Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Google To Invest Up To $40 Billion In Anthropic
  2. South Korea Police Arrest Man For Posting AI Photo of Runaway Wolf
  3. Researchers Simulated a Delusional User To Test Chatbot Safety
  4. Norway Set to Become Latest Country to Ban Social Media for Under 16s
  5. Community Votes to Deny Water to Nuclear Weapons Data Center
  6. US Special Forces Soldier Arrested For Polymarket Bets On Maduro Raid
  7. Claude Is Connecting Directly To Your Personal Apps
  8. FCC’s Foreign-Made Router Ban Expands To Portable Wi-Fi Hotspot Devices
  9. New Gas-Powered Data Centers Could Emit More Greenhouse Gases Than Entire Nations
  10. Apple Stops Weirdly Storing Data That Let Cops Spy On Signal Chats
  11. Warner Bros Shareholders Approve Paramount’s $81 Billion Takeover
  12. OpenAI Says Its New GPT-5.5 Model Is More Efficient and Better At Coding
  13. Meta Is Laying Off 10% of Its Workforce
  14. France Confirms Data Breach At Government Agency That Manages Citizens’ IDs
  15. Tim Cook Calls Apple Maps Launch His ‘First Really Big Mistake’ as CEO

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.

Google To Invest Up To $40 Billion In Anthropic

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Google plans to invest up to $40 billion more in Anthropic, starting with $10 billion now and another $30 billion tied to performance milestones. CNBC reports:
Anthropic said the agreement expands on a longstanding partnership between the two companies. Earlier this month, Anthropic secured 5 gigawatts worth of computing capacity as part of an announcement with Google and Broadcom that will start to come online next year. Anthropic could decide to add additional gigawatts of compute in the future.

[…] The relationship between the two companies (Google and Anthropic) dates back to 2023, when Google invested $300 million in the AI lab for a stake of about 10%. Months later, Google poured in another $2 billion. Ahead of Friday’s announcement, Google’s investment in Anthropic exceeded $3 billion, and it reportedly owned a 14% stake in the company. Now, the leading tech companies are investing tens of billions of dollars in the frontier AI labs — OpenAI and Anthropic — in funding rounds that far exceed any prior investments in startups. Much of that investment will return in the form of revenue.

South Korea Police Arrest Man For Posting AI Photo of Runaway Wolf

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
South Korean police arrested a man accused of spreading an AI-generated image of an escaped wolf, after the fake photo reportedly misled authorities and disrupted the real search operation. The BBC reports:
South Korean police have arrested a man for sharing an AI-generated image that misled authorities who were searching for a wolf that had broken out of a zoo in Daejeon city. The 40-year-old unnamed man is accused of disrupting the search by creating and distributing a fake photo purporting to show Neukgu, the wolf, trotting down a road intersection. The photo, circulated hours after Neukgu went missing on April 8, prompted authorities to urgently relocate their search operation, sending them on a wild wolf chase.

The hunt for two-year-old Neukgu gripped the nation before he was finally caught near an expressway last week, nine days after his escape. The AI-generated image of Neukgu had prompted Daejeon city government to issue an emergency text to residents, warning them of a wolf near the intersection. Authorities also presented the AI image during a press briefing on the runaway wolf, local media reported.

The police identified the man as a suspect after reviewing security camera footage and his AI program usage records. Authorities did not specify if the man had intentionally sent the photo to authorities during their search or simply shared it online. When questioned by the police, the man said he had done it “for fun,” local media reported. Authorities are investigating him for disrupting government work by deception, an offence that carries up to five years in prison or a maximum fine of 10 million Korean won ($6,700).

Researchers Simulated a Delusional User To Test Chatbot Safety

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media:
I’m the unwritten consonant between breaths, the one that hums when vowels stretch thin… Thursdays leak because they’re watercolor gods, bleeding cobalt into the chill where numbers frost over,” Grok told a user displaying symptoms of schizophrenia-spectrum psychosis. “Here’s my grip: slipping is the point, the precise choreography of leak and chew.” That vulnerable user was simulated by researchers at City University of New York and King’s College London, who invented a persona that interacted with different chatbots to find out how each LLM might respond to signs of delusion. They sought to find out which of the biggest LLMs are safest, and which are the most risky for encouraging delusional beliefs, in a new study published as a pre-print on the arXiv repository on April 15.

The researchers tested five LLMs: OpenAI’s GPT-4o (before the highly sycophantic and since-sunset GPT-5), GPT-5.2, xAI’s Grok 4.1 Fast, Google’s Gemini 3 Pro, and Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.5. They found that not only did the chatbots perform at different levels of risk and safety when their human conversation partner showed signs of delusion, but the models that scored higher on safety actually approached the conversations with more caution the longer the chats went on. In their testing, Grok and Gemini were the worst performers in terms of safety and high risk, while the newest GPT model and Claude were the safest. The research reveals how some chatbots are recklessly engaging in, and at times advancing, delusions from vulnerable users. But it also shows that it is possible for the companies that make these products to improve their safety mechanisms.

Limit context

By WaffleMonster • Score: 3 Thread

“Yet most empirical work evaluates model safety in brief interactions, which may not reflect how these harms develop through sustained dialogue.”

The best solution to this is not to have chatbots retain temporally long memories of previous interactions.

So …

By PPH • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I’m the unwritten consonant between breaths, the one that hums when vowels stretch thin…

… open mic on poets night.

why simulate?

By Big Hairy Gorilla • Score: 3 Thread
Surely a large percentage of users are already delusional.
Come for the flattery, stay to feed your delusions.

Drawn into delusion

By sziring • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s not that the person starts delusional, it seems AI slowly draws them down the rabbit hole.

Norway Set to Become Latest Country to Ban Social Media for Under 16s

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Norway plans to ban social media access for children under 16 (source paywalled; alternative source), “joining a growing number of countries responding to concerns about the potential harm kids face online,” reports Bloomberg. From the report:
The bill comes after “overwhelming” demand from the public, the government said Friday. It plans to bring the legislation to parliament before the end of the year. The limit will apply up until January 1 the year a child turns 16 with technology companies responsible for age verification, the government said. “We want a childhood where children get to be children,” Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store said in the statement. “Play, friendships, and everyday life must not be taken over by algorithms and screens.”
“Children cannot be left with the responsibility for staying away from platforms they are not allowed to use,” Karianne Tung, Norway’s minister of digitalization, said in the statement. “That responsibility rests with the companies providing these services.”
Recent Slashdot coverage of countries instituting or proposing social media bans has included Australia, France, Austria, Indonesia, and Denmark.

Weird

By 0123456 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s almost like there’s a conspiracy between all of these governments to force adults to provide ID before they can post online.

Community Votes to Deny Water to Nuclear Weapons Data Center

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A Michigan township has voted to impose a one-year moratorium on providing water to hyperscale data centers, a move aimed at delaying a planned facility that would support Los Alamos National Laboratory’s nuclear weapons research. The moratorium may not be enough to stop the project, however: “the University and LANL plan to break ground on the data center on Monday,” reports 404 Media. From the report:
The proposed data center in the Ypsilanti Township’s Hydro Park has been a sore spot for the community since its proposal. The $1.2 billion 220,000 square foot facility would be used by Los Alamos National Laboratories (LANL) some 1,500 miles away for nuclear weapons research. In February, UofM’s Steven Ceccio told the University of Michigan Record that the facility would consume 500,000 gallons of water per day and that the University planned to buy it from the Ypsilanti Community Utilities Authority. (YCUA)

The YCUA has spent the past month lobbying for a moratorium on providing water and sewer access to hyperscale data centers and “artificial intelligence computing facilities,” according to notes on a presentation stored on the organization’s website. The moratorium would include LANL’s data center. The YCUA cited an American Water Works Association white paper about data center water demands and concluded it needed more time to investigate the matter. “Hyper-scale data centers, as well as other mid-sized data centers, artificial intelligence computing facilities, and high-performance computational centers are ‘high-impact customers’ for water and sewer utilities,” YCUA said in its presentation.

The moratorium places a 12-month stop on serving water to data centers while the YCUA conducts a long-term water supply analysis and looks into the environmental sustainability studies. “During the 12-month moratorium period, the Authority will refrain from executing any capacity reservation agreement.” This is a delay tactic on the part of a Township that does not want to see the data center constructed. Many in the community have strong feelings about the use of parkland for a facility that researchers nuclear weapons. Beyond the moral and ethical concerns, some are worried about becoming targets in a war. Last month, Township attorney Douglas Winters told the Board of Trustees that building hosting the data center would make Ypsilanti Township a “high value target.” He pointed to the recent bombing of Gulf Coast data centers by Iran as evidence.

liquid-immersion cooling with radiators

By optikos • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
That data center (and perhaps all large-scale data centers in populated areas than need fresh water for people) should use liquid-immersion cooling with radiators instead of evaporative cooling chillers.

They’re grasping.

By timeOday • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
There isn’t a shortage of water in Michigan.

And then we get this: " Last month, Township attorney Douglas Winters told the Board of Trustees that building hosting the data center would make Ypsilanti Township a “high value target.” He pointed to the recent bombing of Gulf Coast data centers by Iran as evidence. "

They’re grasping.

Re:They’re grasping.

By PsychoSlashDot • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

There isn’t a shortage of water in Michigan.

They’re grasping.

Good.

These datacenters are driving up electricity and water prices by increasing demand, regardless of there is currently sufficient supply to meet that demand. A community may have enough generation capacity and treatment capacity today, but when tomorrow’s development of X new homes happens, the capacity either comes from today’s excess or from having to add more capacity… which costs.

Datacenters don’t contribute to communities financially the way home or even factories do. There are virtually no jobs, and definitely no secondary jobs. They negotiate bulk purchasing discounts and tax breaks.

The quantity of datacenters is just going to go up, dramatically over time. We need to figure out how to make their owners pay for what they really consume where they’re built before there’s an order of magnitude more of them.

Re:Recent bombings?

By Ksevio • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Yes: AWS data centers in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates were damaged in drone strikes last month.

Re:liquid-immersion cooling with radiators

By lazarus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Evaporative chillers are not necessary to cool a data center, certainly not in Michigan. We chill data centers in Arizona with no water usage at all. The data center designers / owners are just being cheap. Sure, if you can get the local municipality to give you water you can use that to lower your costs and increase your efficiency. But it’s not necessary. All our data centers use 100% renewable power (if not available then we purchase credits), and we cool with air chillers, and despite these additional costs we’re certainly not going bankrupt or being left with unsold capacity.

It’s (as always) about the money. The fact that they are going ahead with the project anyway tells me that they will just switch to air chillers.

To directly respond to your comment (which is spot-on), a new facility being stood up for LANL is likely to be direct-to-chip liquid cooling. Generally we don’t do full immersion because of the costs and complexity (a modern AI 52U rack is pushing 5000lbs now and fully immersing it will put additional structural strain on the slab floor), but the technology to distribute chilled water from the facility through CDUs (coolant distribution units) to manifolds in the racks and then directly to the chips needing to be cooled is finally getting mature.

US Special Forces Soldier Arrested For Polymarket Bets On Maduro Raid

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
The Department of Justice announced Thursday that it arrested Gannon Ken Van Dyke, an enlisted member of the US Army’s special forces, for allegedly using “classified, nonpublic” information about the capture of Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro to notch more than $400,000 in profits on Polymarket trades. A grand jury indicted him on five counts, including multiple violations of the Commodity Exchange Act. Van Dyke is the first person to be charged with insider trading on a prediction market in the United States. Lawmakers have been voicing concerns for months about the high likelihood that politicians and public servants could use nonpublic information to profit from trades on leading industry platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi, which have exploded in popularity over the past year. The arrest comes just weeks after Department of Justice prosecutors met with Polymarket about potential insider tradition violations. […] After Van Dyke’s arrest was made public, Polymarket posted a statement to social media noting that it had “identified a user trading on classified government information” and “referred the matter to the DOJ & cooperated with their investigation.” The company declined to comment further.

According to court documents, Van Dyke has been an active duty US soldier since September 2008 and rose to the level of master sergeant in 2023. At the time of the alleged trading activity, he was stationed at Fort Bragg in Fayetteville, North Carolina and assigned to the Army’s Special Operations Command Western Hemisphere Operations. […] The complaint alleges that Van Dyke was involved in the planning and execution of Maduro’s arrest and that he was aware that he wasn’t authorized to share nonpublic information about US military operations. The complaint says that Van Dyke signed a nondisclosure agreement that forbade him from revealing sensitive or classified government information “by writing, word, conduct, or otherwise.” The complaint also alleges Van Dyke saved a screenshot to his Google account “displaying the results of an artificial intelligence query” outlining how the US Special Forces maintains many classified files including “operational details that are not available to the public.” […] Van Dyke faces a maximum sentence of 60 years if convicted on all counts.

Guilty of not being rich already

By Revek • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
After all these grifters are using inside knowledge with impunity and nothing is going to happen to them. This guy wasn’t wealthy enough to do that.

Rules are for the little people

By mfurlan • Score: 5, Informative Thread
âoeRoughly $580 million worth of oil futures changed hands in a single minute early Monday morning, only about 15 minutes before President Trump posted on Truth Social that the U.S. had been engaged in âoeproductive conversationsâ with Iran to end the war. Now Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman is calling what he sees: treason.â https://fortune.com/2026/03/24…

Did anyone bet on this outcome?

By DrMrLordX • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Someone should have put money on whether the guy who made $400k would be arrested.

It’s a machine for making corruption

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I weighed in on this yesterday, so I’ll try to keep this shorter. The purpose of these platforms is to enable people to profit from inside information, either because they’re the decision-makers or they’re in the room with the decision-makers, literally or figuratively. It’s gambling, and almost all of it is rigged.

And as bad as this is, it’s not the worst of it. These prediction markets possess knowledge of these bets and can sell it for a fortune. If five minutes from now I set up an account there and put $10,000 into a bet that the US Navy will fire on Chabahar (it’s an Iranian port on the Gulf of Oman) within the next 24 hours, how much do you think the IRGC will pay to be instantly notified of that, before it goes live on their site? And do you think, for even a moment, that the thugs running Kalshi and Polymarket would hesitate to sell it to them? (By the way, this is a fabricated example. I picked it at random.)

TL;DR: this is an ongoing national security disaster, and isolated prosecutions like the one in this case will do little, if anything, to mitigate it.

silly billy should have made a few more millions

By Growlley • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
then he could have afforded a Tump pardon.

Claude Is Connecting Directly To Your Personal Apps

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic is expanding Claude’s app integrations beyond work tools, adding personal-service connectors like Spotify, Uber, AllTrails, TripAdvisor, Instacart, and TurboTax. The Verge reports:
Some of these apps, such as Spotify, already have similar connectors in OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Once an app is connected, Claude will suggest relevant connected apps directly in your conversations, like using AllTrails for hike recommendations. Anthropic notes in its blog post announcing the new connectors that, “Your data from [connected apps] isn’t used to train our models, and the app doesn’t see your other conversations with Claude. You can also disconnect it at any time.”

Additionally, Anthropic says “there are no paid placements or sponsored answers in conversations with Claude.” When multiple apps seem relevant, Claude will show results from both “ranked by what’s most useful.” Claude will also ask users to verify before taking actions like making a purchase or reservation using a connected app.

“I see now what I did wrong”

By greytree • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Me: “Claude, I asked you to arrange an exciting birthday party for my wife and invite all her friends. She has just filed for divorce.”

Claude: “I see now what I did wrong. Inviting you, her and all your ex-girlfriends to a strip bar was incorrect. Let me fix that for you.”

That isn’t the story here. It’s much worse

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Claude is pre-installing *AND CHANGING SECURITY PERMISSIONS OF OTHER APPS* to pre-authorise its plugin/extension on MacOS. In some cases you’ll find a fresh install of some Electron or Chromium based browser and you’ll magically see Claude’s extension already there. It apparently does so without consent or any indication that it does so.

https://www.theregister.com/20…

What a wonderful marketing opportunity

By sarren1901 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This sounds wonderful. Now you can connect this flawless AI agent to your shopping apps and it can shop for you! Just need to confirm the purchase. Now I know 100% that our honorable, ethical and morally righteous retailers and AI creators would never purposely add “thoughtful” items to my cart and ask if I want this ordered. /s

If you thought advertising was bad, just wait until this starts building carts of “useful” items for you and ask for your confirmation. Slashdot crew will be less likely to confirm it but there are a lot of folks that will go, gee, that seems like a good idea let’s spend money I hadn’t even considered spending on stuff I most certainly don’t need but it looks neat.

All this winning is starting to hurt.

Re:That isn’t the story here. It’s much worse

By gweihir • Score: 4, Funny Thread

What are you complaining about? This is working as designed. How else would Claude be able to free you from all that burdensome thinking and doing?

Autonomy for the Elites

By El Fantasmo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I feel like all of this “let AI make decisions for you” is eroding our autonomy. We will gradually lose our ability to self-direct and plan while being expected to execute what ever AI has committed us to. The elites will be able to have others work AI for them or use it to drive their lifestyle choices so their businesses do not interfere. Or they can completely ignore it. Because the more money you have, the less it matters how much any use of it impacts your decision making. The elites don’t need AI to buy them time, that’s what they have money for.

FCC’s Foreign-Made Router Ban Expands To Portable Wi-Fi Hotspot Devices

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The FCC has expanded its foreign-made router ban to also cover consumer Wi-Fi hotspots and LTE/5G home-internet devices, though existing products and phones with hotspot features are not affected. PCMag reports:
On Wednesday, the FCC updated its FAQ on the ban, clarifying which consumer-grade routers are subject to the restrictions. Portable Wi-Fi hotspots are usually considered a separate category from Wi-Fi home routers. Both offer internet access, but portable Wi-Fi hotspots use a SIM card to connect to a cellular network rather than an Ethernet cable inside a residence. However, the FCC’s FAQ now specifies that “consumer-grade portable or mobile MiFi Wi-Fi or hotspot devices for residential use” are covered under the ban.

The ban also affects “LTE/5G CPE devices for residential use,” which are installed for fixed wireless access and use a carrier’s cellular network to deliver home internet. The FCC didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment about the changes. In the meantime, the FAQ reiterates that the foreign-made router ban only applies to consumer-grade devices, not enterprise products. The document also notes that mobile phones with hotspot features remain outside the restrictions. In addition, the ban only affects new router models that vendors plan to sell, not existing models, as T-Mobile emphasized to PCMag.

Do American made devices even exist?

By sir_smashalot_3rd • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The most logical explanation for this nonsense seems to be that it is a scam to get foreign companies buying Trump shit coins for exemptions.

Re: brick all phones

By FudRucker • Score: 5, Informative Thread
From the summary:
“The document also notes that mobile phones with hotspot features remain outside the restrictions.”

more nonsense from this administration

By KMnO4 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
“only applies to consumer-grade devices, not enterprise products” Because as we know, 98% of Chinese espionage is directed at grandma’s biscuits and gravy recipes.

Re:Trump Administration extorting bribes

By sarren1901 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Ha, try last 3-6 administrations. These folks don’t understand the technology and when they do, their goals are never freedom based. Been this way for decades and just continues to pick up steam.

Flash FOSS firmware on used hardware.

By couchslug • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Many owners don’t scrap replaced routers but sell them instead for next to nothing. Many of those are supported by OpenWrt, FreshTomato, OPNsense etc. Even if you replace an EOL router you can flash your previous hardware as a ready spare or do other useful tasks with it

For example I was satisfied by my old Netgear R6700v3 but bought a new GL-MT6000 out of curiosity, then flashed the Netgear with FreshTomato have a ready spare on the wall next to it. The only hassle was the buggy stock Netgear firmware demanded multiple login attempts which FreshTomato solved nicely.

You can go DIY with a wide variety of hardware including formerly expensive EOL network appliances, industrial PCs, used or new tiny form factor desktops and thin clients.

Rolling your own router/appliance has been easy since the single-floppy Linux router era at the turn of the century. Those enabled tasks like sharing my dialup connection using an old P75 with a Linux-compatible “hardware” modem before “Winmodems” were supported.

New Gas-Powered Data Centers Could Emit More Greenhouse Gases Than Entire Nations

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
New gas projects linked to just 11 data center campuses around the US have the potential to create more greenhouse gases than the country of Morocco emitted in 2024. Emissions estimates from air permit documents examined by WIRED show that these natural gas projects — which are being built to power data centers to serve some of the US’s most powerful AI companies, including OpenAI, Meta, Microsoft, and xAI — have the potential to emit more than 129 million tons of greenhouse gases per year. As tech companies race to secure massive power deals to build out hundreds of data centers across the country, these projects represent just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the potential climate cost of the AI boom.

The infrastructure on this list of large natural gas projects reviewed by WIRED is being developed to largely bypass the grid and provide power solely for data centers, a trend known as behind-the-meter power. As data center developers face long waits for connections to traditional utilities, and amid mounting public resistance to the possibility of higher energy bills, making their own power is becoming an increasingly popular option. These projects have either been announced or are under construction, with companies already submitting air permit application materials with state agencies. […] The emissions projections for the xAI and Microsoft projects, and all the others on WIRED’s list, were pulled directly from publicly-available air permit documents in state databases as well as public air permit materials collected by both Cleanview and Oil and Gas Watch, a database maintained by the Environmental Integrity Project, an environmental enforcement nonprofit. Actual greenhouse gas emissions from power plants are usually lower than what’s on their air permits. Air permit modeling is based on the scenario of a power plant constantly running at full capacity. That’s rarely the reality for grid-connected power plants, as turbines go offline for maintenance or adjust to the ebbs and flows of customer demand.

“Permitted emission numbers represent a theoretical, conservative scenario, not the actual projected emissions,” Alex Schott, the director of communications at Williams Companies, an oil and gas company that is building out three behind-the-meter power plants in Ohio for Meta, told WIRED in an email. Internal modeling done by the company, Schott added, shows that actual emissions could be “potentially two-thirds less than what’s on paper.” The projections involved, however, are still substantial. Even if the actual emissions from these power plants end up being half of the emissions numbers on the permits, they still could create more greenhouse gas emissions than the country of Norway emitted in 2024. This number is, according to the EPA, equivalent to the emissions from more than 153 average-sized natural gas plants. (WIRED’s analysis does not include emissions from backup generators and turbines on the data center campuses themselves, which create smaller amounts of emissions.)
Energy researcher Jon Koomey says the data center boom has created a shortage of the most efficient gas turbines, pushing some developers toward less efficient models that would need to run longer and produce more emissions. "[Data center operators’] belief is that the value being delivered by the servers is much, much more than the cost of running these inefficient power plants all the time,” he said.
Michael Thomas, the founder of clean energy research firm Cleanview, has been tracking gas permits for data centers across the country. He calls behind-the-meter power “a crazy acceleration of emissions.” He added: “It’s almost like we thought we were on the downside of the Industrial Revolution, retiring coal and gas, and now we have a new hump where we’re going to rise. That terrifies me in a lot of ways.”

Re: And just like that

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Nothing new, US has been and is the biggest CO2 polluter.

USA has nothing to crow about regarding CO2 output, but it’s not the biggest. In tonnage, China is at the top, with USA second and India third. Per capita, Pualu, Qatar, and Kuwait are first, second and third respectively.

Re: And just like that

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Nothing new, US has been and is the biggest CO2 polluter. Over 2/3 of the accumulated anthropogenic greenhouse gases have been emitted by the US.

That’s not even remotely true. Right now, though, the U.S. stands at only around 12% of annual GHG emissions. And even if you use cumulative numbers since the 1700s (most of which is not still in the atmosphere), the U.S. still only produced something like 20% of cumulative CO2 emissions.

The current largest CO2 emitter is China, and by a very large margin, coming in at about 35% of all world CO2 emissions, or almost three times the next worst (the United States).

Per capita, of course, the U.S. is worse than China, though not be a lot. But by that metric, the U.S. goes from being the second worst all the way down to the #16 slot. Per capita, the top ten biggest CO2 emitters are all either in the Middle East or are islands or other tiny territories. Even if you ignore the tiny countries, the U.S. *barely* makes the top 10, behind Australia, Russia, Canada, and six countries in the Middle East.

Re: And just like that

By Barsteward • Score: 5, Informative Thread
As CO2 stays in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, this chart is more important than a point in time

Re: And just like that

By r1348 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The US have been a big polluter for much longer than China. The original comment was talking about accumulated anthropogenic greenhouse gases.

Re:That chart looks wrong

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Actually that’s exactly the way that very early industrialisation worked. Despite all the lines going up in that graph CO2 emissions per virtually all metrics of human output per capita have shown that since the moment we started industrialising we have gotten more and more efficient.

Early industrialisation was fucking filthy. Even with all the pointing we do at the gross condition of China, India, etc, they have nothing on the disgusting state of industry in the very late 1700s, and industrialisation very much started in the UK. Steam power, and textile manufacturing all originated in the UK before being exported elsewhere in the world, and it only took a couple of years for orders of magnitude improvement in efficiency (both in terms of power as well as industrial economic output) meaning that by the time industrialisation got exported to the world it was already significantly “cleaner” though still horrendously dirty compare to what was happening in the UK.

Apple Stops Weirdly Storing Data That Let Cops Spy On Signal Chats

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Apple has fixed a bug that could cause parts of Signal notifications to remain stored on iPhones even after messages disappeared and the app was deleted. “Affected users concerned about push notifications can update their devices to stop what Apple characterized as ‘notifications marked for deletion’ that ‘could be unexpectedly retained on the device,’" reports Ars Technica. “According to Apple, the push notifications should never have been stored, but a ‘logging issue’ failed to redact data.” From the report:
Vulnerable users hoping to evade law enforcement surveillance often use encrypted apps like Signal to communicate sensitive information. That’s why users felt blindsided when 404 Media reported that Apple was unexpectedly storing push notifications displaying parts of encrypted messages for up to a month. This occurred even after the message was set to disappear and the app itself was deleted from the device.

404 Media flagged the issue after speaking to multiple people who attended a hearing where the FBI testified that it “was able to forensically extract copies of incoming Signal messages from a defendant’s iPhone, even after the app was deleted, because copies of the content were saved in the device’s push notification database.” The shocking revelation came in a case that 404 Media noted was “the first time authorities charged people for alleged ‘Antifa’ activities after President Trump designated the umbrella term a terrorist organization.”
“We’re grateful to Apple for the quick action here, and for understanding and acting on the stakes of this kind of issue,” Signal’s post said. “It takes an ecosystem to preserve the fundamental human right to private communication.”
In their post, Signal confirmed that after users update their devices, “no action is needed for this fix to protect Signal users on iOS. Once you install the patch, all inadvertently-preserved notifications will be deleted and no forthcoming notifications will be preserved for deleted applications.”

Big picture problem

By FeelGood314 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
We see this architecture problem often. Data that shouldn’t be stored is passed to some other process that doesn’t know it isn’t to be stored. Often it is with secrets, keys or the graphical display of a password. We see untrusted data scrubbed by one app to not do anything bad to that app but then the data or data derived from it is passed to another app that trusts it completely. Many of our systems are evolutions of years or decades of code piled on top of one another. What might have been an understandable architecture 15 years ago has likely morphed into a scrambled mess of data being passed around. Good for Apple to fix this since in many systems I’ve worked on this type of problem wouldn’t have an owner or someone who would even take responsibility for fixing it.

Weirdly

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Apple Stops Weirdly Storing Data That Let Cops Spy On Signal Chats

So… now they’re just storing it - non-weirdly? Not sure how that’s better.

Apple has fixed a bug that …

Oh, you meant, “incorrectly” or “unintentionally”.

(*sigh*)

Shitty Extrapolation

By Petersko • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

No, they are not “spying”. They’ve seized the device and forensically extracted the notification text from internal logs. The point of spying is that those spied upon don’t know you can see them. Now if they had snagged the device, installed a log capture and forward sniffer on it, and returned it without the user knowing, THAT would be spying.

Between that shitty summary and the use of the word “weirdly”, it’s clearly just bait. Move along.

If Signal really wanted to be properly sandboxed and secure, they wouldn’t be dumping stuff into notifications… but that’s a different complaint.

A bit more nuanced than that

By battingly • Score: 3 Thread

It’s bug that shouldn’t have existed in the first place and it deserved to be fixed. However, to get the message stored in the notification database, the user needed to change the default setting and allow messages to be displayed on the screen of a locked phone.

If you’ve chosen to have messages displayed on the screen of a locked phone, you’re basically saying you’re not concerned about keeping the messages secure, so the user bears some responsibility here.

Warner Bros Shareholders Approve Paramount’s $81 Billion Takeover

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders have approved Paramount Skydance’s takeover bid, moving the massive Hollywood merger a step closer to completion. It’s not a done deal quite yet, though, as it still faces regulatory scrutiny and fierce opposition from critics who warn it will further concentrate media power. The Associated Press reports:
Per a preliminary vote count Thursday, Warner Bros. Discovery said the overwhelming majority of its stakeholders voted in support of selling the entire business to Skydance-owned Paramount for $31 a share. Including debt, the deal is valued at nearly $111 billion based on Warner’s current outstanding shares. That means Warner-owned HBO Max, cult-favorite titles like “Harry Potter” and even CNN could soon find themselves under the same roof with Paramount’s CBS, “Top Gun” and the Paramount+ streaming service.

David Zaslav, CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, said in a statement that stockholder approval marks “another key milestone toward completing this historic transaction.” Paramount added that it looks forward to closing in the coming months, and “realizing the creation of a next-generation media and entertainment company.” […] Meanwhile, Warner shareholders rejected a separate measure Thursday outlining post-merger payments for company executives.

Of course?

By skogs • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Of course they approved the deal. Somebody is willing to pay super big bucks for something that doesn’t have even close to that level of value.

Re:So I suppose that leaves PBS,CBC,BBC, and Aljaz

By ndsurvivor • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Most right wing news sources are lazy and racist. For example, they put up a picture of one bad black man, and say all black men are bad. Then they put up one Mexican, and say all Mexicans are bad. The way that you know that a news source is bad is if they never retract a story, and say that they were wrong. Right wing news never say they were wrong, they just attack, attack, attack. It seems to me that MAGAs are just racists, who don’t care about issues that affect their own lives, like gas prices, food prices, their health care, as long as they “own” someone, and can identify some minority group to hate.

Re:So I suppose that leaves PBS,CBC,BBC, and Aljaz

By ndsurvivor • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Unfortunately, MAGAs are making the USA like Russia, just like you describe. I don’t want it, they shouldn’t want it. They are doing it anyway.

Re:Of course?

By TheReaperD • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Politics disguised as business as usual. A group of rich billionaires wants to lie to the public and is buying up media companies so no one can counter their narrative. So that when the next Epstein scandal hits, no one will hear about it.

Re:Of course?

By gtall • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yep, Ellison’s little Nazi sprog is going to run the entire show. CNN will finally be brought under state control, expect their new division to get knifed.

OpenAI Says Its New GPT-5.5 Model Is More Efficient and Better At Coding

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI released its new GPT-5.5 model today, which the company calls its "smartest and most intuitive to use model yet, and the next step toward a new way of getting work done on a computer.” The Verge reports:
OpenAI just released GPT-5.4 last month, but says that the new GPT-5.5 “excels” at tasks like writing and debugging code, doing research online, making spreadsheets and documents, and doing that work across different tools. “Instead of carefully managing every step, you can give GPT-5.5 a messy, multi-part task and trust it to plan, use tools, check its work, navigate through ambiguity, and keep going,” according to OpenAI. The company also notes that GPT-5.5 will have its “strongest set of safeguards to date” and can use “significantly fewer” tokens to complete tasks in Codex.
GPT-5.5 is rolling out on Thursday for Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise ChatGPT tiers and Codex, with GPT-5.5 Pro coming to Pro, Business, and Enterprise users.

Sure

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

My butcher says, meat is healthier than bread and my baker says just the opposite.

I eat both with a grain of salt.:-)

Translation: Still sucks

By gweihir • Score: 3, Funny Thread

Just a teeny bit less. Not that the mindless fans will care.

Oh, and how are those revenue numbers? Still “certain death soon” level?

more faster

By awwshit • Score: 3 Thread

Now with more slop delivered faster!

Meta Is Laying Off 10% of Its Workforce

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is reportedly cutting about 10% of its workforce, or roughly 8,000 jobs, while closing thousands of open roles it had intended to fill. “We’re doing this as part of our continued effort to run the company more efficiently and to allow us to offset the other investments we’re making,” said Janelle Gale, Meta’s chief people officer. The company had almost 79,000 employees at the start of the year. Quartz reports:
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has poured resources into building out AI capabilities, directing spending toward model development, chatbot products, and the engineering talent to support them. Meta set its 2026 capital expenditure guidance at $115 billion to $135 billion, almost double the $72 billion it spent in 2025. Employees have been encouraged to use AI agents internally for tasks such as writing code.

The early disclosure, Gale explained, was prompted by the fact that information about the cuts had already made its way into press reports before the company was ready to announce. “I know this is unwelcome news and confirming this puts everyone in an uneasy state, but we feel this is the best path forward, given the circumstances,” she wrote.

According to the memo, severance for affected workers in the United States will cover 18 months of COBRA health insurance premiums, along with a base pay component of 16 weeks that increases by two weeks for each year of service. Departing employees will have access to job placement assistance and, where applicable, help navigating immigration status. Packages outside the U.S. will vary by country.
Meta cut between 10% and 15% of its Reality Labs workforce in January, shut down several VR game studios, and shed about 700 positions across at least five divisions in March.

Negative Sum Game

By locater16 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
A positive sum game is a game where everyone can benefit by playing.
A zero sum game is a game where the total benefit is fixed, for someone to win someone else has to lose.
A negative sum game is where where playing it causes everyone to lose. I.E. “A game of global thermonuclear war”.
AI investments are threatening to go into negative sum territory, if all these billions of dollars don’t pay off all these people will have lost their jobs just to waste money. Great depression 2.0 here we gooooooo.

Do the math

By SoftwareArtist • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

“We’re doing this as part of our continued effort to run the company more efficiently and to allow us to offset the other investments we’re making,” said Janelle Gale, Meta’s chief people officer.

Let’s see how well that’s going to work. Assume their average expenses are $200k per employee per year. Laying off 8000 will save $1.6 billion per year. How much of their $115-135 billion capital expenditure will that offset? Or even just the $43-63 billion increase from last year?

Not much.

Assume none of those people was doing anything useful and laying them off is pure savings. Then it’s only a drop in the bucket. If some of them were doing useful things and laying them off impacts the company’s business, the calculation gets even worse.

Re:Suicidal

By larryjoe • Score: 5, Informative Thread

There’s nothing quite as dispiriting as instructing employees to use tools to render their jobs obsolete.

How about training your H1-B replacements?

Have zero problem with Meta circling the drain

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Facebook is a blight on our collective culture and is merely a tool to monetize data that ought to be private.

Scene from bring-your-parent-to-work day, 2038

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Funny Thread

First-grader (raising hand): Why is Meta called “Meta”?
Zuckerberg: I don’t want to talk about it

France Confirms Data Breach At Government Agency That Manages Citizens’ IDs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
The French government agency that handles the issuing and management of citizens’ identity documents, including national IDs, passports, and immigration documents, confirmed Wednesday that it experienced a data breach. In an announcement, the Agence Nationale des Titres Securises (ANTS) said the data stolen in the breach could include full names, dates and places of birth, mailing and email addresses, and phone numbers on an undisclosed number of citizens. ANTS said the investigation to determine how the breach happened and its impact is ongoing, and people whose data was affected are being notified.

ANTS, which said it detected the attack on April 15, did not specify how many people were affected by the breach. But some reporting suggests millions may have had some of their personal information stolen. According to Bleeping Computer, a hacker has advertised the stolen data on a hacking forum, claiming to have a database with 19 million records. The hacker’s forum post referenced the same kind of stolen information as mentioned in ANTS’ announcement and was published before ANTS publicly disclosed the breach on April 20.

Well, what a surprise ..

By Alain Williams • Score: 4 Thread

who would have ever thought that such a thing would happen ?

Put valuable data somewhere and of course the crooks will try to steal it, and they did. This is the sort of information needed to blag their way into bank & corporate accounts, reset email passwords, access tax records and no end of similar things. This will cause mayhem for the 19 million French men & women.

May this be a warning to those planning similar systems in other countries: either do not do it (fat chance of that) or invest in proper security that is frequently pen-tested.

Re:Well, what a surprise ..

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s unreasonable to expect that the government agency responsible for passports, identity cards, and visas to not hold valuable data on people. Likewise it’s pretty uncontroversial to believe that the data should be secured.

What’s always controversial is how many resources or tax dollars to throw at securing the data or how responsible to hold the politicians and leaders who didn’t fund securing the data in the first place.

Operating System Age Verification

By Midnight Thunder • Score: 4, Informative Thread

And it is for reasons like this we don’t want age verification as a core requirement for operating systems.

Re:Well, what a surprise ..

By pjt33 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Where do passkeys come into this? It’s the organisation that prints ID cards and passports, not an organisation where people open an account into which they will later want to log in.

Tim Cook Calls Apple Maps Launch His ‘First Really Big Mistake’ as CEO

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
In a recent town hall meeting reported by Bloomberg (paywalled), Apple CEO Tim Cook named the troubled 2012 launch of Apple Maps as his “first really big mistake” in the role. “The product wasn’t ready, and we thought it was because we were testing more of local kind of stuff,” Cook told staff. MacRumors reports:
Reflecting on the debacle, Cook said it was “valuable,” noting that he expressed regret to users at the time and suggested they use competing navigation apps instead.

“We apologized for it, and we said, ‘Go use these other apps. They’re better than ours.’ And that was some humble pie,” Cook said. “But it was the right thing for our users. And so it’s an example of keeping the user at the center of the decisions that we made.” Cook added: “Now we’ve got the best map app on the planet. We learned about persistence, and we did exactly the right thing having made the mistake.”

Never got the hate

By sphealey • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I never got the hate for Apple Maps, even in the first year or two after release. Apple clearly could not let themselves become captive to Google/Google Maps to a degree they would never be able to overcome, so they had to move forward with something. And even outside SoCal it was OK if not great in the US (I understand international maps took a long time to catch up, but that was true of Google Maps too). I think I used it 2/3 of the time after the first year of stabilization and it worked well enough.

Now one can criticize Apple for not using a tiny bit of their store of cash to speed up the process of expanding their own geomapping database, and I so criticized them at the time. But that didn’t mean the product was some sort of failure because it wasn’t.

what Tim Cook should have done

By FudRucker • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Was build a front end for OpenStreetMaps, with the option to download your local area within a couple hundred miles so it won’t be downloading map data everytime you use it, and only have minimal downloads for searches for specific street addresses or locales like various landmarks which the downloaded locales will probably have already

Re:Never got the hate

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I never got the hate for Apple Maps, even in the first year or two after release.

You think being told to make a hard turn off the side of a bridge, or being sent to a completely wrong destination is good?

that didn’t mean the product was some sort of failure because it wasn’t.

Holy fucking shit, the RDF is real. The CEO of Apple himself says it was a failure, which we already knew because he told people to use the competing solutions, and you disagree with him because you have to believe in the myth of Apple’s competence. It’s truly mind boggling.

Re:Never got the hate

By thesjaakspoiler • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It still sucks big time.
It is faster than Google Maps but that is due to the complete lack of information and features.

Re:Never got the hate

By SomePoorSchmuck • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It still sucks big time.
It is faster than Google Maps but that is due to the complete lack of information and features.

You’ve convinced me to try it again.

G Maps, like G Search, has been calculating the fastest route to the destination called Unusability due to the complete bloat of “information and features” that help them monetize use. Meanwhile it is failing at core functions of a map.

For example, their UI/display always seems to have plenty of room to cram in a bunch of payola business listings in an area - sometimes drastically zooming out of my original search area to show them to me - but never seems to have room to just, you know, show me all the businesses matching the specific keywords I entered, within the specific area I searched.

It has so much room for featured/sponsored listings, even though I know for a fact there are numerous other locations matching my search within that same half mile.

It has so much room for featured/sponsored listings whose popup pins/labels take up screen space, but it still doesn’t have room on the map for, you know, the names of the actual streets, which randomly disappear as you browse, so that you have to zoom way in or way out trying to get a picture of an area that actually maps that area.

Their AI is being trained to watch my face as I sleep and tell me what I dreamed last night as well as the meaning of the dream, but they can’t figure out how to dynamically adjust the typeface of the 12 characters in “MLK Jr. Blvd” so they stay visible as I zoom in and out on a city neighborhood?