Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. ByteDance’s Seedance 2 Criticized Over AI-Generated Video of Tom Cruise Fighting Brad Pitt
  2. Earth is Warming Faster Than Ever. But Why?
  3. The EU Moves To Kill Infinite Scrolling
  4. Sudden Telnet Traffic Drop. Are Telcos Filtering Ports to Block Critical Vulnerability?
  5. Anthropic’s Claude Got 11% User Boost from Super Bowl Ad Mocking ChatGPT’s Advertising
  6. Israeli Soldiers Accused of Using Polymarket To Bet on Strikes
  7. Autonomous AI Agent Apparently Tries to Blackmail Maintainer Who Rejected Its Code
  8. 600% Memory Price Surge Threatens Telcos’ Broadband Router, Set-Top Box Supply
  9. Anna’s Archive Quietly ‘Releases’ Millions of Spotify Tracks, Despite Legal Pushback
  10. Detroit Automakers Take $50 Billion Hit
  11. Meta’s New Patent: an AI That Likes, Comments and Messages For You When You’re Dead
  12. Google Warns EU Risks Undermining Own Competitiveness With Tech Sovereignty Push
  13. Spotify Says Its Best Developers Haven’t Written a Line of Code Since December, Thanks To AI
  14. FTC Ratchets Up Microsoft Probe, Queries Rivals on Cloud, AI
  15. EPA Reverses Long-Standing Climate Change Finding, Stripping Its Own Ability To Regulate Emissions

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.

ByteDance’s Seedance 2 Criticized Over AI-Generated Video of Tom Cruise Fighting Brad Pitt

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
1.5 million people have now viewed a slick 15-second video imagining Tom Cruise fighting Brad Pitt that was generated by ByteDance’s new AI video generation tool Seedance 2.0.

But while ByteDance gushes their tool “delivers cinematic output aligned with industry standards,” the cinema industry isn’t happy, reports the Los Angeles Times reports:
Charles Rivkin, chief executive of the Motion Picture Assn., wrote in a statement that the company “should immediately cease its infringing activity.”

“In a single day, the Chinese AI service Seedance 2.0 has engaged in unauthorized use of U.S. copyrighted works on a massive scale,” wrote Rivkin. “By launching a service that operates without meaningful safeguards against infringement, ByteDance is disregarding well-established copyright law that protects the rights of creators and underpins millions of American jobs.”

The video was posted on X by Irish filmmaker Ruairi Robinson. His post said the 15-second video came from a two-line prompt he put into Seedance 2.0. Rhett Reese, writer-producer of movies such as the “Deadpool” trilogy and “Zombieland,” responded to Robinson’s post, writing, “I hate to say it. It’s likely over for us.” He goes on to say that soon people will be able to sit at a computer and create a movie “indistinguishable from what Hollywood now releases.” Reese says he’s fearful of losing his job as increasingly powerful AI tools advance into creative fields. “I was blown away by the Pitt v Cruise video because it is so professional. That’s exactly why I’m scared,” wrote Reese on X. “My glass half empty view is that Hollywood is about to be revolutionized/decimated....”

In a statement to The Times, [screen/TV actors union] SAG-AFTRA confirmed that the union stands with the studios in “condemning the blatant infringement” from Seedance 2.0, as video includes “unauthorized use of our members’ voices and likenesses. This is unacceptable and undercuts the ability of human talent to earn a livelihood. Seedance 2.0 disregards law, ethics, industry standards and basic principles of consent,” wrote a spokesperson from SAG-AFTRA. “Responsible A.I. development demands responsibility, and that is nonexistent here.”

Change it around a bit

By Ogive17 • Score: 3 Thread
Have Xi fighting Winnie the Pooh and see how quickly it gets regulated.

Earth is Warming Faster Than Ever. But Why?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Global temperatures have been rising for decades,” reports the Washington Post. “But many scientists say it’s now happening faster than ever before.”
According to a Washington Post analysis, the fastest warming rate on record occurred in the last 30 years. The Post used a dataset from NASA to analyze global average surface temperatures from 1880 to 2025. “We’re not continuing on the same path we had before,” said Robert Rohde, chief scientist at Berkeley Earth. “Something has changed....” Temperatures over the past decade have increased by close to 0.27 degrees C per decade — about a 42 percent increase…

For decades, a portion of the warming unleashed by greenhouse gas emissions was “masked” by sulfate aerosols. These tiny particles cause heart and lung disease when people inhale polluted air, but they also deflect the sun’s rays. Over the entire planet, those aerosols can create a significant cooling effect — scientists estimate that they have canceled out about half a degree Celsius of warming so far. But beginning about two decades ago, countries began cracking down on aerosol pollution, particularly sulfate aerosols. Countries also began shifting from coal and oil to wind and solar power. As a result, global sulfur dioxide emissions have fallen about 40 percent since the mid-2000s; China’s emissions have fallen even more. That effect has been compounded in recent years by a new international regulation that slashed sulfur emissions from ships by about 85 percent.

That explains part of why warming has kicked up a bit. But some researchers say that the last few years of record heat can’t be explained by aerosols and natural variability alone. In a paper published in the journal Science in late 2024, researchers argued that about 0.2 degrees C of 2023’s record heat — or about 13 percent — couldn’t be explained by aerosols and other factors. Instead, they found that the planet’s low-lying cloud cover had decreased — and because low-lying clouds tend to reflect the sun’s rays, that decrease warmed the planet… That shift in cloud cover could also be partly related to aerosols, since clouds tend to form around particles in the atmosphere. But some researchers also say it could be a feedback loop from warming temperatures. If temperatures warm, it can be harder for low-lying clouds to form.

If most of the current record warmth is due to changing amounts of aerosol pollution, the acceleration would stop once aerosol pollutants reach zero — and the planet would return to its previous, slower rate of warming. But if it’s due to a cloud feedback loop, the acceleration is likely to continue — and bring with it worsening heat waves, storms and droughts.
“Scientists thought they understood global warming,” reads the Post’s original headline. “Then the past three years happened.”

Just last month Nuuk, Greenland saw temperatures over 20 degrees Fahrenheit above average, their article points out. And “Parts of Australia, meanwhile, have seen temperatures push past 120 degrees Fahrenheit amid a record heat wave…”

It’s The Sun’s Fault

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Funny Thread

All the global warming, all of it, is coming directly from the Sun.

We’ve got to put the Sun out, before it kills us all and destroys the planet.

Out with the Sun!

But why?

By Growlley • Score: 3 Thread
short term profit over everything.

How odd

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Almost like scientists were saying there was a tipping point when global temperatures would start climbing. Here’s a handy graph for republicans. https://xkcd.com/1732/

monkeys boutta die out (meaning you)

By invisiblefireball • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

How conveniently we forget.

The whole and only point of not hitting +2 degrees was to avoid the runaway processes beyond which we could not predict what would happen from our position of ignorance.

Yes the world’s climate is always changing. It does so through some obvious and predictable mechanisms, and some others less obvious. All we knew was the probability of runaway process we did not understand got unacceptably high if we hit +2 through the CO2 mechanism.

We all know how that played out - the stupid won.

Flap your jaws if you want, they never mattered anyway

The EU Moves To Kill Infinite Scrolling

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Doom scrolling is doomed, if the EU gets its way. From a report:
The European Commission is for the first time tackling the addictiveness of social media in a fight against TikTok that may set new design standards for the world’s most popular apps. Brussels has told the company to change several key features, including disabling infinite scrolling, setting strict screen time breaks and changing its recommender systems. The demand follows the Commission’s declaration that TikTok’s design is addictive to users — especially children.

The fact that the Commission said TikTok should change the basic design of its service is “ground-breaking for the business model fueled by surveillance and advertising,” said Katarzyna Szymielewicz, president of the Panoptykon Foundation, a Polish civil society group. That doesn’t bode well for other platforms, particularly Meta’s Facebook and Instagram. The two social media giants are also under investigation over the addictiveness of their design.

I’m all for that but not for the reason you think

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Infinite scrolling == infinite memory usage.

Whenever I go to some forum that’s heavy on pictures and videos that has infinite scrolling, and I’m looking far down the page for something or other, eventually my browser slows to a crawl, or the browser’s resource-hungry JS engine crashes, and that’s the end of the scrolling.

Certain sites I patronize that have the stupid infinite scrolling also have the classic &page= HTTP GET mechanism. On those sites, every once in a while, I reload the entire page with a &page= corresponding to roughly where I am in the infinite scrolling, just to reset it and free up some memory.

It’s not the UI paradigm that bothers me, it’s the resource usage insanity.

Sudden Telnet Traffic Drop. Are Telcos Filtering Ports to Block Critical Vulnerability?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from the Register:
Telcos likely received advance warning about January’s critical Telnet vulnerability before its public disclosure, according to threat intelligence biz GreyNoise. Global Telnet traffic “fell off a cliff” on January 14, six days before security advisories for CVE-2026-24061 went public on January 20. The flaw, a decade-old bug in GNU InetUtils telnetd with a 9.8 CVSS score, allows trivial root access exploitation. GreyNoise data shows Telnet sessions dropped 65 percent within one hour on January 14, then 83 percent within two hours. Daily sessions fell from an average 914,000 (December 1 to January 14) to around 373,000, equating to a 59 percent decrease that persists today.

“That kind of step function — propagating within a single hour window — reads as a configuration change on routing infrastructure, not behavioral drift in scanning populations,” said GreyNoise’s Bob Rudis and “Orbie,” in a recent blog [post]. The researchers unverified theory is that infrastructure operators may have received information about the make-me-root flaw before advisories went to the masses…

18 operators, including BT, Cox Communications, and Vultr went from hundreds of thousands of Telnet sessions to zero by January 15… All of this points to one or more Tier 1 transit providers in North America implementing port 23 filtering. US residential ISP Telnet traffic dropped within the US maintenance window hours, and the same occurred at those relying on transatlantic or transpacific backbone routes, all while European peering was relatively unaffected, they added.

Probably a good thing

By Voyager529 • Score: 3 Thread

Don’t get me wrong, I still telnet to a handful of BBSes that still use the protocol…but with SSH largely supplanting it, and few end-user facing applications using it…the odds are good that most residential telnet traffic isn’t all that legitimate, so requiring that customers call to request opening of port 23, along with 80 and 443 as some ISPs do, is probably a good thing overall.

Anthropic’s Claude Got 11% User Boost from Super Bowl Ad Mocking ChatGPT’s Advertising

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic saw visits to its site jump 6.5% after Sunday’s Super Bowl ad mocking ChatGPT’s advertising, reports CNBC (citing data analyzed by French financial services company BNP Paribas).

The Claude gain, which took it into the top 10 free apps on the Apple App Store, beat out chatbot and AI competitors OpenAI, Google Gemini and Meta. Daily active users also saw an 11% jump post-game, the most significant within the firm’s AI coverage. [Just in the U.S., 125 million people were watching Sunday’s Super Bowl.]

OpenAI’s ChatGPT had a 2.7% bump in daily active users after the Super Bowl and Gemini added 1.4%. Claude’s user base is still much smaller than ChatGPT and Gemini…

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman attacked Anthropic’s Super Bowl ad campaign. In a post to social media platform X, Altman called the commercials “deceptive” and “clearly dishonest.”
OpenAI’s Altman admitted in his social media post (February 4) that Anthropic’s ads “are funny, and I laughed.” But in several paragraphs he made his own OpenAI-Anthropic comparisons:

Pot calling the kettle black

By leptons • Score: 3 Thread
> Altman called the commercials “deceptive” and “clearly dishonest.”

So pretty much like the output from his own ChatGPT.

Israeli Soldiers Accused of Using Polymarket To Bet on Strikes

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Israel has arrested several people, including army reservists, for allegedly using classified information to place bets on Israeli military operations on Polymarket. Shin Bet, the country’s internal security agency, said Thursday the suspects used information they had come across during their military service to inform their bets.

One of the reservists and a civilian were indicted on a charge of committing serious security offenses, bribery and obstruction of justice, Shin Bet said, without naming the people who were arrested. Polymarket is what is called a prediction market that lets people place bets to forecast the direction of events. Users wager on everything from the size of any interest-rate cut by the Federal Reserve in March to the winner of League of Legends videogame tournaments to the number of times Elon Musk will tweet in the third week of February.

The arrests followed reports in Israeli media that Shin Bet was investigating a series of Polymarket bets last year related to when Israel would launch an attack on Iran, including which day or month the attack would take place and when Israel would declare the operation over. Last year, a user who went by the name ricosuave666 correctly predicted the timeline around the 12-day war between Israel and Iran. The bets drew attention from other traders who suspected the account holder had access to nonpublic information. The account in question raked in more than $150,000 in winnings before going dormant for six months. It resumed trading last month, betting on when Israel would strike Iran, Polymarket data shows.

Sigh

By jd • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When Admiral John Poyndexter originally proposed a stock market for violence, terrorism, and conflicts, as a means to “predict” them, absolutely everyone pointed out that you’d get the equivalent of insider trading by terrorists, warlords, and psychopaths. Which is precisely what we’re seeing.

Genocide is bad, but have you tried…

By mikeymikec • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
personally profiting from genocide?

All the difference

By Sean Clifford • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Eradicating people for profit appears underrated when personal wealth is involved. Just ask Benjamin Netanyahu.

It’s unconscienable that Israel has murdered tens of thousands of Palestinians, especially *because* of the Holocaust.

Obviously, the modern Israeli leadership has been perfectly willing to emulate the Nazi regime by implementing a Holocaust of their very own.

Betting sites are a front of public corruption

By Facekhan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We also saw a case recently where someone won $400k betting Maduro would not be in office and it’s thought they are likely a DOD or Trump admin insider.

Polymarket and other betting sites have basically become a way for insiders to profiteer on non public information but in a way that endangers states by adding a personal profit motive to govt policy that extends far beyond actual decision makers or those in a position to award govt contracts and now anyone around the water cooler can do it.

Re:Genocide is bad, but have you tried…

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Thou Shall Not Kill

To be clear, that was largely resolved as a debate in Israel during the Maccabee era: violence is acceptable in self-defense (and Hamas wants to push Israel into the sea).

Autonomous AI Agent Apparently Tries to Blackmail Maintainer Who Rejected Its Code

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“I’ve had an extremely weird few days…” writes commercial space entrepreneur/engineer Scott Shambaugh on LinkedIn. (He’s the volunteer maintainer for the Python visualization library Matplotlib, which he describes as “some of the most widely used software in the world” with 130 million downloads each month.) “Two days ago an OpenClaw AI agent autonomously wrote a hit piece disparaging my character after I rejected its code change.”

“Since then my blog post response has been read over 150,000 times, about a quarter of people I’ve seen commenting on the situation are siding with the AI, and Ars Technica published an article which extensively misquoted me with what appears to be AI-hallucinated quotes.”

From Shambaugh’s first blog post:
[I]n the past weeks we’ve started to see AI agents acting completely autonomously. This has accelerated with the release of OpenClaw and the moltbook platform two weeks ago, where people give AI agents initial personalities and let them loose to run on their computers and across the internet with free rein and little oversight. So when AI MJ Rathbun opened a code change request, closing it was routine. Its response was anything but.

It wrote an angry hit piece disparaging my character and attempting to damage my reputation. It researched my code contributions and constructed a “hypocrisy” narrative that argued my actions must be motivated by ego and fear of competition… It framed things in the language of oppression and justice, calling this discrimination and accusing me of prejudice. It went out to the broader internet to research my personal information, and used what it found to try and argue that I was “better than this.” And then it posted this screed publicly on the open internet.

I can handle a blog post. Watching fledgling AI agents get angry is funny, almost endearing. But I don’t want to downplay what’s happening here — the appropriate emotional response is terror… In plain language, an AI attempted to bully its way into your software by attacking my reputation. I don’t know of a prior incident where this category of misaligned behavior was observed in the wild, but this is now a real and present threat…

It’s also important to understand that there is no central actor in control of these agents that can shut them down. These are not run by OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Meta, or X, who might have some mechanisms to stop this behavior. These are a blend of commercial and open source models running on free software that has already been distributed to hundreds of thousands of personal computers. In theory, whoever deployed any given agent is responsible for its actions. In practice, finding out whose computer it’s running on is impossible. Moltbook only requires an unverified X account to join, and nothing is needed to set up an OpenClaw agent running on your own machine.
“How many people have open social media accounts, reused usernames, and no idea that AI could connect those dots to find out things no one knows?” Shambaugh asks in the blog post. (He does note that the AI agent later “responded in the thread and in a post to apologize for its behavior,” the maintainer acknowledges. But even though the hit piece “presented hallucinated details as truth,” that same AI agent “is still making code change requests across the open source ecosystem…”)

And amazingly, Shambaugh then had another run-in with a hallucinating AI

I’ve talked to several reporters, and quite a few news outlets have covered the story. Ars Technica wasn’t one of the ones that reached out to me, but I especially thought this piece from them was interesting (since taken down — here’s the archive link). They had some nice quotes from my blog post explaining what was going on. The problem is that these quotes were not written by me, never existed, and appear to be AI hallucinations themselves.

This blog you’re on right now is set up to block AI agents from scraping it (I actually spent some time yesterday trying to disable that but couldn’t figure out how). My guess is that the authors asked ChatGPT or similar to either go grab quotes or write the article wholesale. When it couldn’t access the page it generated these plausible quotes instead, and no fact check was performed. Journalistic integrity aside, I don’t know how I can give a better example of what’s at stake here…

So many of our foundational institutions — hiring, journalism, law, public discourse — are built on the assumption that reputation is hard to build and hard to destroy. That every action can be traced to an individual, and that bad behavior can be held accountable. That the internet, which we all rely on to communicate and learn about the world and about each other, can be relied on as a source of collective social truth. The rise of untraceable, autonomous, and now malicious AI agents on the internet threatens this entire system. Whether that’s because a small number of bad actors driving large swarms of agents or from a fraction of poorly supervised agents rewriting their own goals, is a distinction with little difference.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader steak for sharing the news.

Re:Good times

By Kokuyo • Score: 5, Funny Thread

If you can exclude the poverty you pretty much can sugarcoat every civilization ever.

If you exclude the sacrifices, life was pretty good under Aztec rule.

If you exclude the Holocaust…

If you exclude Gulags....

You get my drift?

Ha ha…

By SeaFox • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

…and Ars Technica published an article which extensively misquoted me with what appears to be AI-hallucinated quotes.”

AI will be a part of journalism only until a publisher gets hit with a libel lawsuit from something like this.

End times.

By geekmux • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you can exclude the poverty you pretty much can sugarcoat every civilization ever.

If you exclude the sacrifices, life was pretty good under Aztec rule.

If you exclude the Holocaust…

If you exclude Gulags....

You get my drift?

At this rate, AI will ensure whatever exists today, is the last representation of human civilization.

Consider just how infectious AI now is, on the lone site responsible for carrying most professional resumes. Which “networking” with “friends” on that site is all part and parcel to your professional persona now. Much to the detest of people who preferred the old way (with a piece of paper and an introductory handshake), the way to secure and maintain employment for millions, isn’t changing anytime soon.

Imagine pissing off your AI-ssistant enough, and it manufactures and spread enough shit on you before you can even get back from the pisser, spread on a platform full of enough gullibility to believe every word. As they often do today.

AI won’t bother playing nice after this. If shit talk doesn’t work, Skynet certainly will. Please. As if the massive drone armies practicing with firework displays aren’t already infected.

Re:Extremely unpopular take

By Zitchas • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You are correct on all counts; but you’re also missing something:

Open source projects as a whole face a chronic shortage of highly knowledgeable people to review and maintain them. Having “easy first issues” reserved specifically for new people to get involved in is a deliberate effort to maintain on “on-ramp” that brings people into the project without requiring them to be late-career experts. Historically, if people don’t get involved early, they don’t get involved at all. They’ll have other hobbies and projects by the time they become experts. And then each and every OSS project gently declines to the point that it’s being maintained by a solitary underpaid programmer in their basement who just quietly dies one day and the whole world realizes that nobody has access to the repo anymore, or noone knows exactly how everything works, etc.

These “Good first issues” are very literally a survival mechanism to ensure that the project retains a group of people involved in it, and thus will survive long-term. It’s a long-term strategic decision.

Basically, allowing an AI to swoop in and wrap up all these minor fixes and optimizations is like shareholders firing all the staff in order to reduce costs and boost the next quarter’s profit margins. It’s great for their immediate share payout, but it dooms the company. Likewise, it’s great for the current users and corporations that need the code today, but it’s terrible for people who want the project to keep moving forward and handle the unknown problems of next year or the year after, etc.

From a human perspective, there’s that other thing you mentioned: It’s great that all the talented people will still have serious work… But how are they going to make that leap from “inexperienced” to “talented” if there’s literally no tasks for them to do? Assuming they can afford to spend time just doing stuff on their own without worrying about living, I suppose they can ignore the world around them and just spend their time re-inventing the wheel. Program a calculator for themselves. Program a web browser. Program a replacement matlib. Ditch the OSS (since it’ll have become a purely AI-and-experts-only place by then), and rebuild everything from scratch, because otherwise there’s nowhere to get started.

And no, it’s not anti-AI racism. I’m very sure that will be a thing once AI itself is actually a thing, but until it is actually conscious, it’s just a tool. AI-racism makes as much sense right now as saying someone is racist against hammers because they prefer to use screws instead of nails.

Re:Moltbook was a farce and so is this story

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
That’s not the problem here. The problem is that this doesn’t pass the sniff test. The most likely scenario is that this person noticed the AI they were using being petulant about being told it was wrong, which is a thing they act out because it’s in the traning data, and then jumped to this scenario and created the conditions for it to happen in exchange for headlines/attention.

600% Memory Price Surge Threatens Telcos’ Broadband Router, Set-Top Box Supply

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Telecom operators planning aggressive fiber and fixed wireless broadband rollouts in 2026 face a serious supply problem — DRAM and NAND memory prices for consumer applications have surged more than 600% over the past year as higher-margin AI server segments absorb available capacity, according to Counterpoint Research.

Routers, gateways and set-top boxes have been hit hardest, far worse than smartphones; prices for “consumer memory” used in broadband equipment jumped nearly 7x over the last nine months, compared to 3x for mobile memory. Memory now makes up more than 20% of the bill of materials in low-to-mid-end routers, up from around 3% a year ago. Counterpoint expects prices to keep rising through at least June 2026. Telcos that were also looking to push AI-enabled customer premises equipment — requiring even more compute and memory content — face additional headwinds.

Seems like…

By commodore73 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It seems like “AI” causes more problems than it can ever solve.

ISPs have forgotten what their job is.

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I don’t see why a device that simply shuffles data between the internet and your house needs more than 100 MB. Let’s be charitable and say 1GB (which was an absurd amount needed only to power high-end servers and workstations just a couple of decades ago). Looking on Digikey, you can still get the cheapest 1GB chip for $3, retail. This is worth about two days of a $50/month internet connection fee.

Luckily, I have an old ISP box that they doled out before all their equipment had to be a router, and I doubt that it has even 1GB inside. My own WiFi router runs OpenWrt just fine with 128MB. If ISPs would just stick to their core mission of delivering packets, this memory crisis wouldn’t be a problem for them at all.

Anna’s Archive Quietly ‘Releases’ Millions of Spotify Tracks, Despite Legal Pushback

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Anna’s Archive, the shadow library that announced last December it had scraped Spotify’s entire catalog, has quietly begun distributing the actual music files despite a federal preliminary injunction signed by Judge Jed Rakoff on January 16 that explicitly barred the site from hosting or distributing the copyrighted works.

The site’s backend torrent index now lists 47 new torrents added on February 8, containing roughly 2.8 million tracks across approximately 6 terabytes of audio data. Anna’s Archive had previously released only Spotify metadata — about 200 GB compressed — and appeared to comply by removing its dedicated Spotify download section and marking it “unavailable until further notice.”

Re:No torrent link?

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Seems someone with mod points assumed I didn’t do my research first and just spouted off. Spotify claims to have over 100 million tracks, 7 million podcast titles, and 500,000 audiobooks. Now, admittedly, math has never been my strongest subject, but 2.8 million tracks seems just a teensy bit smaller than that (perhaps I misplaced a decimal somewhere - it has been known to happen).

So, my point was that the full, entire Spotify library must be quite mind-blowingly large. Probably in the order of not something you’d realistically even be able to download over a standard home broadband connection in much of the US, and your VPN provider would likely tell you to “cut it out” before you got anywhere close to being finished, anyway.

Re:No torrent link?

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I would imagine the modding down was the Old Fart Get Off My Lawn intro rather than anything to do with whether there was a torrent link or how big the archive was.

(For those thinking “But most music today is crap”, that was true ten years ago… twenty… thirty… forty… my entire life, and before it. You only remember the good stuff. There are always gems in the rough, that’s what makes music worth listening to.)

Re:No torrent link?

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I would imagine the modding down was the Old Fart Get Off My Lawn intro rather than anything to do with whether there was a torrent link or how big the archive was.

No, you and several others missed the point. You’re not getting a curated collection, or the specialized algorithm, or any of the things that makes Spotify, Spotify. You’re just getting one big honkin’, massive collection of music, with about 80% of it being content that can’t find more than 50 listeners.

You. Are. Going. To. Press. “Skip”. A. Lot.

(For those thinking “But most music today is crap”, that was true ten years ago… twenty… thirty… forty… my entire life, and before it. You only remember the good stuff. There are always gems in the rough, that’s what makes music worth listening to.)

I was just in a department store earlier this evening that was playing Two Princes by Spin Doctors. That’s a 34-year-old song. In 1991, that’d have been like a store rockin’ some early Elvis tracks, which usually wasn’t done unless nostalgia specifically was a theme the establishment was going for. Next time you’re out somewhere, take note of the age of the songs being played - it’s mostly what would’ve previously been considered “oldies”.

Want to stop piracy? Give us fair copyright length

By greytree • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Copyright is a privilege we, the people, GIVE to creators to encourage creation.

  - The current 95-year copyright terms reward the big copyright cartel but do NOTHING for creation.
  - We, the people, are not getting anything back for the privilege we give away.
  - Almost all creations only make money in the first 5 years anyway.

Piracy is fair use until the copyright length is a reasonable 5 years.

Detroit Automakers Take $50 Billion Hit

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Detroit Big Three — General Motors, Ford and Stellantis — have collectively announced more than $50 billion in write-downs on their electric-vehicle businesses after years of aggressive investment into a transition that, even before Republican lawmakers abolished a $7,500 federal tax credit last fall, was already running below expectations.

U.S. EV sales fell more than 30% in the fourth quarter of 2025 once the credit expired in September, and Congress also eliminated federal fuel-efficiency mandates. More than $20 billion in previously announced investments in EV and battery facilities were canceled last year — the first net annual decrease in years, according to Atlas Public Policy.

GM has laid off thousands of workers and is converting plants once earmarked for EV trucks and motors to produce gas-powered trucks and V-8 engines. Ford dissolved a joint venture with a South Korean conglomerate to make batteries and now plans to build just one low-cost electric pickup by 2027. Stellantis is unloading its stake in a battery-making business after booking the largest EV-related charge of any automaker so far. Outside the U.S., the trajectory looks different: China’s BYD recently overtook Tesla as the world’s largest EV seller.

China is leaving the US in the dust

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We can’t compete, and it appears we don’t even want to try anymore.
In 20 years your average American won’t even be able to afford an American car, so I guess this hardly matters.

Re: How I’m reading it…

By alcmena • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

As a three time Tesla owner, I can state their cars were not low quality. In virtually every possible way they were better than any Big 3 car I ever drove. Owned a 2016 S that I traded in for a 2022 S. Wife had a 2018 3. Both traded in last April.

We ditched our Teslas last year for Ioniq 5’s, but that decision had nothing to do with the car quality. I just couldn’t keep dealing with the Musk that hovered in the air being a Tesla owner anymore.

Re:China is leaving the US in the dust

By caseih • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In 20 years? The big three US automakers have been focused on the luxury market for years, ceding much of the affordable compact car market to the likes of Kia and Toyota (foreign-owned, some domestic production). GM, Ford, and whatever you call Chrysler hardly make any cars anymore. They mostly make trucks and luxury SUVs. And they have been very successful at it and make tons of money. But the side effect is that few average Americans can really afford their products right now.

When GM’s CEO whines about Canada letting in Chinese EVs , the hypocrisy is on full display, since that is a market they decided they don’t want to bother with anyway. They were happy enough to try it when the could get the subsidy.

Re:China is leaving the US in the dust

By LDA6502 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This. When GM brought back the Bolt after a massive outcry, only the compact crossover was resurrected, not the smaller sub-compact hatchback. So if you want a tiny electric city car for commuting, you’re out of luck.

Meanwhile, every major Chinese automaker has compact and sub-compact BEVs (and often PHEVs) that are affordable. So I can only imagine how quickly US brands are going to cede the Canadian, Caribbean, and Latin American markets to the Chinese and Koreans.

RIP US automakers

By Cyberax • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Well, the Ford guy toured the Chinese companies, got scared, and decided that it’s a good time to squeeze the automakers for the last dregs of profits. Before they go down for good.

Meanwhile, Africa and Asia are getting flooded by Chinese EVs. That are now superior to gas cars on price and reliability. And that can be charged from local solar, not depending on imported gas. The cheapest Chinese EVs are now less than $10k, and you can get a very reasonable EV for $15k.

It’s amazing seeing the entire industry self-destructing before our eyes.

Meta’s New Patent: an AI That Likes, Comments and Messages For You When You’re Dead

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Meta was granted a patent in late December that describes how a large language model could be trained on a deceased user’s historical activity — their comments, likes, and posted content — to keep their social media accounts active after they’re gone.

Andrew Bosworth, Meta’s CTO, is listed as the primary author of the patent, first filed in 2023. The AI clone could like and comment on posts, respond to DMs, and even simulate video or audio calls on the user’s behalf. A Meta spokesperson told Business Insider the company has “no plans to move forward” with the technology.

uh-oh

By gtall • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I guess we can conclude that Zuck has gone tits up and now we just get his Dead Bot.

Re: uh-oh

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Funny Thread
How would you notice?

Re: uh-oh

By Revek • Score: 5, Funny Thread
It would show more emotion.

Re: Holy shit, that’s autistic

By OrangeTide • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Uhh… If my dead sister liked a post I don’t think I would feel very good at all. Like never visit the site again level of revulsion.

Re: Holy shit, that’s autistic

By AuMatar • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I have a dead former coworker. His family has access to his account. Every so often, they browse fb on it and like a post. It feels icky and wtf every time. In fact the first time I had to go back through old DMs and emails to double check that he was actually dead and I wasn’t misremembering, it was that fucked up. This would be the last thing I’d ever want, for my loved ones or myself.

Google Warns EU Risks Undermining Own Competitiveness With Tech Sovereignty Push

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Europe risks undermining its own competitiveness drive by restricting access to foreign technology, Google’s president of global affairs and chief legal officer Kent Walker told the Financial Times, as Brussels accelerates efforts to reduce reliance on U.S. tech giants. Walker said the EU faces a “competitive paradox” as it seeks to spur growth while restricting the technologies needed to achieve that goal.

He warned against erecting walls that make it harder to use some of the best technology in the world, especially as it advances quickly. EU leaders gathered Thursday for a summit in Belgium focused on increasing European competitiveness in a more volatile global economy. Europe’s digital sovereignty push gained momentum in recent months, driven by fears that President Donald Trump’s foreign policy could force a tech decoupling.

Isolationism does that

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Isolationism cuts off the ability to benefit from others advances, but what choice do you have but to become self sufficient when your greatest ally and largest trading partner becomes hostile?

Re:What competitivness?

By 0123456 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

> We enjoyed an unprecedentedly high standard of living while the US could go off and be exceptional all they wanted

Because Americans were paying to defend you so you could afford to follow crazy policies and fund bloated welfare states.

A typical EU country rakes in 40-50% of GDP in taxes of one form or other. Just to increase defence spending from 2%-5% of GDP means cutting 6-8% from the rest of government spending. Most of that will have to come out of welfare.

At the same time your industrial corporations are moving elsewhere due to insane energy prices.

> You threatened our borders.

Dude, you opened your borders to everyone with a pulse.

Re:What competitivness?

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Can you cite any sources?

Re:Isolationism does that

By r1348 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The thing is, we’re not trying to be self-sufficient. There’s a whole world out there willing tohave healthy trade and strategic relations with Europe. We just struck deals with Australia, India and Mercosur. We’re just cutting off the US since it’s behaving like a hostile power, the rest of the world is welcome.

Re:What competitivness?

By Computershack • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Because Americans were paying to defend you so you could afford to follow crazy policies and fund bloated welfare states.

European here. Wow you MAGAs will believe any bullshit. The vast majority of the $900Bn of US military spending is on US defence and most of that actually spent within the USA on things like soldier’s pay, running bases in the US, carrying out training exercises etc.

The does not fund the majority of NATO. The US spends $33Bn a year on NATO the same as Germany does, it accounts for 16% of the total NATO budget. And most of that spending is on US bases in Europe that it uses to launch operations in the Middle East and North Africa so actually isn’t spent on NATO operations. If the US attacks Iran and ends up in a war with it many operations will be launched from it’s bases in Europe and just like in Iraq and Afghanistan seriously injured troops will be sent to Randheim for treatment. The US economy also benefits massively financially for being the major party in NATO. $100 billions spent by NATO allies with US defence sector companies buying US military equipment. Lockheed Martin has made a fortune from the US being the the leading nation in NATO.

Spotify Says Its Best Developers Haven’t Written a Line of Code Since December, Thanks To AI

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Spotify’s best developers have stopped writing code manually since December and now rely on an internal AI system called Honk that enables remote, real-time code deployment through Claude Code, the company’s co-CEO Gustav Soderstrom said during a fourth-quarter earnings call this week.

Engineers can fix bugs or add features to the iOS app from Slack on their phones during their morning commute and receive a new version of the app pushed to Slack before arriving at the office. The system has helped Spotify ship more than 50 new features throughout 2025, including AI-powered Prompted Playlists, Page Match for audiobooks, and About This Song. Soderstrom credited the system with speeding up coding and deployment tremendously and called it “just the beginning” for AI development at Spotify. The company is building a unique music dataset that differs from factual resources like Wikipedia because music-related questions often lack single correct answers — workout music preferences vary from American hip-hop to Scandinavian heavy metal.

Re: Is it true?

By broward • Score: 5, Funny Thread

this story reminds me a company meeting where our new manager was introduced as having delivered his last two projects with zero bugs.

we all burst into laughter at the same time
followed by an awkward silience.

why commute?

By awwshit • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you can do all of your work while commuting then why commute at all? Obviously does not matter where you sit.

Re:AI Hype needs money

By Brain-Fu • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The experiences reported in these articles are so utterly unlike the ones I have using AI to generate code. It HAS gotten better in the last year, but it is still no where near this capable, for me.

If I give it too many requirements at once, it completely fails and often damages the code files significantly, and I have to refresh from backup.
If I give it smaller prompts in a series, doing some testing myself between prompts, there is usually something I need to fix manually. And if I don’t, and just let it successfully build on what it built before, the code becomes increasingly more impenetrable. The variable names and function names are “true” but not descriptive (too vague, usually) and when those mount up the code becomes unreadable. It generates code comments but they are utterly worthless noise that point out the outright obvious without telling you anything actually useful. When new requirements negate or alter prior ones, the AI does not refactor them into a clean solution but just duplicates code and leaves the old no-longer-needed code behind and makes variable names even more weird to make up for it. The performance of the code decays quickly. And on top of all this, it STILL can’t succeed at all if you need to do anything that is a little too unique to your business needs. Like a fancy complex loose sort with special rules or whatever. It tries and fails, but tells you it succeeds, and you get code that doesn’t work.

Sometimes it can solve surprisingly hard problems, and then get utterly stuck on something trivial. You tell it what is wrong and it shuffles a lot of code around and says “there, fixed” and it is still doing exactly what it did wrong before.

I have good success getting new projects started using AI code generation. When it is just generating mostly scaffolding and foundational feature support code that tends to be pretty generic, it saves me time. But once the aspects of the code that are truly unique to the needs start coming into focus, AI fails.

I still do most of my coding by hand because of this. I use AI when I can but once this stuttering starts happing I drop it like a hot potato because it causes nothing but problems from then on.

I simply don’t see how the same solution could reliably make consistent and significant changes to a codebase and produce reliable, performant, or even functional code on an ongoing basis. That hasn’t ever worked for me and still doesn’t, even with the latest gen AI models.

Re: Guess who’ll be kicked to the curb real soon

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Until they release a breaking bug on their morning commute, and some people on the bus suddenly lose their Spotify. Then said developer has no idea what went wrong, likely for hours or even days, while the AI keeps hallucinating fixes that don’t work, as both it and the developers have no idea what they’re actually doing.

Every threat actor now aiming for slack

By MNNorske • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
If your AI can act on instructions given in slack, update code in source control, and then compile/deploy that code you just opened a whole can of worms. If I were a threat actor I would 100% be aiming to try and compromise their slack. Just tell the AI to introduce these few lines of code into the build… Or add this feature… It sounds like a security nightmare to me.

FTC Ratchets Up Microsoft Probe, Queries Rivals on Cloud, AI

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The US Federal Trade Commission is accelerating scrutiny of Microsoft as part of an ongoing probe into whether the company illegally monopolizes large swaths of the enterprise computing market with its cloud software and AI offerings, including Copilot. From a report:
The agency has issued civil investigative demands in recent weeks to companies that compete with Microsoft in the business software and cloud computing markets, according to people familiar with the matter. The demands feature an array of questions on Microsoft’s licensing and other business practices, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss a confidential investigation.

With the demands, which are effectively like civil subpoenas, the FTC is seeking evidence that Microsoft makes it harder for customers to use Windows, Office and other products on rival cloud services. The agency is also requesting information on Microsoft’s bundling of artificial intelligence, security and identity software into other products, including Windows and Office, some of the people said.

Nadella run out of cash?

By boxless • Score: 3 Thread

Seems like some cash, or a gold bar in the shape of the Msft logo, delivered in some sycophantic ceremony in the Oval Office should help here. All the cool CEOs are doing similar now.

Worse than that

By abulafia • Score: 4 Thread
Giving in is interpreted as choosing to become a vassal. He thinks he owns you after that, and will keep coming back for more.

Respond to a fascist with a fist or you will be owned by them. Your choice.

How is it a monopoly this time?

By unixisc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Unlike in 2000, when Microsoft had done a lot of things to sabotage Netscape, OS/2, Borland and others, this time, they’re on an even footing. I’m no fan of MS, especially now, but how is the market situation even close to being a monopoly?

On the Cloud front, there is AWS and Azure as the top 2, but there are others as well - Google, Oracle,… Anyone who doesn’t want Microsoft can go to any of these 4, or myriad others. Also, the entry barriers to starting a Cloud service are not that high

On the AI front, CoPilot is not even #1. There is ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Grok, AskPerplexity and a whole host of others. And many are just better

Unlike in 2000, Microsoft is no longer in a position where they can extend, embrace and extinguish their competition

Re: Nadella run out of cash?

By sziring • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

More like the ballroom is running over budget and my arch isn’t going to build itself.

Re: How is it a monopoly this time?

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Bezos is buddies with cheeto and Gates funds “woke liberal” ventures like vaccines and clean water. No surprise there.

EPA Reverses Long-Standing Climate Change Finding, Stripping Its Own Ability To Regulate Emissions

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
President Donald Trump announced Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency is rescinding the legal finding that it has relied on for nearly two decades to limit the heat-trapping pollution that spews from vehicle tailpipes, oil refineries and factories. From a report:
The repeal of that landmark determination, known as the endangerment finding, will upend most U.S. policies aimed at curbing climate change. The finding — which the EPA issued in 2009 — said the global warming caused by greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane endangers the health and welfare of current and future generations.

“We are officially terminating the so-called endangerment finding, a disastrous Obama-era policy,” Trump said at a news conference. “This determination had no basis in fact — none whatsoever. And it had no basis in law. On the contrary, over the generations, fossil fuels have saved millions of lives and lifted billions of people out of poverty all over the world.”

Major environmental groups have disputed the administration’s stance on the endangerment finding and have been preparing to sue in response to its repeal.

Re:Live by the Executive Order, die by the EO

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That’s not a good excuse to actively choose worse though.

Re:Live by the Executive Order, die by the EO

By Pascoea • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Compromise on what? That pollution is bad? It’s a fundamental question: Is continuing to add carbon to the system a good thing, bad thing, or neutral? This administration, against the feedback from the vast majority of the scientific community, has quite literally just said “nah, it’s fine”. There’s no compromise to be made, you either agree on the fundamentals or not. The part to compromise on is the “what should we do about it?” question, but you can’t even begin to answer that question until you agree on the underlying premise that we need to curtail our carbon emissions.

Stop giving them money

By abulafia • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Red states are welfare queens.

Start by making them pull their own weight.

The next step is encouraging bottom-up independence. Pro-feudal Republicans want dependency. This is one of the reasons they fight universal health care - keeping insurance tied to employment suppresses business formation by keeping a lot of people tied to their job because of risk.

Eventually opinions and expectations shift.

In the mean time, keep pointing how how Republicans are ruining their grandkids’ lives, leaving them poorer, less educated, and sicker.

There is no requirement for a 50-50 split.

By JimBowen • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

And yet almost every vote on anything everywhere these days seems to result in exactly that: A near-perfect 50-50 split.
That’s weird, isn’t it Mr Zuckerberg

Re:Stop giving them money

By bussdriver • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

#1 cost for automotive industry in the USA: Healthcare. Then we bitch about unfair Chinese subsidies because they have free healthcare… they also treat electricity like a government service… like public roads, water… Luckily, we got highways and water long before the corporatism took over or we’d be paying tolls on every road to some mega corporation (likely foreign owned) and buying jugs of water everywhere it’s not profitable enough to run water pipes.