Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Browser Extensions With 8 Million Users Collect Extended AI Conversations
  2. English Has Become Easier To Read
  3. FCC Chair Suggests Agency Isn’t Independent, Word Cut From Mission Statement
  4. How We Ingest Plastic Chemicals While Consuming Food
  5. Coursera Acquires Udemy For $930 Million
  6. Google Sues Alleged Chinese Scam Group Behind Massive US Text Message Phishing Ring
  7. Meta Is Considering Charging Business Pages To Post Links
  8. Warner Bros Discovery Board Rejects Rival Bid From Paramount
  9. OpenAI in Talks With Amazon About Investment That Could Exceed $10 Billion
  10. Uber and DoorDash Try To Halt NYC Law That Encourages Tipping
  11. Senators Count the Shady Ways Data Centers Pass Energy Costs On To Americans
  12. The Arctic Is in Dire Straits, 20 Years of Reporting Show
  13. Breach At South Korea’s Equivalent of Amazon Exposed Data of Almost Every Adult
  14. EU Moves To Ease 2035 Ban On Internal Combustion Cars
  15. Meta Tolerates Rampant Ad Fraud From China To Safeguard Billions In Revenue

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.

Browser Extensions With 8 Million Users Collect Extended AI Conversations

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Browser extensions with more than 8 million installs are harvesting complete and extended conversations from users’ AI conversations and selling them for marketing purposes, according to data collected from the Google and Microsoft pages hosting them.

Security firm Koi discovered the eight extensions, which as of late Tuesday night remained available in both Google’s and Microsoft’s extension stores. Seven of them carry “Featured” badges, which are endorsements meant to signal that the companies have determined the extensions meet their quality standards. The free extensions provide functions such as VPN routing to safeguard online privacy and ad blocking for ad-free browsing. All provide assurances that user data remains anonymous and isn’t shared for purposes other than their described use.

English Has Become Easier To Read

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The conventional wisdom that English prose has gotten easier to read because sentences have gotten shorter is wrong, according to a new analysis published in Works in Progress by writer and Mercatus Center research fellow Henry Oliver. The real transformation happened centuries ago in the 1500s and 1600s when Bible translators like William Tyndale and Thomas Cranmer developed a “plain style” built on logical syntax rather than the older rhythmic, periodic structures inherited from medieval prose.

Oliver argues that much of what modern datasets measure as declining sentence length is actually just changing punctuation habits. Writers now use periods where earlier generations used colons and semicolons. One dataset shows semicolon usage dropped from one every 90 words in 1781 to one every 390 words today. The cognitive complexity of a paragraph often remains the same regardless of how it’s punctuated. Even wildly popular modern books don’t follow the “short sentences equal readable” formula. Oliver points to Onyx Storm, the 2025 fantasy novel that has sold tens of millions of copies, which opens with sentences of 24 and 30 words. The 30-word sentence has a subordinate clause twice as long as its main clause. The book reads easily not because sentences are short but because the language is plain and the syntax is logical.

How about no punctuation?

By flatulus • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I occasionally see posts here where the poster doesn’t use even periods It makes it difficult to break the string of words into meaningful quanta So the mind has a difficult time “chewing” the text piecewise How do you like my explanation I’m sure it’s clear to everyone yes

FCC Chair Suggests Agency Isn’t Independent, Word Cut From Mission Statement

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr said in his Wednesday Senate testimony that the agency he governs "is not an independent agency, formally speaking.” Axios:
During his testimony, the word “independent” was removed from the FCC’s mission statement on its website. The extraordinary statement speaks to a broader trend of regulatory agencies losing power to the executive branch during the Trump era. Last week, the Supreme Court appeared poised to allow President Trump to fire members of the Federal Trade Commission during oral arguments over the issue.

Sen. Ben Ray LujÃn (D-N.M.) began the line of questioning, citing the FCC’s website, which said the agency was independent as of Wednesday morning. By Wednesday afternoon, the FCC’s mission statement no longer said it was independent. Chairman Carr would not respond directly to questions about whether he believed the president was his boss. He would not answer whether it’s appropriate if the president were to pressure him to go after media companies. He suggested the president has the power to fire him and other FCC commissioners.

How We Ingest Plastic Chemicals While Consuming Food

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A comprehensive database built by scientists in Switzerland and Norway has catalogued 16,000 chemicals linked to plastic materials, and the findings paint a troubling picture of what Americans are actually eating when they prepare food in their kitchens. Of those 16,000 chemicals, more than 5,400 are considered hazardous to human health by government and industry standards, while just 161 are classified as not hazardous. The remaining 10,700-plus chemicals simply don’t have enough data to determine their safety.

The chemicals enter food through multiple pathways. Black plastic utensils and trays often contain brominated flame retardants because they’re made from recycled electronic waste. Nonstick pans and compostable plates frequently contain PFAS. One California study found phthalates in three-quarters of tested foods, and a Consumer Reports analysis last year detected BPA or similar chemicals in 79% of foods tested. According to CDC data, more than 90% of Americans have measurable levels of these chemicals in their bodies. A 10-fold increase in maternal levels of brominated flame retardants is associated with a 3.7-point IQ drop in children.

IQ drop

By 0xG • Score: 3 Thread

Americans are actually eating when they prepare food in their kitchens. Of those 16,000 chemicals, more than 5,400 are considered hazardous to human health by government and industry standards, while just 161 are classified as not hazardous. …
A 10-fold increase in maternal levels of brominated flame retardants is associated with a 3.7-point IQ drop in children.

This actually explains a lot of election results.

Older than IQ tests

By OrangeTide • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

We were never terribly great at democracy. There is a little bit of an observation bias, because historians tend to quote literate and intelligent people (both good and evil). And rarely do they share quotes of the barely literate rabble.

Initially democracy was for land owners. Implicitly men, and specifically white men.
Next we opened it up and any white man could vote. Even if they didn’t own land.
Then we eventually we decided that black men are men too and they could vote, somewhat. They weren’t allowed much justice, but technically could vote.
Eventually in 1920 we allowed anyone of the age of majority to vote, even women!
Imagine that, EVEN women could vote. That’s quite a leap from where we started.

But there is a significant faction in the US that wants America to revert back to when it was once Great. We pine for the days when not everyone could vote and white men were respected for their systemically enforced power. The 2025 dream is to topple the series of events that occurred nearly 250 years ago, and guide this nation down a different path. A very hierarchical and undemocratic path, unchaining white men from restrictions they see under an egalitarian society.

Where’s the lie?

By Luckyo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Today in “Where’s the lie?”, notice the language used in the article:

>One California study found phthalates in three-quarters of tested foods, and a Consumer Reports analysis last year detected BPA or similar chemicals in 79% of foods tested. According to CDC data, more than 90% of Americans have measurable levels of these chemicals in their bodies.

So we have “measurable levels”, which means anything from “just above what can even be measured with extremely accurate modern equipment” to “he’d dead”. This is then followed by the scare:

>A 10-fold increase in maternal levels of brominated flame retardants is associated with a 3.7-point IQ drop in children.

Are we observing anything near that level? No. But if we did, it would be scary.

This is essentially the same thing we have with everything: in sufficient amounts, everything is poison. Did you know that to get dihydrogen monoxide poisoning you need to drink less of it than is currently found in humans for example? It’s true, and it’s a great headline. It’s also an obvious lie by misdirection, just as the journo piece in the OP.

Bonus points for article having these cool animations where red dots all neatly arrange into a big red ball that is headlined “hazardous”. Like dihydrogen monoxide.

Coursera Acquires Udemy For $930 Million

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Coursera announced on Wednesday that it will acquire rival online learning platform Udemy in an all-stock deal that values the combined company at $2.5 billion, a move that brings together two of the largest U.S.-based players in an industry that has struggled since pandemic-era enrollment highs faded. Under the terms of the agreement, Udemy shareholders will receive 0.8 shares of Coursera for each share they hold, valuing Udemy at roughly $930 million. Based on Coursera’s last closing price, the offer works out to $6.35 per Udemy share, an 18.3% premium. The deal is expected to close in the second half of next year, pending regulatory and shareholder approvals.

The two companies are betting that a combined platform will be better positioned to pursue corporate customers seeking to retrain workers in artificial intelligence, data science and software development. Coursera has built its business on partnerships with universities and institutions to offer degree programs and professional certificates, while Udemy operates a marketplace where independent instructors sell courses directly to consumers and businesses. Both stocks have significantly underperformed this year. Udemy shares have fallen about 35% and Coursera is down roughly 7%, leaving both trading well below their post-IPO highs as investors remain cautious about competition and pricing pressure in the sector.

Google Sues Alleged Chinese Scam Group Behind Massive US Text Message Phishing Ring

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Google is suing a Chinese-speaking cybercriminal group it says is responsible for a massive wave of scam text messages sent to Americans this year, according to a legal complaint filed Tuesday. From a report:
The group, known as Darcula, sells software that allows users to send phishing text messages en masse, impersonating organizations like the IRS or the U.S. Postal Service in scams. The lawsuit is designed to give Google legal standing so U.S. courts will allow it to seize websites the group uses, hampering their operations, a spokesperson said.

Darcula is possibly the most prominent name in an emerging, loosely affiliated cybercrime world that creates and sells hacking programs for aspiring scammers to use. Darcula’s signature program, called Magic Cat, provides an easy-to-use, intuitive way for cybercriminals without advanced hacking skills to quickly spam millions of phone numbers with links to fake websites impersonating businesses like YouTube’s premium service, then steal the credit card numbers victims put in.

Meta Is Considering Charging Business Pages To Post Links

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is informing some users that they will soon be restricted in how many link posts they can share each month, unless they pay for its Meta Verified subscription service. As per the notification message:
“Starting December 16, certain Facebook profiles without Meta Verified, including yours, will be limited to sharing links in 2 organic posts per month. Subscribe to Meta Verified to share more links on Facebook, plus get a verified badge and additional benefits to help protect your brand.”

To be clear, right now this is a limited test, so relatively few Pages are impacted. But understandably, a lot of users are also seeking more information on the change, and whether it could be expanded to all Pages. So, Meta’s seeking to boost take-up of Meta Verified, in order to make more money out of its subscription option, which, for business users, costs between $14.99 and $499 per month, depending on which package you choose.

Fleecing their last customers?

By Gilgaron • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
One of the few reasons to even interact with Meta/Facebook is for small businesses using it as a free web host, if they get driven off maybe we can have a decentralized internet again

Re:Level up!

By nightflameauto • Score: 4, Informative Thread

“Enshitification complete, sir!”

Sweet summer child. You think this is complete? They won’t be happy until people have force-installed tech gadgets at birth that pipe ads directly into our brains while we sleep. We’re aiming to enshitify the entire human experience, not just online interaction.

Cash flow must be down

By Inglix the Mad • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
They’re engaging in (even more blatant) rent-seeking behavior.

There was once a time when…

By MpVpRb • Score: 3 Thread

…FB was the place where glassworkers showed their work and there were a lot of glassworkers on the site.
I make machines for glasswork, and FB was a great way to show the glass community what I was making.
Over time, I noticed more and more glassworkers leaving FB. It’s now mostly ads, AI slop, promoted posts, pop culture and other assorted crap.
It’s barely worth the time to look at, and I have slowed my posting dramatically.
I wish that glassworkers had a good place to share our work

Enshittification Stage 2

By allo • Score: 3 Thread

Stage 1: Fuck your users
Stage 2: Fuck your customers
Stage 3: Got forgotten as both groups flock to a new platform.

I guess stage 3 is long overdue

Warner Bros Discovery Board Rejects Rival Bid From Paramount

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Warner Bros Discovery’s board spurned Paramount Skydance’s $108.4 billion hostile takeover bid on Wednesday, calling the offer “illusory” as it accused the studio giant of misleading shareholders about its financing. From a report:
Paramount has been in a race with Netflix to win control of Warner Bros, and with it, its prized film and television studios, HBO Max streaming service and franchises like “Harry Potter.” After Warner Bros accepted the streaming giant’s offer, Paramount launched a hostile offer to outdo that bid.

In a letter to shareholders on Wednesday, the Warner Bros board wrote that Paramount had “consistently misled” Warner Bros shareholders that its $30-per-share cash offer was fully guaranteed, or “backstopped,” by the Ellison family, led by billionaire and Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison.

good

By melizeche • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Probably a good thing, handling CNN to the Ellisons before midterms would have really bad outcomes

Re:Streaming Trash

By TwistedGreen • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I thought movie studios were forbidden to own movie theaters, but now I just learned those rules were repealed in 2020, so I guess nobody cares anymore about the antitrust implications of total end-to-end control of movie production and distribution.

OpenAI in Talks With Amazon About Investment That Could Exceed $10 Billion

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI is in discussions with Amazon about a potential investment and an agreement to use its AI chips, CNBC confirmed on Tuesday. From the report:
The details are fluid and still subject to change but the investment could exceed $10 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be named because the talks are confidential. The discussions come after OpenAI completed a restructuring in October and formally outlined the details of its partnership with Microsoft, giving it more freedom to raise capital and partner with companies across the broader AI ecosystem.

Microsoft has invested more than $13 billion in OpenAI and backed the company since 2019, but it no longer has a right of first refusal to be OpenAI’s compute provider, according to an October release. OpenAI can now also develop some products with third parties. Amazon has invested at least $8 billion into OpenAI rival Anthropic, but the e-commerce giant could be looking to expand its exposure to the booming generative AI market. Microsoft has taken a similar step and announced last month that it will invest up to $5 billion into Anthropic, while Nvidia will invest up to $10 billion in the startup.

What the hell is going on here?

By supabeast! • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So Amazon is going to give money to OpenAI so OpenAI can buy chips from Amazon. And Nvidia is giving OpenAI money to buy chips from Nvidia. And AMD is doing some weird thing giving OpenAI stock warrants so OpenAI can sell the stock and buy chips from AMD. How the hell is Sam Altman convincing people to keep this house of cards standing? Is he really a genius running a company so amazing that this makes sense behind closed doors?

And how is OpenAI making its code work well on all these different platforms? Everybody else seems to be writing their code to run on one architecture. Does OpenAI have three teams of programmers adapting their latest code to work on three chip architectures?

Re:amazing

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
OpenAI looks like a Ponzi scheme.

Re:amazing

By GoTeam • Score: 4, Funny Thread

OpenAI looks like a Ponzi scheme.

I was thinking it’s a super villain scheme to consume all of earth’s electricity and fresh water.

Re:What the hell is going on here?

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
This looks pretty close to what the rail boom of the late 1860s and early 1870s looked like. Some corporations and investors then did some pretty incestuous stuff of a similar. The resulting bubble pop was devastating to the US economy. But it is notable that even as that bubble popped, the overall amount of rail continued to grow, with almost every major metric (amount of track laid down, number of passenger-miles traveled per a month, number of locomotives, number of overall stations, etc.) barely showing blips as they continued to climb.

Uber and DoorDash Try To Halt NYC Law That Encourages Tipping

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times:
Two of the largest food-delivery app companies have made a last-ditch effort to overturn tipping laws in New York City that go into effect in January just as its next mayor, who has been highly critical of the companies and the app industry, takes office. Tips to delivery workers have plummeted since some food-delivery apps switched to showing the tipping option only after a purchase had been completed; that change came after New York City established the country’s first minimum pay-rate for the workers in 2023. The new laws will require the apps to suggest a minimum tip of 10 percent at checkout, though customers can contribute more or less, or nothing at all.

Two of the app companies, DoorDash and Uber, filed a joint federal lawsuit in the Southern District of New York late last week targeting the City Council legislation, arguing that the new rules violated the First Amendment by requiring them to “speak a government-mandated message” and exceeded the Council’s authority. Although tipping will be optional under the law, the companies wrote in the suit that a “mandated pre-delivery 10 percent tip suggestion” would cause customers to use the app less because they were suffering from “tipping fatigue.” “Lessened engagement would result in fewer orders,” the suit said.

The days of people complimenting are gone.

By Fly Swatter • Score: 5, Informative Thread
So should tipping be gone. Fix the wages. Tipping was supposed to be a compliment for good service not some beggar like entitlement.

If it’s on the receipt it is NOT a tip.

pre-tip

By groobly • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Tipping ahead of time invites vindictive actions by the tipees, or scammy actions by tippers. The idea of a tip used to be to reward good service. Tipping ahead of time is more like extortion to avoid bad service.

Re:Start paying people normal salaries

By Bert64 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Noone is advocating raising prices. They’re just advocating for quoting the actual price up front. You would end up paying the exact same amount, it’s just declared up front instead of misleading you with artificially lower prices and expecting you to make up the difference with a tip.

Pre-delivery tip is not a tip…

By nealric • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you are asking me to tip someone before I even know the level of service, then what you are asking for is not a tip. What you are asking is for me to pay this person’s wages so you don’t have to.

Besides that, tipping for Doordash and uber eats drivers is also not really tipping. If I were actually in the car with the driver, then I would be experiencing service and could tip accordingly. But for Doordash, the order simply shows up on my doorstep and I have no interaction with the driver. The only thing I know is whether the order was delivered in a timely manner, but I also know that the timeliness of the order is often not in the driver’s control.

I wish we could go back to the system in most of Europe, where the workers are fairly paid and a tip is supposed to be just a little extra for excellence (and not considered mandatory). Demanding the customer supply the vast majority of the worker’s wages is not fair to the customer (who is being asked to defray the “employer’s” cost out of guilt) or to the worker who cannot rely on a steady stream of income and whose wages can be unfairly withheld by bad customers.

Re:This is wrong

By pz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Trying to solve the problem with tips is completely wrong.

No. Tipping is the problem, and the problem has gotten entirely out of hand. Make tipping illegal, and employers will be forced to pay wages that will retain their employees, and then, in turn, raise prices to compensate. At which point, we will have the system that Europe has been using for longer than I know, where being a waiter is not a stop-gap employment option while you’re trying to do something else, but a respectable profession. There are establishments I frequent in various parts of the Continent where I see the same waiters working there, year after year, and there is never any problem with the service. Tipping is not expected, and if you do, it’s a couple of percent. The prices on the menu are the prices you pay. No extra taxes, no extra tipping. Completely transparent.

It is pure commercial greed that prevents the US from adopting the same rational standard, and instead we get the fraud where the price you see is nowhere near the price you pay, except in very specific, isolated cases like fuel and airline tickets.

Senators Count the Shady Ways Data Centers Pass Energy Costs On To Americans

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
U.S. senators are probing whether Big Tech data centers are driving up local electricity bills by socializing grid upgrade costs onto residents. Some of the tactics they’re using include NDAs, shell companies, and lobbying. Ars Technica reports:
In letters (PDF) to seven AI firms, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) cited a study estimating that “electricity prices have increased by as much as 267 percent in the past five years” in “areas located near significant data center activity.” Prices increase, senators noted, when utility companies build out extra infrastructure to meet data centers’ energy demands — which can amount to one customer suddenly consuming as much power as an entire city. They also increase when demand for local power outweighs supply. In some cases, residents are blindsided by higher bills, not even realizing a data center project was approved, because tech companies seem intent on dodging backlash and frequently do not allow terms of deals to be publicly disclosed.

AI firms “ask public officials to sign non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) preventing them from sharing information with their constituents, operate through what appear to be shell companies to mask the real owner of the data center, and require that landowners sign NDAs as part of the land sale while telling them only that a ‘Fortune 100 company’ is planning an ‘industrial development’ seemingly in an attempt to hide the very existence of the data center,” senators wrote. States like Virginia with the highest concentration of data centers could see average electricity prices increase by another 25 percent by 2030, senators noted. But price increases aren’t limited to the states allegedly striking shady deals with tech companies and greenlighting data center projects, they said. “Interconnected and interstate power grids can lead to a data center built in one state raising costs for residents of a neighboring state,” senators reported.

Under fire for supposedly only pretending to care about keeping neighbors’ costs low were Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Equinix, Digital Realty, and CoreWeave. Senators accused firms of paying “lip service,” claiming that they would do everything in their power to avoid increasing residential electricity costs, while actively lobbying to pass billions in costs on to their neighbors. […] Particularly problematic, senators emphasized, were reports that tech firms were getting discounts on energy costs as utility companies competed for their business, while prices went up for their neighbors.

My rural town

By Dan East • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

This is going on right now in my rural town in Virginia, as they are planning a massive AI datacenter in an industrial park created about 20 years ago that has been mostly empty (except for a few massive tenets, like one of the largest Gatorade plants in the US at 1 million square feet). Environmental groups have already seeded the community with fear (we have this cut-throat Facebook gossip page that was posted to, and now everyone is up in arms). People have been flooding the county supervisor meetings and so on.

Just in the last couple days the county released a much more detailed explanation of the datacenter’s consumption of both electricity and water, but I don’t think it’s eased people’s minds much. Our power is supplied by American Electric Power, which has over 5 million customers and very deep pockets. We also have close to 100 MW of solar farms, and two hydroelectric dams on the New River at the edge of the county, and very robust power infrastructure here. So I don’t think there would be any regional issues with power (as compared to other states that have much smaller and even municipal-level power companies that have to pass infrastructure spending onto a much small customer base).

Re:NDAs?

By geekmux • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Non-Disclosure Agreements are a giant red flag.Any politician who signs one must be prosecuted immediately for undermining democracy, violating transparency laws and corruption. If someone asks you to sign an NDA, you know something extremely fishy is going on.

Not so sure I’d agree that NDAs are default “fishy”, but you are absolutely correct. And let’s be accurate here. Any Representative who is signing NDAs to hide key information from their constituency, is NOT a Representative. That is a fucking politician. And it’s long past time we make politician a four-letter word.

Those are elected officials. They come crawling, begging for your vote every few years. If they’re guilty of this, that blacklist should shine in Times Square until the mid terms. Remind them and any other cocksucker cunt politician this is what happens when you forget who your actual constituency is.

Hell yes both sides. I may favor one over the other, but integrity for all. Fuck ‘em if they’re guilty. Don’t care what flag they’re waiving. If they can’t Represent, they need to be gone. Plain and simple.

And enough with the fucking Insider Trading. Pelosi should be in prison for suggesting that shit is some kind of Congressional job perk. That only fuels motive for Representatives to act like fucking politicians. Maybe after a market crash we’ll rethink that job perk.

Re:They are and nobody will do anything about it

By Targon • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You shouldn’t confuse the Clinton-Democrats for being on the left. Those “centrists” are really a bit on the right, they embrace conservatives like Joe Manchin and then attack any progressives, who are the ones trying to move things back to the left after decades of Republicans pulling politics in the USA far to the right.

Remember, the Republican platform from the 1950s is actually quite a bit to the left of where the Democratic Party establishment is these days.

Re:Color me shocked

By rmdingler • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The demarcation between responsible representative democracy and oligarchal kleptocracy is as thin as the legislation regulating political contributions.

Re:They are and nobody will do anything about it

By Fly Swatter • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
We citizens don’t want it either, but we lost control of our own country to the new Corporate fiefdoms. And apparently most are accepting it.

The Arctic Is in Dire Straits, 20 Years of Reporting Show

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A new Arctic Report Card recap shows how the Arctic has transformed in just 20 years, warming about twice as fast as the global average and losing most of its oldest sea ice. It’s also triggering cascading impacts from “Atlantification” to permafrost-driven “rusting rivers” and more destructive storms. Scientific American reports:
The first Arctic Report Card was released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in 2006. Since then the region has warmed twice as fast as the global average. About 95 percent of the oldest, thickest sea ice is gone — “the sliver that remains is collected in an area north of Greenland. Even the central Arctic Ocean is becoming warmer and saltier, causing more ice melt and changing how much heat is released into the atmosphere in a way that affects weather patterns around the world. Those are just some of the stark changes 20 years have wrought. The findings were highlighted in the 2025 Arctic Report Card, released on Tuesday.

The Arctic Ocean is undergoing what scientists are calling “Atlantification” — a process where warm, salty water from the Atlantic flows north, changing how waters of different temperatures and densities are layered in the Arctic, disrupting ecosystems and altering how heat moves from the water to the air. […] The Arctic is simply becoming wetter, with more precipitation falling as rain instead of snow. June snow cover over the entire Arctic is half of what it was 60 years ago, the report found. Permafrost also continues to thaw, releasing once trapped carbon into the atmosphere and disgorging iron and other elements that have turned rivers and streams orange. These “rusting rivers,” found in more than 200 watersheds, are more acidic than normal and have elevated levels of toxic metals that endanger local ecosystems. And as the permafrost thaws, the tundra of the Arctic biome is shrinking, and the boreal forest biome is creeping northward, disrupting ecosystems.

Dire Straits

By backslashdot • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Thanks a lot. All those microwave ovens, custom kitchens, refrigerators, and color TVs caused global warming. And for what, so you yo-yos can get money for nothing and your chicks for free?

Is there a small upside?

By Viol8 • Score: 3 Thread

I’m hoping the extra iron going into the sea will cause plankton to grow faster and absord more CO2. Also more forest = greater CO2 absorbtion. Though obviously this is probably more than offset by the permafrost melting not to mention forests dying off where its now too hot further south.

Echo of 18,000 BC

By Mspangler • Score: 3 Thread

Imagine what it was like as the Wisconsin glaciation began to melt off. The ice retreated from Manhattan, the Missoula and Bonneville floods were about to start. Exciting times indeed.

As for the ecosystem changes, go to the library and read After the Ice Age by EC Pielou. Life went storming north after 100,000 years after hiding out anywhere it could.

Re:I said it before and I’ll say it again

By DesScorp • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The worst case scenarios are going to happen. Or worse.

OK. When? Because I’ve been hearing worst case scenarios all my adult life, and most of them are now past their predicted dates. Beginning with Paul Erlich’s infamous predictions of mass-starvation in the 60’s and 70’s, nearly every year the press is filled with credentialed experts that tell us the end is nigh and that the point of no return is almost here. If you want to know why most of the public is so Meh about these doomsday predictions, it’s because we’ve been inundated with the Boy Crying Wolf all of our lives. Would you like a timeline of all the point of no return predictions over the years? It’s readily available.

Re:Echo of 18,000 BC

By Mspangler • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The change at the glacial margin was a lot quicker.

Consider a 5000 foot thick icesheet. 90% melts and its still 500 feet thick. Nothing has really changed. Now melt off another 5%, it’s now only 250 feet thick and the tops of hills are poking out. Birds land on the bare hill tops and poop out seeds and the wind blows in more. From there the rest proceeds very rapidly.

Read the Pielou book. It was really interesting.

There is a lot of literature on start and stop of the Younger Dryas too. Neither event was gradual.

Breach At South Korea’s Equivalent of Amazon Exposed Data of Almost Every Adult

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal:
The alleged perpetrator had improper access to virtually every South Korean adult’s personal information: names, phone numbers and even the keycode to enter residential buildings. It was one of the biggest data breaches of recent years and it has sent the company it targeted — Coupang, South Korea’s equivalent of Amazon — reeling, generating lawsuits, government investigation and calls to toughen penalties against such leaks. The leak went undetected for nearly five months, hitting Coupang’s radar on Nov. 18 only after a customer flagged suspicious activity.

At first, Coupang, which was founded by a Korean-American entrepreneur, said it had experienced a data “exposure” affecting roughly 4,500 customer accounts. But within days, the e-commerce firm revised the figure: The leak exposed up to roughly 34 million user accounts in South Korea — a sum representing more than 90% of the country’s working-age population. Coupang started calling the incident a “leak” after Korean regulators took issue with the company’s prior word choice. “The Whole Nation Is a Victim,” read one local news headline.

An investigation has found that the alleged perpetrator had once worked in South Korea as a software developer for authentication systems at Coupang, which is known for its blockbuster U.S. initial public offering a few years ago. The suspected leaker is believed to be a Chinese national who has moved back to China and is now on the lam, South Korean officials say. They haven’t named the person. Even after leaving the firm roughly a year ago, the suspect secretly held on to an internal authentication key that granted him unfettered access to the personal information of Coupang users, South Korean authorities and lawmakers say. The infiltration, using overseas servers, started on June 24. By using the login credentials, the suspect was able to appear as if he were still a Coupang employee when accessing the company’s systems.

Wrong solution.

By gurps_npc • Score: 3 Thread

Trying to increase penalties is incredibly stupid. That only makes things worse. Let me be clear There is NO way to stop this kind of breach from happening again.

The problem is that morons believe they will never be robbed. There is no one with perfect security. The more valuable your data, the more likely it WILL be broken into. Every security professional or database designer (AND their bosses) should be required to sign a statement that says this every year.

AI will only make it worse as bad actors / governments will begin to set AI to find the exploits.

The only solution is to prevent companies from collecting and maintaining this level of information.

There was no need for a single database to contain 34 million people’s key addresses and key codes to enter residential building. No need for a database to contain more than keycodes for more than a single building. Even if your company owns multiple buildings or runs security for multiple buildings.

The proper solution is to outlaw the creation of such massive databases. You want to contain information on more than 1 million people? Then there should be massive limitations on what it can contain. No passwords at all for something that large. Name, Address and Phone numbers should already be suspect at 1 million entrees.

If you have 34 stores, then keep 34 separate databases that have a different security system for each of them.

EU Moves To Ease 2035 Ban On Internal Combustion Cars

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The EU is moving to soften its planned 2035 ban on internal combustion cars by allowing a small share of low-emission engines. “The less stringent limit would leave room for automakers to continue selling some plug-in hybrids, which have both electric and internal combustion engines and can use the combustion engine to recharge the battery without the need to find a charging station,” reports the Associated Press. From the report:
The proposal from the EU’s executive commission would change provisions of 2023 legislation requiring average emissions in new cars to equal zero, or a 100% reduction from 2021 levels. The new proposal would require a 90% emissions reduction. That means in practical terms that most cars would be battery-only but would leave room for some cars with internal combustion engines.

Automakers would have to compensate for the added emissions by using European steel produced by methods that emit less carbon, and through use of climate neutral e-fuels made from renewable electricity and captured carbon dioxide and biofuels made from plants. EU officials say changing the limit will not affect progress toward making the 27-country bloc’s economy climate neutral by 2050. That means producing only as much carbon dioxide as can be absorbed by forests and oceans or by abatement methods such as storing it underground. CO2 is the primary greenhouse gas blamed by scientists for climate change.

Called it - Politicians backing off

By Firethorn • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’ve said before that the upcoming bans were more aspirational than effective, placed far enough in the future that when things didn’t go as rosy as predicted (which itself should be predictable), that they’d modify them.
Examples include:
1. Expanding the qualifying vehicles, like including HEVs in the same category as EVs
2. Pushing deadlines back
3. Lowering percentages.

Meanwhile, in the US…

By SvnLyrBrto • Score: 3, Funny Thread

Don’t worry. By 2035, Dear Leader will have abolished all of those “WOKE” hybrids and the smaller “LEFTIST” economical petrol cars. We’ll be cruising around on land yachts… the BEST land yachts… better than SAD little cars the shithole countries of the world use. And they’ll be powered by beautiful CLEAN COAL; with our very own black gangs shoveling it into the REAL GOOD fireboxes that CROOKED HILLARY banned for NO REASON except that she’s a NASTY woman who full of HATE and she wants to spite the REAL Americans.

Re: Meanwhile in China…

By FudRucker • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I think the USA & EU should start developing hybrids, use a smaller engine that can take over when the battery gets low and charge the batteries while driving and when parked and it frees the car from being dependant on charging stations

Re:Meanwhile, in the US…

By Dixie_Flatline • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Sure, just as soon as the taxpayers stop subsidizing petroleum companies. I’m okay with that solution. Let’s see what the market decides when the government isn’t gifting free land in protected wildlife areas and cleaning up abandoned wells and waging wars to protect oil interests in the middle east. Let’s go.

Meta Tolerates Rampant Ad Fraud From China To Safeguard Billions In Revenue

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
A Reuters investigation found that Meta knowingly tolerated large volumes of scam and illegal ads from China worth billions in revenue. Reuters reports:
Though China’s authoritarian government bans use of Meta social media by its citizens, Beijing lets Chinese companies advertise to foreign consumers on the globe-spanning platforms. As a result, Meta’s advertising business was thriving in China, ultimately reaching over $18 billion in annual sales in 2024, more than a tenth of the company’s global revenue. But Meta calculated that about 19% of that money — more than $3 billion — was coming from ads for scams, illegal gambling, pornography and other banned content, according to internal Meta documents reviewed by Reuters.

The documents are part of a cache of previously unreported material generated over the past four years by teams including Meta’s finance, lobbying, engineering and safety divisions. The cache reveals Meta’s efforts over that period to understand the scale of abuse on its platforms and the company’s reluctance to introduce fixes that could undermine its business and revenues. The documents show that Meta believed China was the country of origin of roughly a quarter of all ads for scams and banned products on Meta’s platforms worldwide. Victims ranged from shoppers in Taiwan who purchased bogus health supplements to investors in the United States and Canada who were swindled out of their savings. “We need to make significant investment to reduce growing harm,” Meta staffers warned in an internal April 2024 presentation to leaders of its safety operations.

To that end, Meta created an anti-fraud team that went beyond previous efforts to monitor scams and other banned activity from China. Using a variety of stepped-up enforcement tools, it slashed the problematic ads by about half during the second half of 2024 — from 19% to 9% of the total advertising revenue coming from China. Then Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg weighed in. “As a result of Integrity Strategy pivot and follow-up from Zuck,” a late 2024 document notes, the China ads-enforcement team was “asked to pause” its work. Reuters was unable to learn the specifics of the CEO’s involvement or what the so-called “Integrity Strategy pivot” entailed. But after Zuckerberg’s input, the documents show, Meta disbanded its China-focused anti-scam team. It also lifted a freeze it had introduced on granting new Chinese ad agencies access to its platforms. One document shows that Meta shelved yet other anti-scam measures that internal tests had indicated would be effective. The document didn’t detail the specifics of those measures.

Meta took these steps even as an outside consultant it hired produced research that warned “Meta’s own behavior and policies” were fostering systemic corruption in the Chinese market for ads targeting users in other countries, additional documents show. The upshot: Within a few months of Meta’s brief crackdown, a new crop of Chinese advertising agencies was flooding Facebook and Instagram with prohibited ads. By mid-2025, banned ads climbed back to about 16% of Meta’s China revenue. Rob Leathern, who was a senior director of product management at Facebook until 2020 and is no longer at the company, said the scale of predatory advertising revealed in the documents represents a major breakdown in consumer protections at the social media giant. “The levels that you’re talking about are not defensible,” he said of the percentage of abusive ads. “I don’t know how anyone could think this is okay.”

Facebook has ads? Huh.

By spywhere • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I avoid both Facebook ads and their algorithm by going to this link:

https://www.facebook.com/?filt…

This displays only friends and accounts I follow, in reverse chronological order.

To completely avoid ads, I report every “sponsored” link as sexually inappropriate… triggering a human review each time
After I do this about half a dozen times, FB stops inserting ads in my reverse chron feed for several months.
When I see another “Sponsored” item, I just start reporting them again..

Watched someone infect their computer on Facebook

By GotNoRice • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
After cleaning up a friend’s computer, I watched them get back on it. The first thing they did was go to Facebook. There was an advertisement that was clearly disguised to look like a Facebook notification claiming that they had a new friend request. Without hesitation they clicked on it, and thus began the process of re-infecting their system. It turned out to be very instructional, at least. I explained to them how being asked to copy and paste commands into an Administrator command prompt isn’t a normal part of inviting a new friend on Facebook. Crisis averted. But it was kind of mind-blowing to see that Meta allowed those ads on their platform in the first place. I realized that even I had become a bit sheltered due to using uBlock Origin on Firefox for years, given how good of a job it does.

Seems they encourage this kind of behavior

By mrclevesque • Score: 5, Informative Thread

From last week’s article, usually Meta doesn’t ban an ad reported or automatically flag as fraudulent, instead they raise their fee:

“But the company only bans advertisers if its automated systems predict the marketers are at least 95% certain to be committing fraud, the documents show. If the company is less certain – but still believes the advertiser is a likely scammer – Meta charges higher ad rates as a penalty, according to the documents”

This is big business for Meta:

“Meta internally projected late last year that it would earn about 10% of its overall annual revenue – or $16 billion – from running advertising for scams and banned goods, internal company documents show.” - https://www.reuters.com/invest…

And of those 16 billion dollars, we see today that Meta is making about 20% of that amount from advertisers in China:

“more than $3 billion — was coming from ads for scams, illegal gambling, pornography and other banned content [from China], according to internal Meta documents” - https://www.reuters.com/invest…

Re:Repeal Section 230

By maladroit • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Repeal it, and this problem goes away.
And so does Slashdot.

Re:Repeal Section 230

By maladroit • Score: 5, Informative Thread

From: “Hello! You’ve Been Referred Here Because You’re Wrong About Section 230 Of The Communications Decency Act”
https://www.techdirt.com/2020/…

If you said “Section 230 means these companies can never be sued!”

I regret to inform you that you are wrong. Internet companies are sued all the time. Section 230 merely protects them from a narrow set of frivolous lawsuits, in which the websites are sued either for the content created by others (in which case the actual content creators remain liable) or in cases where they’re being sued for the moderation choices they make, which are mostly protected by the 1st Amendment anyway (but Section 230 helps get those frivolous lawsuits kicked out faster). The websites can and do still face lawsuits for many, many other reasons.

If you said “Section 230 is a get out of jail card for websites!”

You’re wrong. Again, websites are still 100% liable for any content that they themselves create. Separately, Section 230 explicitly exempts federal criminal law - meaning that stories that blame things like sex trafficking and opioid sales on 230 are very much missing the point as well. The Justice Department is not barred by Section 230. It says so quite clearly:

        Nothing in this section shall be construed to impair the enforcement of … any other Federal criminal statute

So many of the complaints about criminal activity are not about Section 230, but about a lack of enforcement.