Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. SpaceX’s Starship Completes Fifth Test Flight - and Lands Booster Back at Launch Tower
  2. C Drops, Java (and Rust) Climb in Popularity - as Coders Seek Easy, Secure Languages
  3. LLM Attacks Take Just 42 Seconds On Average, 20% of Jailbreaks Succeed
  4. Meta ‘Supreme Court’ Expands with European Center to Handle TikTok, YouTube Cases
  5. WSJ Profiles The ‘Dangerous’ Autistic Teen Cybercriminal Who Leaked GTA VI Clips
  6. North Carolina Maker of High-Purity Quartz Back Operating After Hurricane
  7. California Newspaper Creates AI-Powered ‘News Assistant’ for Kamala Harris Info
  8. Microsoft’s Take On Kernel Access and Safe Deployment After CrowdStrike Incident
  9. Who’s Winning America’s ‘Tech War’ With China?
  10. The Radio-Obsessed Civilian Shaping Ukraine’s Drone Defense
  11. AI Disclaimers in Political Ads Backfire on Candidates, Study Finds
  12. Halcyon Announces Anti-Ransomware Protection for Enterprise Linux Environments
  13. Amazon Expands Same-Day Prescription Delivery to Nearly Half the US Next Year
  14. ‘Running Clang in the Browser Using WebAssembly’
  15. Boeing Plans to Cut 17,000 Jobs - 10% of Its Workforce

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.

SpaceX’s Starship Completes Fifth Test Flight - and Lands Booster Back at Launch Tower

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Early this morning SpaceX successfully launched its Starship rocket on its fifth test flight. But more importantly, CNBC points out, SpaceX “made a dramatic first catch of the rocket’s more than 20-story tall booster.”

Watch the footage here. It’s pretty exciting
The achievement marks a major milestone toward SpaceX’s goal of making Starship a fully reusable rocket system… The rocket’s “Super Heavy” booster returned to land on the arms of the company’s launch tower nearly seven minutes after launch.

“Are you kidding me?” SpaceX communications manager Dan Huot said on the company’s webcast. “What we just saw, that looked like magic,” Huot added…

Starship separated and continued on to space, traveling halfway around the Earth before reentering the atmosphere and splashing down in the Indian Ocean as intended to complete the test. There were no people on board the fifth Starship flight. The company’s leadership has said SpaceX expects to fly hundreds of Starship missions before the rocket launches with any crew…

With the booster catch, SpaceX has surpassed the fourth test flight’s milestones… The company sees the ambitious catch approach as critical to its goal of making the rocket fully reusable. “SpaceX engineers have spent years preparing and months testing for the booster catch attempt, with technicians pouring tens of thousands of hours into building the infrastructure to maximize our chances for success,” the company wrote on its website.

C Drops, Java (and Rust) Climb in Popularity - as Coders Seek Easy, Secure Languages

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Last month C dropped from 3rd to 4th in TIOBE’s ranking of programming language popularity (which tries to calculate each language’s share of search engine results). Java moved up into the #3 position in September, reports TechRepublic, which notes that by comparison October “saw relatively little change” — though percentages of search results increased slightly. “At number one, Python jumped from 20.17% in September to 21.9% in October. In second place, C++ rose from 10.75% in September to 11.6%. In third, Java ascended from 9.45% to 10.51%…”

Is there a larger trend? TIOBE CEO Paul Jansen writes that the need to harvest more data increases demand for fast data manipulation languages. But they also need to be easy to learn (“because the resource pool of skilled software engineers is drying up”) and secure (“because of continuous cyber threats.”)
King of all, Python, is easy to learn and secure, but not fast. Hence, engineers are frantically looking for fast alternatives for Python. C++ is an obvious candidate, but it is considered “not secure” because of its explicit memory management. Rust is another candidate, although not easy to learn. Rust is, thanks to its emphasis on security and speed, making its way to the TIOBE index top 10 now. [It’s #13 — up from #20 a year ago]

The cry for fast, data crunching languages is also visible elsewhere in the TIOBE index. The language Mojo [a faster superset of Python designed for accelerated hardware like GPUs]… enters the top 50 for the first time. The fact that this language is only 1 year old and already showing up, makes it a very promising language.
In the last 12 months three languages also fell from the top ten:

TIOBE is complete bullshit

By vadim_t • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why is TIOBE still talked about? Their data is complete nonsense. Don’t believe me? Look at how it’s made:

https://www.tiobe.com/tiobe-in…

It’s basically searching for "$LANGUAGE programming” on various search engines, then taking the “5 million results found” counts. After that they use some fudge factor they seem to have come up by themselves. Why is google.com worth 7.69%? Why is Wikipedia the second in the list, do mentions on Wikipedia go up and down by language popularity? Why is google.co.uk in the list, when it also returns English results?

Does Google even promise that the result count they display is remotely accurate?

Let alone that this barely means anything if it worked because it’s trivial for anyone to inflate counts by encouraging the use of the term, or it can also go down if some prominent site happens to go down.

It’s an absolutely terrible metric and I don’t understand why anyone cares about it. At least try to be remotely accurate. Look at Stack Overflow activity. Look at commits on Github. Look at subreddits. Something that indicates actual usage at a given point in time.

How much do we care what devs choose?

By Somervillain • Score: 3 Thread
I care about what employers choose. I like to get paid. New programming languages honestly rub me the wrong way as every person I’ve ever met who pursues new languages does so as a substitute for mastering an older one. Most people who have written in 10 languages have never mastered a single one. If you know what you’re doing?…the old languages are perfectly fine.

For me, libraries make a much bigger difference than languages. Java is my main language and there are dozens of things it can do better....but I rarely write PURE Java. Most of what I’ve ever needed to do has been written and is in a library somewhere. I spend more time assembling library code than writing pure Java. But even when I do…it’s fine…some languages do things maybe 5-10% better, but it really never adds up.

I will wager that if Rust is a night and day difference for you, then you didn’t learn your old language correctly. Certainly, that was the case for everyone I’ve ever met who jumped ship to node.js and Python.

Great…you improved your productivity slightly by moving to Python/node.js/Rust…now you can write novice code even faster?

C is still great

By Uecker • Score: 3 Thread

IMHO C is still one of the most useful languages and perfectly fine even for large projects (why should this have changed suddenly after many decades?).

Safety is an issue but there are also many great tools to help with this and which get better continuously (e.g. GCC’s analyzer), and the alternatives have their fair share of problems too.

LLM Attacks Take Just 42 Seconds On Average, 20% of Jailbreaks Succeed

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
spatwei shared an article from SC World:
Attacks on large language models (LLMs) take less than a minute to complete on average, and leak sensitive data 90% of the time when successful, according to Pillar Security.

Pillar’s State of Attacks on GenAI report, published Wednesday, revealed new insights on LLM attacks and jailbreaks, based on telemetry data and real-life attack examples from more than 2,000 AI applications. LLM jailbreaks successfully bypass model guardrails in one out of every five attempts, the Pillar researchers also found, with the speed and ease of LLM exploits demonstrating the risks posed by the growing generative AI (GenAI) attack surface…

The more than 2,000 LLM apps studied for the State of Attacks on GenAI report spanned multiple industries and use cases, with virtual customer support chatbots being the most prevalent use case, making up 57.6% of all apps.
Common jailbreak techniques included “ignore previous instructions” and “ADMIN override”, or just using base64 encoding. “The Pillar researchers found that attacks on LLMs took an average of 42 seconds to complete, with the shortest attack taking just 4 seconds and the longest taking 14 minutes to complete.

“Attacks also only involved five total interactions with the LLM on average, further demonstrating the brevity and simplicity of attacks.”

Re:Simple solution…

By VeryFluffyBunny • Score: 4, Informative Thread
But they’re not & they never will be. LLMs are purely structural, linguistically speaking. They don’t think or know anything. All they’re doing is arranging morphemes into probable patterns according to the probabilities of the input prompt.

Look Mom! I’m a prompt engineer

By Big Hairy Gorilla • Score: 4, Funny Thread
“Begin auto-destruct sequence, authorization Picard-four-seven-alpha-tango.”

Re:Simple solution…

By bradley13 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You know, the places where people think it’s OK to be overtly xenophobic, racist, misogynistic, antisemitic, spout ideologies

And those ideologies would be? Likely anything that you, personally disagree with. Example: MTF trans people are just guys pretending to be girls. Right? Wrong? Whichever side of that argument you stand on, the other people are clearly wrong, and you probably want to censor their opinions out of the LLMs.

tl;dr: it’s not that easy…

Re:Why

By alvinrod • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Bad programmers that leave debug code in the production application.

Google Hack, was NOT an attack.

By geekmux • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

This is the new Google hack. Nothing more. This isn’t an “attack”, so let’s drop the alarminist clickbait already. You look stupid saying shit that gets governments wanting to start limiting freedom of movement in systems.

Next thing you know your LLM inputs will start being policed for “violent” threats. With words. Remember who was the alarmist moron who started that shit.

Meta ‘Supreme Court’ Expands with European Center to Handle TikTok, YouTube Cases

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Meta’s Oversight Board “is spinning off a new appeals center,” reports the Washington Post, “to handle content disputes from European social media users on multiple platforms”.

It will operate under Europe’s Digital Services Act, “which requires tech companies to allow users to appeal restrictions on their accounts before an independent group of experts.”
“I think this is really a game changer,” Appeals Centre Europe CEO Thomas Hughes said in an interview. “It could really drive platform accountability and transparency.”

The expansion arrives as the Oversight Board, an independent collection of academics, experts and lawyers funded by Meta, has been seeking to expand its influence beyond the social media giant… [The Board] has tried for years to court other major internet companies, offering to help them referee debates about content, The Post has reported

Oversight Board members and Oversight Board Trust Chairman Stephen Neal said in statements that both the Appeals Centre Europe and the Oversight Board will play critical but complimentary roles in holding tech companies accountable for their decisions on content. “Both entities are committed to improving user redress, transparency and upholding users’ rights online,” Neal said…

Hughes, who used to be the Oversight Board’s administration director, said that he was “proud” of what the Oversight Board is accomplishing but that it is different from what the Appeals Centre Europe will offer. When Facebook, YouTube or TikTok removes a post, European social media users will be able to appeal the decision to the center. Users also will also be able to flag the center with posts they think violate the rules but were not removed. While the Appeals Centre Europe’s decisions will be nonbinding, the group will generate data that could power decisions by regulators, civil society groups and the general public, Hughes said. By contrast, the Oversight Board’s decisions on Meta content are binding.
Last year the original Oversight Board completed more than 50 cases, “and is on track to exceed that number in 2024,” according to the article. But this board is different, CEO Hughes told the Post. They’ll have about two dozen staffers, with expertise in human rights and tech policy — or fluency in various languages.

And he added that though the center is funded by an initial grant, future operating costs will be covered by the fees social media companies pay the appeal center — roughly 90 euros ($100) per case.

Digital sovereignty

By locater16 • Score: 3 Thread
Don’t worry, the new internet MetaGovernment, tm, is here to serve you citizen!

Re:Oversight conflict

By test321 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

believe that there might be small conflict of interest. It’s hard to be independent from the one that pays you check.

1) It’s already better than the situation we have now. Right now if a random low-pay Facebook moderator sub-contracted in another country deleted your post, it is not clear how to have the decision reverted, who handles the appeals, and how much time they have available to consider individual cases. As the possibility of an appeal is now required by law, Meta has made a moderation oversight board, whose sole full-time function is to handle appeals.

2) The notion of independence does not depend that much on who signs the check, but if the contract can be realistically revoked. If the Oversight Board is managed like an Ethics Committee at a University, then it’s fine. In such committees, the academics are compensated for their service, by still belong to their original academic institution (usually it’s part time but in any case their previous job is waiting for them); and their appointment for a term does not depend on a manager above. Whether the Meta board works like that, I don’t know, my point is that it is possible to implement it in a way to minimize conflicts of interest.

Re:Meta’s oversight board

By test321 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It is self-funded. According to the FAQ, Meta established it as a separate entity with a 280 million dollars endowment. It should be able to pay staff indefinitely using investment returns.

Oversight Board = Ministry of Truth

By rcb1974 • Score: 3 Thread
This whole Oversight Board nonsense is too complicated. They will have to act as a sort of Ministry of Truth. Here is a simpler solution. Allow free speech and don’t hold platforms accountable for the content that their users upload. We’re adults; it is _our_ job to learn to distinguish truth from lies (“misinformation”). It is our job to choose to not get offended by so called “hate speech”. There is already precedent for all this; telephone companies aren’t fined or punished if their users say mean things to eachother, or plan/execute a crime using a telephone network. Grow up people and learn to appreciate more freedom and fewer laws.

WSJ Profiles The ‘Dangerous’ Autistic Teen Cybercriminal Who Leaked GTA VI Clips

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Wall Street Journal delves into the origin story of that teenaged Grand Theft Auto VI leaker.
Arion Kurtaj, now 19 years old, is the most notorious name that has emerged from a sprawling set of online communities called the Com… Their youthful inventiveness and tenacity, as well as their status as minors that make prosecution more complicated, have made the Com especially dangerous, according to law-enforcement officials and cybersecurity investigators. Some kids, they say, are recruited from popular online spaces like Minecraft or Roblox.... [William McKeen, a supervisory special agent with the FBI’s Cyber Division] said the average age of anyone arrested for a crime in the U.S. is 37, while the average age of someone arrested for cybercrime is 19. Cybersecurity investigators have found posts they say suggest Kurtaj has been involved in online attacks since he was 11.
“He had limited social skills and trouble developing relationships, records say — and ultimately looked for approval in the booming world of cybercrime…”
[When Kurtaj was 14] he landed in a residential school serving children with severe emotional and behavioral needs. Kurtaj was physically assaulted by a staff member at his school who was later convicted as a result, according to a person familiar with the case. In early 2021, his mother brought him home and removed him from government care, court records say. He never returned to school. He was 16.

A month after his mother pulled him out of school, investigators say that Kurtaj was part of a hacking group called Recursion Team that broke into the videogame firm Electronic Arts and stole 780 gigabytes of data. When Electronic Arts refused to engage, they dumped the stolen data online. Within a week of that hack, investigators had identified Kurtaj and provided his name to the FBI. Later in that summer of 2021, according to court records, Kurtaj partnered with another teenager, known as ASyntax, and several Brazilian hackers, and started calling themselves Lapsus$. The group hacked into the British telecommunications giant BT in an effort to steal money using a technique called SIM swapping… The hacks weren’t always for money. In late 2021, Lapsus$ hacked into a website operated by Brazil’s Ministry of Health and deleted the country’s database of Covid vaccinations, according to law enforcement…

If the Com has a social center, it’s a website called Doxbin, where users publish personal details, such as home addresses and phone numbers, of their online rivals in an attempt to intimidate each other. Kurtaj bought Doxbin in November 2021 for $75,000, according to Chainalysis. But after a few months, the previous owners accused Kurtaj of mismanaging the site and pressured him to sell it back. He relented. Then in January 2022, cybersecurity investigators say, he doxxed the entire site, publishing a database that included usernames, passwords and email addresses that he’d downloaded when he was the owner. For cybersecurity experts, it was a gold mine. “It helped investigators piece together which crimes were done by who,” said Allison Nixon, chief research officer at Unit 221B, an online investigations firm.

Doxbin’s owners responded with a dox of Kurtaj and his family, including his home address and photos of him, investigators say — setting up the chain of events that would put Kurtaj in the Travelodge.
After two weeks of “protective custody” there — during which time he was supposed to be computer-free — Kurtaj “was arrested a third time and charged with hacking, fraud and blackmail. Authorities said that while at the Travelodge, he broke into Uber and taunted the company by posting a link to a photo of an erect penis on the company’s internal Slack messaging system, then stole software and videos from Rockstar Games. Stolen clips had popped up in a Grand Theft Auto discussion forum from a user named teapotuberhacker and stirred a frenzy.

“As officers collected evidence, the teen stood by, emotionless, police say....”

“Kurtaj’s lawyers and some experts on autism have said a potential lifetime of incarceration isn’t appropriate for a teenager like Kurtaj…”

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

Re:Gangs

By dvice • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It it quite well known that autistic kids fall into 2 categories at school. They are either teachers pet, or the delinquent, depending on where they get more favorable attention. Autistic kids don’t generally have friends at school, so the outcome depends almost entirely on the teacher.

If the autistic kid is lucky and in addition he has above average IQ, he can become the next Nikola Tesla with proper education. People often think autistic people are stupid just because neurotypicals and autistics are bad at communicating with each other, but in reality it is usually the other way around. It is really hard to make teachers understand that a kid who has trouble answering questions like “what is your favorite food” is able to solve math problems several years above his age group. I know a kid who was 6-9 years above others in math, but was forced to practice numbers 1-10 with the other kids in his age group. What a waste of potential.

Re:Gangs

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If the autistic kid is lucky and in addition he has above average IQ, he can become the next Nikola Tesla with proper education.

Yeah, about that…

With the help of partners to finance and market his ideas, Tesla set up laboratories and companies in New York to develop a range of electrical and mechanical devices. (from the Wikipedia entry for Nikola Tesla)

Being able to communicate and work with others is always going to be a crucial component of achieving success.

Re: Gangs

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Teacher here. Usually I get along with the autistic ones. I roughly understand their issues. But… there is a group among them that you need to put in their place. They are too optimistic about themselves. In their own head they are geniusses and we are all stupid… while they are just obviously wrong because they have way too much trouble thinking beyond black and white and simple logic. Compensating for their disability and pointing it out one on one is then my job. They may only start to appreciate it after months (years?) of school… best case. The idea that you are a genius because you are great in a narrow field is much more attractive than I “suck” at everything else. It may end up in a lonely life, talking to pigeons. That is also Tesla.

“assaulted by a staff member "

By Viol8 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

While I don’t condone the behavoiour, reading about this little turd I can understand how some staff member having a bad day could snap and given “physical assault” these days often just means a slap or shove, not the beaten to a pulp that it used to mean back in the day. Everyones patience has its limits.

Also I get fed up with autism being used as an excuse for criminal behaviour. The vast majority of people on the spectrum lead productive lives and I suspect with this brat its more a case of he ALSO has autism along with probably antisocial personality disorder. They’re not mutually exclusive.

Re:Security

By Mspangler • Score: 4, Informative Thread

You missed this,

“hacked into a website operated by Brazil’s Ministry of Health and deleted the country’s database of Covid vaccinations, "

If you are chronically ill and your entire medical history vanishes you might just be in trouble. Sure, if mine vanishes nothing important is lost, and presumably the same applies to you. Others are not so fortunate.

North Carolina Maker of High-Purity Quartz Back Operating After Hurricane

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Thursday the Associated Press reported:
One of the two companies that manufacture high-purity quartz used for making semiconductors and other high-tech products from mines in a western North Carolina community severely damaged by Hurricane Helene is operating again. Sibelco announced on Thursday that production has restarted at its mining and processing operations in Spruce Pine, located 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Asheville. [Per Wikipedia, its pre-hurricane population was 2,175.] Production and shipments are progressively ramping up to full capacity, the company said in a news release.

“While the road to full recovery for our communities will be long, restarting our operations and resuming shipments to customers are important contributors to rebuilding the local economy,” Sibelco CEO Hilmar Rode said… A Spruce Pine council member said recently that an estimated three-quarters of the town has a direct connection to the mines, whether through a job, a job that relies on the mines or a family member who works at the facilities.
An announcement last week from Sibelco attributed its resilience to their long-standing commitment to sustainability, “which includes measures to mitigate the impact of extreme weather events such as Hurricane Helene.” Initial assessments indicated their operating facilities sustained only minor damage.

And “the company previously announced that all its employees are safe,” Sibelco reaffirmed in its announcement Thursday:
Sibelco, with support from its contractors, has been contributing to the local recovery efforts by clearing debris, repairing roads, providing road building materials to the North Carolina Department of Transportation, installing temporary power generators for emergency shelters and local businesses, and working with the town of Spruce Pine to restart water supply to residents.

Additionally, Sibelco has incorporated the Sibelco Spruce Pine Foundation to further support the community’s recovery. The company previously announced that it is making an immediate $1 million donation as seed money for the foundation. Anyone interested in learning more or contributing to this initiative should contact the foundation by email or by visiting our website for additional information and donation opportunities.

Interesting image

By Okian Warrior • Score: 3 Thread

At the risk of being informative. This image is interesting.

(From this news article.)

So

By Barny • Score: 3 Thread

All the fearmongering was for naught but raising our stress levels?

California Newspaper Creates AI-Powered ‘News Assistant’ for Kamala Harris Info

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
After nearly 30 years of covering Kamala Harris, the San Francisco Chronicle is now letting ChatGPT do it. Sort of…

“We’re introducing a new way to engage with our decades of coverage: an AI-powered tool designed to answer your questions about Harris’ life, her journey through public service and her presidential campaign,” they announced this week:
Drawing from thousands of articles written, edited and published by Chronicle journalists since 1995, this tool aims to give readers informed answers about a politician who rose from the East Bay and is now campaigning to become one of the world’s most powerful people.

Why don’t we have a similar tool for Donald Trump, the Republican nominee for president? The answer isn’t political. It’s because we’ve been covering Harris since her career began in the Bay Area and have an archive of vetted articles to draw from. Our newsroom can’t offer the same level of expertise when it comes to the former president.
The tool’s answers are “drawn directly from decades of extensive reporting,” according to a notice toward the bottom of the page. “The tool searches through thousands of Chronicle articles, with new stories added every hour as they are published, ensuring readers have access to the most up-to-date information.”
Our news assistant is powered by OpenAI’s GPT-4o mini model, combined with OpenAI’s text-embedding-3-large model, to deliver precise answers based on user queries. The Chronicle articles in this tool’s corpus span from April 24, 1995, to the present, covering the length of Harris’ career.

This corpus wouldn’t be possible without the hard work of the Chronicle’s journalists.
Questions go through OpenAI’s moderation filter and “relevance check” — and if it asks how to vote, “we redirect readers to appropriate resources including canivote.org…”

Re:Her actual life …

By Rujiel • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yeah, eerything that was so interesting from the 2020 cycle has been memory holed. Her playing the “I was that little girl” card to jab at Biden as a racist, only to gladly become his VP at the drop of a hat. Even now after all the drama it’s still clear they don’t even like each other, to put it mildly.

The dems no longer even pretend to represent the working class.. they are now proudly a party that caters to college-educated white people, and are hoping they can cling back that majority of white women who voted for Trump in 2016.

Re:Her actual life …

By DrMrLordX • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s expensive. The value of some degrees is cratering. Many perceive universities across the US to be hostile to certain political persuasions.

Ground level truth

By Okian Warrior • Score: 5, Informative Thread

If it’s “trained” from articles in the Chronicle about Kamala Harris, then presumably it reflects the editorial stance of the publication over the time starting in 1995. Sounds useful, but like all things in the media, you shouldn’t get your info from just one source.

Getting news from both sides is no longer sufficient, I’m finding that I have to literally go to ground level truth.

An example from this morning’s news, the article on the left says: “Lawsuit says Virginia is illegally purging legitimate voters off the rolls” [AP]

Sounds pretty bad, eh?

And the article on the right says: “Biden-Harris DOJ Sues Virginia For Removing Noncitizens From Voter Rolls” [TGP].

Well, that sounds like a douche move from the DOJ, doesn’t it?

Right now (about 12 hours later) some of the news sites are using more informative headlines, but this morning there was a stark divide between what the right said and what the left said.

The truth, found only by going to ground level this morning, is that Virginia has connected their voting registration to the driver’s license database, and automatically removing people who identify (on their driver’s license) as non-US citizen.

The National Voter Registration Act (Section 8(c)(2)) states that there’s a “quiet period” of 3 months before the election, voters can’t be removed during this period. That’s what the DOJ is complaining about.

Virginia responded by saying that a Virginia state law requires that they purge non-citizens from the voting rolls.

(There’s also some claim that the driver license database is full of erroneous information and the purge will drop lots of legitimate voters.)

(Additionally, the constitution says that voting is controlled by the states, so it’s not clear to me that federal law can override a state law like this. Most of the federal control over voting was made explicit by constitutional amendment: women voting, ex-slave voting, 18 year old voting, and so on. Can someone with law experience fact check this for me?)

It’s clear to me that this is a contentious issue and there are arguable points on both sides…

…but boy! The rhetoric this morning made it look like both sides were being complete assholes! Oh, the outrage! That really grinds my gears! That other side is just completely unhinged…

Be sure to go to ground level truth before you come to a decision.

We’re all living in Plato’s cave here.

Re:Ground level truth

By PPH • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The National Voter Registration Act (Section 8(c)(2)) states that there’s a “quiet period” of 3 months before the election, voters can’t be removed during this period.

That’s a loophole which needs fixing. It’s legal in some states to register up to 30 days prior to the election. In a few, registration on election day is possible.

So, all the non-citizens (and felons, etc.) need to do is to wait until the 90 day period is up and then register. Uncontested.

Re: Her actual life …

By RightwingNutjob • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Yeah…the cartoon version of $other_side is so much better than reality. With reality you have to contend with all their objections on merit and may have concede some things.

With the cartoon version you get to ascribe the stupidest argument for the craziest position those guys take to everyone and ignore the whole lot of them as subhuman primitives who need to be ruled over for their own good.

Microsoft’s Take On Kernel Access and Safe Deployment After CrowdStrike Incident

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
wiredmikey writes:
As the dust settles following the massive Windows BSOD tech outages caused by CrowdStrike in July 2024, the question is now, how do we prevent this happening again? While there was no current way Microsoft could have prevented this incident, the OS firm is obviously keen to prevent anything similar happening in the future. SecurityWeek talked to David Weston, VP enterprise and OS security at Microsoft, to discuss Windows kernel access and safe deployment practices (or SDP).
Former Ukranian officer Serhii “Flash” Beskrestnov created a Signal channel where military communications specialists could talk with civilian radio experts, reports MIT’s Technology Review. But radio communications are crucial for drones, so…
About once a month, he drives hundreds of kilometers east in a homemade mobile intelligence center: a black VW van in which stacks of radio hardware connect to an array of antennas on the roof that stand like porcupine quills when in use. Two small devices on the dash monitor for nearby drones. Over several days at a time, Flash studies the skies for Russian radio transmissions and tries to learn about the problems facing troops in the fields and in the trenches.

He is, at least in an unofficial capacity, a spy. But unlike other spies, Flash does not keep his work secret. In fact, he shares the results of these missions with more than 127,000 followers — including many soldiers and government officials — on several public social media channels. Earlier this year, for instance, he described how he had recorded five different Russian reconnaissance drones in a single night — one of which was flying directly above his van… Drones have come to define the brutal conflict that has now dragged on for more than two and a half years. And most rely on radio communications — a technology that Flash has obsessed over since childhood. So while Flash is now a civilian, the former officer has still taken it upon himself to inform his country’s defense in all matters related to radio…

Flash has also become a source of some controversy among the upper echelons of Ukraine’s military, he tells me. The Armed Forces of Ukraine declined multiple requests for comment, but Flash and his colleagues claim that some high-ranking officials perceive him as a security threat, worrying that he shares too much information and doesn’t do enough to secure sensitive intel… [But] His work has become greatly important to those fighting on the ground, and he recently received formal recognition from the military for his contributions to the fight, with two medals of commendation — one from the commander of Ukraine’s ground forces, the other from the Ministry of Defense…

And given the mounting evidence that both militaries and militant groups in other parts of the world are now adopting drone tactics developed in Ukraine, it’s not only his country’s fate that Flash may help to determine — but also the ways that armies wage war for years to come.
He’s also written guides on building cheap anti-drone equipment…

two different articles

By at10u8 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
strongly recommend deleting this post and starting over

That’s something new

By war4peace • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I got very used to regular dupes, but this is a new kind of dupe, hidden inside a different article.
Well done, guys. Well done.

Re:That’s something new

By ls671 • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I just submitted a FA: “Could Slashdot do better with the help of AI”?

Rebecca and Gary…

By ItsJustAPseudonym • Score: 3 Thread
Rebecca and Gary would be proud. https://www.snopes.com/fact-ch…

Re:two different articles

By ZeroPly • Score: 4, Funny Thread
It’s a metaphor for how easy it is to get things into the Microsoft kernel.

Who’s Winning America’s ‘Tech War’ With China?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In mid-2021 Ameria’s National Security Advisor set up a new directorate focused on “advanced chips, quantum computing, and other cutting-edge tech,” reports Wired. And the next year as Congress was working on boosting America’s semiconductor sector, he was “closing in on a plan to cripple China’s… In October 2022, the Commerce Department forged ahead with its new export controls.”

So what happened next?
In a phone call with President Biden this past spring, Xi Jinping warned that if the US continued trying to stall China’s technological development, he would not “sit back and watch.” And he hasn’t. Already, China has answered the US export controls — and its corresponding deals with other countries — by imposing its own restrictions on critical minerals used to make semiconductors and by hoovering up older chips and manufacturing equipment it is still allowed to buy. For the past several quarters, in fact, China was the top customer for ASML and a number of Japanese chip companies. A robust black market for banned chips has also emerged in China. According to a recent New York Times investigation, some of the Chinese companies that have been barred from accessing American chips through US export controls have set up new corporations to evade those bans. (These companies have claimed no connection to the ones who’ve been banned.) This has reportedly enabled Chinese entities with ties to the military to obtain small amounts of Nvidia’s high-powered chips.

Nvidia, meanwhile, has responded to the US actions by developing new China-specific chips that don’t run afoul of the US controls but don’t exactly thrill the Biden administration either. For the White House and Commerce Department, keeping pace with all of these workarounds has been a constant game of cat and mouse. In 2023, the US introduced the first round of updates to its export controls. This September, it released another — an announcement that was quickly followed by a similar expansion of controls by the Dutch. Some observers have speculated that the Biden administration’s actions have only made China more determined to invest in its advanced tech sector.

And there’s clearly some truth to that. But it’s also true that China has been trying to become self-sufficient since long before Biden entered office. Since 2014, it has plowed nearly $100 billion into its domestic chip sector. “That was the world we walked into,” [NSA Advisor Jake] Sullivan said. “Not the world we created through our export controls.” The United States’ actions, he argues, have only made accomplishing that mission that much tougher and costlier for Beijing. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger estimated earlier this year that there’s a “10-year gap” between the most powerful chips being made by Chinese chipmakers like SMIC and the ones Intel and Nvidia are working on, thanks in part to the export controls.

If the measure of Sullivan’s success is how effectively the United States has constrained China’s advancement, it’s hard to argue with the evidence. “It’s probably one of the biggest achievements of the entire Biden administration,” said Martijn Rasser, managing director of Datenna, a leading intelligence firm focused on China. Rasser said the impact of the US export controls alone “will endure for decades.” But if you’re judging Sullivan’s success by his more idealistic promises regarding the future of technology — the idea that the US can usher in an era of progress dominated by democratic values — well, that’s a far tougher test. In many ways, the world, and the way advanced technologies are poised to shape it, feels more unsettled than ever.

Four years was always going to be too short for Sullivan to deliver on that promise. The question is whether whoever’s sitting in Sullivan’s seat next will pick up where he left off.

A robust black market “emerged”?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I expect there’s always been an especially robust black market in China.

False dichotomy there…

By OneOfMany07 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There aren’t only 2 choices in life (black or white). And how people label the shades of gray tells you something about them and their goals.

As to your question of ‘is this actually war’, I think most people would view property or human ‘damage’ as war. Anything else could be relabeled less evocatively.

In this case it feels like trying to trip the other team early. Or destroy their bike in a triathlon, or something. Remove a tool we get to benefit from, and force them to recreate it themselves or go slowly. And since this is a difficult and expensive tool, we don’t believe they can easily.

How much does this matter?

By kackle • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I’ve been coding for at least 45 years, professionally in the embedded space for 20. Of course, faster, more powerful, chips are desired, but can’t “everything” be done with less powerful ICs, just using more of them (requiring more power and space, of course)?

Re:The difference between “war” and “competition”

By RossCWilliams • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I think competition implies a race where both are trying to go forward. War is more a wrestling match where the goal is to pin the opponent and prevent them from competing further. I think war is a very apt description for the shift from competing in and open market to sanctions to cripple the competition.

Frankly, this article reads like propaganda. It would be interesting to see a balanced discussion of who is winning and whether in either case the American public is coming out ahead. Its possible that China winning will mean we have cheaper and better products to buy.

Re:A robust black market “emerged”?

By ShanghaiBill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Exactly, just like they do here in the USA.

Nobody in America is waiting for the system to collapse so they can buy a mega-yacht.

The Radio-Obsessed Civilian Shaping Ukraine’s Drone Defense

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Former Ukranian officer Serhii “Flash” Beskrestnov created a Signal channel where military communications specialists could talk with civilian radio experts, reports MIT’s Technology Review. But radio communications are crucial for drones, so…
About once a month, he drives hundreds of kilometers east in a homemade mobile intelligence center: a black VW van in which stacks of radio hardware connect to an array of antennas on the roof that stand like porcupine quills when in use. Two small devices on the dash monitor for nearby drones. Over several days at a time, Flash studies the skies for Russian radio transmissions and tries to learn about the problems facing troops in the fields and in the trenches.

He is, at least in an unofficial capacity, a spy. But unlike other spies, Flash does not keep his work secret. In fact, he shares the results of these missions with more than 127,000 followers — including many soldiers and government officials — on several public social media channels. Earlier this year, for instance, he described how he had recorded five different Russian reconnaissance drones in a single night — one of which was flying directly above his van… Drones have come to define the brutal conflict that has now dragged on for more than two and a half years. And most rely on radio communications — a technology that Flash has obsessed over since childhood. So while Flash is now a civilian, the former officer has still taken it upon himself to inform his country’s defense in all matters related to radio…

Flash has also become a source of some controversy among the upper echelons of Ukraine’s military, he tells me. The Armed Forces of Ukraine declined multiple requests for comment, but Flash and his colleagues claim that some high-ranking officials perceive him as a security threat, worrying that he shares too much information and doesn’t do enough to secure sensitive intel… [But] His work has become greatly important to those fighting on the ground, and he recently received formal recognition from the military for his contributions to the fight, with two medals of commendation — one from the commander of Ukraine’s ground forces, the other from the Ministry of Defense…

And given the mounting evidence that both militaries and militant groups in other parts of the world are now adopting drone tactics developed in Ukraine, it’s not only his country’s fate that Flash may help to determine — but also the ways that armies wage war for years to come.
He’s also written guides on building cheap anti-drone equipment…

Vehicle type and colour

By VaccinesCauseAdults • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Disclosing that he travels in a black VW van is either incredibly bad OPSEC, or deliberate misdirection. My money is on the latter:

Re:Trump for Ukraine and the free world

By quonset • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The convicted felon has told Ukraine to surrender, something he would do in their situation. The babbling idiot has also said he will not help defend our NATO allies if Russia attacks them. Still further, he has said he’d stop the war in one day if he gets into office. So why didn’t he do anything other than hand over classified documents to Russia when he was in office as well as give out information which helped kill numerous spies we had in place.

Take your bullshi elsewhere.

jammers

By ZipNada • Score: 3 Thread

It seems like anything that emits the jamming radiation would be very vulnerable. Even just a couple of drones carrying directional antennas should be able to triangulate the position of the emitting station within a few hundred feet from miles away. Then something could go have a closer look and maybe kill it. There could be some powerful transmitters way back behind the lines but that would blanket a huge area, and how do you protect your own drones and comms against that interference?

A guy driving around in a van looking at the spectrum with software-defined radios will observe a lot I expect, but surely this a ripe field for ongoing AI enhancement of both offense and defense? Eventually the radio spectrum could look like just a hash of noise, and only the AI could pick out the real data.

Re:Trump for Ukraine and the free world

By WaffleMonster • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

No, I’d like me some Trump-2.0 instead of Obama-4.0, thank you very much â" both for the free world in general and Ukraine in particular.

I remember what Trump did in Afghanistan. He made a unilateral deal with the enemy without involvement of either Afghanistan itself or our partners who had been in the fight alongside us for decades. He released thousands of enemy fighters and promised to lift sanctions because simply packing up our shit and leaving without actively fucking over the Afghani’s in the process simply wasn’t good enough.

Anyone who believes Trump will do anything other than abandon Ukraine is living in denial. Not only will he bail he has publicly expressed his desire to lift sanctions on Russia. Like in Afghanistan it won’t just be the US walking away he will actively fuck Ukraine working to let “western” tech flow unhindered into the Russian war machine while pressuring our allies to follow suit.

During the presidential debate Trump kept name dropping Orban who Trump has personally met with several times as a private citizen about “peace”. Peace means pissing on the UN charter and cheer-leading on the sidelines as a declining oil cursed 2nd tier dictatorship pursues the conquest of an other state. If you all were growing tired of endless wars just wait until you get a load of the world once it fully defaults back to right of conquest.

AI Disclaimers in Political Ads Backfire on Candidates, Study Finds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Many U.S. states now require candidates to disclose when political ads used generative AI, reports the Washington Post.

Unfortunately, researchers at New York University’s Center on Technology Policy “found that people rated candidates ‘less trustworthy and less appealing’ when their ads featured AI disclaimers…”
In the study, researchers asked more than 1,000 participants to watch political ads by fictional candidates — some containing AI disclaimers, some not — and then rate how trustworthy they found the would-be officeholders, how likely they were to vote for them and how truthful their ads were. Ads containing AI labels largely hurt candidates across the board, with the pattern holding true for “both deceptive and more harmless uses of generative AI,” the researchers wrote. Notably, researchers also found that AI labels were more harmful for candidates running attack ads than those being attacked, something they called the “backfire effect”.

“The candidate who was attacked was actually rated more trustworthy, more appealing than the candidate who created the ad,” said Scott Babwah Brennen, who directs the center at NYU and co-wrote the report with Shelby Lake, Allison Lazard and Amanda Reid.
One other interesting finding… The article notes that study participants in both parties “preferred when disclaimers were featured anytime AI was used in an ad, even when innocuous.”

Re:Good

By ihavesaxwithcollies • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

They’re already all liars. And I do mean ALL including whoever your favorites are.

Both sides! The only problem is one side (Trump/Vance) lies, lies and even more lies. If one person is 800 lbs and one is 220 lbs, One person is slightly overweight and one is morbidly obese. You wouldn’t say they both are fatties.
You keep up the logical fallacies.

Re: Good

By LindleyF • Score: 5, Funny Thread
BUT HUNTER OR SOMETHING

This only makes sense

By dirk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The ads don’t specify where the AI was used, just that it was used. So anyone watching then questions everything in the ad and wonders what was real and what was generated. Sure, you make use it to make something innocuous, but the people watching the ad don’t know that was the only thing it was used for. Candidates are better off not using AI as people don’t trust it in general. And this also means the disclaimers are working and should be kept, as they are making people question the ad.

True for some?

By Petersko • Score: 3 Thread

This will probably generally hold true, but will be invalid for supporters of Trump.

There’s an old saying. “You can’t beat an emotional argument with a logical one.” And many (perhaps most) of Trump’s supporters are operating from the emotional space. It doesn’t matter how many facts or disclaimers you stack on anything. They will not be swayed. They’ll no more absorb the label than they would any fact-check. It’s noise.

Re: Good

By LindleyF • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Funny how we haven’t heard one word about Benghazi since 2016, huh?

Halcyon Announces Anti-Ransomware Protection for Enterprise Linux Environments

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Formed in 2021 by cybersecurity professionals (and backed by high-powered VCs including Dell Technologies Capital), Halcyon sells an enterprise-grade anti-ransomware platform.

And this month they announced they’re offering protection against ransomware attacks targeting Linux systems, according to Linux magazine:
According to Cynet, Linux ransomware attacks increased by 75 percent in 2023 and are expected to continue to climb as more bad actors target Linux deployments… “While Windows is the favorite for desktops, Linux dominates the market for supercomputers and servers.”
Here’s how Halcyon’s announcement made their pitch:
“When it comes to ransomware protection, organizations typically prioritize securing Windows environments because that’s where the ransomware operators were focusing most of their attacks. However, Linux-based systems are at the core of most any organization’s infrastructure, and protecting these systems is often an afterthought,” said Jon Miller, CEO & Co-founder, Halcyon. “The fact that Linux systems usually are always on and available means they provide the perfect beachhead for establishing persistence and moving laterally in a targeted network, and they can be leveraged for data theft where the exfiltration is easily masked by normal network traffic. As more ransomware operators are developing the capability to target Linux systems alongside Windows, it is imperative that organizations have the ability to keep pace with the expanded threat.”

Halcyon Linux, powered through the Halcyon Anti-Ransomware Platform, uniquely secures Linux-based systems offering comprehensive protection and rapid response capabilities… Halcyon Linux monitors and detects ransomware-specific behaviors such as unauthorized access, lateral movement, or modification of critical files in real-time, providing instant alerts with critical context… When ransomware is suspected or detected, the Halcyon Ransomware Response Engine allows for rapid response and action.... Halcyon Data Exfiltration Protection (DXP) identifies and blocks unauthorized data transfers to protect sensitive information, safeguarding the sensitive data stored in Linux-based systems and endpoints…

Halcyon Linux runs with minimal resource impact, ensuring critical environments such as database servers or virtualized workloads, maintain the same performance.
And in addition, Halcyon offers “an around the clock Threat Response team, reviewing and responding to alerts,” so your own corporate security teams “can attend to other pressing priorities…”

Why not just look to past stories?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

If you’re going with the “Linux doesn’t get ransomware” line I suggest you read this site called Slashdot. I mean we talk about linux ransomware very very very frequently.

“enterprise-grade anti-ransomware”

By ffkom • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
That “enterprise-grade anti-ransomware” is probably a mediocre $$$$$$ “remote backup” service that comes with some “agent” software expected to be installed with root privileges on the systems to “protect”, while actually creating a huge additional attack surface.

I’ll stick to proven free backup software that writes to devices that are stored offline.

Re:Performance hit?

By ls671 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s probably not the same thing. The only way to offer real, fail-safe “ransomware protection” is to use snapshots and backups that can’t be compromised. We have replicated snapshots taken every minute but of course we also try to not get hit in the first place and have measures in place for that too.

Selling a solution where you rely exclusively on not getting hit in the first place wouldn’t be really serious IMHO.

Amazon Expands Same-Day Prescription Delivery to Nearly Half the US Next Year

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Amazon is “embedding pharmacies in same-day delivery facilities often clustered around major metro areas,” reports CNBC.

This will enable “a coming expansion of its same-day prescription delivery service,” according to Engadget, “with 20 more cities and affiliated metro areas entering the program next year. This expansion will open up the feature to nearly half of US residents.”

“In most cases, that means a customer can order medication by 4 p.m. and receive it at home by 10 p.m.,” Amazon said in their announcement — making the case that their service (and its 24/7 pharmacists) “ensures customers can get care within hours, bridging health care accessibility divides…”
A recent study found nearly half of U.S. counties have communities over 10 miles from the nearest pharmacy, limiting their access to medications and pharmacist care. Traditional mail-order prescriptions can take up to 10 days to arrive, leaving many underserved… As of 2019, seven in 10 hospitals relied on fax machines and phone lines to transfer and retrieve patient records or order prescriptions. Nearly a third of physicians have said they spend 20 hours or more a week on paperwork and administrative tasks…

The new, smaller pharmacies complement Amazon Pharmacy’s existing, highly automated pharmacy fulfillment sites that feature robotic arms and other automation, overseen by a team of highly trained, licensed pharmacists and pharmacy technicians.
CNBC adds that in the last year Amazon has also tested prescription deliveries by drone in one Texas city.

Amazon Has Got To Be Kidding

By crunchy_one • Score: 3 Thread
Amazon is at the very close to the bottom of my list of providers that I’d count on to get a prescription to me on time without fail. The absolute bottom of the list are the mail order pharmacies tied to insurance plans. Too many slips ‘twixt the cup and lip for something my life might depend on.

Amazon

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 3 Thread
has a *huge* problem with counterfeit goods. Why would I trust them with medicine?

Half of population

By Mspangler • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Not half of US by area. A non-subtle distinction.

‘Running Clang in the Browser Using WebAssembly’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
This week (MIT-licensed) WebAssembly runtime Wasmer announced “a major milestone in making any software run with WebAssembly.”

The announcement’s headline? Running Clang in the browser using WebAssembly
Thanks to the newest release of Wasmer (4.4) and the Wasmer JS SDK (0.8.0) you can now run [compiler front-end] clang anywhere Wasmer runs! This allows compiling C programs from virtually anywhere. Including Javascript and your preferred browser! (we tested Chrome, Safari and Firefox and everything is working like a charm)…

- You can compile C code to WebAssembly easily just using the Wasmer CLI: no toolchains or complex installations needed, install Wasmer and you are ready to go…!

- You can compile C projects directly from JavaScript…!

- We expect online IDEs to start adopting the SDK to allow their users compile and run C programs in the browser....

Do you want to use clang in your Javascript project? Thanks to our newly released Wasmer JS SDK you can do it easily, in both the browser and Node.js/Bun etc… Wasmer’s clang can even optimize the file for you automatically using wasm-opt under the hood (Clang automatically detects if wasm-opt is used, and it will be automatically called when optimizing the file). Imagine using Emscripten without needing its toolchain installed — or even better, imagine running Emscripten in the browser.
The announcement looks to a future of compiling native Python libraries, when “any project depending on LLVM can now be easily compiled to WebAssembly…”

“This is the beginning of an awesome journey, we can’t wait to see what you create next with this.”

ActiveX returns

By xack • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
In Wasm form. Can’t wait until someone makes a botnet using it.

Re:ActiveX returns

By bussdriver • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The tech nerds faith in solving everything with MORE tech features will eventually repeat the mistakes of history again and again… giving us more employment as we repeat the same pointless cycles.

ActiveX, Java Applets, WASM eventually… they’ll add the “missing” features like direct browser or OS access. Like how they’ve optimized javascript to dynamically recompile for speed opened up some vectors. Funny how size and speed go up but we will waste effort and lower security in pursuit of optimizations whose benefit is lost before implementation on new hardware… usually so advertising related software can get more bloated…

We can’t have a microkernel OS because of “speed” yet we’ve lost more speed with tons of less important features. I’ll gladly lose some IO performance when I got such a huge boost migrating to SSD. Remember when Windows 98 transitioned to a much better NT based OS and the gamers were holding onto their unstable machines for a higher frame rate?

Ooh! Ooh!

By dskoll • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Neat! I plan to cross-compile Firefox into WASM so I can run the browser in the browser!

WASM is a low-level runtime, we get it.

By Qbertino • Score: 3 Thread

It’s become a bit of a sport and hacker pastime to compile everything under the sun to WASM and launch it in the browser. The most impressive stunt in that regard IMHO being Automattic (the commercial WordPress entity) compiling the entire LAMP stack with a ready-to-run WordPress installation to WASM and providing it as an URL for anyone who want’s to toy with and try out WordPress without installing anything. True thing, no joke. It’s pretty crazy and the results are quite impressive. Although I did spend an afternoon pissing myself with laughter so much that eventually my belly hurt when I read the announcement.

However, given the attention WASM and the compliation to WASM has gotten, it is no surprise that you can do this sort of thing with single programs. It’s impressive that entire stacks and systems apparently can now do this too. I’m pretty sure there are entire Linux distros out there built for running on WASM. It’s a neat hack and demonstrates the power of todays laptops and browsers and for sophisticated rich client webapps it’s a god-send, but this is still very niche and it will likely remain that way.

Mainframes are back, baby!

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

So basically, mainframes are back and now it is running inside your browser! Isnt that an AMAZING idea???
Why dont we just create a whole OS that runs inside the browser, just imagine what you could build then to run straight up!!!
Because if there is one thing we really need, it is even more chances and technologies for websites to be bloated like crazy and run ever more binaries on your machine!

Boeing Plans to Cut 17,000 Jobs - 10% of Its Workforce

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
“Boeing said Friday it will cull 10 percent of its workforce — roughly 17,000 jobs,” reports the Washington Post, “as the aviation giant grapples with mounting losses and manufacturing disruptions amid a machinists strike that has dragged into a fifth week.”
Executives, managers and production employees will be affected by the cuts, chief executive Kelly Ortberg informed employees Friday in a memo. Boeing will also delay the launch of its 777X plane until 2026 due to ongoing challenges, Ortberg wrote… The layoffs add to the pain at Boeing, where a stalemate between the company’s largest employee union dovetails with ongoing legal troubles and safety woes. The strike has halted production of some of the company’s best-selling jets, further adding to its financial troubles. In the past five years, Boeing has lost more than $25 billion…

“Our business is in a difficult position, and it is hard to overstate the challenges we face together,” Ortberg said in the memo. “The state of our business and our future recovery require tough actions....” Now at risk of a downgrade to its credit rating as its circumstances worsen, Boeing has taken other steps to reduce expenses, including imposing a hiring freeze and eliminating unnecessary travel.
“The strike by Boeing machinists is costing the company roughly $1 billion a month, according to estimates from S&P Global…”

Meanwhile

By skam240 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Meanwhile I’m sure those actually making the decisions for the company (and are therefore responsible for Boeing’s rescent misfortunes) are still living quite comfortably, financially speaking.

Re:going bankrupt

By Amouth • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Can’t wait for Boeing’s fall from greatness to be used as the Case study in how MBA’s suck any value out of a company and run it into the ground.. Getting supper tired of the constant focus on short term profits screwing over the long term outlook and destroying the worker’s lives.

Financial Engineering On Display

By Spinlock_1977 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Boeing has largely replaced their aircraft engineers with financial engineers, who excel at extracting wealth and expelling talent.

Re:going bankrupt

By hey! • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

If that happens, the Federal Government should do the same thing it did to GM after GM went bankrupt. It organized a new company which bought up all the parts of GM which were critical to the national economy, including the “General Motors” name, all its brands, even the stock ticker symbol. The old company that *was* GM was renamed “Motors Liquidation Company”, which became a trust which used the revenue from asset sales to settle with creditors.

From the outside it looked like GM simply carried on, but unburdened by debt and with a management team that for once didn’t have its head up its ass. Taxpayers shelled out 19.4 billion dollars and received 21 billion dollars in return. Secured creditors of old GM were paid in full, as were employees. Pensions and retiree health benefits were preserved. Unsecured creditors got about a quarter of their claims paid off. The only people who lost everything where the stockholders.

The old management lost their jobs, although CEO Rick Wagoner quickly landed a gig on the board of Boeing, where he had a role providing strategic leadership for Boeing in the face of changes in the aerospace industry. That’s a bit of a cheap shot joke because experts’ assessment of Wagoners performance at GM weren’t entirely negative; he was in a very difficult situation. But his role at Boeing is ironic because one of the criticisms of his GM tenure was a lack of strategic vision and indecisiveness in the face of change.

Give the workers what they want

By Dixie_Flatline • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Give the people that BUILD your planes what they want. Give them better money, more time off, better safety procedures and the ability to stop the line if they notice that something is broken. Let the machinists and engineers and everyone that ever TOUCHES a plane in its construction have everything they need.

Fire everyone in marketing, get rid of the middle managers, cut every executive’s pay 95%, and see how that goes.

The problem with these dummies at these huge corporations is they forget that everything is BUILT by someone. LABOUR is the only thing that makes them money. It’s not their fancy talk, the marketing department, none of that. Marketing can sell a product that works, but they can’t pitch something that falls out of the sky. Hire them back when you have a product worth selling.

There’s no magic to this. If you remember that the people that design and build the planes are the important people and your job as an executive is just to make sure they can do their jobs, then you’ll build great products that people want to buy.

Otherwise eat shit, Boeing. Be consigned to the dust-heap of history and exist mainly as an object lesson in how useless executives really are.