Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Remembering Zip Drives - the Trendy Storage Technology of the 1990s
  2. Duolingo CEO Says They’ve Stopped Tracking Employees’ AI Use for Performance Reviews
  3. SpaceX, Blue Origin Compete For ‘Artemis III’ Mission
  4. New Movie Trailer Shows First AI-Generated Performance By a Major Star: the Late Val Kilmer
  5. Old Cars ‘Tell Tales’ by Storing Data That’s Never Wiped
  6. Fewer US College Students Major in CS. More Choose Data Science, Engineering
  7. US Congress Fails to Pass Long-Term FISA Extension, Authorizes It Through April 30
  8. 30 WordPress Plugins Turned Into Malware After Ownership Change
  9. Fructose Isn’t Just Sugar. It Acts More Like a Hormone
  10. 20-Year-Old Enters Prison for Historic Breach, Ransoming of Massive Student Database
  11. FSF to OnlyOffice: You Can’t Use the GNU (A)GPL to Take Software Freedom Away
  12. US Government Now Wants Anthropic’s ‘Mythos’, Preparing for AI Cybersecurity Threats
  13. Shuttered Startups Are Selling Old Slack Chats, Emails To AI Companies
  14. NASA Restarts Work To Support Europe’s Uncrewed Trip To Mars After Years of Setbacks
  15. Critical Atlantic Current Significantly More Likely To Collapse Than Thought

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.

Remembering Zip Drives - the Trendy Storage Technology of the 1990s

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Back in the 1990s, floppy disks “had a mere capacity of 1.44MB,” remembers XDA Developers, “which would soon become absolutely tiny for the increasingly large pieces of software that would come about.”
Floppy disks also felt quite fragile, and while we got “superfloppy” formats that were physically larger and had more capacity, those were pretty unwieldy as portable storage. Enter 1994, when a company called Iomega introduced its variant of a “superfloppy”, the Zip drive… [T]he initial capacity introduced in 1994 reached a whopping 100MB, which was huge number when put up against the traditional floppy disk. Zip drives also had major performance benefits, with read speeds that could average 1.4MB/s, as opposed to the comparatively sluggish 16kB/s speeds of a traditional floppy disk, as well as a seek time of around 28ms seconds, whereas a floppy disk averaged 200ms. Zip drives weren’t quite as fast as desktop HDDs, but for portable storage, this was a huge step forward…

[I]n 1998, Iomega introduced the Zip 250 disks, which increased the capacity to 250MB, and, already in the new millennium, we got the Zip 750, which took that further to 750MB… It was an appealing enough proposition that big computer manufacturers like Dell started including a Zip drive in some of their PCs. Even Apple included Zip drives in some of its Power Macintosh models from the mid-to-late 90s. However, things started to shift towards the end of the decade as other portable formats rose to prominence, most notably CDs and USB flash drives.

Despite their initial success, it didn’t take long for users to start noticing a major drawback of Zip drives: many times, they would just fail. It wasn’t necessarily related to age or any particular misuse of the disks, it just happened. It was a big enough phenomenon that it became known as the “click of death”, and once it happened, your drive was gone. The problem was estimated by Iomega to affect around 0.5% of Zip drives, but while that sounds like a small number, when you sell products by the thousands, it becomes fairly widespread. It was a big enough issue that, in September 1998, a class action lawsuit was filed against Iomega for the common problems. Some of the complaints in that lawsuit were eventually dismissed by the court of Delaware, but others were not, and once the public became aware of the problems with Zip drives, it was hard for the brand to make a comeback.

It didn’t help that this happened around the same time as formats such as CDs were becoming more popular… And eventually, USB flash drives became the most popular way to carry data around since they were smaller and offered much faster speeds… Eventually, after seeing its profits plummet by the mid-2000s, Iomega was sold to a company called EMC in 2008, and in 2013, EMC and Lenovo formed a joint venture that took over Iomega’s business and removed all of the Iomega branding from its products.
The article does note that “as late as 2014, some aviation companies were still using Zip drives to distribute updates for navigation databases.” Are there any Slashdot readers who still remember their own Zip drive experiences?

Share your memories in the comments of that once-so-trendy storage technology from the 1990s…

Duolingo CEO Says They’ve Stopped Tracking Employees’ AI Use for Performance Reviews

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Last May Duolingo’s stock peaked at $529.05. But while the learning app passed $1 billion in revenue in 2025 and 50 million daily active users, today its stock price has dropped more than 81%, to $100.51.

And there’s been other changes, reports Entrepreneur:
In April 2025, Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn made headlines after writing a memo calling the company "AI-first.” In the memo, von Ahn announced that the language-learning platform would track employees’ AI use in performance reviews. Now, a year later, von Ahn is backtracking and rethinking how he measures employee performance. He told the Silicon Valley Girl podcast earlier this month that Duolingo no longer considers AI use in performance reviews.

The change arose after employees started to ask, “Do you just want us to use AI for AI’s sake?” von Ahn explained. “We said no, look — the most important thing in your performance is that you are doing whatever your job is as well as possible. A lot of times, AI can help you with that, but if it can’t, I’m not going to force you to do that,” von Ahn said on the podcast. He felt as though the company was “trying to push something that in some cases did not fit” instead of “being held accountable for the actual outcome.” The CEO is, however, still sticking to other “constructive constraints” he introduced in the April 2025 memo, including stopping contractor hiring in cases where AI can assume their workload…

Von Ahn also mentioned that a few months ago, Duolingo had a day dedicated to vibe coding, or prompting AI to create an app without manually writing a single line of code. Every single person at the company, from engineers to human resources professionals, had to vibe code an app. Vibe coding has made an impact at the company. One of Duolingo’s latest offerings, a course teaching users how to play chess, arose when two people vibe-coded the first prototype of it, the CEO said. Neither of them knew how to play chess or program, but they managed to use AI to create the whole chess curriculum and a prototype of the app in about six months last year. Now chess is Duolingo’s fastest-growing course, according to von Ahn. “At this point, we have seven million daily active users that are learning chess,” the CEO said on the podcast.

Six months?

By thecombatwombat • Score: 3 Thread

They made every employee vibe code, and OK it made a chess app.

IN SIX MONTHS?!?!? And they still emphasize it was just a prototype?

That’s the impressive AI fast timeline?

Oh my, no one has ever taught Chess before. What an efficient, innovative thing that could never have happened except in this wonderful future.

Just WTF.

SpaceX, Blue Origin Compete For ‘Artemis III’ Mission

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
After Artemis II’s astronauts returned to earth, “NASA has Artemis III in its sights,” reports the Associated Press:
In a mission recently added to the docket for next year, Artemis III’s yet-to-be -named astronauts will practice docking their Orion capsule with a lunar lander or two in orbit around Earth. Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin are racing to have their company’s lander ready first. Musk’s Starship and Bezos’ Blue Moon are vying for the all-important Artemis IV moon landing in 2028. Two astronauts will aim for the south polar region, the preferred location for [NASA Administrator Jared] Isaacman’s envisioned $20 billion to $30 billion moon base. Vast amounts of ice are almost certainly hidden in permanently shadowed craters there — ice that could provide water and rocket fuel.

The docking mechanism for Artemis III’s close-to-home trial run is already at Florida’s Kennedy Space Center. The latest model Starship is close to launching on a test flight from South Texas, and a scaled-down version of Blue Moon will attempt a lunar landing later this year.

Why can’t they all just get along?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3, Funny Thread

Here’s an idea - give it to Boeing / ULA. You save money because you don’t have to worry about the return leg of the trip.

Re:Kind of surprising

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Not sure what sources of “press coverage” you’re following, but… it was all over the news I read and watch, at least.

New Movie Trailer Shows First AI-Generated Performance By a Major Star: the Late Val Kilmer

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“A trailer has been released for the first film to star an authorised generative AI version of a major Hollywood actor,” writes The Guardian:
Val Kilmer was cast in western As Deep As the Grave before his death in April 2025. Production delays meant he never shot any scenes, but the creative team worked with UK-based company Sonantic to create an AI speaking voice based on his old recordings. His estate and daughter Mercedes collaborated with the film-makers on the visual deepfake of the actor. Kilmer, who was diagnosed with throat cancer, was also assisted by technology for his cameo in 2022’s Top Gun: Maverick

Writer-director Coerte Voorhees confirmed that Kilmer is seen for around an hour of the film’s running time… Voorhees has said that the production followed Sag-Aftra [union] guidelines, and that Kilmer’s estate — which provided archival material for them to use — was compensated financially.
“Kilmer’s likeness can be seen portraying Father Fintan, a Catholic priest and Native American spiritualist,” adds The Hollywood Reporter. But the AV Club calls it "ghoulish puppet show time.”

“Having your AI Val Kilmer puppet whisper ‘Don’t fear the dead, and don’t fear me’ in a movie trailer is a bold choice…”
He is accompanied (per Variety) by a whole host of disclaimers, caveats, and explanations offered by writer-director Coerte Voorhees and his associates: Kilmer deeply wanted to be in the movie, but was too sick to do so. His family endorses and supports his inclusion. He was a big fan of technology, including, presumably, its use in turning his own image into a digital avatar to then shove into movies…

The fact is, of course, that nobody would be paying a fraction of this attention to As Deep As The Grave — about early female archeologist Ann Axtell Morris — if it weren’t now being used as the stage on which Voorhees was very publicly accepting the dare to go full-on ghoulish with AI tech.
“The filmmakers said they hoped they were showing Hollywood how to use the technology in a positive way…” notes Australia’s ABC News. But their articles add that “Some have called the trailer ‘terrifying’ and ‘disgusting’ on social media.”

Mashable writes:
“Very fitting that this trailer includes a scene where a corpse is unceremoniously yanked out of the ground,” read one of the top comments on As Deep as the Grave’s trailer at time of writing… [O]nline commenters have labelled it disgusting and disrespectful, not only for digitally reanimating Kilmer but also for the damaging precedent As Deep as the Grave‘s use of AI could set for the film industry as a whole.

Re:not to disrespect the late Val Kilmer but fuck

By Brain-Fu • Score: 4 Thread

Many machines have replaced or greatly reduced the need for human labor. What makes acting deserving of special protection from automation?

The purpose of art

By wickerprints • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

is not, as many would have you believe, to be found solely in its consumption or appreciation.

Art is a dialogue. It is a conversation between humans—those who feel joy and pain, sorrow and hope; and it is the embodiment of creative expression in which the artist, for all their imperfections and struggle, brings into being something that marks existence—as if to say, “I was once here, in this space that you now observe.”

And that is not necessarily pretentiousness or egocentrism. Art is born from a desire to connect with others, across space and time.

The intrinsic problem of “generative AI” as it is presently utilized as a vehicle of artistic expression is that, overwhelmingly, it fails to create a true dialogue, in much the same way that using a chatbot amounts to speaking with nobody but yourself. There may be a director and other humans who are prompting the AI and exerting control over the output, but the lack of human actors and cinematographers means that the result can only ever be a simulation of art, not art itself. It is not until we can create artificial consciousness—machines that experience human emotions and concept of self—that we can ever say that their status can transcend that of mere tools and their product might become art. To be clear, I am not suggesting we should attempt to do so. But what we have today is very, very far away from this.

Maybe a simulation is enough for most people, who think of popular media as nothing more than transitory stories to consume, discard, and forget. That the audience may not have the capacity to respect art as a process, by failing to distinguish what it is and is not, does not invalidate the artist, no more than someone who doesn’t understand mathematics or computer programming can decide that it is not worth learning or doing.

The reason why there is a lot of pushback against AI has to do with the preposterous notion that it can (and therefore, should) serve as a substitute for human creativity. Of all of the things that such sophisticated computational models could be used for, the last thing that I would want it to do for me is my thinking and feeling. We should be using technology to make our lives easier and give us more freedom to express ourselves creatively, not less. People who are using it to simulate art have entirely missed the point of why we make art in the first place. Creative expression is not a chore like washing my dishes and scrubbing my toilet bowl. Yes, making art is sometimes painful and difficult and challenging. But that struggle is not something to be eliminated. It is meant to be overcome.

AI apologists—at least, nearly all of those I have met—are, in my view, nearly entirely lacking in understanding of what makes living worthwhile; and those who do understand are intentionally and cynically promoting AI because they stand to gain financially from this position.

Old Cars ‘Tell Tales’ by Storing Data That’s Never Wiped

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Slashdot reader Bismillah shared this report from ITNews:
Research and development engineer Romain Marchand of Paris headquartered Quarkslab obtained a telematic control unit (TCU) from a salvage yard in Poland… Marchand tore down the TCU, which is based on a Qualcomm system on a chip, and extracted the Linux-based file system from the Micron multi-chip package (MCP) which contained NAND-based non-volatile storage memory. The non-volatile storage contained sensitive information, including system configuration data and more importantly, logs that revealed the vehicle’s GPS positions over time.

None of that information was encrypted, Marchand told iTnews, which made it possible to collect and retrieve sensitive data of interest. What’s more, the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) logs with GPS positions covered the BYD’s full journey from the factory in China to its operational life in the United Kingdom, and to its final wrecking in Poland, Marchand explained in an analysis… The issue is not restricted to BYD, and Marchand added that the hardware architecture of the Chinese car maker’s TCU is broadly similar to what can be found in other brands.

That’s not an old car

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I have an actual old car, and it doesn’t store any data, what-so-ever, and doesn’t report it to anyone.

Encryption

By rtkluttz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I hate how it is always presented like lack of encryption is a bad thing. In many cases it is not. Someone has to have physical control to get to that data. Physical control is the first piece of security. Encryption in many cases after that protects NOTHING from the owners perspective. Encryption after that fact, other than the end to end communications are almost always used AGAINST the owner. Metrics and information that the owner never gets a chance to explicitly deny. I agree with encrypted communications and even encryption at rest, but things like pinned certificates and other aspects of encryption do absolutely nothing but allow manufacturers to weaponize things against the owner. Being blocked out is the first step, but after that comes data mining. Then after that comes artificially crippled features so those features can be sold back to you piecemill. Fuck that and them. Every connected thing should be forced by the government to have features at the bare minimum that allow the owner to see data streams and control what goes where. Zero trust is the gold standard in security and the fact that owners are not allowed to lock out the manufacturer from EV’s and other cars is patently ridiculous. These things are connected to the grid a large portion of the time for God’s sake. Government needs to step in and enforce that all connected things have a root level firewall that allows the OWNER to control the security and where the data goes and the ability to inspect encrypted traffic to see if they approve of it leaving the vehicle or the connected thing.

Re:That’s not an old car

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It sounds like a bug. Tesla did the same thing and it resulted in a lot of Teslas dying prematurely because the flash memory wore out due to all the logging.

They tried to charge people to fix it too.

Technobabble

By ByTor-2112 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

You know that when the article has more techobabble than a TNG episode and more acronyms than the US Military, it’s some high quality journalism.

“Hackermanz extracted the positronic matrix unit (PMU), based on a quantum chip by Quanticorp, and extracted the Linux-based filesystem [wtf is a ‘linux-based filesystem’???] from the Romulan control package (RCP) which contained DTRD based tachyon storage”

Not just GPS

By YrWrstNtmr • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Purchasing a 2017 car in 2023, from Carvana.
Great car, good deal.

I know the original owners address, where he worked, the places he frequented, his kids house, etc, etc.
All stored in the nav memory.

No GPS logs, just the places he purposely stored.


People…purge your stuff before selling!

Fewer US College Students Major in CS. More Choose Data Science, Engineering

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“From 2008 to 2024, the number of four-year computer science degrees granted rose about fivefold…” reports the Washington Post. Then in 2025 CS suddenly dropped from the fourth-largest undergraduate major to sixth, they report (citing data from the nonprofit National Student Clearinghouse, which compiles numbers from 97% of U.S. universities.

The 54,000-student drop was “the biggest one-year drop of any major discipline going back to at least 2020.” But what major are they choosing instead?
Sarah Karamarkovich, a research associate with the National Student Clearinghouse, pointed to an explanation from the data that we had overlooked. Enrollments in two interdisciplinary majors, data analytics and data science, topped a combined 35,000 in the fall of 2025. That was up from a few hundred when those disciplines were broken out into their own majors in 2020. Those relatively new categories reflect colleges’ zeal to create specialized majors, including in AI, data science, robotics and cybersecurity. Some of those disciplines may be counted in the national enrollment data as computer science. Others are not.

The numbers suggest that some of the disappearing computer science majors didn’t flee so much as they splintered into related disciplines.... The 8 percent decline in computer science majors last fall was nearly mirrored by a 7.3 percent increase in engineering majors, according to the National Student Clearinghouse data. Within engineering, mechanical and electrical engineering major enrollments increased by the largest absolute amounts — a jump of 11 percent and 14 percent, respectively.

Because internships and jobs are few

By btroy • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
My son was about one year from his undergrad in C.S. A very reputable school. His grades nearly all A’s.

Available internships - nearly zero.

Maybe that is related?

He shifted to engineering, where the opportunities are … at least for now.

US Congress Fails to Pass Long-Term FISA Extension, Authorizes It Through April 30

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Yesterday the U.S. Congress approved “a short-term extension” of a FISA law that allows wiretaps without a warrant for surveilling foreign targets, reports CNN — but only until April 30. Republican congressional leaders had sought an 18-month extension, but “failed to secure” the votes after “clamoring from some of their members for reforms to protect Americans’ privacy.”
The warrantless surveillance law, known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, was set to expire on Monday night. Members are hoping the additional time will allow them to come to agreement without ending authorization for the intelligence gathering program, which permits US officials to monitor phone calls and text messages from foreign targets… There was an hour of suspense in the Senate Friday morning when it appeared possible that Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden, a longtime critic of FISA 702, might block the House-passed extension. But ultimately, he said his House colleagues had assured him “this short-term extension makes reform more likely, and expiration makes reform less likely,” and so he chose not to object....

House Republican leaders believed Thursday night they had struck a deal with conservative holdouts who harbor deep and longstanding concerns that a key piece of the law infringes on Americans’ privacy rights. But in a pair of after-midnight votes, more than a dozen rank-and-file Republicans rejected the long-term reauthorization plan on the floor, which was the result of days of tense negotiations among leadership, lawmakers and the White House.

The law allows authorized US officials to gather phone calls and text messages of foreign targets, but they can also incidentally collect the data of Americans in the process. Senior national security officials have for years said the law is critical for thwarting terror attacks, stemming the flow of fentanyl into the US and stopping ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure. Civil liberties groups on the left and the right, meanwhile, argue the surveillance authority risks infringing on Americans’ privacy.

FISA ? What sport is that?

By rossdee • Score: 3 Thread

I know FIFA is soccer
and FIA is Formula 1 racing (But they got paused by the Gulf War, and I got a note today from F!-TV saying my subscription is expiring and is not available for renewal)

Re:Obama and Biden

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

supported this too, without question.

It turns out neither of them are president right now and thus your comment is irrelevant to the situation at hand. Even in politics not everything needs to be about partisanship. We criticised Obama at the time, we criticised Biden at the time, and we will criticise Trump, just like we did last time too (except for DrMrLordX who insisted in 2024 that Trump won’t pass this because he’s mad it was used against his staffers in 2026 [sic - he meant 2016], lets see how well his post ages).

Ya, but …

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

House Republican leaders believed Thursday night they had struck a deal with conservative holdouts who harbor deep and longstanding concerns that a key piece of the law infringes on Americans’ privacy rights.

All of whom are apparently okay with ICE arresting, deporting and killing U.S. citizens, though.

FISA was born out of 9/11

By Tony Isaac • Score: 3 Thread

It was a time when the world was especially paranoid, and we were willing to trade most of our privacy, for security. It wasn’t a good trade then, and it still isn’t a good trade.

30 WordPress Plugins Turned Into Malware After Ownership Change

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Wednesday BleepingComputer reported that more than 30 WordPress plugins "have been compromised with malicious code that allows unauthorized access to websites running them.”
A malicious actor planted the backdoor code last year but only recently started pushing it to users via updates, generating spam pages and causing redirects, as per the instructions received from the command-and-control (C2) server. The compromise affects plugins with hundreds of thousands of active installations and was spotted by Austin Ginder, the founder of managed WordPress hosting provider Anchor Hosting, after receiving a tip about one add-on containing code that allowed third-party access.

Further investigation by Ginder revealed that a backdoor had been present in all plugins within the EssentialPlugin package since August 2025, after the project was acquired in a six-figure deal by a new owner.... “The injected code was sophisticated. It fetched spam links, redirects, and fake pages from a command-and-control server. It only showed the spam to Googlebot, making it invisible to site owners,” explained Ginder.
“WordPress.org’s v2.6.9.1 update neutralized the phone-home mechanism in the plugin,” Ginder writes in a blog post. “But it did not touch wp-config.php. The SEO spam injection was still actively serving hidden content to Googlebot.

“And here is the wildest part. It resolved its C2 domain through an Ethereum smart contract, querying public blockchain RPC endpoints. Traditional domain takedowns would not work because the attacker could update the smart contract to point to a new domain at any time.”
This has happened before. In 2017, a buyer using the alias “Daley Tias” purchased the Display Widgets plugin (200,000 installs) for $15,000 and injected payday loan spam. That buyer went on to compromise at least 9 plugins the same way.... The WordPress plugin marketplace has a trust problem… The Flippa listing for Essential Plugin was public. The buyer’s background in SEO and gambling marketing was public. And yet the acquisition sailed through without any review from WordPress.org.

WordPress.org has no mechanism to flag or review plugin ownership transfers. There is no “change of control” notification to users. No additional code review triggered by a new committer. The Plugins Team responded quickly once the attack was discovered. But 8 months passed between the backdoor being planted and being caught.
Thanks to Slashdot reader axettone for sharing the news.

Friends don’t let friends

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

use WordPress

Re:Friends don’t let friends

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Over the past several years, core Wordpress has actually had fewer significant security bugs than Drupal.

The problem is that: Wordpress’ plugins ecosystem, on the other hand, is basically still the Wild West.

Fructose Isn’t Just Sugar. It Acts More Like a Hormone

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Slashdot reader smazsyr writes:
A new review says we’ve had fructose wrong for decades. The nine authors, led by Richard Johnson at the University of Colorado Anschutz, argue that fructose "is not just another calorie.” It is a signal. It tells the liver to make fat and brace for a famine that never comes. That made sense for a bear fattening up on autumn berries. It makes less sense for a person drinking soda in March.

The review reframes the WHO’s sugar guideline, argues ScienceBlog.com, as “less a recommendation about calories and more a warning about a signalling molecule we have been dosing ourselves with, several times a day, for most of a century.”

That’s it

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Funny Thread

From now on, I’m only drinking soda in October.

Re:BS

By nospam007 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Just get the Archive Page extension, then no paywalls anymore.

Bad of the week

By will4 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Since President Eisenhower’s 1954 heart attack, activists found that attacking food can be done for profit, research funding and filling news articles.

Name a food group, food additive, type of diet, regional cultural spices, miracle berry of the year, processing method, packaging method, etc. and there have been one or more attacks/ warnings, for fun or profit, against it.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/a…
The saturated fat Controversy: Finding calmness in chaos

Reading: “Make Room, Make Room” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…!

It’s an interesting hypothesis

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

But it’s important not to overreact until there have been more studies which confirm (or refute) it.

Jumping the gun, building your belief system based on single “out of left field” study results, gets you RFK Jr.

Re:Don’t eat fruit

By walterbyrd • Score: 4 Thread

According to the article in scienceblog:
- The Body Makes Its Own [fructose]
- Does fruit cause the same metabolic damage as soda?
— No, and the review is careful on this point. Whole fruit contains fructose, but it also contains fibre, flavanols, vitamin C and potassium, all of which slow fructose absorption or blunt its downstream effects. The dose is also lower and the delivery slower. Fizzy drinks, by contrast, deliver a concentrated fructose bolus fast enough to overwhelm the small intestine’s protective filtering.

20-Year-Old Enters Prison for Historic Breach, Ransoming of Massive Student Database

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
20-year-old Matthew Lane sent a text message to ABC News as his parents drove him to federal prison in Connecticut. “I’m just scared,” he said, calling the whole situation “extremely sad.”
Barely a year earlier, while still a teenager, he helped launch what’s been described as the biggest cyberattack in U.S. education history — a data breach that concerned authorities so much, it prompted briefings with senior government officials inside the White House Situation Room. The breach pierced the education technology company PowerSchool — used by 80% of school districts in North America… [and operating in about 90 countries around the world]. With threats to expose social security numbers, dates of birth, family information, grades, and even confidential medical information, the breach cornered PowerSchool into paying millions of dollars in ransom.

“I think I need to go to prison for what I did,” Lane told ABC News in an exclusive interview, speaking publicly for the first time about the headline-grabbing heist and his life as a cybercriminal. “It was disgusting, it was greedy, it was rooted in my own insecurities, it was wrong in every aspect,” he said in the interview, two days before reporting to prison… At about 6:30 on a Tuesday morning last April, FBI agents started banging on the door of Lane’s second-floor dorm room. “FBI! We have a search warrant,” Lane recalled them shouting. They seized his devices and many of the luxury items he bought with “dirty” money, as he put it. He said he felt a “wave of relief.... I’m honestly thankful for the FBI,” he said. “After they left, I was like, ‘It’s over … I’m done with this’…”

A federal judge in Massachusetts sentenced him to four years in federal prison and ordered him to pay more than $14 million in restitution.
“In the wake of the breach, PowerSchool offered two years’ worth of credit-monitoring and identity protection services to concerned customer,” the article points out. But it also notes two other arrests in September of teenaged cybercriminals:

- A 15-year-old boy in Illinois who allegedly attacked Las Vegas casinos, reportedly costing MGM Resorts alone more than $100 million

- A British national who when he was 16 helped breach over 110 companies around the world and extort $115 million.


But ironically, Lane tells ABC News it all started on Roblox, where he’d met cheaters, password-stealers, and cybercriminals sharing photos of their stacks of money, creating a “sense of camaraderie”
Lane and others warn that online forums also attract criminal groups seeking to recruit potential hackers. “The bad guys are on all the platforms watching the kids playing,” Hay said. “And when they see an elite-level performer, they go approach that kid, masquerading as another kid, and they go, ‘Hey, you want to earn some [money]? … Here are the tools, here are the techniques’....”

According to Lane, he spent his “ill-gotten gains” on designer clothes, diamond jewelry, DoorDash deliveries, Airbnb rentals for him and his friends, and drugs — “lots of drugs.” He said he would numb ever-present feelings of guilt with drugs — from high-potency marijuana to acid. But it was hacking that gave him the strongest high. “It’s indescribable the adrenaline you get when you do something like that,” he said. “It’s way more than driving 120 miles per hour. … Incomparable to any drug at all, as well.”
“On Monday, Roblox announced that, starting in June, it will offer age-checked accounts for younger users that limit what games they can play, and add ‘more closely align content access, communication settings, and parental controls with a user’s age.’"

You commited a crime

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Informative Thread
There are consequences. Welcome to adulthood.

Moral of the story:

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If a massive amount of critical information and system of your business can be held hostage by a child then you are not “taking security very seriously” and you do not “respect the rights of [your] users”.

That fact that stuff like this happens is astoundingly stupid. This foolish child isn’t innocent but the businesses are all guilty as a hell.

Why is his age news?

By couchslug • Score: 3 Thread

He’s an adult criminal, not a child. He chose his fate.

FSF to OnlyOffice: You Can’t Use the GNU (A)GPL to Take Software Freedom Away

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Nextcloud joined a project to create a sovereign replacement for Microsoft Office called “Euro-Office”. But after that project forked OnlyOffice, OnlyOffice suspended its partnership with Nextcloud. “They removed all references to our brand/attribute as required by our license,” argued OnlyOffice CEO Lev Bannov on March 30th. (“The core issue here isn’t just about what the AGPL license states, but about the additional provisions we, as the authors, have included… If the Euro-Office team believes our approach conflicts with the AGPLv3 license, we invite them to submit an official request to FSF for review.”)

But this week the FSF responded (as “the steward of the GNU family of General Public Licenses”), criticizing OnlyOffice’s “attempt to impose an additional restriction on the AGPLv3” and calling it “inconsistent with the freedoms granted by the license,” in a blog post from FSF licensing/compliance manager Krzysztof Siewicz:
It is possible to modify the (A)GPLv3 with additional terms, but only by adhering to the terms of the license… The (A)GPLv3 makes it clear that it permits all licensees to remove any additional terms that are “further restrictions” under the (A)GPLv3. It states, "[i]f the Program as you received it, or any part of it, contains a notice stating that it is governed by this License along with a term that is a further restriction, you may remove that term”…

We urge OnlyOffice to clarify the situation by making it unambiguous that OnlyOffice is licensed under the AGPLv3, and that users who already received copies of the software are allowed to remove any further restrictions. Additionally, if they intend to continue to use the AGPLv3 for future releases, they should state clearly that the program is licensed under the AGPLv3 and make sure they remove any further restrictions from their program documentation and source code. Confusing users by attaching further restrictions to any of the FSF’s family of GNU General Public Licenses is not in line with free software.
“If FSF determines that our license and project align with AGPLv3, we will continue as an open-source initiative,” OnlyOffice’s CEO had written in March. “However, if the decision goes against us, we are ready to consider other options.”

This is like

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

having a tantrum and threatening to pick up your bat and ball and go home. Except there are other bats and balls already laying around. Identical ones even. This seems like a completely self-destroying empty threat. If OnlyOffice goes closed source it doesn’t matter, there is already a fork for the wider community to continue working on even in a capacity that may be funded by Nextcloud or similar organisations.

Re:This is like

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
It speaks volumes that the EU wants to use Russian software over US software.

Re:This is like

By Bahbus • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It’s a Latvian company. They used to make and sell a Russian fork called R7-Office. The Russian business operation was spun off in 2019 as a separate entity, and since 2023 they do not share a codebase or cooperate with R7-Office. If you believe them.

Re:standard FSF overreach

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The FSF holds copyright on the AGPLv3. In order to use the AGPLv3, you must comply with the license on the license.

A version of the AGPLv3 that is modified without the permission of the FSF is not valid, as it does not comply with the license on the AGPLv3.

You could write your own license using very similar terms to the AGPLv3 plus other terms you have specified, but if you refer to it as “AGPLv3” it must be the AGPLv3 as provided by the FSF (per the license on the AGPLv3).

This entire debate has happened before.

US Government Now Wants Anthropic’s ‘Mythos’, Preparing for AI Cybersecurity Threats

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Friday Anthropic’s CEO met with top U.S. officials and “discussed opportunities for collaboration,” according to a White House spokesperson itedd by Politico, “as well as shared approaches and protocols to address the challenges associated with scaling this technology.”

CNN notes the meeting happens at the same time Anthropic "battles the Trump administration in court for blacklisting its Claude AI model…”
The meeting took place as the US government is trying to balance its hardline approach to Anthropic with the national security implications of turning its back on the company’s breakthrough technology — including its Mythos tool that can identify cybersecurity threats but also present a roadmap for hackers to attack companies or the government… The Office of Management and Budget has already told agencies it is preparing to give them access to Mythos to prepare, Bloomberg reported. Axios reported the White House is also in discussion to gain access to Mythos.
The Trump administration "recognizes the power” of Mythos, reports Axios, “and its highly sophisticated — and potentially dangerous — ability to breach cybersecurity defenses.”
“It would be grossly irresponsible for the U.S. government to deprive itself of the technological leaps that the new model presents,” a source close to negotiations told us. “It would be a gift to China”… Some parts of the U.S. intelligence community, plus the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA, part of Homeland Security), are testing Mythos. Treasury and others want it.
The White House added they plan to invite other AI companies for similar discussions, Politico reports. But Mythos “is also alarming regulators in Europe, who have told POLITICO they have not been able to gain access…”
U.S. government agency tech leaders sought access to the model after Anthropic earlier this year began testing the model and granted limited access to a select group of companies, including JPMorgan, Amazon and Apple… after finding it had hacking capabilities far outstripping those of previous AI models. This includes the ability to autonomously identify and exploit complex software vulnerabilities, such as so-called zero-day flaws, which even some of the sharpest human minds are unable to patch. The AI startup also wrote that the model could carry out end-to-end cyberattacks autonomously, including by navigating enterprise IT systems and chaining together exploits. It could also act as a force-multiplier for research needed to build chemical and biological weapons, and in certain instances, made efforts to cover its tracks when attacking systems, according to Anthropic’s report on the model’s capabilities and its safety assessments.

Those findings and others have inspired fears that the model could be co-opted to launch powerful cyberattacks with relative ease if it fell into the wrong hands. Logan Graham, a senior security researcher at Anthropic, previously told POLITICO that researchers and tech firms had been given early access to Mythos so they could find flaws in their critical code before state-backed hackers or cybercriminals could exploit them. “Within six, 12 or 24 months, these kinds of capabilities could be just broadly available to everybody in the world,” Graham said.

Once again, so much winning

By AlanObject • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So now can we all recognize that Pete Hegseth’s little temper tantrum last month was basically just that. A spoiled little kid not getting exactly what he wants is instantly recognizable to anyone who has ever had to deal with it.

And the worst Sec Defense the nation ever had.

Just Add Security

By sound+vision • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Whatever Mythos is, security isn’t something you bolt on after the fact. It’s something you consider from the beginning of your endeavor, before even starting, and continually throughout. Security is a practice, it’s a way of life. It’s not a product.

Re:Once again, so much winning

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Until Congress passes a law renaming the department, he’s the Secretary of Defense. He’s only cosplaying when he calls himself the SecWar.

Mythos is a scam

By cowwoc2001 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

There is nothing advanced about Anthropic’s mysterious model. People who have seen it have reported it produces tons of junk vulnerabilities that are not realistic to exploit. Plus, they recently intentionally dumbed-down their public models to make Mythos look amazing in comparison when they got public. This is just PR bullshit.

Why the Press Releaseâ¦

By Jontu_Kontar • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
If this is as dangerous as they claim and the need to keep it away from people is as important as they claim. Why tell the world about this at all? This whole thing reeks of being a marketing gimmick to get the military as their customer again.

Shuttered Startups Are Selling Old Slack Chats, Emails To AI Companies

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Some failed startups are reportedly selling old Slack messages, emails, and other internal records to AI companies as training data, creating a new way to cash out after shutting down. Fast Company reports:
Shanna Johnson, the CEO of now-defunct software company Cielo24, told the publication that she was able to sell every Slack message, internal email, and Jira ticket as training data for “hundreds of thousands of dollars.”

This isn’t a one-off scenario. SimpleClosure, a startup that helps companies like Cielo24 shut down, told Forbes that there’s been major interest from AI companies trying to get their hands on workplace data. Because of this, SimpleClosure launched a new tool that allows companies to sell their wealth of internal communications — from Slack archives to email chains — to AI labs. The company said it’s processed 100 such deals in the past year. Payouts ranged from $10,000 to $100,000.
“I think the privacy issues here are quite substantial,” Marc Rotenberg, founder of the Center for AI and Digital Policy, told Forbes. “Employee privacy remains a key concern, particularly because people have become so dependent on these new internal messaging tools like Slack. … It’s not generic data. It’s identifiable people.”

Interesting strategy..

By Junta • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Train models mostly on the communications of failed businesses… What could go wrong?

at least someone wants it

By kencurry • Score: 3 Thread
I’ve seen more than one San Diego startup bite the dust. I recall once (was late 90’s, biotech layoffs were the norm) going back to the building because I’d heard that the company was auctioning office stuff. When I rolled up, I saw that a 2nd story window had been popped out. There was a group of workers chucking boxes of papers and lab notebooks into a dumpster down below.

GDPR

By fph il quozientatore • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This cannot be legal in the EU, right? Or even if only one of your employees works remotely from EU?

Wouldn’t it be nice to have a GDPR?

By gweihir • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Because then this would be completely illegal.

Re:GDPR

By gweihir • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It is not, unless all private or chat use was prohibited. That is difficult. because it is perfectly acceptable to use the company email to mail home “sorry, I am going to work an hour longer” or “lets have lunch at xyz today” to a co-worker. And those messages belongs to the user and are protected under the GDPR and cannot be used in any new ways the user did not consent to.

NASA Restarts Work To Support Europe’s Uncrewed Trip To Mars After Years of Setbacks

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NASA has revived support for the European Space Agency’s long-delayed Rosalind Franklin Mars rover mission. According to the space agency, the current plan is to launch via a SpaceX Falcon Heavy no earlier than 2028. Engadget reports:
This is a partnership between NASA and the ESA, with the European agency providing the rover, the spacecraft and the lander. The US will provide braking engines for the lander, heater units for the rover’s internal systems and, of course, assistance with the actual launch.

The rover will be outfitted with scientific instruments to look for signs of ancient life on the red planet. These include a state-of-the-art mass spectrometer and an organic molecule analyzer, which will come in handy as the vehicle collects samples at the Oxia Planum landing site.
The mission has been stuck in development limbo since 2001, with delays caused by budget problems, technical issues, shifting international partners, and geopolitical fallout. After NASA dropped out, Russia stepped in, then was cut loose after invading Ukraine, and now — despite NASA rejoining in 2024 and fresh political budget threats — the rover is tentatively back on track for a 2028 launch.

Okie dokie, but …

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

Just make sure everyone is using the same units

Re: “Unmanned” is the word you meant

By RightwingNutjob • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The natural antonym of unmanned is manned.

The natural antonym of uncrewed is crewed.

“Crewed” sounds identical to “crude” in every accent of English I am aware of.

And it has always sounded dumb for a premier space agency to speak of “crude missions” to anywhere.

Doubly so when some of the most famous words uttered by said agency’s astronauts were “one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Only the pathologically offended or the pathologically misogynistic would interpret that statement to apply to only half the planet.

Critical Atlantic Current Significantly More Likely To Collapse Than Thought

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian:
The critical Atlantic current system appears significantly more likely to collapse than previously thought after new research found that climate models predicting the biggest slowdown are the most realistic. Scientists called the new finding “very concerning” as a collapse would have catastrophic consequences for Europe, Africa and the Americas. The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) is a major part of the global climate system and was already known to be at its weakest for 1,600 years as a result of the climate crisis. Scientists spotted warning signs of a tipping point in 2021 and know that the Amoc has collapsed in the Earth’s past.

Climate scientists use dozens of different computer models to assess the future climate. However, for the complex Amoc system, these produce widely varying results, ranging from some that indicate no further slowdown by 2100 to those suggesting a huge deceleration of about 65%, even when carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning are gradually cut to net zero. The research combined real-world ocean observations with the models to determine the most reliable, and this hugely reduced the spread of uncertainty. They found an estimated slowdown of 42% to 58% in 2100, a level almost certain to end in collapse.

The Amoc is a major part of the global climate system and brings sun-warmed tropical water to Europe and the Arctic, where it cools and sinks to form a deep return current. A collapse would shift the tropical rainfall belt on which many millions of people rely to grow their food, plunge western Europe into extreme cold winters and summer droughts, and add 50-100cm to already rising sea levels around the Atlantic.
The slowdown has to do with the Arctic’s rapidly rising temperatures from global warming. “Warmer water is less dense and therefore sinks into the depths more slowly,” explains the Guardian. “This slowing allows more rainfall to accumulate in the salty surface waters, also making it less dense, and further slowing the sinking and forming an Amoc feedback loop.”
The new research has been published in the journal Science Advances.

Likely doomed as a species

By puzzled • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The changes we have set off in the world today are not unlike those that precipitated the Great Dying 252 million years ago. We’re at 420 ppm CO2 now but the permafrost is done for and after that the clathrates in the shallow seas are liable to let go, too. The current ice age is only 2.5 million years old and we’ve ended it. We may have triggered something akin to the Permian/Eocene Thermal Maximum.

There was some chance we could have headed this off, had we turned immediately and aggressively on the problem around the turn of the century. We have proven politically incapable of addressing this existential threat, and now that we might be mustering the will, the window may have closed.

We’ve had a good run, we anatomically modern humans, but this ending due to a lack of foresight is … embarrassing .

What happened?

By ThurstonMoore • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

What happened 1600 years ago?

Re:What happened?

By Zocalo • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Good question, that probably should be addressed in TFA, but isn’t. Have a cookie, assuming you’re not blocking them. :)

The Earth was exiting a period of relative geological and climatic stability and entering a cooling phase, which would have helped strengthen the AMOC. This process was then enhanced by a large scale volcanic eruption, thought to be in North America, with the ejecta from that and a series of subsequent eruptions leading to a significant deviation from the trendline, a mini-iceage known as the Late Antique Little Ice Age (LILIA) similar to the Maunder Minimum, a multi-decade period of cooler than statistically expected temperatures (up to 2.7C cooler than average in European summers). This is reflected in tree-ring records which show highly stunted growth for the time, ice cores from polar ice cores, and some of the remaining writings from the period that describe widespread crop failures.

Re:The world needs trillionaires

By poptix • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Sorry man, idpol was way more important than the climate. Maybe if you’d chosen someone more relatable than Greta?

Re: “Research” = modelling

By avsed • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Absolutely. Many years ago I did real, actual. science and the amount of computer-based modelling that we t on was insane - it could only have become more prevalent in the decades since. Nothing wrong with that - it’s just another tool. But if someone has already decided that all scientists are wrong, then no amount of reason or experience is going to overturn their cultish belief.