fuck you a little,” sounds real good when the alternative is, “WE’RE GOING IN DRY AND HARD, MOTHERFUCKER!” But it doesn’t change the fact that the Democrats are *STILL* learning the wrong lessons from their defeats. They seem to believe that it’s a winning strategy to become *MORE* like the Republicans, rather than less like them. Don’t believe me? Look at how Gavin Newsom is rising in their ranks. How? By being an obnoxious twat online, like a knock-off Trump.

It’d be nice if there were a few more Bernie Sanders / AOC types that actually propose true alternatives to, “We need to hand billions to the business class and take the reigns completely off of all business interactions.” But there’s a reason Bernie was pushed aside during his rise. There’s no profit in helping the general population. There’s much more profit it allowing the business sector and their owners to ride roughshod over the rest of us. And the politicians willing to help them do it are the ones we get presented with to choose between.

And the sad reality is, I still vote, because I want to at least *TRY* to stop the worst of the worst. It’s done me zero good, as I’m in prime MAGA country, and my state always goes red, but at least I can look myself in the mirror and say, “i didn’t fucking vote for this assclown.”

Brockman Rebuts Musk’s Take On Startup’s History, Recounts Secret Work For Tesla

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC:
OpenAI President Greg Brockman concluded his testimony on Tuesday, where he largely rebutted Elon Musk’s account of the early years of the startup and negotiations that occurred at the company. Brockman testified that he never made any commitments to Musk about the company’s corporate structure, and he never heard anyone else make them. He emphasized that OpenAI is still governed by a nonprofit. “This entity remains a nonprofit,” Brockman said, referring to the OpenAI foundation. “It is the best-resourced nonprofit in the world.” […] Brockman, who spoke from the witness stand in federal court in Oakland, California, over the course of two days, also revealed that Musk had enlisted several OpenAI employees to do months of free work for him at Tesla, Musk’s electric vehicle company. That work mainly included efforts to overhaul the company’s approach to developing self-driving technology as part of the Autopilot team there in 2017. During his two days on the stand, Brockman answered questions about his personal financial ambitions, his understanding of OpenAI’s structure and Musk’s involvement at the company, which they co-founded with other executives in 2015.

In Musk’s testimony last week, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO said that the time, money and resources he poured into OpenAI had been integral to the company’s success. He repeatedly said that he helped recruit the company’s top talent. Brockman said Tuesday that while Musk was helpful in convincing some employees to take the leap to join OpenAI, he was a polarizing figure for others. “Elon had a reputation of being an extremely hard driver,” Brockman said. He added that “certain candidates were very attracted” by Musk’s involvement at OpenAI, and that “certain candidates were very turned off.” Musk testified last week that a former OpenAI researcher named Andrej Karpathy joined Tesla, but only after he had planned to leave the startup already. Brockman said that Musk, after he hired Karpathy, approached him with “an apology and a confession,” about the hire, and that neither Musk nor Karpathy had told him the researcher planned to leave OpenAI before that. Musk was generally not very available for meetings and conversations, Brockman said, so he relied on employees, including Sam Teller and former OpenAI board member Shivon Zilis, as proxies.
Brockman testified that open sourcing OpenAI’s technology was “not a topic of conversation” during Musk’s time with the nonprofit, despite Musk’s claims that it was supposed to be central to the organization. He also described tense 2017 negotiations over a possible for-profit arm, saying Musk became angry when equity stakes were discussed. “He said Musk declined the proposal during an in-person meeting, then tore a painting of a Tesla Model 3 car off the wall, and began storming out of the room,” reports CNBC. He also demanded to know when the cofounders would leave the company.
Brockman further said Musk wanted control of OpenAI because he disliked situations where he lacked control, citing Zip2 and SolarCity as examples Musk had raised. He also testified that Musk partly wanted control to help fund his broader SpaceX ambition of building a “city on Mars.”

CNBC notes the trial will resume at 8:30 a.m. PT on Wednesday, with Shivon Zilis expected to testify. She is the mother of four of Musk’s children and a former OpenAI board member.

Recap:
OpenAI President Discloses His Stake In the Company Is Worth $30 Billion (Day Five)
Musk Concludes Testimony At OpenAI Trial (Day Four)
Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company’s Attorney (Day Three)
Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two)
Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)

So, nothing really new here

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 3 Thread

the ketamine nazi is basically a crook who likes to use other people’s money to his own ends and behaves like a trump when he can’t.

totally in character.

Re:So, nothing really new here

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think Musk is a supremacist. He regularly boosts supremacist accounts and their talking points on Twitter. He turned that whole platform into Nazis and other far rightists.

Nazis don’t necessarily have to buy into the genocide part, they can simply believe in the supremacy of white Europeans and various extreme measures to make sure that group stays on top. That seems to sum up Musk’s political views and actions as the head of DOGE. It’s a common trope among neo-Nazi organizations to want to remove all DEI and the like, to create a perfect “meritocracy” where it just happens to be the case that they have a huge advantage. That way everyone else can fail and they say it’s fair and natural, that the whites who succeed are just better. Of course we know what actually happens.

Re:So, nothing really new here

By necro81 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This goes against my better judgement, but I have to ask .. do you think Elon is an actual Nazi? Like… he wants to exterminate Jews and other races?

Throwing the Sieg Heil around is a bit of a tell. The nastiness, antisemitism, scapegoating, and glorification of hatred that bubbles on X and Grok - guided and abetted by Elon personally - is another indication. Nazism is about a lot more than antisemitism, though - that’s just a particularly violent manifestation of baser principles. Elon definitely espouses the belief that there are a certain class of folks (him being a prime example) that are superior to all others - the ones who ought to be calling the shots, and everyone else is a drag on society. Rules, democracy, pluralism, even basic kindness - these are impediments to an ubermensch such as himself.

To a certain extent, it does not matter if Elon truly believes these things or not - his actions speak volumes.

Ketamine [Re:So, nothing really new here]

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Ketamine is a very commonly prescribed drug, especially over the last decade for treating PTSD. I don’t know what that has to do with nazis, nor do I see any good coming from stigmatizing it. What other medicine do you like to stigmatize? Vaccines?

Ketamine is a Schedule III controlled substance: having accepted medical benefits but abuse potential. Usage rules mandate that the drug cannot be taken at home. Patients are observed at least two hours after receiving the agent and typically receive psychotherapy and other treatments for depression.

https://www.psychologytoday.co…

Quoting Gerard Sanacora, M.D., Ph.D. Director of the Yale Depression Research Program and Co-Director of Yale’s interventional psychiatry program: “Large amounts of data suggest that your ability to make rational, correct decisions is completely disrupted when you take ketamine, as long as it’s in your system… People can hear things, see things, feel things differently. The physiological and psychological reasons are the main reasons the FDA declared Spravato [Ketamine] safe only in a health care facility under supervision.”

Apple Agrees To Pay iPhone Owners $250 Million For Not Delivering AI Siri

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Apple has agreed to a proposed $250 million settlement over claims that it misled iPhone buyers about the availability of Apple Intelligence and its upgraded Siri features. The settlement would cover U.S. buyers of the iPhone 16 lineup and iPhone 15 Pro models between June 10, 2024, and March 29, 2025. The Verge reports:
The settlement will resolve a 2025 lawsuit, alleging Apple’s advertisements created a “clear and reasonable consumer expectation” that Apple Intelligence features would be available with the launch of the iPhone 16. The lawsuit claimed Apple’s products “offered a significantly limited or entirely absent version of Apple Intelligence, misleading consumers about its actual utility and performance.”

Apple brought certain AI-powered features to the iPhone 16 weeks after its release, and delayed the launch of its more personalized Siri, which is now expected to arrive later this year. Last April, the National Advertising Division recommended that Apple “discontinue or modify” its “available now” claim for Apple Intelligence. Apple also pulled an iPhone 16 ad showing actor Bella Ramsey using the AI-upgraded Siri.

No AI?

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Funny Thread
That’s a feature. These people should be paying Apple.

sure I’ll take the money, but

By FudRucker • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I’m not interested in Siri or AI being installed on my phone, I just don’t need it and consider it unneeded complexity, the only time I like AI is on a search engine in my web browser when it gives a clean & concise answer to my question.

Kill all the lawyers

By boxless • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What do the aggrieved parties get? A $10
coupon to the Apple Store?

And the lawyers? Millions. This one case made the careers of several of them. Never have to work again.

Crazy.

Re:Kill all the lawyers

By misnohmer • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Still infinitely more than people who paid thousands for Full Self Driving on Teslas between 2016-2019, which was supposed to drive their kids to school, drive their family and friends around, and drive for Tesla Ride Sharing Network when not in use making money for each owner.

Do Tesla next

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There are people who paid for self-driving who owned their Teslas for years and then on sold them or got rid of them all without ever actually having the promised feature. Musk has literally promised this every year now for over a decade.

Coinbase Lays Off Nearly 700 Workers In ‘AI-Native’ Restructuring

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Coinbase is laying off about 700 workers, or 14% of its workforce, as CEO Brian Armstrong says the company is restructuring to become “lean, fast, and AI-native.” Engadget reports:
Armstrong claimed he’d seen engineers “use AI to ship in days what used to take a team weeks” and that non-technical teams in the company are “shipping production code,” while Coinbase is automating many of its workflows. “All of this has led us to an inflection point, not just for Coinbase, but for every company,” Armstrong wrote. “The biggest risk now is not taking action. We are adjusting early and deliberately to rebuild Coinbase to be lean, fast and AI-native. We need to return to the speed and focus of our startup founding, with AI at our core.”

An AI-driven restructuring is only one half of the equation for Coinbase, though. Armstrong wrote that while the company “is well-capitalized, has diversified revenue streams and is well-positioned to weather any storm,” the crypto market is down. As such, Coinbase is attempting to become leaner and faster ahead of the next crypto cycle. The company is eliminating some management layers and organizing the business around “AI-native talent who can manage fleets of agents to drive outsized impact,” Armstrong wrote. “We’ll also be experimenting with reduced pod sizes, including ‘one person teams’ with engineers, designers and product managers all in one role.” That sure sounds like an attempt to get workers to take on more responsibilities.

Really? Wow!

By oldgraybeard • Score: 5, Funny Thread
“non-technical teams in the company are “shipping production code,”"

Everything you hate in one company

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Crypto grift, AI bubble and psychopathic billionaire CEO.

Re:Really? Wow!

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
With a dodgy asset that is constantly under massive amounts of attacks I’m sure that couldn’t possibly end poorly.

Also I am so fucking sick of how AI makes it so that we can pretend Trump didn’t put us into a recession. It is stupidly obvious we are in recession right now but because of the AI bubble and AI washing of layoffs we can all just pretend we aren’t.

Let’s call it what it is

By wakeboarder • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We hired too many devs, we are laying them off, we are blaming AI.

Re:Everything you hate in one company

By newslash.formatblows • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I heard that they have uncovered one of the world’s largest reserves of bullshit buzzwords, so that should add a few hundred billion to the market cap.

Google DeepMind Workers Vote To Unionize Over Military AI Deals

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
Employees at Google DeepMind in London have voted to unionize as part of a bid to block the AI lab from providing its technology to the US and Israeli militaries. In a letter addressed to Google’s managing director for the UK and Ireland, Debbie Weinstein, the workers asked the company to recognize the Communication Workers Union and Unite the Union as joint representatives for DeepMind employees. “Fundamentally, the push for unionization is about holding Google to its own ethical standards on AI, how they monetize it, what the products do, and who they work with,” John Chadfield, national officer for technology at the CWU, tells WIRED. “Through the process of unionization, workers are collectively in a much stronger place to put [demands] to an increasingly deaf management.”

[…] The DeepMind employee tells WIRED that if the staff succeeds in unionizing in the UK, they will likely demand that Google pulls out of its long-standing contract with the Israeli military, and seek greater transparency over how its AI products will be used, and some sort of assurance relating to layoffs made possible by automation. If Google does not engage, the letter states, the employees will ask an arbitration committee to compel the company to recognize the unions. Since the turn of the year, both Anthropic and OpenAI have announced large-scale expansions of their operations in London. CWU hopes the unionization effort at DeepMind will spur workers at those labs into similar action. “These conversations are happening,” claims Chadfield. “The workers at other frontier labs have seen what Google DeepMind workers have done. They’ve come to us asking for help as well.”
The unionization push began in February 2025 after Alphabet removed a pledge from its AI ethics guidelines that had barred uses such as weapons development and surveillance. “A lot of people here bought into the Google DeepMind tagline ‘to build AI responsibly to benefit humanity,’" the DeepMind employee told WIRED. “The direction of travel is to further militarization of the AI models we’re building here.”

Re:Unions are for employee protections.

By kwelch007 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It’s not going anywhere. Unions can bargain all they want over this issue, and they may even have a valid societal value in doing so. But unless they can show that it will cost Google more in legal fees than it will in lost revenue or lack of willing employees, the only real option the employees will have is to quit in protest.

Re:Unions are for employee protections.

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Or is that no more? This sounds like unionizing to control the employer’s actions or morality. I don’t see how this is even a thing going anywhere.

These employees are being forced to choose between having their work product support a genocide, and being unemployed. It strikes me that they should be protected from such a choice - especially so since the company they work for once had a loudly-proclaimed motto which said “Don’t be evil”.

Re: Go Google Employees!

By XXongo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I could understand if they were just pacifists, but where were these guys when Google backed Russia’s information warfare campaign in a US court?

First, we’re discussing an article about employees at DeepMind in London, which, for reference, is not in the US, and has nothing to do with the case of US copyright violation that you posted the link to.

Second, don’t ever use yootoob as a reference. Yootoob is for conspiracy garbage. If it’s real, there’s a link to an actual site with information.

Re:Go Google Employees!

By swillden • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It won’t work: Google is a for profit company, and there are A LOT of profits to be made in the made from the military. They will stop operating in the UK before they give up that much money.

DeepMind is the core of Google’s AI research, and it began as a UK company that Google purchased. It’s still the case that the bulk of their core researchers are there. Ceasing operations in the UK would not only cost them a lot more than the US DoD will ever pay them, it would also cost them a lot of critical AI expertise.

Re:Go Google Employees!

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Google doesn’t actually have to cease UK operations. That is just some internet-tough-guy bad faith fantasy. Don’t entertain it as a real thing.

Google doesn’t have to agree to the terms put forth by the unions. Google can recognize the unions, negotiate on common terms, and still reject the demand to “pull out of its long-standing contract with the Israeli military”. That puts the ball squarely back in the court of the employees. How many are really willing to quit over that one demand not being met? Being a union does give leverage, but it does not give the ability to dictate terms. And that one is a BIG ask for a tech company.

Moving To Mainframe Can Be Cheaper Than Sticking With VMware

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Gartner says some VMware customers may find it cheaper to move certain Linux VM workloads to IBM mainframes than to adopt Broadcom’s new VMware licensing, especially for fleets of hundreds of Linux VMs and mission-critical apps needing long-term stability. The Register reports:
Speaking to The Register to discuss the analyst firm’s mid-April publication, “The State of the IBM Mainframe in 2026,” [Gartner Vice President Analyst Alessandro Galimberti] said some buyers in many fields are comparing mainframes to modern environments and deciding Big Blue’s big iron comes out ahead. “I can build a multi-region cloud application, but things like data synchronization and high availability are things I need to build into application logic,” he said. “The mainframe has that in the platform, which shields developers from complexity.” He also thinks mainframes are ideally suited to workloads that need many years of transactional consistency and backward-compatibility.

That said, Galimberti doesn’t recommend the mainframe for all applications. He said mission-critical applications that are unlikely to change much for a decade are best-suited to the machines, as are Linux applications because the open source OS runs on IBM’s hardware. IBM also offers the z/VM hypervisor, which he says can make Linux “even better and more enterprise-ready.” Which is why Galimberti thinks IBM’s ecosystem is attractive to VMware users, especially those who operate a fleet of 500 to 700 Linux VMs. […]

Committing to mainframes therefore means planning “to spend time negotiating price and renewal protections, rather than prioritizing the business value these solutions can deliver.” Another downside is that mainframes pose clear lock-in risk, so users may hold back on useful customizations out of fear they make it harder to extricate themselves from the platform. Access to skills remains an issue, too, as kids these days mostly don’t contemplate a career working with big iron. Galimberti sees more service providers investing in their mainframe programs, which might help. So does the availability of Linux.

Broadcom doesn’t expect customers to stay

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

They got rid of most of VMware’s engineering team. VMware is basically where Solaris is now. Yes technically you can keep renewing but this is not a product with a future. They are just shaking down customers on the way out the door.

I’d laugh if IBM got any new labels from this, I mean come on nobody really thinks that tying yourself to mainframes is the path to long-term cost savings. Though the fact IBM is still somewhat investing in its mainframes versus POWER is slightly impressive. Telum II got a die shrink while Power 11, released last year, is still on 7 nm.

Not happening much. Proxmox & Nutantix better

By MIPSPro • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Few want to be stuck with the requirement to keep IBM mainframe tooling and expertise attached to their business unless they are already there (banks mostly). One of the sister companies to ours under the same ownership actually does this kinda stuff for people and it’s still a pretty hard sell. It’s mostly folks who already have mainframes who will even listen to that sales pitch.

Proxmox and (especially) Nutanix have a much better sales pitch. They can support ESXi natively and provide the management layer. When they want to abandon the last VMware server they just V2V migrate the machines from ESXi (works pretty seamlessly in Nutanix AHV and there are some good orchestration bits for Proxmox that do it, too).

Oh come on

By jrnvk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Look, the VMWare debacle was one thing, but you should not aim to replace any already modern systems with IBM products in 2026.

If not for the obvious technological reasons, just look at how IBM has been run the last few years.

Gartner: Advertising Posing as Research

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This is IBM trying to advertise that they’re still viable, when in reality, nobody is going to move from Linux in VMWare to an IBM mainframe.

Now, it’s not *COMPLETELY* outside the realm of possibility that Gartner is simply too unaware to understand that VMWare is/was not the only platform available for virtualizing Linux. They are, after all, notoriously unidimensional in their thinking on tech, and often seem to present information as if they were forced to wear blinders when doing their research. But it’s really hard to believe they’ve remained *COMPLETEL* ignorant of the other possibilities available that are anything other than, “Spend a fortune on VMWare licensing” or “Spend almost as much on IBM licensing + Hardware.”

One would almost think they’re goal was to promote spending ridiculously too much money to accomplish a business goal.

That pendulum keeps swinging…

By MachineShedFred • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

2006: fed up with IBM, everyone starts buying 64-bit x86 servers to load VMware on, cluster up, and migrate application loads from IBM mainframes to virtualized environments

2026: fed up with Broadcom, everyone starts buying IBM Z-series mainframes to migrate application loads from VMware to IBM mainframe environments.

We’ve been doing the “tick-tock” thing from distributed to centralized and back since the 1960s. This is not new.

Kids Bypass Age Verification With Fake Moustaches

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
A new Internet Matters survey suggests the UK’s Online Safety Act age checks are easy for many children to bypass. Reported workarounds include fake birthdays, borrowed IDs, video game characters, and even drawing on a fake mustache. The Register reports:
The group surveyed over 1,000 UK children and their parents, and while it did report some positive effects from changes made under the OSA, many children saw age verification as an easy-to-bypass hurdle rather than something that kept them genuinely safe. A full 46 percent of children even said that age checks were easy to bypass, while just 17 percent said that they were difficult to fool. The methods kids use to fool age gates vary, but most are pretty simple: There’s the classic use of a video game character to fool video selfie systems, while in other instances, children reported just entering a fake birthday or using someone else’s ID card when that was required.

The report even cites cases of children drawing a mustache on their faces to fool age detection filters. Seriously. While nearly half of UK kids say it’s easy to bypass online age checks (and another 17 percent say it’s neither hard nor easy), only 32 percent say they’ve actually bypassed them, according to Internet Matters. Like scoring some booze from “cool” parents, keeping age-gated content out of the hands of kids under the OSA is only as effective as parents let it be, and a quarter of them enable their kids’ online delinquency. More specifically, Internet Matters found that a full 17 percent of parents admitted to actively helping their kids evade age checks, while an additional 9 percent simply turned a blind eye to it.

Dupes with fake moustaches fool slashdot editors

By caseih • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Come one editors. You can do better than that.

Maybe Age Verification is Backwards

By databasecowgirl • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
It might be smarter to ban parents from social media so they aren’t parenting while distracted.

Age restrictions turn access into a game

By MpVpRb • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Kids are good at games

Re:They learned it from cartoons!

By MIPSPro • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Check out this fabulous old political cartoon from 2003 showing Uncle Sam at the gift store wrapping “control of internet speech” and the clerk asks “How would you like that wrapped”. On the wall hangs two kinds of wrapping paper “For the Children” or “Anti-Terrorism”