Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. EFF Is Leaving X
  2. Waymo Is Offering To Help Cities Fix Their Potholes
  3. Skilled Older Workers Turn To AI Training To Stay Afloat
  4. Little Snitch Comes To Linux To Expose What Your Software Is Really Doing
  5. Anthropic Loses Appeals Court Bid To Temporarily Block Pentagon Blacklisting
  6. Apple’s Foldable iPhone Is ‘On Track’ To Launch In September
  7. John Deere To Pay $99 Million In Monumental Right-To-Repair Settlement
  8. ‘Survivor’ Style Corporate Retreat Descends Into Hellish Nightmare
  9. Iran-Linked Hackers Disrupted US Oil, Gas, Water Sites
  10. NYT Claims Adam Back Is Bitcoin Creator Satoshi Nakamoto
  11. Amazon Is Ending Support For Older Kindles
  12. Iran Demands Bitcoin For Ships Passing Hormuz During Ceasefire
  13. Meta Debuts ‘Muse Spark’, First AI Model Under Alexandr Wang
  14. Microsoft Abruptly Terminates VeraCrypt Account, Halting Windows Updates
  15. Valve Releases Native Steam Link App For Apple’s Vision Pro

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.

EFF Is Leaving X

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
After nearly 20 years on the platform, The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) says it is leaving X. “This isn’t a decision we made lightly, but it might be overdue,” the digital rights group said. “The math hasn’t worked out for a while now.” From the report:
We posted to Twitter (now known as X) five to ten times a day in 2018. Those tweets garnered somewhere between 50 and 100 million impressions per month. By 2024, our 2,500 X posts generated around 2 million impressions each month. Last year, our 1,500 posts earned roughly 13 million impressions for the entire year. To put it bluntly, an X post today receives less than 3% of the views a single tweet delivered seven years ago. […]

When you go online, your rights should go with you. X is no longer where the fight is happening. The platform Musk took over was imperfect but impactful. What exists today is something else: diminished, and increasingly de minimis.

EFF takes on big fights, and we win. We do that by putting our time, skills, and our members’ support where they will effect the most change. Right now, that means Bluesky, Mastodon, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, and eff.org. We hope you follow us there and keep supporting the work we do. Our work protecting digital rights is needed more than ever before, and we’re here to help you take back control.

Waymo Is Offering To Help Cities Fix Their Potholes

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Waymo is launching a pilot with cities and Google’s Waze to share pothole data collected by its robotaxis, giving local transportation departments a new way to find and fix road damage more quickly. “We realized, hey, once we’re at scale, we can actually share this data with cities, which is something that they’ve asked for and something that we collect at scale,” said Arielle Fleisher, Waymo’s policy development and research manager. “And so we figured out a way to make that happen.” The Verge reports:
Waymo uses its perception hardware, including cameras and radar, as well as accelerometers and the vehicle’s physical feedback system, to log every pothole its vehicles encounter. These sensors detect physical changes to the road’s surface, such as tilt and movement when the vehicle encounters irregularities. Originally, Waymo knew it needed the ability to detect potholes so it could ensure that its vehicles slowed down to avoid damage or injury to the passenger. Later, the company realized this could be invaluable data for cities, too.

Under the new pilot program, that data will now be made available to cities’ departments of transportation through a free-to-use Waze for Cities platform, which provides access to real-time, user-generated traffic data that officials can then use to make important decisions — such as pothole repair. The platform also allows for Waze users to validate pothole locations through their own observations, decreasing the chances that city officials will be led astray by false positives.

Currently, many cities rely on a patchwork of non-emergency 311 reports and manual inspections to address their pothole problems. Waymo developed this pilot program after collecting years of feedback from city officials about the state of their highways and surface streets. The company is launching the new pilot in the San Francisco Bay Area, as well as Los Angeles, Phoenix, Austin, and Atlanta, where Waymo says it has already helped the city identify approximately 500 potholes. Fleisher said that Waymo would be open to expanding the project to other street maladies based on further feedback from officials. The company is eager to learn what other types of street condition or safety data might be valuable, she said.
“We want to be responsive to cities,” Fleisher said. “They are interested in safer streets and potholes are really a tough challenge for cities. So we really wanted to meet that need as part of our desire to be a good partner and to ultimately advance our goal for safer streets.”

problem

By fluffernutter • Score: 3 Thread
The problem is having money and resources to fix potholes, not knowing where they are.

Skilled Older Workers Turn To AI Training To Stay Afloat

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian:
[Five skilled workers aged 50 and older spoke] to the Guardian about how, after struggling to find work in their fields, they have turned to an emerging and growing category of work: using their expertise to train artificial intelligence models. Known as data annotation, the work involves labeling and evaluating the information used to train AI models like Open AI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini. A doctor, for example, might review how an AI model answers medical questions to flag incorrect or unsafe responses and suggest better ones, helping the system learn how to generate more accurate and reliable responses. The ultimate goal of training is to level up AI models until they’re capable of doing a job as well as a human could — meaning they could someday replace some of these human workers.

The companies behind AI training, such as Mercor, GlobalLogic, TEKsystems, micro1 and Alignerr, operate large contractor networks staffed by people like Ciriello. Their clients include tech giants like OpenAI, Google and Meta, academic researchers and industries including healthcare and finance. For experienced professionals, AI training contracts can be a side hustle — or a temporary fallback following a layoff — where top experts can, in some cases, earn over $180 an hour. But that’s on the high end. For some older workers […], it represents another thing entirely: a last refuge in a brutal job market that is harder to stay in, or re-enter, the older they get. For many of them, whether or not they’re training their AI replacements in their professions is besides the point. They need the work now.

[…] “There’s just a lot of desperation out there,” Johnson said. As opportunities narrow, many turn to what Joanna Lahey, a professor at Texas A&M University who studies age discrimination and labor outcomes, calls “bridge jobs” — lower-paying, less demanding roles that help workers stay financially afloat as they approach retirement. Historically, that meant taking temp assignments, retail and fast-food work and gig roles like Uber and food delivery. Now, for skilled workers — engineers, lawyers, nurses or designers, for example — using their expertise for AI data training is becoming the new bridge job. "[AI] training work may be better in some ways than those earlier alternatives,” Lahey told the Guardian.

AI training can offer flexibility, quick income and intellectual engagement. But it’s often a clear step down. Professionals in fields such as software development, medicine or finance typically earn six-figure salaries that come with benefits and paid leave, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. According to online job postings, AI training gigs start at $20 an hour, with pay increasing to between $30 and $40 an hour. In some cases, AI trainers with coveted subject matter expertise can earn over $100 an hour. AI training is contract-based, though, meaning the pay and hours are unstable, and it often doesn’t come with benefits.

Fuck the Nazi Guardian

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
Fuck the Nazi Guardian.

Use it to know what anti-semitic attacks are being planned in the UK, but not for factual, unbiased reporting. They gave up on that long ago.

Re:Fuck the Nazi Guardian

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Hi! American here. You appear to have committed a small typographical error. In actuality, the organizations using violence to enact the cultural destruction of the Western world are in fact fully governmental, and they are using immigrants as scapegoats and victims to satisfy the atavistic bloodlust of their pig-ignorant supporters. Don’t fret, easy mistake to make!

Little Snitch Comes To Linux To Expose What Your Software Is Really Doing

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Little Snitch, the well known macOS tool that shows which applications are connecting to the internet, is now being developed for Linux. The developer says the project started after experimenting with Linux and realizing how strange it felt not knowing what connections the system was making. Existing tools like OpenSnitch and various command line utilities exist, but none provided the same simple experience of seeing which process is connecting where and blocking it with a click. The Linux version uses eBPF for kernel level traffic interception, with core components written in Rust and a web based interface that can even monitor remote Linux servers.

During testing on Ubuntu, the developer noticed the system was relatively quiet on the network. Over the course of a week, only nine system processes made internet connections. By comparison, macOS reportedly showed more than one hundred processes communicating externally. Applications behave similarly across platforms though. Launching Firefox immediately triggered telemetry and advertising related connections, while LibreOffice made no network connections at all during testing. The early release is meant primarily as a transparency tool to show what software is doing on the network rather than a hardened security firewall.

lsof -i ?

By Fly Swatter • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I guess this will be logging that type of data, so another data logger.

Re:Is there a windows version

By drinkypoo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

You can’t trust the Windows kernel, so you need a component external to the system as well.

Wireshark - ?

By evil_aaronm • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Isn’t this what Wireshark is for? Or at least one of its many purposes?

Re:Wireshark - ?

By SumDog • Score: 5, Informative Thread
LittleSnitch (and I guess open snitch?) show you whenever a process attempts to make an outbound connection and lets you define a rule about if you want to allow it. It’s not just a monitor, it actively forces you to approve or deny every program’s connection to the Internet the first time you run it.

Used to use Norton for this

By AndrewZX • Score: 3 Thread
In the dial up era Norton utilities would track and optionally block apps connecting to the internet. This was for Windows.

Anthropic Loses Appeals Court Bid To Temporarily Block Pentagon Blacklisting

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A federal appeals court denied Anthropic’s bid to temporarily block the Pentagon’s blacklisting, meaning the company remains shut out of Defense Department contracts while the case continues, even though a separate court has allowed other federal agencies to keep using Claude for now. CNBC reports:
“In our view, the equitable balance here cuts in favor of the government,” the appeals court said in its decision. “On one side is a relatively contained risk of financial harm to a single private company. On the other side is judicial management of how, and through whom, the Department of War secures vital AI technology during an active military conflict. For that reason, we deny Anthropic’s motion for a stay pending review on the merits.” With the split decisions by the two courts, Anthropic is excluded from DOD contracts but is able to continue working with other government agencies while litigation plays out. Defense contractors will be prohibited from using Claude in their work with the agency, but they can use it for other cases.

[…] In the ruling on Wednesday, the court acknowledged that Anthropic “will likely suffer some degree of irreparable harm absent a stay,” but that the company’s interests “seem primarily financial in nature.” While the company claimed the DOD was standing in the way of its right to free speech, “Anthropic does not show that its speech has been chilled during the pendency of this litigation,” the order said. Because of the harm Anthropic is likely to suffer, the appeals court said “substantial expedition is warranted.”

An Anthropic spokesperson said in a statement after the ruling that the company is “grateful the court recognized these issues need to be resolved quickly” and that it’s “confident the courts will ultimately agree that these supply chain designations were unlawful.” “While this case was necessary to protect Anthropic, our customers, and our partners, our focus remains on working productively with the government to ensure all Americans benefit from safe, reliable AI,” Anthropic said.

Financial in nature, no kidding?

By drinkypoo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

In the ruling on Wednesday, the court acknowledged that Anthropic “will likely suffer some degree of irreparable harm absent a stay,” but that the company’s interests “seem primarily financial in nature.”

Yeah, the company’s interests are financial. That’s what companies are for. The military’s interests are also financial. People may think they’re enlisting to serve their country, but they’re really serving oligarchs. We have to blow up the middle east so we can rebuild it in our image — at great expense… and benefit to corporations like Halliburton who get awarded the no-bid contracts (sometimes literally, sometimes figuratively - I’m picking on Halliburton here not just because they deserve it in general, but because they were declared to be the only corporations capable of doing the job the last time around, short-circuiting the legally mandated bidding process.)

Re:Financial in nature, no kidding?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

All ACs are the same LLM as far as I’m concerned.

More Blatant Corruption

By bussdriver • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Low information people don’t see anything getting worse because for them nothing has changed; they were ignorant before and they are ignorant now it’s 5000% worse, they can’t see any difference in the 2% of information they ingest.

So much widespread corruption so frequent that not only can’t the media report on it fast enough (even if they were fully and honestly doing their jobs) it’s also so much that it is just like the big lie psychology from the Nazi era — people can’t believe it’s possible to be so extreme. They can’t be lying that much… so they can’t be corrupting that much… but it’s that and more. We’re all being reduced to low information with this DoS on our society; and technology is at the heart of all the problems helping force multiply evil.

If this was a REAL national security threat like they claim in order to ban them so extremely, this would be a huge scandal because the company had it’s hands all over government already. We know it’s all BS and so do the judges and the burden should be on the crooks to prove their dishonest decisions. This reminds me of how Amazon cloud was kept out of government out of spite and MS was chosen when there was obviously no contest which service was superior (putting critical infrastructure on a cloud service being foolish is a whole other subject… don’t give me that “but my bucket is encrypted”, when you seriously shouldn’t even put the system online at all.)

Re:More Blatant Corruption

By ClickOnThis • Score: 4, Informative Thread

So much widespread corruption so frequent that not only can’t the media report on it fast enough (even if they were fully and honestly doing their jobs) it’s also so much that it is just like the big lie psychology from the Nazi era — people can’t believe it’s possible to be so extreme.

The real opposition is the media. And the way to deal with them is to flood the zone with shit. — Steve Bannon

Just saturate the news cycle, and any bad news will disappear in 24 hours. That has been Trump’s strategy, going back at least to 2017.

Dept. of War?

By gkelley • Score: 3 Thread
The appeals court stated in it’s ruling “the Department of War secures ....” I’m surprised they used the name Dept. of War. My understanding was that it’s still the Dept of Defense until Congress changes the name, regardless of what Kegseth says. For the appeals court to use that term in a legal document says more about the person that wrote that opinion. “Only Congress has the authority to formally and permanently change the name of a US Cabinet department, as these departments are established by statute. While a president can use an executive order to assign a secondary or colloquial name to an agency, they cannot legally change its official statutory title without Congressional action”

Apple’s Foldable iPhone Is ‘On Track’ To Launch In September

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says Apple’s foldable iPhone is still “on track” for a September unveiling alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup. 9to5Mac reports:
The report notes that Apple’s stock took a hit earlier today after Nikkei Asia indicated the iPhone Fold was having serious production issues. Clearly, sources within Apple were motivated to share positive news via Gurman. Not long ago, Gurman himself said that he was expecting an iPhone Fold release date that was a little bit later than iPhone 18 Pro. That’s still very possible, but it sounds like Apple is internally feeling optimistic about its targeted September launch.

The report continues: “While the complexity of the new display and materials may limit initial supply for several weeks, Apple is currently operating with a plan to put the device on sale around the same time — or very soon after — the new non-foldable models, the people said.” Gurman adds an important qualifier: “Still, the release is six months away and production has yet to ramp up. That means the timing isn’t final.”

Can always get an iPhone SE

By drnb • Score: 3 Thread

Apple’s foldable iPhone is still “on track” for a September unveiling alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup

No problem, I was happy with the SE in the past. I can always return to that line if the options are only “fold” or “pro” among the newer models.

iPhone Fold 44

By ZiggyZiggyZig • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I for one am waiting for the release of that specific version, because the name will allow me to impress potential mates, like so:

- hey babe, check out my iPhone Fold Fourty-Four!

*potential mate walks out, upset at my humor*

… OK, maybe I’ll buy a Samsung S66 instead.

Can they land the use case?

By shilly • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

That’s what I’ll be interested in. Form following function and all that

Sometimes I hate the direction of tech

By satanicat • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s funny, common tech. (phones, computers, laptops, wearables) has kind of hit a pinnacle for me.

The Neo is everything I wanted my ideated s10 to be like 15 years ago, or whenever that was.
Modern cell phones are marvels. Great battery life, fantastic cameras, dare I say, the internet in your pocket, basically anywhere…
I’ve got a super-computer in my home office, especially by the standards that got me into software, and back in the late 90s my computer was fast enough for me then.

Sometimes I feel like I’m the only sane person, which is a good indicator I’m the crazy one I suppose.

For me a foldable phone was the Motorola razor, the one with physical buttons. And in my opinion it was a great phone.

Every now and again something comes along that I really wish would be a shorter lived trend, but it never goes away. Foldable screens are up there with “the notch (in the Mac world)" and “The Ribbon UI ( in windows)". I have this feeling it’s not going away…

Two screens?

By bradley13 • Score: 3 Thread
The foldables I have seen have been…unimpressive. In particular, after they age a bit, there is an irritating distortion at the fold. I wonder if having two screens (which would show two different apps) wouldn’t be better.

John Deere To Pay $99 Million In Monumental Right-To-Repair Settlement

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Drive:
Farmers have been fighting John Deere for years over the right to repair their equipment, and this week, they finally reached a landmark settlement. While the agricultural manufacturing giant pointed out in a statement that this is no admission of wrongdoing, it agreed to pay $99 million into a fund for farms and individuals who participated in a class action lawsuit. Specifically, that money is available to those involved who paid John Deere’s authorized dealers for large equipment repairs from January 2018. This means that plaintiffs will recover somewhere between 26% and 53% of overcharge damages, according to one of the court documents (PDF) — far beyond the typical amount, which lands between 5% and 15%.

The settlement also includes an agreement by Deere to provide “the digital tools required for the maintenance, diagnosis, and repair” of tractors, combines, and other machinery for 10 years. That part is crucial, as farmers previously resorted to hacking their own equipment’s software just to get it up and running again. John Deere signed a memorandum of understanding in 2023 that partially addressed those concerns, providing third parties with the technology to diagnose and repair, as long as its intellectual property was safeguarded. Monday’s settlement seems to represent a much stronger (and legally binding) step forward.
The report notes that a judge’s approval of the settlement is still required but likely to happen. John Deere also faces another lawsuit by the U.S. FTC, accusing the company of forcing farmers to use its authorized dealer network and driving up their costs for parts and repairs.

Good!

By T34L • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Now lets bring these requirements into law, permanently, across all industrial and consumer devices.

Any obstacle to repair and maintenance other than the inherent difficulty of the operation is anticonsumerist and in the long run, economically damaging (and many of the inherent difficulties are as well, but we gotta start somewhere).

In other words,

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Informative Thread

… plaintiffs will recover somewhere between 26% and 53% of overcharge damages, according to one of the court documents (PDF) — far beyond the typical amount, which lands between 5% and 15%.

So John “nothing scams like a” Deere gets to keep between 47% and 74% of their ill-gotten gains, minus legal fees which are undoubtedly a small fraction of their total take. Who says crime doesn’t pay?

It’s good news that they have to provide the digital tools. However, TFA says Deere must “make Repair Resources—which permit Deere Large Ag Equipment to be maintained, diagnosed, and repaired such that they can be operated in the manner for which they were designed—available to every Owner, Lessor, and IRP on a license or subscription basis on Fair and Reasonable Terms”. I say “fuck that noise”. Deere should be forced to provide those things free of charge as an additional punishment.

I’m getting sick and tired of all the corporate fuckery that lets the bastards steal from customers hand-over-fist, then give back a fraction of what they stole and call the matter settled. Fuck John Deere and the tractor they rode in on.

Cost of doing business.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This means that plaintiffs will recover somewhere between 26% and 53% of overcharge damages, according to one of the court documents (PDF) — far beyond the typical amount, which lands between 5% and 15%.

Anything short of 100% is merely a cost of doing business. This is no victory, this is yet another loss in the long history of losses against corporations.

Re:Good!

By gtall • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yes, it should be. Although even with a law, RICO enforcement (for anything outside of political retribution) will have to wait until the U.S. gets a real Justice Dept. reconstituted to replace the current rump JD.

Re:Good!

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

In some cases devices, even repairable ones, defend themselves against the economics of being repaired. I ran into this with a wet/dry vacuum recently. Kärcher is a company known for having every single part available to purchase individually. You can repair literally any Kärcher product. So when the switch (internal mechanism on the power control circuit board) broke I had the option of …

Buying a replacement WD5 power board for 93EUR + 20EUR shipping (113EUR total).
Buying a whole replacement WD5 for 145EUR which includes 2 new filter bags (13EUR) and 1 new HEPA filter (18EUR), which brings the cost of the vacuum + all accessories minus the consumable ones to (145-13-18 = 114EUR).

So … on a related note does anyone want a broken vacuum cleaner? Free to a good home. All it will cost you is nearly the price of an entire new one to get it working again…

‘Survivor’ Style Corporate Retreat Descends Into Hellish Nightmare

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A $500,000 “Survivor”-style corporate retreat for 120 Plex employees in Honduras "turned into a week-long disaster involving illness, wild animals, armed guards, and employees stranded on a remote island,” reports the Daily Beast. The CEO was bedridden by E. coli, staff were collapsing in brutal heat during Navy SEAL-led drills, there were fire ant attacks, uncooked food, and failing utilities. At one point, a porcupine even crashed through the ceiling of a guest’s room. Here’s an excerpt from the report:
Tech media company Plex flew its 120 employees to a Honduran resort in 2017 for what was billed as a Survivor-style getaway. They called it "Plexcon.” The first harbinger of trouble was an email that arrived before the group departed, informing them that the hotel manager and chef had both quit within days of each other. Things went sharply downhill from there.

CEO Keith Valory, 54, had flown out a day early, intending to channel his inner Jeff Probst and welcome his staff off the buses like a game show host. Instead, he spent the arrival morning flat on his back. “I got E. coli, which is maybe the worst thing you could get, possibly, ever,” Valory told the Wall Street Journal this week. “Just as people were arriving on the buses, I was like, ‘Uh oh.’ I lost 8 or 10 pounds. They had a doctor come to me, which apparently is pretty standard. They nailed an IV bag to the bedpost.”

With the CEO incapacitated, chief product officer and co-founder Scott Olechowski, 52, stepped in to run proceedings — beginning with a forced eating challenge in which one employee had to consume a dead tarantula. […] Sean Hoff, 42, founder of Moniker Partners, the independent retreat agency that planned the trip, was running himself ragged attempting damage control — the showers, water, and electricity kept cutting out. […] Meanwhile, senior software engineer Rick Phillips, 53, was trying to sleep when he heard a crash in his room. He ignored it until morning. “I got up and went over to get in the shower, and there was a porcupine,” he said. “It must have climbed a tree and fallen through the ceiling.”

I was there

By gbooker • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
So the first question, why is this a news story now when it occurred in 2017?

My best guess is that with the second season of Jury Duty being about a corporate retreat, the WSJ (who wrote the first article on this) contacted Moniker as they organize such retreats (and have organized them for Plex for many years). I expect they ask about bad experiences and this trip immediately came to mind.

Did this all happen?
Yes Also, I was talking with Sean (Hoff) just over a year ago and he told me other things that happened that I likely shouldn’t repeat. This trip was extremely stressful for him which likely ranks it very high for worst trips for him.
The shower porcupine mostly became a topic of laughter as it started contained and remained so.

120 employees?
Uh, I think that’s a confusion with Plex’s current employee count and not what it was in 2017. This was before the AVOD side of the business and everyone worked on Personal Media so the company was much smaller then. I think it was ~70 or so then. Now the Personal Media side of the business is significantly smaller than what it was back then.

How was it overall?
Mostly it was a fun trip. There were several things we did have to concern ourselves with which did detract from the trip. Yes the water broke all the time but also we didn’t want to drink it anyway (I never did; didn’t even brush my teeth with the water from the tap). There was also a concern about mosquitos especially since Zika was spreading there. We couldn’t really go into the ocean because there were jellyfish all over the place. On the planes to Utila (the island in the article), looking out the window I could see nothing but water and jellyfish.

How was it for me?
Mostly it was fine. I did prepare by getting up to date on all my vaccinations beforehand, getting malaria medication, mosquito repellent, etc. I did make the mistake of eating the salad on my last day so I got sick when I got home. Fortunately I had gone to a doctor who specialized in travel beforehand so I had medication on hand already. Never had it as bad as Keith.
Honestly, the most dangerous I felt on the trip was the bus from the airport to the resort.

Navy SEAL drills work best for Navy SEALs

By Beeftopia • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I read Richard Marcinko’s leadership book (Marcinko was the SEAL who founded DEVGRU, the SEAL’s most elite unit, aka Team Six). From it, I concluded this: Applying Navy SEAL principles to lead people works best when the people are physically and mentally built like Navy SEALs. Most people are not, not even elite company CEO’s and their staff.

It becomes a game of square peg / round hole.

Re:Yeah

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Funny Thread

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy defines the marketing division of the Sirius Cybernetic Corporation as “a bunch of mindless jerks who’ll be the first against the wall when the revolution comes,”

Re:Slashdot - ancient history for nerds.

By vbdasc • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Because their trauma finally wore off.

Re:Yeah

By mu22le • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Curiously, an edition of the Encyclopedia Galactica which fell through a rift in the time-space continuum from 1000 years in the future describes the Marketing Department of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation as: “A bunch of mindless jerks who were the first against the wall when the revolution came.”

Iran-Linked Hackers Disrupted US Oil, Gas, Water Sites

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The FBI says (PDF) Iran-linked hackers disrupted internet-connected systems used by U.S. oil, gas, and water companies. Even with the recent two-week ceasefire between Iran and the United States and Israel, hackers backing Tehran say they won’t end their retaliatory cyberattacks. The Hill reports:
The report warned that similar companies across the country should be aware of an increased push by hackers to take over programmable logic controller (PLC) systems, which can be used to digitally control physical machinery from remote locations. Secure internet access for PLCs from one company, Rockwell Automation, were removed by Iran-linked coders who then “maliciously interacted with project files and altered data,” according to the report. Hackers first gained access to some of the platforms in January of last year. All access to compromised platforms ended in March, the report said. The FBI said the move resulted in “operational disruption” and “financial loss.”

[…] Rockwell Automation wasn’t the only company to recently face cyberattacks from Iran-linked hackers. Stryker, a major U.S. medical device maker, was targeted by Iran-affiliated coders in mid-March. It was unclear if physical operations were affected by the security breach. FBI Director Kash Patel was personally impacted by hackers who leaked his emails and records related to his personal travels and business from more than 10 years ago. […]

The FBI urged companies to adopt network defenders and multifactor authentication to prevent future attacks. Tuesday’s report was published alongside the National Security Agency, the Department of Energy, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. “Government and experts have been warning about internet connected systems for years, and how vulnerable they are,” one source familiar with the federal investigation into the hacks told CNN. Many companies have “ealready removed those systems and followed the guidance,” the person added.

Re:We cut back on cyber security

By Samantha Wright • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Ironically this war has worked out well for Russia—it draws media attention away from Ukraine while simultaneously expending supplies of Patriot missiles and other munitions, and the spike in oil prices has basically wiped out the benefits of crushing them with sanctions for the past four years.

These are just some of the ‘miracles’ you can accomplish when you let Bibi Netanyahu start another war so he can keep postponing the conclusion of his corruption trial

Re:We cut back on cyber security

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
There’s nothing ironic about it they got what they paid for. People forget that Trump was a Russian stooge for ages. The reason he wasn’t bankrupted during his most incompetent business deals is because he was laundering money for the Russian mafia.

Never mind the fact that Russia and the Israeli government both have massive amounts of dirt on Trump thanks to his long-term friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. You would have to be incredibly naive not to know that the Russian government has evidence of trump raping kids. You don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to figure that out. We learn from the Epstein files that the Russians provided a lot of girls to Jeffrey Epstein and we have eight credible women accusing Trump of raping them when they were children details of which have been corroborated by several journalists.

The problem is you can lay out all the evidence and proof of that but nobody is going to believe you because it’s too fucking insane to think that we elected a pedophile who is under the control of a hostile foreign Nation to be president of the United states. I don’t think the human brain is capable of grasping the enormity of that.

You get the same problem with things like the Iran Contra affair or how Ronald Reagan arranged for Americans to be held hostage so that he could win his election. It’s just something that you don’t want to believe is true no matter how true it is because you don’t want to face a world that fucked up.

Re:More bombing....

By stabiesoft • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The only thing I can figure is when trump was a child, daddy would pay people to let his son beat them up and not fight back against donnie so that donnie could be gloriously victorious. And now as an adult, he thinks that is the way it works. Sort of a variant of the whipping boy for the king’s kid.

Re:The Fucking Big Idiots say

By hyades1 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

As a Canadian, I look at the US and I can’t help but think, “It might have taken a while, but the Confederacy has finally won the Civil War”.

Re:We cut back on cyber security

By gtall • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I thought it would be good to keep a running list of the Benefits to the Epstein-Iran War:

1. Iran gets control of the Strait of Hormuz
2. Iran gets its oil restrictions lifted by the U.S.
3. Russia gets its oil restrictions lifted by the U.S.
4. The Iranian regime gets stronger and can now spend more on the Basiji to keep control
5. The Iranian regime now gets to tax tankers going through the Strait.
6. American and world consumers get higher gas prices
7. American and world consumers get higher prices for everything as the higher oil prices filter through
8. NATO has been weakened due to la Presidenta’s hissy fits
9. The world has learned ways of disentangling themselves from the U.S. and its economy
10. Congress is even more diminished since they failed to step up and stop that dementia patient
11. Other nations no longer look to the U.S. for inspiration thus leaving the world at the mercy of China and Russia
12. Other nations can no longer trust the U.S. political system which has been show to be brittle and susceptible to authoritarian takeover
13. Other nations can no longer trust the American people who could just as easily elect another lunatic

NYT Claims Adam Back Is Bitcoin Creator Satoshi Nakamoto

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A New York Times investigation by John Carreyrou claims a British cryptographer named Adam Back is the strongest circumstantial candidate yet for being Satoshi Nakamoto. The report citing overlaps in writing style, ideology, technical background, and old posts that outlined key parts of Bitcoin years before its launch. Carreyrou is a renowned investigative journalist and author, best known for exposing the massive fraud at Theranos while at the Wall Street Journal. Here’s an excerpt from the report:
… As anyone steeped in Bitcoin lore will tell you, Satoshi was a master at the art of maintaining anonymity on the internet, leaving few, if any, digital footprints behind. But Satoshi did leave behind a corpus of texts, including a nine-page white paper (PDF) outlining his invention and his many posts on the Bitcointalk forum, an online message board where users gathered to discuss the digital currency’s software, economics and philosophy. And that corpus, it turned out, had expanded significantly during the impostor’s civil trial when Martti Malmi, a Finnish programmer who collaborated with Satoshi in Bitcoin’s early days, released a trove of hundreds of emails he had exchanged with him. Emails Satoshi sent to other early Bitcoin adopters had surfaced before, but none came close in volume to the Malmi dump. If Satoshi was ever going to be found, I was convinced the key lay somewhere in these texts.

Then again, others must have gone down this road before me. Journalists, academics and internet sleuths had been trying to identify Satoshi for 16 years. During that span, more than 100 names had been put forward, including those of an Irish cryptography student, an unemployed Japanese American engineer, a South African criminal mastermind and the mathematician portrayed in the movie “A Beautiful Mind.” The most alluring theories had focused on coincidences that aligned with what little was known about Satoshi: a particular code-writing style, a mysterious work history, an expertise in Bitcoin’s key technical concepts, an anti-government worldview. But they had run aground under the weight of an alibi or some other piece of inconsistent or contrary evidence. Each failure had been met with glee by many members of the Bitcoin community. As they liked to point out, only Satoshi could definitively prove his identity by moving some of his coins. Any evidence short of that would be circumstantial.

It seemed foolish to think that I could somehow crack a case that had confounded so many others. But I craved the thrill of a big, challenging story. So I decided to try once more to unmask Bitcoin’s mysterious creator.
Back, for his part, denies being Satoshi, writing in a post on X: “i’m not satoshi, but I was early in laser focus on the positive societal implications of cryptography, online privacy and electronic cash, hence my ~1992 onwards active interest in applied research on ecash, privacy tech on cypherpunks list which led to hashcash and other ideas.”

clickbait article

By etash • Score: 5, Informative Thread
every year or so we’ll have one such article claiming to have discovered satoshi’s identity .

on the one hand

By Monkey-Man2000 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
On the one hand, it’s kind of an asshole move to publicly reveal someone that would prefer a private life. On the other hand, Satoshi supposedly has $138 billion in Bitcoin and could crash the markets with rapid divestment. Maybe it is in the public’s interest to know who they are? Unlike Banksy…

Re:on the one hand

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

On the other hand, Satoshi supposedly has $138 billion in Bitcoin and could crash the markets with rapid divestment.

The idea that someone could have access to a vast sum of wealth, but chooses not to, makes for a good story, but I’d say it’s more plausible he’s dead.

Re:Purpose

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Publicly traded US companies have to follow US laws on disclosures. Lying to the US government as a company officer who is a foreign national being in a different country isn’t magically protected when there’s an extradition treaty.

They’re always wrong

By ebunga • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Looking at the foundation of bitcoin, it’s clear the person that created it was trolling techno-libertarians. They disappeared as soon as they realized their creation was taken seriously rather than as the obvious joke it really is.

Amazon Is Ending Support For Older Kindles

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Starting May 20th, Amazon will stop Kindle Store access for Kindle and Kindle Fire devices released in 2012 and earlier. After that date, those devices will “no longer be able to purchase, borrow, or download new content.” Owners can still read content already on the device, but if an affected device is reset or deregistered after the cutoff, it can’t be re-registered. The Verge reports:
The complete list of affected devices goes all the way back to the original Kindle that launched in 2007 with a full keyboard and scroll wheel. […] Amazon will be notifying affected users over email ahead of May 20th with an explanation of what their older devices can and cannot do. Pre-2012 Kindle Fire devices will be subjected to the same limitations as Kindle e-readers when it comes to books, but other apps and Amazon services on those devices won’t be impacted.

For longtime users wanting to take the opportunity to upgrade to newer Kindle hardware, Amazon will offer a 20 percent discount on new Kindle devices and a $20 ebook credit that will be added to their accounts after upgrading, valid until June 20th, 2026, at 11:59PM PT. Their older purchases will be available on new devices as long as they log in to the same account they’ve been using for the past 14 years or more.

Re:What about epubs you own yourself?

By willoughby • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You can sideload ebooks, but not in epub format. You must convert the epub to an Amazon format - mobi or, for later Kindles, AZW3. Many programs are available for this kind of conversion. Or for a full featured ebook library manager, check out a great program called Calibre. Calibre will convert an epub to mobi on-the-fly & put it on your kindle with just one click.

Re:14 years?

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I bought some paper books from Amazon in 1998 and they still work like the day I bough them.

Excellent support after 28 years.

For the record,

By s0nicfreak • Score: 4, Informative Thread
this just means you can’t purchase, borrow, or download new content for those devices through Amazon. And this was already the case for all the Kindles that don’t have wifi, since they killed the “download & transfer via USB” option last year.

I’m sure the thought is that people will buy new Kindles - and I’m sure many people will, especially with the confusing way this news is being shared. But pre-2012 Kindles still work, just with no reason to buy books from Amazon. Seems stupid to me to turn away all the people that want to keep buying books but don’t want to buy a new Kindle (and really there’s several reasons to not, some of which might be accessibility issues for some people; for example they replaced the text-to-speech feature with a pitiful, cumbersome screen reader after they bought Audible), but I guess they’re counting on people not being able to figure out they can keep using them.

Re:So what

By Samantha Wright • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

My Kindle 3 died recently, and I replaced it with a basic Kobo Clara. The browser is a mixed blessing (very buggy), but certain familiar mods—custom screensavers and ssh are built in. It was very weird to buy a device that wants to be hacked! It literally comes with a file called “ssh-disabled” that contains the instructions “rename this file to ssh-enabled and reboot,” no jailbreak required.

Once again, books are better

By quonset • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

You’ll never see a publisher say, “Your book is more than ten years old. You can’t use it because we say so.”

Nor do you have to worry about a book being in the “wrong” format, or only available in select formats.

When you’re done with a book you can freely give it to anyone you want without any third party being involved.

Books are just better.

Iran Demands Bitcoin For Ships Passing Hormuz During Ceasefire

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Financial Times:
Iran will demand that shipping companies pay tolls in cryptocurrency for laden oil tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz (source paywalled; alternative source), as it seeks to retain control over passage through the key waterway during the two-week ceasefire. Hamid Hosseini, a spokesperson for Iran’s Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Products Exporters’ Union, told the FT on Wednesday that Iran wanted to collect tolling fees from any tanker passing and to assess each ship.

“Iran needs to monitor what goes in and out of the strait to ensure these two weeks aren’t used for transferring weapons,” said Hosseini, whose industry association works closely with the state. “Everything can pass through, but the procedure will take time for each vessel, and Iran is not in a rush,” he added. […] Hosseini said that each tanker must email authorities about its cargo, after which Iran will inform them of the toll to be paid in digital currencies.

He said that the tariff is $1 per barrel of oil, adding that empty tankers can pass freely. “Once the email arrives and Iran completes its assessment, vessels are given a few seconds to pay in Bitcoin, ensuring they can’t be traced or confiscated due to sanctions,” Hosseini added.

That’s about right

By abulafia • Score: 5, Informative Thread
And it didn’t even really pull the heat of the Epstein stuff, so it failed there, too.

On the bright side, the dipshit also badly damaged his coalition.

But yes, Stumpy: - spent upwards of 12 digits on war porn without any plan,
- got badly outplayed by Iran on one side, Israel on the other, and China playing adult in the room,
- destroyed the Freedom of Navigation the world depends on for trade the US used to guarantee,
- spit in the face of our allies, yet again,
- demonstrated to the world that the US cannot be trusted to keep commitments,
- turned the most active Iranian protests against the regime in decades into very public demonstrations defending it.

Oh - and we’re not done. Iran says the ceasefire isn’t on yet, because US/Israel is violating several of the provisions, and the Strait is not, in fact, open.

This is that fucking idiot failure Don Trump’s gift for Americans.

Re:Pyrrhic Victory

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
First, you’re right. And second: it gets better.

The former leader of Iran was 86 years old, in failing health, and facing increasing internal opposition despite repeated crackdowns. By killing him, the US turned him into a martyr, not just for hardcore loyalists in Iran, but for many others across the entire Middle East. And his replacement not only has political, ideological, and religious motivation, but: the US made it personal.

Thanks to incompetent drunk Pete Hegseth, the US bombed a school and killed a lot of little girls. That won’t be forgotten for a long, long time. Not only has it enraged much of the population, but it undercut the opposition movement by providing fresh evidence that the US isn’t and has never been on the side of the Iranian people.

The parade of unhinged threats from Trump has been an absolute gift to Iran’s strategic and tactical military planners. if the ceasefire holds for a while, they can use the time to bolster defenses in at least some of the right places, because Trump gave them a target list. Politically, it nicely demonstrates to everyone — including US allies — that Trump is a psychotic moron who cannot be trusted. I think at this point that if he decides to pull the US out of NATO, they might offer to hold the door open for him. He is quite clearly demented AND insane: it’s obvious on inspection.

There’s a reason Iran wants to be paid in cryptocurrency, aka fake money for criminals. Do you know which country really REALLY wants cryptocurrency, lots of it? Which country has knocked itself out running numerous large-scale operations to get it? North Korea. That’s the reason: Iran no doubt already has a deal in place for weapons, and the North Koreans are happy to supply them because they’ve very interested in finding out how those weapons perform in live combat against the US military.

Bottom line: the US lost in every possible way, and provided a textbook counterexample to the principles expounded in The Art of War.

Re:Done.

By skam240 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

3) It was before, and like Hamas, it is so deeply rooted in society that you have to kill the population, e.g. commit genocide to get it out.

Or Israel could stop regularly provoking such groups so the long healing process could actually begin. That’s probably a long shot though unless we force them by threatening their aid but I don’t see either political party doing that despite them avidly committing war crimes.

Re:Trump likes that idea… for himself

By AnOnyxMouseCoward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
You have to wonder what happens behind closed doors sometimes… I don’t know that Trump understands anything at all of the current situation. From where I sit here’s what happened:

The Israelis build a nice presentation that tells Trump he’ll be the world savior if he attacks Iran, and that success is guaranteed. The US army generals disagree, but Bibi Netanyahu worked at BCG, a top consulting firm, and there’s no way his folks aren’t convincing. Trump buys it and thinks it’ll also stop people from talking about him being a pedo, so launches missiles. A few weeks in he realizes it’s not working out, victory is taking time, and the narrative is changing (aka the stock market is crumbling, which is one of the few things he cares about). He asks his team to fix it, and so negotiations start. Negotiations aren’t going well, but he’s pushing his team of sycophants to do something while posting on social media how this is a beautiful war, some say it’s the most beautiful, and Iran will pay and be destroyed and also Allahu Akbar. His team manages to have a draft of a beginning of an understanding with Iran, so immediately that’s announced via the official governmental channel that is Truth Social (also called Pravda by the USSR). In the meantime the peace plan has barely any shape and is not in any way advantageous to the US, but there’s a whole room of sycophants telling Trump “we’re winning”. Cue Trump’s announcement that the First Epstein War is over.

Re:They still want tolls? They’ll get bombs, inste

By WaffleMonster • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Another “Say one word that could even be interpreted as not support Ukraine and I’ll accuse you of Putin worship.” guy. Yeah, great logic, moron. Everyone at … is a “Putin worshiper”. Very rational and well thought out…

Oh give it a rest Spirals. You are not merely opposed to war you actively support Russia and regurgitate every bit of false Russian propaganda there is while demonstrating guttural hatred of Ukraine like any good self respecting vatnik.

“Now, those women they sent away for safe keeping better learn to clean house and pole dance at speed, because daddy isn’t coming home. He got blown up in a proxy war back home. Bad decisions to prolong wars have consequences (and so do foreign warmongers interfering, like you are advocating for). Ukrainian women are going to finish paying the price on strip club runway that Ukrainian men already have paid with their lives. "

“Fuck those beggars. They definitely provoked it with their shelling in Donbas and elsewhere after repeated warnings from Russia to stop.”

“When Ukraine loses and capitulates to Russia they will never get back their lost territory. They probably shouldn’t have been shelling Russians in Donbas and Luhansk and they’d never had the trouble with Russia in the first place.”

“BTW, Ukraine is losing badly and this whole idiotic debate is about to end when we properly stop supporting this proxy war and war mongering BS”

“There was no 2014 coup? There was no shelling in Donbas before the war? There was no threat of joining NATO? Russia just invaded because they coveted Ukraine?”

Meta Debuts ‘Muse Spark’, First AI Model Under Alexandr Wang

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Meta has launched Muse Spark, its first major AI model under Alexandr Wang’s leadership. The model was built over the past nine months and is being positioned as a significant step up from Llama 4. Axios reports:
Muse Spark will power queries in the Meta AI app and Meta.ai website immediately, with plans to expand across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. The model accepts voice, text and image inputs, but produces text-only output. […] Meta plans to release a version of Muse Spark under an open-source license.

The model uses a fast mode for casual queries and several reasoning modes. A “shopping mode” highlights how Meta hopes to differentiate itself. It combines large language models with data on user interests and behavior. Over time, the model will also power “features that cite recommendations and content people share across Instagram, Facebook, and Threads,” Meta said in a blog post.
Wang, the 29-year-old entrepreneur who co-founded Scale AI, joined Meta’s “superintelligence” unit last year to help Meta catch up to rival models from OpenAI and Anthropic.

Microsoft Abruptly Terminates VeraCrypt Account, Halting Windows Updates

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Microsoft has apparently terminated the account VeraCrypt uses to sign its Windows drivers and bootloader, leaving the encryption project unable to publish Windows updates and throwing future releases into doubt. VeraCrypt’s developer says Microsoft gave no clear explanation or warning for the move. “I didn’t receive any emails from Microsoft nor any prior warnings,” Mounir Idrassi, VeraCrypt’s developer, told 404 Media. From the report:
VeraCrypt is an open-source tool for encrypting data at rest. Users can create encrypted partitions on their drives, or make individual encrypted volumes to store their files in. Like its predecessor TrueCrypt, which VeraCrypt is based on, it also lets users create a second, innocuous looking volume if they are compelled to hand over their credentials. Last week, Idrassi took to the SourceForge forums to explain why he had been absent for a few months. The most serious challenge, he wrote, “is that Microsoft terminated the account I have used for years to sign Windows drivers and the bootloader.”

“Regarding VeraCrypt, I cannot publish Windows updates. Linux and macOS updates can still be done but Windows is the platform used by the majority of users and so the inability to deliver Windows releases is a major blow to the project,” he continued. “Currently I’m out of options.” Idrassi told 404 Media the termination happened in mid-January. “I was surprised to discover that I could no longer use my account,” he said.

On the forum and in the email to 404 Media, Idrassi shared what he said was the only message he received connected to the account shutdown. “Based on the information you have provided to date, we have determined that your organization does not currently meet the requirements to pass verification. There are no appeals available, we have closed your application,” it reads. Idrassi told 404 Media the message is concerning his company IDRIX. “As you can read in their message, they say that the organization (IDRIX) doesn’t meet their requirements, but I don’t see which requirement IDRIX suddenly stopped meeting,” he said. Idrassi said he has tried contacting Microsoft support, but he received automated responses that he believes contained AI-generated text.

Re: Microsoft issues the Linux keys too

By Viol8 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you think UEFI enhances anything except MSs stranglehold on the PC market then theres a bridge with your name on it.

Other privacy-related projects are also affected

By JaredOfEuropa • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Wireguard, a lightweight and secure VPN
Windscribe, a VPN service.

Re:Microsoft issues the Linux keys too

By tlhIngan • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Microsoft issues the secure boot keys that are used by all Linux distributions.

If they can just arbitrarily yank someone’s keys like this, apparently without explanation or appeal, then what does that mean for those Linux keys? Are they subject to withdrawal for no reason as well?

Incorrect. Microsoft signs the boot shim. This lets you use Secure Boot with the default Microsoft keys you use to boot Windows. So any PC, with Secure Boot enabled, can boot Linux. The keys built into every PC are Microsoft’s, and even if you hard reset the machine, they will revert to those Microsoft keys.

You are encouraged though if you run Linux, to create your own keys, and install them on your PC. Doing so would require you to re-sign the Microsoft bootloader but you are free to use your own keys. The only reason Microsoft signed the shim is because some OEMs do not make it easy to install a third-party key to secure-boot a non-Windows OS. So the Microsoft signed shim means if it can boot Windows, it can boot Linux.

And I say shim because that’s the actual component signed - major Linux distributions re-distributed the signed binary. But it’s bootloader independent - you can use the signed shim to boot your own version of GRUB or other bootloader and continue the secure boot chain if desired. (If you use something like Ubuntu, you’re likely to encounter this if you try to compile your own kernel or module where you then h ave to add a key to the shim so the kernel can run your new module.

Microsoft can stop signing new shims, but that has nothing to do with Secure Boot. It’s just a way so everything that can boot Windows can boot other OSes even if the OEMs lock down the computer.

Big companies often use their own keys for secure boot.

Re:Microsoft issues the Linux keys too

By higuita • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

the secure boot in windows enables other features, but in linux it doesn’t do anything useful… yes, you have the flag of secure boot, but it is not used by almost anything (may exist tools that check this, but not something breaking)

secure boot in linux is mostly useful for (stupid) laptops where you can’t disable secure boot

Re:Dumbasses in charge

By Fly Swatter • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Semicolon says hi.

Valve Releases Native Steam Link App For Apple’s Vision Pro

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Valve has released a native Steam Link beta for Apple Vision Pro, letting users stream their existing Steam games onto a large virtual screen in visionOS. It supports up to 4K resolution and will let you dynamically adjust the curve of the display. The Mac Observer reports:
Steam Link does not support VR titles in this beta, and Valve clearly states that the app is limited to 2D game streaming, but this still opens up a large library of games that users can play on a massive virtual screen inside Vision Pro.

At the same time, Vision Pro already handles 2D media very well, and this update builds on that strength by turning the headset into a portable gaming display that connects directly to your existing setup without needing extra hardware.

You can join the Steam Link beta through TestFlight right now, and this early release shows how Apple Vision Pro continues to expand beyond media into more practical and everyday use cases like gaming.