Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Meta Backtracks, Will Keep Horizon Worlds VR Support ‘For Existing Games’
  2. OpenAI Acquires Developer Tooling Startup Astral
  3. Walmart Wins Patents To Give Algorithms More Sway Over Prices
  4. Microsoft Considers Legal Action Over $50 Billion Amazon-OpenAI Cloud Deal
  5. iPhone Exploit DarkSword Steals Data In Minutes With No Trace
  6. Pardoned Nikola Fraudster Is Raising Funds For AI-Powered Planes He Claims Will Reshape Aviation
  7. FBI Is Buying Location Data To Track US Citizens, Director Confirms
  8. Cloudflare Appeals Piracy Shield Fine, Hopes To Kill Italy’s Site-Blocking Law
  9. Google Is Trying To Make ‘Vibe Design’ Happen
  10. New Windows 11 Bug Breaks Samsung PCs, Blocking Access To C: Drive
  11. UK Plans To Require Labels On AI-Generated Content
  12. Meta Is Shutting Down VR Social Platform Horizon Worlds
  13. SaaS Apocalypse Could Be OpenSource’s Greatest Opportunity
  14. 2026 Turing Award Goes To Inventors of Quantum Cryptography
  15. Federal Cyber Experts Called Microsoft’s Cloud ‘a Pile of Shit’, Yet Approved It Anyway

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.

Meta Backtracks, Will Keep Horizon Worlds VR Support ‘For Existing Games’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is partially reversing its decision to drop VR support for Horizon Worlds, keeping VR access for existing Unity-based games while shifting future development to a new flatscreen-focused Horizon Engine. UploadVR reports:
If you somehow missed it, on Tuesday Meta officially announced that its Horizon Worlds “metaverse” platform would drop VR support in June, meaning it would only be available as a flatscreen experience for the web and smartphones. But now, in an “ask me anything” session on his Instagram page, Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth says the company has decided to “keep Horizon Worlds working in VR for existing games to support the fans who’ve reached out.”

Bosworth says this specifically applies to worlds developed with the Horizon Unity runtime, suggesting it applies to those built inside VR or with the Horizon Desktop Editor, but not those built for the new Horizon Engine with Horizon Studio. The picture painted here is of a clean technical break, with the legacy Unity version of Horizon Worlds continuing to support VR, and the new Horizon Engine focusing fully on flatscreen. This VR support will continue through the Horizon Worlds VR app, which Bosworth says will stay on Quest’s store “for the foreseeable future”.

Specific worlds will not be recommended by the operating system, though, and nor will they be seen in the storefront. Horizon Worlds will be just another app on the store. As for the reason behind not supporting VR in Horizon Engine, Bosworth repeated the explanation he’s been giving for two months now — “because that’s where most of the consumer and creator energy already was, and so we’re leaning into that.”

OpenAI Acquires Developer Tooling Startup Astral

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI announced it’s acquiring developer tooling startup Astral to strengthen its Codex AI coding assistant, which has over 2 million weekly users and has seen a three-fold increase in user growth since the start of the year. CNBC reports:
“Through it all, though, our goal remains the same: to make programming more productive. To build tools that radically change what it feels like to build software,” Astral’s founder and CEO Charlie Marsh wrote in a blog post. The company’s acquisition of Astral is still subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approval.

Walmart Wins Patents To Give Algorithms More Sway Over Prices

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Walmart has secured patents for systems that use machine learning to forecast demand and automate pricing decisions, “pushing the U.S. retail behemoth into a debate over the use of algorithms to adjust product costs,” reports the Financial Times. From the report:
In January Walmart obtained a U.S. patent for a “system and method for dynamically and automatically updating item prices” to carry out markdowns in its ecommerce unit, a rapidly growing division that generated more than $150 billion in sales last year. Last week it received another patent for using machine learning to predict demand and recommend prices for goods. […] Walmart said that both patents were “unrelated to dynamic pricing,” as the patent issued in January was specific to markdowns and last week’s patent was designed for merchant teams to make decisions, not the technology.

The patent granted in January involves an “end-to-end price markdown system” for ecommerce platforms such as Walmart.com based on data including predicted demand and consumers’ price sensitivity. Last week’s approved patent outlines ways to forecast demand and set prices at levels that will move stock over periods such as a week, a month or a quarter. “Example categories may include, for example, a food item, outdoor equipment, clothing, housewares, toys, workout equipment, vegetables, spices,” according to the filing. The “demand forecasting and price recommendation” tool envisaged in the patent would incorporate sources including purchases, prices, methods of payment and customer ID, such as a passport or driver’s license number.
“Dynamic pricing or anything that smells like it is playing with fire,” said Matt Hamory, a grocery industry consultant at AlixPartners, who cited “the goodwill that you can lose by getting customers to think or suspect or worry even slightly that you are doing things with pricing that are to your benefit and their detriment.”

Good news

By alvinrod • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I’m sure some people will find this patent to be deeply upsetting, but Walmart having patented it hopefully ensures that no other stores will be able to use it. It’s been years since I’ve shopped at a Walmart so them doing this doesn’t affect me at all. Perhaps this patent could be granted in perpetuity so that other stores are unable to use it after the usual 14/28 year period.

Seems like the same old price fixing & gouging

By 2TecTom • Score: 3 Thread

People have been using algorithms to manage inventory and pricing for over a century, starting with simple formulas like Economic Order Quantity that tried to balance stock levels and costs. By the mid-1900s, computers brought operations research into the mix, letting businesses forecast demand and optimize inventory more systematically. Then came barcodes and databases in the 80s and 90s, giving retailers near real-time visibility. Fast forward to the 2000s, and companies like Amazon pushed things further with dynamic pricing systems that constantly adjust based on demand, competition, and user behavior. Same basic goal as always, just massively more data and speed.

What Walmart is doing with AI pricing isn’t a clean break from that history, but it is a step change in how aggressive and autonomous it’s become. Earlier systems followed rules; today’s AI rewrites them on the fly, reacting in real time and feeding back into itself. Prices shift, demand shifts, the model updates, and the cycle keeps going. At Walmart scale, that doesn’t just optimize shelves, it can start nudging the whole market. So while it’s still “just algorithms,” the difference now is less about the idea and more about the speed, scope, and how little human hands are actually on the wheel.

Re:Good news

By SumDog • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I stopped shopping at Wal-Market from before 2010 until 2022. But Target’s entire entry into inappropriate children’s books, sexualized children’s’ clothing and literally satanic pride pins (I don’t even believe in god and find it problematic) led me to go back to Walmart on occasion when I need things I can’t get at the grocery store. It’s sad Walmart is now the less-evil one. Still haven’t shopped at Amazon since 2016.

Title Correction:

By Sebby • Score: 3 Thread

Walmart Wins Patents To Give Algorithms More Sway Over Prices

“Walmart Wins Patents To Gouge Customers of Their Money”

…or “U.S. Patent Office Run by Rubber Stamping Monkeys”

There FTFY.

For everybody?

By SumDog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If they’re just changing the prices of everybody dynamically, I don’t see why they need a patent. Every store already does that. Is this just so they can do it faster; adjusting e-ink tags on shelves throughout the day? I feel customers might actually find ways to game this system and unify to drive down prices if they can master the algorithm and utilize social media. I’d love to see this backfire and Walmart end up losing millions.

The real danger is dynamic prices per person. Since the article is pay-walled, I’m not sure if that’s mentioned. I think it should be totally illegal to charge different people different prices, based on facial recognition or anything else. Every single person should always be given the same price. This is a known problem on travel websites, where if you’ve visited before, they’ll often only give you the prices for more expensive seats .. where if you use a different browser from a different location without being signed in, you can see the original cheaper sets you were looking at earlier haven’t been sold yet.

Microsoft Considers Legal Action Over $50 Billion Amazon-OpenAI Cloud Deal

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Microsoft is considering legal action against its partner OpenAI and Amazon over a $50 billion deal that could violate its exclusive cloud agreement with the ChatGPT maker, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday. Last month, Amazon and OpenAI signed several agreements, including one that makes Amazon Web Services the exclusive third-party cloud provider for Frontier, OpenAI’s enterprise platform for building and running AI agents. The dispute centers on whether OpenAI can offer Frontier via AWS without violating the Microsoft partnership, which requires the startup’s models to be accessed through the Windows maker’s Azure cloud platform, the FT report said, citing sources.

OpenAI and Microsoft recently stated together that “Azure remains the exclusive cloud provider of stateless OpenAI APIs,” a Microsoft spokesperson said in an emailed statement, referring to software interfaces used to access OpenAI’s models. “We are confident that OpenAI understands and respects the importance of living up to this legal obligation,” the spokesperson added. FT said Microsoft executives believed the approach was not feasible and would violate the spirit, if not the letter, of their agreement, and added that the companies were in talks to resolve the dispute without litigation ahead of Frontier’s launch. “We know our contract,” a person familiar with Microsoft’s position told the newspaper. “We will sue them if they breach it. If Amazon and OpenAI want to take a bet on the creativity of their contractual lawyers, I would back us, not them.”

Sam Altman

By Bill, Shooter of Bul • Score: 3 Thread
What!!! Sam Altman not following through with a promise!?! A legal one at that ?!?! Just screwing people over when ever it suits him?!? Crazy times when you can’t trust the guy no one trusts at all and was fired over his blatant lies.

The pool is drying up

By greytree • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The investment money pool is drying up and the fat fish stuck in it are starting to eat each other.

The end is nigh, thank goodness.

iPhone Exploit DarkSword Steals Data In Minutes With No Trace

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
A new iOS exploit chain called DarkSword shows how attackers can break into certain iPhones, grab sensitive data like messages, credentials, and even crypto wallets, and then disappear without leaving obvious traces. It targets older iOS 18 builds using Safari and WebGPU flaws to escape Apple’s sandbox, which is pretty wild on its own, but what really stands out is how fast it works and how financially motivated these attacks have become. The takeaway is simple but important, update your iPhone ASAP and don’t assume mobile devices are somehow safer than desktops anymore.

Er

By cascadingstylesheet • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

and then disappear without leaving obvious traces.

Er, do attackers normally leave a handy log of traces?

and don’t assume mobile devices are somehow safer than desktops anymore

Was … somebody assuming that? Why?

Who thinks mobile devices are secure?

By gweihir • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

That sounds to me like a childish belief. What mobile devices get you is a second computer that is not easily associated with your first one for an attacker (if you are careful). But they are just computers. Not special in any way except for the from-factor.

I guess too many people still see tech as “magic”.

Re:Who thinks mobile devices are secure?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Who thinks mobile devices are secure? That sounds to me like a childish belief. […] I guess too many people still see tech as “magic”.

Banks think mobile devices are secure. That’s why they will let you upload a check image from your bank app but not from your desktop where you scanned it at high enough resolution to see security features.

Re:How about we recycle old devices?

By Moridineas • Score: 5, Informative Thread

How about we stop allowing corporations to do that? They are legal fictions which exist at the pleasure of The People, and if we stop bending over for them, we can bring them to heel. They should not be allowed to abandon devices they could easily support when any significant number of people are still using them. The only reason corporate charters are supposed to exist is to serve the public interest.

According to Apple, as of February 2026, 90% of all currently running iOS devices are on either iOS 26 (current release) or iOS 18 (previous release), while 10% are running something earlier.

iOS 15, 16, and 17 covers ~10% of all iOS users and are all actively patched for security bugs. (Presumably there is a tiny fraction of people running something before iOS 15.)

iOS 15 supports iPhone 6s devices first released in 2015.

So, Apple is supporting their iPhone hardware for at least 11 years right now.

Now, how much further would you, Drinkypoo, force them to make updates for? Should it go all the way back to iOS 1 in 2007? Sure, only a few hobbyists may be running those devices, but what does that matter. Does your dictat apply to all companies that release software packages? Should every company that has ever released a piece of software be forced to patch _every revision level_, separately, forever? How do you define what they could “easily support” and “any significant number of people”? I’m really curious how you imagine your system working. It sure sounds like it would put a lot of small and open source developers out of business.

Nota Bene

By Artem S. Tashkinov • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

don’t assume mobile devices are somehow safer than desktops anymore

Both iOS and Android are full-fledged operating systems, and the only reason they are considered safer than desktop operating systems is because their application stores are somewhat curated. That’s it.

Their software stacks are very similar to desktop operating systems, except they both strip you of superuser rights by default. That doesn’t mean their kernels and user space are significantly more secure; they’re just a tad different.

Not updating either of them is like leaving your house key out in the open.

Pardoned Nikola Fraudster Is Raising Funds For AI-Powered Planes He Claims Will Reshape Aviation

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Trevor Milton, the pardoned founder of Nikola, is seeking $1 billion for AI-powered autonomous planes through a new venture called SyberJet. The Tech Buzz reports:
“Autonomous planes will be 10 times harder than Nikola ever was,” Milton told the Wall Street Journal in a rare interview. It’s a remarkable admission from someone whose last venture collapsed under the weight of securities fraud charges after he overstated the capabilities of Nikola’s electric and hydrogen-powered trucks. Milton was convicted in 2022 on three counts of fraud for misleading investors about Nikola’s technology, including staging a video that made it appear a truck prototype was driving under its own power when it was actually rolling downhill. The conviction sent him to prison and turned Nikola into a cautionary tale about startup hype culture. His pardon, which came earlier this year, sparked immediate controversy in venture capital and legal circles.

Now he’s betting that AI and autonomous aviation represent a clean slate. SyberJet appears focused on developing artificial intelligence systems capable of piloting aircraft without human intervention - a technical challenge that’s stumped even well-funded players like Boeing and Airbus. […] Milton hasn’t detailed SyberJet’s technical approach or revealed who’s backing the venture. The company’s website remains sparse, and aviation industry sources say they haven’t seen concrete demonstrations of the technology. That opacity echoes the early days of Nikola, when Milton made sweeping claims about revolutionary trucks that existed mostly in renderings and promotional videos.
If you need a quick refresher on the Nikola saga, here’s a timeline of key events:
June, 2016: Nikola Motor Receives Over 7,000 Preorders Worth Over $2.3 Billion For Its Electric Truck
December, 2016: Nikola Motor Company Reveals Hydrogen Fuel Cell Truck With Range of 1,200 Miles
February, 2020: Nikola Motors Unveils Hybrid Fuel-Cell Concept Truck With 600-Mile Range
June, 2020: Nikola Founder Exaggerated the Capability of His Debut Truck
September, 2020: Nikola Motors Accused of Massive Fraud, Ocean of Lies
September, 2020: Nikola Admits Prototype Was Rolling Downhill In Promo Video
September, 2020: Nikola Founder Trevor Milton Steps Down as Chairman in Battle With Short Seller
October, 2020: Nikola Stock Falls 14 Percent After CEO Downplays Badger Truck Plans
November, 2020: Nikola Stock Plunges As Company Cancels Badger Pickup Truck
July, 2021: Nikola Founder Trevor Milton Indicted on Three Counts of Fraud
December, 2021: EV Startup Nikola Agrees To $125 Million Settlement
September, 2022: Nikola Founder Lied To Investors About Tech, Prosecutor Says in Fraud Trial

Re: WTF is wrong with this guy’s brain?

By pele • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Nothing! Absolutely nothing. You should ask what’s wrong with his INVESTORS brains instead. He offers you a lie and if you buy it it’s on you, not him. Trump has been doing it for decades.

Re:WTF is wrong with this guy’s brain?

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It’s like he doesn’t even want his scams to work.

Ya, but he fooled the person that counted. From TFA:

When asked about the pardon on Friday, Trump contended that Milton was persecuted because he was supportive of the president and that the Utah entrepreneur was “highly recommended” by lots of people.

“They say the thing that he did wrong was he was one of the first people that supported a gentleman named Donald Trump for president,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “He supported Trump. He liked Trump. I didn’t know him, but he liked him.”

“There are many people like that,” he added. “They support Trump, and they went after him.”

Though, to be fair, he also paid handsomely for his pardon:

Milton has given nearly $3 million in contributions to various GOP lawmakers’ campaigns, PACs and GOP state-level committees since July 2016, Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings show.

He gave $920,000 to Trump 47 Committee, a joint fundraising committee that split money between Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, the Republican Nation Commitee (RNC) and state party groups, on Oct. 10, just over a month before the president won the last year’s election.

The same month, separately, he dished out $284,000 to the RNC, the records show.

So much winning — I mean, not us regular folks, but for some… /s

Re:WTF is wrong with this guy’s brain?

By Rei • Score: 5, Informative Thread

He’s also a sleasebag who has been credibly accused of sexual assault by three women (and in general being a sex pest to many more). When a former friend (Jonny Robb) threatened to out him over it (it had been gnawing at him for a long time, and he was friends with some of the girls), Milton entrapped him (deliberately switching the topic to money, baiting him into asking for money to stay quiet, knowing that he was poor), then when he got Robb to ask for money, reported him into the police for extortion. Robb - his old friend - committed suicide after being released on bail. Milton rained largesse on local politicians, including the Attorney General’s campaign. Milton was never investigated by the AG’s office for sexual assault, while they arrested Robb immediately just on Milton’s word.

I’ve talked with people online who knew Jonny Robb, and the universal answer was that he was the kindest person you’d ever meet. He had a hard life, struggled through overcoming depression and addiction, and had a lot of sympathy for others who were struggling as a result. I saw a podcast once where he was a guest, and I remember one of the topics was about a recent event where he was at a fast food restaurant, and there was a homeless lady, clearly mentally ill / schizophrenic, who was in general freaking out the guests and the staff, who didn’t know what to do with her, and were probably minutes from calling the police. Robb orders for both himself and for her and sits down and eats with her, chats with her. She’s having a great time, having not gotten attention like this in ages, starts joking that he’s her boyfriend, etc. After they eat, he walks her out, much to the relief of the guests and staff, heads to a store and buys her a new sleeping bag and stuff. And she looks both simultaneously happy with her nice new stuff, but also terrified, and he suddenly realizes, oh shit, other homeless people are just going to steal this off her. And during the interview, he looked almost like he was going to cry when he said that.

Anyway, he’s dead now.

FAA

By jythie • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Yeah, I can not imagine certification even being possible without major legal changes. DAL-A (or any of them) are not friendly to black boxes, You have to be able to do things like verify that the object code you produced matches the source code you wrote, they are not even allowed to use OOP because it is considered too unpredictable and opaque. I can not imagine ‘well, we plug a bunch of numbers into this neural network and it seems to mostly work’ will pass cert.

Re:WTF is wrong with this guy’s brain?

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Altman might be a dick but anyone who claims ChatGPT isn’t useful has either never used it or is a fool with an agenda.

The typical claim is not that “ChatGPT is not useful”. That is just the dishonest propaganda version. The usual claim is that ChatGPT is not useful or outright harmful for a lot of the application scenarios claimed and only has limited use where it actually works, which is mostly improved search and text summarization. And even there it comes with the risk of hallucinations.

That sounds a bit different from what you just claimed, doesn’t it? Of course, you being an AI fan may indicate you are not smart enough to see that difference. I recommend you take the statement I just made and have some LLM type Artificial Idiot explain to you what the difference is to “ChatGPT is not useful”. Because while LLM-type AI is utterly dumb, it usually can perform on this very low level, even if you cannot.

FBI Is Buying Location Data To Track US Citizens, Director Confirms

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
The FBI has resumed purchasing reams of Americans’ data and location histories to aid federal investigations, the agency’s director, Kash Patel, testified to lawmakers on Wednesday. This is the first time since 2023 that the FBI has confirmed it was buying access to people’s data collected from data brokers, who source much of their information — including location data — from ordinary consumer phone apps and games, per Politico. At the time, then-FBI director Christopher Wray told senators that the agency had bought access to people’s location data in the past but that it was not actively purchasing it.

When asked by U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, if the FBI would commit to not buying Americans’ location data, Patel said that the agency “uses all tools … to do our mission.” “We do purchase commercially available information that is consistent with the Constitution and the laws under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act — and it has led to some valuable intelligence for us,” Patel testified Wednesday. Wyden said buying information on Americans without obtaining a warrant was an “outrageous end-run around the Fourth Amendment,” referring to the constitutional law that protects people in America from device searches and data seizures.

Re:Excellent news, I guess

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
We know all this from Snowden but nobody listened.

No shit sherlock

By GameboyRMH • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It would actually be news if they *weren’t* buying the location data openly available on the market.

The only way to fix this massive privacy problem is to make it illegal for companies to collect this information in the first place.

trump supporters speak up. now is your chance

By tigerstyle • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
anyone who voted for trump please tell us all how this is ok

Re: trump supporters speak up. now is your chance

By getuid() • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Droves of peole telling you how this isn’t worse than the alternative in 3… 2… 1…

Trump supporters stick to safe spaces

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
At this point after literally every single promise was broken, it was revealed that Jeffrey Epstein tricked them into being angry at trans kids and basically invented 4chan as we know it today, and that Trump has refused to release the Epstein files like he promised the only Trump supporters left or the ones hiding out in safe spaces where they are protected from facts and logic.

You see it over on the Reddit conservative forum where there are very few actual posts anymore because the Trump supporters know they got tricked and you can’t allow them to talk about how they got tricked. So the mods just shut down any discussion and only let people who are approved of right think comment or post. Basically safe spaces. But not the good kind intended to help people cope with trauma but the kind where you believe something that is objectively wrong and you want to keep believing it.

A while back I started to talk right winger into joining us here in reality. Went through a lot of discussion with them about why minimum wage exists and why bigotry is a tool for controlling populations and all that sort of thing. They started to agree with me because well, they weren’t completely stupid and I was obviously correct.

Then they got into their car and they turned on talk radio and Rush Limbaugh started to blurt out whatever and then they got home and watched a little bit of Fox News and probably some Tucker Carlson or maybe it was Bill O’Reilly back then and that was it. Any of the effort I put in and any of the work I did was completely out the door.

Simply put you have got to get them away from the propaganda otherwise they can’t come back into reality. Because for some oddball reason they find the propaganda extremely entertaining and fun.

There’s an old joke where a Russian comes to American and says hey, you Americans you’re propaganda is so much better than ours. And the American says we don’t have propaganda! To which the Russian replies Exactly!

Cloudflare Appeals Piracy Shield Fine, Hopes To Kill Italy’s Site-Blocking Law

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Cloudflare is appealing a 14.2 million-euro fine from Italy for refusing to comply with its “Piracy Shield” law, which requires blocking access to websites on its 1.1.1.1 DNS service within 30 minutes. The company argues the system lacks oversight, risks widespread overblocking, and could undermine core Internet infrastructure. Ars Technica’s Jon Brodkin reports:
Piracy Shield is “a misguided Italian regulatory scheme designed to protect large rightsholder interests at the expense of the broader Internet,” Cloudflare said in a blog post this week. “After Cloudflare resisted registering for Piracy Shield and challenged it in court, the Italian communications regulator, AGCOM, fined Cloudflare… We appealed that fine on March 8, and we continue to challenge the legality of Piracy Shield itself.” Cloudflare called the fine of 14.2 million euros ($16.4 million) “staggering.” AGCOM issued the penalty in January 2026, saying Cloudflare flouted requirements to disable DNS resolution of domain names and routing of traffic to IP addresses reported by copyright holders.

Cloudflare had previously resisted a blocking order it received in February 2025, arguing that it would require installing a filter on DNS requests that would raise latency and negatively affect DNS resolution for sites that aren’t subject to the dispute over piracy. Cloudflare co-founder and CEO Matthew Prince said that censoring the 1.1.1.1 DNS resolver would force the firm “not just to censor the content in Italy but globally.”

Piracy Shield was designed to combat pirated streams of live sports events, requiring network operators to block domain names and IP addresses within 30 minutes of receiving a copyright notification. Cloudflare said the fine should have been capped at 140,000 euros ($161,000), or 2 percent of its Italian earnings, but that “AGCOM calculated the fine based on our global revenue, resulting in a penalty nearly 100 times higher than the legal limit.”

Despite its complaints about the size of the fine, Cloudflare said the principles at stake “are even larger” than the financial penalty. “Piracy Shield is an unsupervised electronic portal through which an unidentified set of Italian media companies can submit websites and IP addresses that online service providers registered with Piracy Shield are then required to block within 30 minutes,” Cloudflare said.
Cloudflare is pushing for the law to be struck down, arguing that it is “incompatible with EU law, most notably the Digital Services Act (DSA), which requires that any content restriction be proportionate and subject to strict procedural safeguards.”
In addition to appealing the fine, Cloudflare says it will continue to challenge Piracy Shield in Italian courts, engage with EU officials, and seek full access to AGCOM’s Piracy Shield records.

Rock on CloudFlare

By Sean Clifford • Score: 4 Thread

Rock on CloudFlare!

DNS “blocking” is still a thing?

By gweihir • Score: 3 Thread

How utterly incompetent and disconnected do you have to be to still think that DNS “blocking” works?

Good luck…

By jonwil • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Cloudflare may be big but there is no way they will be able to overcome the power and influence of the Italian soccer league and the powerful entities that paid the big bucks for the rights to air the games.

Google Is Trying To Make ‘Vibe Design’ Happen

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
With today’s latest Stitch updates, Google is trying to make “vibe design” happen, reports The Verge’s Jay Peters. The AI-native design platform encourages users to describe goals, feelings, or inspiration in “natural language,” rather than starting with traditional blueprints.

In a blog post, Google Labs Product Manager Rustin Banks says that Stitch can turn those inputs into interactive prototypes, automatically map user flows, and support real-time iteration. It introduces voice capabilities that allow users to “speak directly to [the] canvas” for feedback or changes. Tools like DESIGN.md also help users create reusable design systems across various projects.

To Hell With That

By crunchy_one • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The very last thing I’m going to do is share my goals, feelings, or inspiration with Google. Fuck that. Hard.

Re:To Hell With That

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

To crush my enemies, see them driven before me, and to hear the lamentations of their women.

vibe dildo

By Goodsuburbanite • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I don’t even want to put anything useful in writing on the Internet anymore.

Re:To Hell With That

By devnulljapan • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Hot water, good dentishtry and shoft lavatory paper —-Cohen the Barbarian

New Vibe App

By gtall • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Mr. Google Vibe App, I’d like an agent that tracks google’s anti-privacy actions. It should be considerate and take umbrage when it sees something wonky, and then pepper Google Central Command with messages to tell them to stop before the agent really gets pissy. And I’d like a nice GUI interface to it so we can keep up to date on google’s actions in realtime. Can you finish it before din-din?

New Windows 11 Bug Breaks Samsung PCs, Blocking Access To C: Drive

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes:
Users of Samsung PCs are reporting the inability to access the C: drive after the Windows 11 February update. The bug seems to be in connection with the Samsung Galaxy Connect app, which allows Samsung phones and tablets to connect to Windows machines. [A previous stable version of the app has been re-released to prevent this problem from spreading.] This parody explains the situation with humor.
The issue stems from update KB5077181 and is impacting Samsung PCs running Windows 11 25H2 or 24H2. Microsoft and Samsung have confirmed the issue and published a workaround, but as PCWorld notes, it will take some time. The workaround “requires removing the Samsung application, then asking Windows to repair the drive permissions and assigning a new owner, then restoring the Windows default permissions, including patching in some custom code that Microsoft wrote.”

Another example of how professionals can’t use it.

By Murdoch5 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
This is not a minor bug, and luckily no one at my company has been hit by it, but, how can you risk using Windows, when these are the issues you run in to?

People joke about Linux being unstable, and having usability issues, when was the last time a major Linux distribution completely bleeped home directory access? I’ve never seen it, and I’ve been using Linux since 1999, maybe 1998. Let’s be clear, you could do through incompetence, but that’s of your own destruction, and if you did, you could easily get it back.

With Windows, not only do things break, the solutions are nonsense, or in the best cases, idiotic. I have a recurring issue where virtualization will just stop working on Windows, and it’s not a UEFI issue. There is a long-standing issue where Windows can suspend, but then can’t wake up. To get Windows to “wake-up”, you need an installer so you can enter recovery mode, and tell the boot manager, TO BOOT.

Windows doesn’t know how to BOOT, which tracks across most Microsoft products, they can’t do the most basic functions of their use case. How can a professional, honestly, seriously, non-fraudulently, use Windows? If you can afford the massive amounts of downtime, you’re not a professional! If you can afford the constantly “roll-the-dice” methodology on updates, you’re not a professional! If you can honestly tell me that an OS which can’t boot, is a suitable product for a workplace, don’t, you’re lying. Windows is not for professionals, it’s not even for hobbies at this point.

I have it running in VM, on top of Fedora because in the best case that’s the only safe place to have it, it’s not ready for bare metal. Windows is for testing, and nothing else, and that’s all I’ll ever use it for because it’s not an operating system, it’s AdWare, bloated with ShareWare, and CrapWare, that only seeks to violate and harm it user base, when it works, which isn’t often.

the Windows 11 February update

By guygo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

the thing is an atrocity. disappearing sys drives is just one of many issues with it, and Redmond sure seems to be dragging their ass getting around to fixing it.
it completely breaks username/password authentication on my simple LAN, so I uninstalled it. Let’s see how March’s update does…

Clickbait title

By SuperDre • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The title suggests it’s a windows 11 bug, but that’s not the case, it is a bug in the Samsung App..

Re: Clickbait title

By newcastlejon • Score: 5 Thread
There’s plenty of blame to go around. W11 by all accounts is a dumpster fire, but Samsung companion software is notoriously shit.

Re:Another example of how professionals can’t use

By chmod a+x mojo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Companies wouldn’t have been affected. At least not ones with any type of sane policies.

The issue isn’t a Microsoft issue, it’s a Samsung shitty preinstalled “management app” issue. Samsungs own shovelware is what’s causing the issues. If your company allows that kind of crap to run unrestricted on their PCs that are connected to their networks they deserve every last headache they get from it.

It should be the most telling that it only happens to Samsung computers. Samsung is doing weird shit, and it’s their fault for doing weird shit when the base changes and everything goes sideways.

If this is what happens when the base Windows changes to fix bugs and exploits, what other weird undocumented shit are they also doing? Why aren’t they doing it within the proper protocols for the OS? Why are they basically using the equivalent of unpatched exploits to do whatever they are doing?

UK Plans To Require Labels On AI-Generated Content

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Britain plans to consider requiring labels on AI-generated content to protect consumers from disinformation and deepfakes, the government said on Wednesday, as it outlined other areas of focus to tackle the evolving global challenge. Technology minister Liz Kendall stressed the need to strike the right balance between protecting the creative industries and allowing the AI sector to innovate, saying in a statement that the government would take time to “get this right.”

The next phase of the government’s work on copyright and AI would also look at the harms posed by digital replicas without consent, ways for creators to control their work online and support for independent creative organizations, she said. […] Louise Popple, a copyright expert at law firm Taylor Wessing, noted that the government had not ruled out a broad exception that would allow AI developers to train on copyright works. “That’s a subtle difference of approach and could be interpreted to mean that everything is still up for grabs” she said. “It feels very much like the hard issues are being kicked down the road by the government.”

In 2024, Britain proposed easing copyright rules to let developers train models on lawfully accessed material, with creators able to reserve their rights. On Wednesday, Kendall said that having engaged with creatives, AI firms, industry bodies, unions and academics, the government had concluded it “no longer has a preferred option.” “We will help creatives control how their work is used. This sits at the heart of our ambition for creatives – including independent and smaller creative organizations — to be paid fairly,” she said.

good luck

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Good luck enforcing that. I agree that the deluge of slop is lame, but I don’t see it going away either.

prop 65 warning

By Local ID10T • Score: 4 Thread

Just as everything in California comes with a warning that it may contain chemicals that might contribute to an individual’s overall lifetime risk of cancer… all content in the UK will come with a warning that someone, somewhere, somehow, may have used AI to create some part of the content. Danger, Will Robinson!

Lip service

By Richard_at_work • Score: 3 Thread

Yup, because those people intentionally looking to mislead or defraud others through the use of AI fakes are certainly going to follow this law to the letter…

Re:prop 65 warning

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The California Prop 65 law is a great example of doing it wrong. There is a real possibility of being penalized if you fail to warn someone and it turns out that chemicals were present. It is therefore safer to just warn people that everything and every place may contain chemicals. No effort is made to accurately label anything -just label everything as a potential hazard and call it done.

Re:good luck

By OngelooflijkHaribo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Honestly, one of the really good things about this I noticed on Twitter is that no one trusts anything any more which is good. Everyone questions every video as potentially fake and people use judgement of “If it look implaujsible it’s probably fake.” and that’s a mentality more people should have.

“a.i.” is such a meme word, forgeries, fake images and fake videos have always existed, before they were simply the privilege of those with significant time, expertise, and/or capital but now they belong to everyone and it has made people more critical on what to trust. Just like the era of “Is this image shopped?” after that became more and more plausible it now applies to videos too, which is good.

People adapt very quickly to this in my experienc and they just don’t buy it any more.

Meta Is Shutting Down VR Social Platform Horizon Worlds

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is shutting down its VR social platform Horizon Worlds, which was once a key piece of the pivot to the metaverse. The company said the app will be taken off the Quest store at the end of March, and fully removed from Quest headsets by June 15. After that date, it will shift to a standalone "mobile-only experience.” CNBC reports:
The shift for Horizon Worlds, which was once a central part of the company’s push into virtual reality, comes weeks after Meta cut over 1,000 employees from Reality Labs, the unit responsible for the metaverse. […] The social platform has never drawn more than a couple hundred thousand active users a month, CNBC previously reported.

The virtual 3D social network where avatars could interact and play games with other users officially launched in late 2021. It operated exclusively on the Quest VR platform until Meta launched a mobile app version in September 2023. The mobile version of Horizon Worlds was built to provide an entry point for users without VR headsets, functioning similarly to Roblox.

Nobody saw that coming !

By greytree • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Well, nobody wearing VR glasses.

The rest of us though…

Re:That’s a good first step

By GoTeam • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Now you’re just being greedy

I still remember

By RitchCraft • Score: 3 Thread

I still remember watching Zuck on stage, with his big soulless eyes, telling everyone that this was the future, and being completely amazed this idiot is actually a billionaire. How many billions did this fool waste on this venture? Why is he still a billionaire? What is wrong with the fucking world?

The staggering stupidity of it

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
Really does show that if you take a billionaire outside of the one thing they blundered into that they really are completely incompetent.

Just like how we found out how completely incompetent Elon Musk was when he got to design a vehicle and the result was the cybertruck

Like the old saying goes never ask a Man how he made his first million.

Just couldn’t get the legs working

By BoogieChile • Score: 3 Thread
It just couldn’t stand up to the competition

SaaS Apocalypse Could Be OpenSource’s Greatest Opportunity

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader internet-redstar writes:
Nearly a trillion dollars has been wiped from software stocks in 2026, with hedge funds making billions shorting Salesforce, HubSpot, and Atlassian. At FOSDEM 2026, cURL maintainer Daniel Stenberg shut down his bug bounty program after AI-generated slop overwhelmed his team. A new article on HackerNoon argues that most commercial SaaS could inevitably become OpenSource, not out of ideology but economics. The author points to Proxmox replacing VMware at enterprise scale and startups like Holosign replicating DocuSign at $19/month flat as evidence. The catch, the article claims, is that maintainers who refuse to embrace AI tools risk being forked, or simply replicated from scratch, by those who do.

What?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I can’t be bothered to read the article after that summary.

What a mess of conflated nonsense. Stock price, unrelated developer activity due to AI, free software replacing rapist vendor software… What does any of that have to do with open sourcing SaaS or SaaS “apocalypse”?

If you wanna talk about AI slop, this sure looks like it.

What is this?

By irreverentdiscourse • Score: 3 Thread

Is slashdot taking fanfiction submissions now?

Re:What?

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I can’t be bothered to read the article after that summary.

What a mess of conflated nonsense. Stock price, unrelated developer activity due to AI, free software replacing rapist vendor software… What does any of that have to do with open sourcing SaaS or SaaS “apocalypse”?

If you wanna talk about AI slop, this sure looks like it.

Yeah, all of that, and the conclusion is developers *MUST* embrace AI, or risk being replaced by those who do. It’s literally just an amalgamation of everything the AI Prophets and their sales henchmen have been preaching for the last several years. “GET ABOARD OUR HYPE TRAIN OR WE WILL RUN YOU DOWN WITH IT!” Meh, whatever.

Open Source developers can develop however they want. Just because you can flood their bug system with AI generated slop doesn’t mean you’re running them out of development. These people need to get a grip.

Still missing the point

By DarkOx • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

*most* of the value of SaaS is the someone else is responsible part. All you do given them a credit card number, setup your tenant by filling a few forms and creating some users and done.. Or at least it *can* be that easy, if you have a lot of people or are part of big enterprise you are maybe setting up SSO or something.

The reality is most of these SaaS projects are just slightly targeted CRUD apps. Sure AI makes cloning them much faster, but any business with a sizeable software teem could have already replicated them anyway. The point is:
1) Leaving all the details to someone else
2) having someone else to blame when things go wrong
3) having a very predictable op-ex, you know the bill is $2500 every month, no surprises like a member of the financial software support time decided to retire and IT had hire a replacement, your department is getting billed for 33% of the hiring costs this quarter…

The other end of the spectrum is truly unique software that does actual hard things engineering tasks, very large scale shipping lane management, very complex industry specific billing, payment, license, legal management, telecom/conferencing; where things might actually have some proprietary algorithms, or significant infrastructure requirements not entirely availible as some AWS or Azure PaaS service.

I think the lower of SaaS is probably in real trouble. Because you can vibe code your own and drop it in AWS/Azure to handle all your infrastructure and be very much more in the driver seat vs what SalesForce decides to ‘let you do’ with Lighting or Apex. AI tools with their ability to let a single developer rapidly take and extend/customize a FOSS product rapidly will suck the value out of your basic SaaS CRM/ERP/Storefront providers, in a way FOSS alone has done the opposite for.

Wait, what???

By dskoll • Score: 3 Thread

Maintainers risk being forked? That might not be a bad thing. Five or six Linus Torvalds, a bunch of Greg Kroah-Hartmans, etc. would be awesome!

Of course, the downside is we might end up with 9 Matt Mullenwegs…

2026 Turing Award Goes To Inventors of Quantum Cryptography

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Dave Knott shares a report from the New York Times:
On Wednesday, the Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest society of computing professionals, said Drs. Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard had won this year’s Turing Award for their work on quantum cryptography and related technologies. The Turing Award, which was introduced in 1966, is often called the Nobel Prize of computing, and it includes a $1 million prize, which the two scientists will share.

[…] The two met in 1979 while swimming in the Atlantic just off the north shore of Puerto Rico. They were taking a break while attending an academic conference in San Juan. Dr. Bennett swam up to Dr. Brassard and suggested they use quantum mechanics to create a bank note that could never be forged. Collaborating between Montreal and New York, they applied Dr. Bennett’s idea to subway tokens rather than bank notes. In a research paper published in 1983, they showed that their quantum subway tokens could never be forged, even if someone managed to steal the subway turnstile housing the elaborate hardware needed to read them.

This led to quantum cryptography. After describing their new form of encryption in a research paper published in 1984, they demonstrated the technology with a physical experiment five years later. Called BB84, their system used photons — particles of light — to create encryption keys used to lock and unlock digital data. Thanks to the laws of quantum mechanics, the behavior of a photon changes if someone looks at it. This means that if anyone tries to steal the keys, he or she will leave a telltale sign of the attempted theft — a bit like breaking the seal on an aspirin bottle.

When I meet strangers in the ocean

By Locke2005 • Score: 3 Thread
Usually the first thing I say isn’t, “Hey, can we work together on quantum cryptography?” Usually it’s more like… “Sharks!” The story sounds weird, they obviously knew of each other before they “met” in the middle of the Atlantic.

I hate when people get this wrong.

By niftydude • Score: 3 Thread
BB84 doesn’t create keys, it’s a key *distribution* protocol

The key itself is a one time pad generated using whatever random number generator you wish.

BB84 is a protocol that distributes the key to your communication partner using a quantum physics technique plus a public open channel to guarantee that no one has eavesdropped on or tampered with the key.

For the record, in BB84, the public channel must satisfy certain very strict requirements which I’ve never seen any BB84 implementations get right - even when they do the quantum physics correctly (which is another part people often get horribly wrong).

Re:When I meet strangers in the ocean

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Oops ,I forgot to link to the Quanta article https://www.quantamagazine.org/quantum-cryptography-pioneers-win-turing-award-20260318/.

Federal Cyber Experts Called Microsoft’s Cloud ‘a Pile of Shit’, Yet Approved It Anyway

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
ProPublica reports that federal cybersecurity reviewers had serious, yearslong concerns about Microsoft’s GCC High cloud offering, yet they approved it anyway because the product was already deeply embedded across government. As one member of the team put it: “The package is a pile of shit.” From the report:
In late 2024, the federal government’s cybersecurity evaluators rendered a troubling verdict on one of Microsoft’s biggest cloud computing offerings. The tech giant’s “lack of proper detailed security documentation” left reviewers with a “lack of confidence in assessing the system’s overall security posture,” according to an internal government report reviewed by ProPublica. For years, reviewers said, Microsoft had tried and failed to fully explain how it protects sensitive information in the cloud as it hops from server to server across the digital terrain. Given that and other unknowns, government experts couldn’t vouch for the technology’s security.

Such judgments would be damning for any company seeking to sell its wares to the U.S. government, but it should have been particularly devastating for Microsoft. The tech giant’s products had been at the heart of two major cybersecurity attacks against the U.S. in three years. In one, Russian hackers exploited a weakness to steal sensitive data from a number of federal agencies, including the National Nuclear Security Administration. In the other, Chinese hackers infiltrated the email accounts of a Cabinet member and other senior government officials. The federal government could be further exposed if it couldn’t verify the cybersecurity of Microsoft’s Government Community Cloud High, a suite of cloud-based services intended to safeguard some of the nation’s most sensitive information.

Yet, in a highly unusual move that still reverberates across Washington, the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, or FedRAMP, authorized the product anyway, bestowing what amounts to the federal government’s cybersecurity seal of approval. FedRAMP’s ruling — which included a kind of “buyer beware” notice to any federal agency considering GCC High — helped Microsoft expand a government business empire worth billions of dollars. “BOOM SHAKA LAKA,” Richard Wakeman, one of the company’s chief security architects, boasted in an online forum, celebrating the milestone with a meme of Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

It was not the type of outcome that federal policymakers envisioned a decade and a half ago when they embraced the cloud revolution and created FedRAMP to help safeguard the government’s cybersecurity. The program’s layers of review, which included an assessment by outside experts, were supposed to ensure that service providers like Microsoft could be entrusted with the government’s secrets. But ProPublica’s investigation — drawn from internal FedRAMP memos, logs, emails, meeting minutes, and interviews with seven former and current government employees and contractors — found breakdowns at every juncture of that process. It also found a remarkable deference to Microsoft, even as the company’s products and practices were central to two of the most damaging cyberattacks ever carried out against the government.

More Proof

By organgtool • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
More proof that it’s better to be entrenched than to be good.

Not surprising

By ebunga • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I mean, this is no big surprise for anyone that has had to deal with this shit on a daily basis. I’m sure we’ve all been forced to use Teams at some point, so just extrapolate that out to their entire tech stack.

Trust

By Snert32 • Score: 5, Funny Thread
If you can’t trust Microsoft to protect you, you can at least trust the government oversight to protect you.

Re:Trust

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Funny Thread

If you can’t trust Microsoft to protect you, you can at least trust the government oversight to protect you.

Yes, governments excel when it comes to committing oversights…

Re:Knotty problem

By dfghjk • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Builders build buildings precisely the same way programmers write programs. That’s how society learns how to set building codes. There are no building codes for programs, that’s the difference.