Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. US Threatens Anthropic with ‘Supply-Chain Risk’ Designation. OpenAI Signs New War Department Deal
  2. Antarctica’s Massive Neutrino Observatory Gets an Upgrade
  3. ‘World’s Largest Battery’ Soon At Google Data Center: 100-Hour Iron-Air Storage
  4. After US-Israel Attacks, 90 Million Iranians Lose Internet Connectivity
  5. America’s Teenagers Say AI Cheating Has Become a Regular Feature of Student Life
  6. Startup Plans April Launch for a Satellite to Reflect Sunlight to Earth at Night
  7. Google Quantum-Proofs HTTPS
  8. Rubin Observatory Has Started Paging Astronomers 800,000 Times a Night
  9. Southern California Air Board Rejects Pollution Rules After AI-Generated Flood of Comments
  10. OpenAI Fires an Employee For Prediction Market Insider Trading
  11. Human Brain Cells On a Chip Learned To Play Doom In a Week
  12. Hyperion Author Dan Simmons Dies From Stroke At 77
  13. CISA Replaces Bumbling Acting Director After a Year
  14. Perplexity Announces ‘Computer,’ an AI Agent That Assigns Work To Other AI Agents
  15. South Korea Set To Get a Fully Functioning Google Maps

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.

US Threatens Anthropic with ‘Supply-Chain Risk’ Designation. OpenAI Signs New War Department Deal

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
It started Friday when all U.S. federal agencies were ordered to "immediately cease” using Anthropic’s AI technology after contract negotiations stalled when Anthropic requested prohibitions against mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. But later Friday there were even more repercussions…

In a post to his 1.1 million followers on X.com, U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth criticized Anthropic for what he called “a master class in arrogance and betrayal as well as a textbook case of how not to do business with the United States Government or the Pentagon.”
Our position has never wavered and will never waver: the Department of War must have full, unrestricted access to Anthropic’s models for every LAWFUL purpose in defense of the Republic… Cloaked in the sanctimonious rhetoric of “effective altruism,” [Anthropic and CEO Dario Amodei] have attempted to strong-arm the United States military into submission — a cowardly act of corporate virtue-signaling that places Silicon Valley ideology above American lives. The Terms of Service of Anthropic’s defective altruism will never outweigh the safety, the readiness, or the lives of American troops on the battlefield. Their true objective is unmistakable: to seize veto power over the operational decisions of the United States military. That is unacceptable…

In conjunction with the President’s directive for the Federal Government to cease all use of Anthropic’s technology, I am directing the Department of War to designate Anthropic a Supply-Chain Risk to National Security. Effective immediately, no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic… America’s warfighters will never be held hostage by the ideological whims of Big Tech. This decision is final.
Meanwhile, Anthrophic said on Friday that "no amount of intimidation or punishment from the Department of War will change our position.” (And “We will challenge any supply chain risk designation in court.”)
Designating Anthropic as a supply chain risk would be an unprecedented action — one historically reserved for US adversaries, never before publicly applied to an American company. We are deeply saddened by these developments. As the first frontier AI company to deploy models in the US government’s classified networks, Anthropic has supported American warfighters since June 2024 and has every intention of continuing to do so. We believe this designation would both be legally unsound and set a dangerous precedent for any American company that negotiates with the government… Secretary Hegseth has implied this designation would restrict anyone who does business with the military from doing business with Anthropic. The Secretary does not have the statutory authority to back up this statement.
Anthropic also defended the two exceptions they’d requested that had stalled contract negotiations. "[W]e do not believe that today’s frontier AI models are reliable enough to be used in fully autonomous weapons. Allowing current models to be used in this way would endanger America’s warfighters and civilians. Second, we believe that mass domestic surveillance of Americans constitutes a violation of fundamental rights.”

Also Friday, OpenAI announced that "we reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network.” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman emphasized that the agreement retains and confirms OpenAI’s own prohibitions against using their products for domestic mass surveillance — and requires “human responsibility” for the use of force including for autonomous weapon systems. “The Department of War agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement. We also will build technical safeguards to ensure our models behave as they should, which the Department of War also wanted. "
We are asking the Department of War to offer these same terms to all AI companies, which in our opinion we think everyone should be willing to accept. We have expressed our strong desire to see things de-escalate away from legal and governmental actions and towards reasonable agreements. We remain committed to serve all of humanity as best we can. The world is a complicated, messy, and sometimes dangerous place.

Sam Altman, American Hero!

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 3 Thread
He’s going to save us all by watching us all very, very carefully. Especially the young guys. Then his AI will kill us all.

Antarctica’s Massive Neutrino Observatory Gets an Upgrade

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
There’s already 5,000 sensors embedded in Antarctica’s ice to look for evidence of neutrinos, reports the Washington Post. But in November scientists drilled six new holes at least a mile and a half deep and installed cables with hundreds more light detectors — an upgrade to the massive 15-year-old IceCube Neutrino Observatory to detect the charged particles produced by lower-energy neutrinos interacting with matter:
When they do, the neutrinos produce charged particles that travel through the ice at nearly the speed of light, creating a blue glow called Cherenkov radiation… “Within the first couple years, we should be making much better measurements,” [said Erin O’Sullivan, an associate professor of physics at Uppsala University in Sweden and a spokesperson for the project.] “There’s hope to expand the detector, by an order of magnitude in volume, so the important thing there is we’re not just seeing a few neutrino point sources, but we’re starting to be a true telescope. … That’s really the dream.”
The scientists spent seven years planning the upgrade, according to the article. “To drill holes a mile and a half deep takes about 30 hours, and 18 more hours to return to the surface,” the article points out. “Then, the race begins because almost immediately, the hole starts to shrink as the water refreezes.” (“If it takes too much time, the principal investigator says, “the instruments don’t fit in anymore!”)

‘World’s Largest Battery’ Soon At Google Data Center: 100-Hour Iron-Air Storage

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Interesting Engineering reports:
US tech giant Google announced on Tuesday that it will build a new data center in Pine Island, Minnesota. The new facility will be powered by 1.9 gigawatts (GW) of clean energy from wind and solar, coupled with a 300-megawatt battery, claimed to be the ‘world’s largest’, with a 30-gigawatt-hour (GWh) capacity and 100-hour duration… The planned battery would dwarf a 19 GW lithium-ion project in the UAE…

Form Energy’s batteries work very differently from most large batteries today. Instead of using lithium like the batteries in electric cars, they store electricity by making iron rust and then reversing the rusting process to release the energy when needed… Form’s iron-air batteries are heavier and less efficient than their counterparts; they can only return about 50% to 70% of the energy used to charge them, while lithium-ion batteries return more than 90%. However, Form’s batteries have one distinct advantage. They are cheaper than lithium-ion batteries, costing about $20 per kilowatt-hour of storage, which is almost three times as cheap… It will store 150 MWh of electricity and can supply to the grid for up to 100 hours, delivering about 1.5 MW at peak output.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the article.

After US-Israel Attacks, 90 Million Iranians Lose Internet Connectivity

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
CNN reports that images from Iran’s capital “have shown cars jammed along Tehran’s street, with heavy traffic on major roads after today’s wave of attacks by the US and Israel.” And though Iran has a population of 93 million, the attacks suddenly plunged Iran into “a near-total internet blackout with national connectivity at 4% of ordinary levels,” according to internet monitoring experts at NetBlocks.

CNN reports:
Since Iran’s brutal crackdown earlier this year, the regime has made progress to allow only a subset of people with security clearance to access the international web, experts said. After previous internet shutdowns, some platforms never returned. The Iranian government blocked Instagram after the internet shutdown and protests in 2022, and the popular messaging app Telegram following protests in 2018.
The International Atomic Energy Agency announced an hour ago that they’re “closely monitoring developments” — keeping in contact with countries in the region and so far seeing "no evidence of any radiological impact.” They’re also urging “restraint to avoid any nuclear safety risks to people in the region.”

UPDATE (1 PM PST): Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait “are shifting to remote learning starting Sunday until further notice following Iran’s retaliatory strikes on Saturday,” reports CNN.

Re:Finally

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When has a regime change by the USA ever improved a country? Iran is in their current state because of US meddling decades ago.

Now, what was all that talk of Hillary or Kamala starting a war? Will cheeto return his fake FIFA medal?

Re:Finally

By Tailhook • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When has a regime change by the USA ever improved a country?

Germany is one example.

Japan is another.

Re:Finally

By korgitser • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Venezuela will play out like it has already played out before. The US puppet regime will not care about the people, and because of that will get ousted sooner or later.

Re:Finally

By korgitser • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Take a look at the map and behold, most of the Empire is not in fact doing too good: https://www.britannica.com/pla….

An Empire is a machine of violence with the sole purpose of transferring wealth created by other people back to the motherland. Rarely does anyone do good as a subject nation of the empire, and if that happens, it’s only because the Empire was otherwise engaged with more important matters.

Re:Finally

By ClickOnThis • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

You seem to think that the current strikes against Iran by the USA and Israel are an attempt to get Iran to treat its people more humanely.

No, they are a pressure tactic to bend Iran’s resolve in nuclear negotiations — which would not have been necessary if Trump hadn’t torn up the JCPOA signed on July 14, 2015 between Iran and China, France, Germany, Russia, the UK, and the USA. But that agreement happened during Obama’s administration, so in Trump’s mind, it had to go.

And, perhaps — oh, say — these strikes are meant to distract the American people from the Epstein files.

America’s Teenagers Say AI Cheating Has Become a Regular Feature of Student Life

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Tuesday Pew Research announced their newest findings: that 54% of America’s teens use AI help with schoolwork:
One-in-five teens living in households making less than $30,000 a year say they do all or most of their schoolwork with AI chatbots’ help. A similar share of those in households making $30,000 to just under $75,000 annually say this. Fewer teens living in higher-earning households (7%) say the same.”
“The survey did not ask students whether they had used chatbots to write essays or generate other assignments…” notes the New York Times. “But nearly 60% of teenagers told Pew that students at their school used chatbots to cheat ‘very often’ or ‘somewhat often.’" Agreeing with that are the Pew Researchers themselves. “Our survey shows that many teens think cheating with AI has become a regular feature of student life.”

One worried teenager still told the researchers that AI “makes people lazy and takes away jobs.” But another teenager told the researchers that “Everyone’s going to have to know how to use AI or they’ll be left behind.”

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader theodp for sharing the article.

Homework is largely useless

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
A very small amount of homework can be beneficial but we’re talking ridiculously small amounts. Like half an hour a night and a couple hours on the weekend. Basically just reviewing the material a little bit.

As for American teenagers I don’t think any sort of functional economy is going to be left for them. We are already a 25% functional unemployment. That means a quarter of the population either is unemployed, has given up looking for work, or makes so little money that they cannot afford to feed and clothes and shelter themselves. Even with roommates.

So there isn’t really a lot of point in demanding that they work harder because there’s nothing for them to work for except a techno-feudal hellscape.

That’s the world we left our kids. We really are a bunch of useless assholes.

Carl Sagan saw this coming

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
“I have a foreboding of an America in my children’s or grandchildren’s time - when the United States is a service and information economy; when nearly all the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries; when awesome technological powers are in the hands of a very few, and no one representing the public interest can even grasp the issues; when the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority; when, clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes, our critical faculties decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what’s true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstition and darkness. The dumbing down of America is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30-second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance.”

Carl Sagan, in “The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark”, 1995

The students know the game

By oumuamua • Score: 3 Thread
Insightful questions from Georgetown students to Bernie Sanders and Geoffrey Hinton, here is the amazing less than a 2 min summary https://www.youtube.com/watch?… if you like that you can watch the whole thing here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?…

Ai this that

By OngelooflijkHaribo • Score: 3 Thread

This is just one of the many things that people talk about now like it’s unique about “a.i.” and that it’s more scary that it’s “a.i.”. Homework could always be liberally cheated with because there’s no oversight. One can ask someone else, look up the answer online, copy the homework of a classmate. There is no controlled environment here where people can be supervised like in a classroom.

Truth be told I think the concept of “homework” existing was always just a cost-saving measure. If students apparently should spend more time on school than school hours, then schools should simply be open for longer and school hours should be longer, but that costs more money I suppose

CheatGPT (The Simpsons)

By theodp • Score: 3 Thread

Bart Gets Caught Using CheatGPT On His Homework

Startup Plans April Launch for a Satellite to Reflect Sunlight to Earth at Night

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A start-up called Reflect Orbital "proposes to use large, mirrored satellites to redirect sunlight to Earth at night,” reports the Washington Post, “with plans to bathe solar farms, industrial sites and even entire cities in light that could, if desired, reach the intensity of daylight....”

Slashdot noted their idea in 2022 — but Reflect Orbital now expects to launch its first satellite in April, according to the article. “But its grand vision is largely ‘aspirational,’ as its young founder, Ben Nowack, told me…”
Reflect Orbital’s Nowack describes a scene right out of sci-fi: An extremely bright star appears on the northern horizon and makes its way across the sky, illuminating a 5-kilometer circle on Earth, then setting on the southern horizon about five minutes later, just as another such “star” appears in the north. To make the night even brighter, a customer could make 10 “stars” appear at once in the north by ordering them on an app. Two such artificial stars are in development in Reflect Orbital’s factory. Nowack showed them to me on a Zoom call. The first to launch is 50 feet across, but he plans later to build them three times that size. If all goes according to plan, he’ll have 50,000 of them circling the Earth in 2035 at an altitude of around 400 miles.

Nowack plans to start selling the service “in mostly developing nations or places that don’t have streetlights yet.” Eventually, he thinks, he can illuminate major cities, turn solar fields and farms into round-the-clock operations for any business or municipality that pays for it. He likened his technology to the invention of crop irrigation thousands of years ago. “I see this as much the same thing,” he said, arguing that people would no longer have to “wait for the sun to shine.”
The article adds that Elon Musk’s SpaceX "wants to launch as many as a million satellites to serve as orbiting data centers — 70 times the number of satellites now in orbit.” (America’s satellite-regulation Federal Communications Commission grants a “categorical exclusion” from environmental review to satellites on the grounds that their operations “normally do not have significant effects on the human environment.”)

The public comment periods for the two proposals close on March 6 and March 9.

Astronomers will love this

By dskoll • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

As if Starlink satellites ruining their observations weren’t enough… yeah, more light pollution is exactly what we need.

Fuck that

By dargaud • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I cannot emphasize enough how much I DO NOT WANT THAT ! There’s not enough light pollution yet ? We can’t see stars or galaxies anymore from most of the western world. Animals need the night to rest or to hunt. Plants need the night to complete their respiratory / photosynthesis cycle.

Re:Astronomers will love this

By dbialac • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Let’s not add the fact that reflecting sunlight onto the earth at night increases warming.

Re:Astronomers will love this

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Let’s not add the fact that reflecting sunlight onto the earth at night increases warming.

You’re not wrong, but by how much? Even if this plan gets anywhere near a scale that yields useful energy, I think it needs to be weighed against the kinds of energy-generation methods we use already that unquestionably warm the planet — and may also produce greenhouse gasses.

And for the record, I’m not exactly a fan of this new idea. I like night skies and I want to keep them.

Musk’s space datacenters

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Dear god, will the stupidity never end?

This can’t happen. In space, dumping heat is a massive issue. Getting power is a massive issue.

Imagine the size of the solar and radiator arrays for the most modest conceivable datacenter, and if you know anything at all about the subject you’ll shake your head in disbelief that anyone thinks it’s a good idea.

Google Quantum-Proofs HTTPS

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Google on Friday unveiled its plan for its Chrome browser to secure HTTPS certificates against quantum computer attacks without breaking the Internet. The objective is a tall order. The quantum-resistant cryptographic data needed to transparently publish TLS certificates is roughly 40 times bigger than the classical cryptographic material used today. Today’s X.509 certificates are about 64 bytes in size, and comprise six elliptic curve signatures and two EC public keys. This material can be cracked through the quantum-enabled Shor’s algorithm. Certificates containing the equivalent quantum-resistant cryptographic material are roughly 2.5 kilobytes. All this data must be transmitted when a browser connects to a site.

To bypass the bottleneck, companies are turning to Merkle Trees, a data structure that uses cryptographic hashes and other math to verify the contents of large amounts of information using a small fraction of material used in more traditional verification processes in public key infrastructure. Merkle Tree Certificates, “replace the heavy, serialized chain of signatures found in traditional PKI with compact Merkle Tree proofs,” members of Google’s Chrome Secure Web and Networking Team wrote Friday. “In this model, a Certification Authority (CA) signs a single ‘Tree Head’ representing potentially millions of certificates, and the ‘certificate’ sent to the browser is merely a lightweight proof of inclusion in that tree.”

[…] Google is [also] adding cryptographic material from quantum-resistant algorithms such as ML-DSA (PDF). This addition would allow forgeries only if an attacker were to break both classical and post-quantum encryption. The new regime is part of what Google is calling the quantum-resistant root store, which will complement the Chrome Root Store the company formed in 2022. The [Merkle Tree Certificates] MTCs use Merkle Trees to provide quantum-resistant assurances that a certificate has been published without having to add most of the lengthy keys and hashes. Using other techniques to reduce the data sizes, the MTCs will be roughly the same 64-byte length they are now […]. The new system has already been implemented in Chrome.

Do We Have Quantum Computers For this?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I didn’t think that we had quantum computers already.

How is it that we have Shor’s Algorithm(from 1994) and have Google working on this?

Is it still theoretical and prophylactic, or does this stuff exist today and have real world possibility now?

Today’s certs are not 64 bytes in size

By madbrain • Score: 3 Thread

Some EC public keys might be, but certs contain other identity information, and the key was often not their largest component.

Rubin Observatory Has Started Paging Astronomers 800,000 Times a Night

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
On February 24th, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory activated its automated alert system, sending out roughly 800,000 real-time notifications flagging asteroids, supernovae, flaring black holes and “other transient celestial events,” reports Scientific American. And this is only the beginning — that number is projected to climb into the millions as it continues scanning the ever-changing sky. From the report:
The astronomical observatory equipped with world’s largest camera hit a key milestone on February 24, when a complex data-processing system pushed hundreds of thousands of alerts out to scientists eager to pore over its most exciting sightings. The Vera C. Rubin Observatory began operations last year, capturing stunning, panoramic time-lapse views of the cosmos with ease. Rubin’s first images, based on just 10 hours of observations, let space fans zoom seemingly forever into an overwhelmingly starry sky. But watchful astronomers were always awaiting the next step: the system that would automatically alert them to the most promising activity in the overhead sky amid the 1,000 or so enormous images that Rubin’s telescope captures every night.

“We can detect everything that changes, moves and appears,” said Yusra AlSayyad, an astronomer at Princeton University and Rubin’s deputy associate director for data management, to Scientific American last summer. “It’s way too much for one person to manually sift through and filter and monitor themselves.” So even as they were designing and building the Rubin Observatory itself, scientists were also designing an alert system to help astronomers navigate the flood of data. As soon as the telescope began observations, the team started constructing a static reference image of the entire sky in impeccable detail.

Now the data processing systems that support the observatory are starting to automatically compare every new Rubin image to the corresponding section of that background template. The systems identify all of the differences, each of which is individually flagged. The algorithms can also distinguish between a potential supernova and a possible newfound asteroid, for example. Alerting the scientific community is the final, crucial step. Astronomers — as well as members of the public — can sign up for notifications based on the type of sighting they’re interested in and the brightness of the observation in question. And now that the alerts system has gone live, users receive a tiny, fuzzy image with some astronomical metadata of each observation that fits their criteria — all just a couple of minutes after Rubin captures the original image.

news

By smillie • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Star-taling news

Southern California Air Board Rejects Pollution Rules After AI-Generated Flood of Comments

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Southern California’s air quality board rejected proposed rules to phase out gas-powered appliances after receiving more than 20,000 opposition comments generated through CiviClick, “the first and best AI-powered grassroots advocacy platform.” Phys.org reports:
A Southern California-based public affairs consultant, Matt Klink, has taken credit for using CiviClick to wage the opposition campaign, including in a sponsored article on the website Campaigns and Elections. The campaign “left the staff of the Southern California Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) reeling,” the article says. It is not clear how AI was deployed in the campaign, and officials at CiviClick did not respond to repeated requests for comment. But their website boasts several tools, including “state of the art technology and artificial intelligence message assistance” that can be used to create custom advocacy letters, as opposed to repetitive form letters or petitions often used in similar campaigns.

When staffers at the air district reached out to a small sample of people to verify their comments, at least three said they had not written to the agency and were not aware of any such messages, records show. But the email onslaught almost certainly influenced the board’s June decision, according to agency insiders, who noted that the number of public comments typically submitted on agenda items can be counted on one hand.

The proposed rules were nearly two years in the making and would have placed a fee on natural gas-powered water heaters and furnaces, favoring electric ones, in an effort to reduce air pollution in the district, which includes Orange County and large swaths of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. Gas appliances emit nitrogen oxides, or NOx — key pollutants for forming smog. The implications are troubling, experts said, and go beyond the use of natural gas furnaces and heaters in the second-largest metropolitan area in the country.

Fossil fuels suck, and politicians are idiots

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
We have a propane cook top and oven at one residence and all electric at the other. The smell from cooking with propane indoors is just awful, even with windows open and a breeze. Yes, there is more control over the temperature, but I’d rather not breath in toxic gasses poisoning my asses. I can cook just fine with a $40 induction plate, thank you, and breath easier too. Not to mention that propane and natural gas leaks into the house all the fucking time, no matter how much you think it isn’t leaking. As for the politicians, they’re not smart enough to recognize bullshit, because generally all they know is bullshit. It’s how they got elected. Matt Klink and the cunts at CiviClick should be flayed alive.

Politicans aren’t good at this

By Morromist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I see a lot of things changing in the future but politicans being illiterate about tech and science and health isn’t going to change at all. They can usually quote a trenchant bible verse though, so we’ve got that covered. Unfortunately more and more of the decisions they face are going to be tech related, and dismantling the part of the goverment filled with experts and scientists is just going to make everything worse.

Re:Fossil fuels suck, and politicians are idiots

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Diesel != Gasoline. That doesn’t mean that both of them don’t contribute to health related issues and air quality problems. The problem with any gas burning inside the house, including gas fireplaces in your living space is that it creates fine particulates and NOx emissions due to imperfect combustion. This is universal. There’s no stove nor is there a gas type that prevents this. In all cases the result is a level that is now known to be a cause of adverse health effects.

So yeah the OP complains about Propane. I’ll complain about NG, I have a NG cooktop at home, and even when it’s -15C outside I open all the windows downstairs when cooking, and I can *STILL* see the result on my air quality meter spike in the living room, even before I add any food to the pan.

Dealing with smog is straightforward

By hdyoung • Score: 3 Thread
Smog is a *very* local thing. If a local population wants to breathe clean air, the steps to do it are extremely straightforward. If a local population doesn’t care about it, they can allow all sorts of burning and exchange their health for a small amount of convenience and short term economic benefit, and usually it barely impacts the next city over. Smog is extremely egalitarian as well. If you live in the area, there’s no getting away from it. The particles are too small. They get everywhere. Everyone from the poorest hobo to the billionaire in the penthouse gets a dose of the aerosol particles, and the health effects of that stuff is very well understood.

OpenAI Fires an Employee For Prediction Market Insider Trading

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
OpenAI has fired an employee following an investigation into their activity on prediction market platforms including Polymarket, WIRED has learned. OpenAI CEO of Applications, Fidji Simo, disclosed the termination in an internal message to employees earlier this year. The employee, she said, “used confidential OpenAI information in connection with external prediction markets (e.g. Polymarket).” “Our policies prohibit employees from using confidential OpenAI information for personal gain, including in prediction markets,” says spokesperson Kayla Wood. OpenAI has not revealed the name of the employee or the specifics of their trades.

Evidence suggests that this was not an isolated event. Polymarket runs on the Polygon blockchain network, so its trading ledger is pseudonymous but traceable. According to an analysis by the financial data platform Unusual Whales, there have been clusters of activities, which the service flagged as suspicious, around OpenAI-themed events since March 2023. Unusual Whales flagged 77 positions in 60 wallet addresses as suspected insider trades, looking at the age of the account, trading history, and significance of investment, among other factors. Suspicious trades hinged on the release dates of products like Sora, GPT-5, and the ChatGPT Browser, as well as CEO Sam Altman’s employment status. In November 2023, two days after Altman was dramatically ousted from the company, a new wallet placed a significant bet that he would return, netting over $16,000 in profits. The account never placed another bet.

The behavior fits into patterns typical of insider trades. “The tell is the clustering. In the 40 hours before OpenAI launched its browser, 13 brand-new wallets with zero trading history appeared on the site for the first time to collectively bet $309,486 on the right outcome,” says Unusual Whales CEO Matt Saincome. “When you see that many fresh wallets making the same bet at the same time, it raises a real question about whether the secret is getting out.” […] Though this is the first confirmed case of a large technology company firing an employee over trades in prediction markets, it’s almost certainly not the last. Opportunities for tech sector employees to make trades on markets abound. “The data tells me this is happening all over the place,” Saincome says.

Alternate headline proposal

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 3 Thread
“Corrupt employee of corrupt company led by corrupt CEO uses platform of corrupt company led by corrupt CEO to engage in the corruption the platform was expressly designed, built, and run to encourage and reward.”

Human Brain Cells On a Chip Learned To Play Doom In a Week

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Researchers at Cortical Labs used living human neurons grown on a chip to learn how to play Doom in about a week. “While its performance is not up to par with humans, experts say it brings biological computers a step closer to useful real-world applications, like controlling robot arms,” reports New Scientist. From the report:
In 2021, the Australian company Cortical Labs used its neuron-powered computer chips to play Pong. The chips consisted of clumps of more than 800,000 living brain cells grown on top of microelectrode arrays that can both send and receive electrical signals. Researchers had to carefully train the chips to control the paddles on either side of the screen. Now, Cortical Labs has developed an interface that makes it easier to program these chips using the popular programming language Python. An independent developer, Sean Cole, then used Python to teach the chips to play Doom, which he did in around a week.

“Unlike the Pong work that we did a few years ago, which represented years of painstaking scientific effort, this demonstration has been done in a matter of days by someone who previously had relatively little expertise working directly with biology,” says Brett Kagan of Cortical Labs. “It’s this accessibility and this flexibility that makes it truly exciting.”

The neuronal computer chip, which used about a quarter as many neurons as the Pong demonstration, played Doom better than a randomly firing player, but far below the performance of the best human players. However, it learnt much faster than traditional, silicon-based machine learning systems and should be able to improve its performance with newer learning algorithms, says Kagan. However, it’s not useful to compare the chips with human brains, he says. “Yes, it’s alive, and yes, it’s biological, but really what it is being used as is a material that can process information in very special ways that we can’t recreate in silicon.”
Cortical Labs posted a YouTube video showing its CL1 biological computer running Doom. There’s also source code available on GitHub, with additional details in a README file.

Horrors

By Kamineko • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Oh boy! Man made horrors beyond my comprehension!

Most likely bullshit

By backslashdot • Score: 3 Thread

You can get any logic-gate system to “play Doom”. One of the ways I’m familiar with to do this with neurons is use an effect called “spike-timing-dependent plasticity”. It’s basically like creating a circuit with flip-flops and logic gates at that point and claiming “yo, I got transistors to play doom bro”. I don’t know if that’s what they did here .. if it is (someone find out?).. that’s pretty damn lame. STDP produces a deterministic behavior. Either way, the cells have no idea they’re playing Doom the same as a clock has no idea what time it is.

Relative

By burtosis • Score: 4, Funny Thread
I learned to play doom in less than a week but I had the benefit of lots of chips. And soda.

fuck

By Pitt64 • Score: 3, Funny Thread
i still haven’t learned

Sure, okay

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

By all means, let’s start cybernetic organisms off by having them learn to play games like Doom. What could go wrong - for us? There’s no way they learn to perceive us as the enemy, right? Right? How about city/civilization building games instead so maybe they might eventually help us out. And, no, not empire or kingdom building games — we seem to good with that already. (sigh) /s

Hyperion Author Dan Simmons Dies From Stroke At 77

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Author Dan Simmons, best known for the epic sci-fi novel Hyperion and its sequels, has died at 77 following a stroke. Ars Technica’s Eric Berger remembers Simmons, writing:
Simmons, who worked in elementary education before becoming an author in the 1980s, produced a broad portfolio of writing that spanned several genres, including horror fiction, historical fiction, and science fiction. Often, his books included elements of all of these. This obituary will focus on what is generally considered his greatest work, and what I believe is possibly the greatest science fiction novel of all time, Hyperion.

Published in 1989, Hyperion is set in a far-flung future in which human settlement spans hundreds of planets. The novel feels both familiar, in that its structure follows Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, and utterly unfamiliar in its strange, far-flung setting.
Simmons’ Hyperion appeared in an Ask Slashdot story back in 2008, when Slashdot reader willyhill asked for tips on how Slashdotters track down great sci-fi. If you’re in the mood for a little nostalgia, or just want to browse the thread for book recommendations, it’s well worth revisiting.

Meanwhile…

By PCM2 • Score: 3 Thread

Meanwhile, he also wrote “Carrion Comfort,” one of the worst-written, most racist, most antisemitic novels that I ever gave up on.

CISA Replaces Bumbling Acting Director After a Year

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
New submitter DeanonymizedCoward shares a report from TechCrunch:
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is reportedly in crisis following major budget cuts, layoffs, and furloughs under the Trump administration, says TechCrunch. The agency has now replaced its acting director, Madhu Gottumukkala, after a turbulent year marked by controversy and internal turmoil. During his tenure, Gottumukkala allegedly mishandled sensitive information by uploading government documents to ChatGPT, oversaw a one-third reduction in staff, and reportedly failed a counterintelligence polygraph needed for classified access. His leadership also saw the suspension of several senior officials, including CISA’s chief security officer.
Nextgov also reported that CISA lost another top senior official, Bob Costello, the agency’s chief information officer tasked with overseeing the agency’s IT systems and data policies. “Last month, CISA’s acting director Madhu Gottumukkala reportedly took steps to transfer Costello, but other political appointees blocked it,” added Nextgov.

failed a polygraph needed for classified access

By Caro Cogitatus • Score: 3 Thread
This would seem to be a rather large red flag for the … (checks notes) … Director of Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security. The kakistocracy continues to amaze.

Re:failed a polygraph needed for classified access

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Polygraph is BS. You might as well test with astrology.

So there was a danger of them interfering

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
In Russian interference with American policy and elections.

For years I wondered why Trump got away with ripping off Rich people. Poor people I get you can rip as many of those off as you want. But he ripped off some rich people normally you go to prison for that.

And sure Trump was heavily involved with Jeffrey Epstein so he probably had some scary dirt.

But more and more I’m starting to think that he was an intelligence asset and that’s why he was allowed to swim. It would explain why the Russians laundered so much money through him.

Perplexity Announces ‘Computer,’ an AI Agent That Assigns Work To Other AI Agents

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joshuark shares a report from Ars Technica:
Perplexity has introduced “Computer,” a new tool that allows users to assign tasks and see them carried out by a system that coordinates multiple agents running various models. The company claims that Computer, currently available to Perplexity Max subscribers, is “a system that creates and executes entire workflows” and “capable of running for hours or even months.”

The idea is that the user describes a specific outcome — something like “plan and execute a local digital marketing campaign for my restaurant” or “build me an Android app that helps me do a specific kind of research for my job.” Computer then ideates subtasks and assigns them to multiple agents as needed, running the models Perplexity deems best for those tasks. The core reasoning engine currently runs Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6, while Gemini is used for deep research, Nano Banana for image generation, Veo 3.1 for video production, Grok for lightweight tasks where speed is a consideration, and ChatGPT 5.2 for “long-context recall and wide search.”

This kind of best-model-for-the-task approach differs from some competing products like Claude Cowork, which only uses Anthropic’s models. All this happens in the cloud, with prebuilt integrations. “Every task runs in an isolated compute environment with access to a real filesystem, a real browser, and real tool integrations,” Perplexity says. The idea is partly that this workflow was what some power users were already doing, and this aims to make that possible for a wider range of people who don’t want to deal with all that setup.

People were already using multiple models and tailoring them to specific tasks based on perceived capabilities, while, for example, using MCP (Model Context Protocol) to give those models access to data and applications on their local machines. Perplexity Computer takes a different approach, but the goal is the same: have AI agents running tailor-picked models to perform tasks involving your own files, services, and applications. Then there is OpenClaw, which you could perceive as the immediate predecessor to this concept.

‘Computer’

By rossdee • Score: 3 Thread

They will have a hard time getting a trademark on that

South Korea Set To Get a Fully Functioning Google Maps

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
South Korea has reversed a two-decade policy and approved the export of high-precision map data, paving the way for a fully functional Google Maps in the country. Reuters reports:
The approval was made “on the condition that strict security requirements are met,” the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said in a statement. Those conditions include blurring military and other sensitive security-related facilities, as well as restricting longitude and latitude coordinates for South Korean territory on products such as Google Maps and Google Earth, it said.

The decision is expected to hurt Naver and Kakao — local internet giants which currently dominate the country’s market for digital map services. But it will appease Washington, which has urged Seoul to tackle what it says is discrimination against U.S. tech companies. South Korea, still technically at war with North Korea, had shot down Google’s previous bids in 2007 and 2016 to be allowed to export the data, citing the risks that information about sensitive military and security facilities could be exposed.
“Google can now come in, slash usage fees, and take the market,” said Choi Jin-mu, a geography professor at Kyung Hee University. “If Naver and Kakao are weakened or pushed out and Google later raises prices, that becomes a monopoly. Then, even companies that rely on map services — logistics firms, for example — become dependent, and in the long run, even government GIS (geographic information) systems could end up dependent on Google or Apple. That’s the biggest concern.”

Tourists say thankyou

By mkwan • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I was in Seoul last year, and it was a choice between Google Maps (all coordinates out by 50m+) and Naver (most labels in Korean). Such a hassle.

Monopoly

By Hentes • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If Naver and Kakao are weakened or pushed out and Google later raises prices,

This has already happened in other countries. Google Maps pushes out the competition using low prices, then proceeds to raise prices by more than 1000%, up to an eyewatering $0!

Huh? Korea has way better stuff than google maps

By wonkavader • Score: 3 Thread

Have these guys never been in a cab in Korea?

Korea way better maps software than google maps and has had it for years. Every single good-sized building in Seoul is laid out in 3D on the map, so you can identify it — and you need that because you have to navigate to Jangmi Castle 11D, which is one of 13 building which all look basically alike in a cluster. The Korean navigation software is SWEET and makes you envious — we could really use that stuff in the US.

I suspect Google will come in, offer their stuff, and then be mystified as to why nobody uses it except western visitors (of which yes, there are a good number).

One should be careful…

By LordHighExecutioner • Score: 3 Thread
…when drawing very precise maps.