Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. The Small English Town Swept Up in the Global AI Arms Race
  2. Microsoft’s AI Chief Says All White-Collar Desk Work Will Be Automated Within 18 Months
  3. Britain Lost 14,000 Pubs, a Quarter, in 13 Years
  4. A YouTuber’s $3M Movie Nearly Beat Disney’s $40M Thriller at the Box Office
  5. Blind Listening Test Finds Audiophiles Unable To Distinguish Copper Cable From a Banana or Wet Mud
  6. Micron’s PCIe 6.0 SSD Hits Mass Production at 28 GB/s
  7. 99% of Adults Over 40 Have Shoulder ‘Abnormalities’ on an MRI, Study Finds
  8. China Once Stole Foreign Ideas. Now It Wants To Protect Its Own
  9. Mazda Finally Admits Its Infotainment System Is the Worst
  10. ‘Software Isn’t Dead, But Its Cosy Business Model Might Be’
  11. Valve’s Steam Deck OLED Will Be ‘Intermittently’ Out of Stock Because of the RAM Crisis
  12. Sony Tech Can Identify Original Music in AI-Generated Songs
  13. EU Parliament Blocks AI Features Over Cyber, Privacy Fears
  14. Secondhand Laptop Market Goes ‘Mainstream’ Amid Memory Crunch
  15. The Music Industry Enters Its Less-Is-More Era

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.

The Small English Town Swept Up in the Global AI Arms Race

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Residents of Potters Bar, a small town just north of London, are trying to block what would be one of Europe’s largest data centers from being built on 85 acres of rolling farmland that separates their community from the neighboring village of South Mimms. Multinational operator Equinix acquired the land last October after the local council granted planning permission in January 2025, and the company intends to break ground this year on a development it estimates will cost more than $5 billion.

The UK government’s decision to classify data centers as “critical national infrastructure” and a new “gray belt” land designation that loosens building restrictions on underperforming greenbelt parcels helped clear the path for approval — even though objections from locals outweighed signatures of support by nearly two-to-one during the public consultation. A protest group of more than 1,000 residents has since appealed to a third-party ombudsman and the UK’s Office of Environmental Protection, but has so far failed to overturn the decision.

Microsoft’s AI Chief Says All White-Collar Desk Work Will Be Automated Within 18 Months

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman expects “human-level performance on most, if not all professional tasks” from AI, and believes most work involving “sitting down at a computer” — accounting, legal, marketing, project management — will be fully automated within the next year or 18 months. He pointed to exponential growth in computational power and predicted that creating a new AI model will soon be as easy as “creating a podcast or writing a blog.”

He’s a visionary.

By boxless • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s so stupid. Do you honestly believe this will happen, where real money is on the table?

I am sure there’s nuance: he’s saying it *could* happen, I suppose, and only if companies endorse his view. If they don’t, and stay in the dark ages, then that’s on them.

Sounds like the same drivel we get from Muskie.

He’s probably been told by someone he’s not visionary enough. So he gets out there with some projection, because everyone is doing it, and no one seems to pay a price for getting it wrong.

Good grief.

What About CEOs?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

CEOs seem like the absolute ripest jobs for AI replacement.

Why won’t he consider replacing himself first?

Absurd

By nealric • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Even if all this capability were available today (AI doing most white collar jobs with no need for input or babysitting), most companies can’t even do things like a simple ERP upgrade in 12-18 months. The idea that we could actually implement all of that AI capability in that amount of time is patently absurd.

Re:He’s a visionary.

By Morromist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Muskie really changed the way Americans talk about buisiness.
His success is mostly through massively overhyping and overpromising things, most of which haven’t just missed their deadlines but have never been made.
But that didn’t stop him from becoming the richest due in the world, so why shouldn’t everyone else act the same way? Clearly it works.

Microsoft

By RitchCraft • Score: 3 Thread

Everyone at Microsoft has gone bat shit crazy! Woohoo!

Britain Lost 14,000 Pubs, a Quarter, in 13 Years

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Britain has lost more than 14,000 pubs since 2009, a decline from roughly 54,000 registered public houses and bars to under 40,000 by 2022, according to a new analysis of UK business register data by data analyst Lauren Leek. The North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Midlands lost 25 to 30% of their stock; London saw the smallest decline.

Leek trained a random forest model on 49,840 pubs and found spatial isolation — how far a pub stood from its nearest neighbour — was the single strongest predictor of closure. Median nearest-neighbour distance for surviving pubs is roughly 280 metres; for closed pubs, 640 metres. Each closure pushes remaining pubs further into isolation, a dynamic Leek calls a “spatial death spiral.”

Much of that isolation traces to ownership. Stonegate, Britain’s largest pub company and a holding of PE firm TDR Capital, carries over $4 billion in debt from its 2019 leveraged acquisition of Ei Group. PE-backed and overseas-owned companies now control roughly a quarter to a third of all British pubs.

No money, no friends

By abulafia • Score: 3 Thread
Gosh, maybe somebody should have thought about the poor public house before destroying the economy and telling the rest of the world to fuck off.

It turns out if everyone hates each other and is poor, they don’t hang out in bars much.

Oh well. Maybe if they turn the island into an even poorer, meaner place, the good times will come back.

A YouTuber’s $3M Movie Nearly Beat Disney’s $40M Thriller at the Box Office

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Mark Fischbach, the YouTube creator known as Markiplier who has spent nearly 15 years building an audience of more than 38 million subscribers by playing indie-horror video games on camera, has pulled off something that most independent filmmakers never manage — a self-financed, self-distributed debut feature that has grossed more than $30 million domestically against a $3 million budget.

Iron Lung, a 127-minute sci-fi adaptation of a video game Fischbach wrote, directed, starred in, and edited himself, opened to $18.3 million in its first weekend and has since doubled that figure worldwide in just two weeks, nearly matching the $19.1 million debut of Send Help, a $40 million thriller from Disney-owned 20th Century Studios. Fischbach declined deals from traditional distributors and instead spent months booking theaters privately, encouraging fans to reserve tickets online; when prospective viewers found the film wasn’t screening in their city, they called local cinemas to request it, eventually landing Iron Lung on more than 3,000 screens across North America — all without a single paid media campaign.

Dude he’s a YouTuber

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
A long-standing YouTuber who used his existing audience to promote the movie. He is part of the system. If he did anything that was contrary to or in opposition to the system he would get demonetized and shadowbanned.

We saw this with Patrick Boyle where he did a video about Jeffrey Epstein’s finances that got demonetized without any explanation why. As soon as it was demonetized the views stopped coming in because unless you were subscribed to the channel you didn’t see the video. Demonetized videos do not get promoted by YouTube.

You can change the system from within using voting, at least while you’re still a democracy. But you’re not going to get any miracles out of somebody else’s platform. Although Checkmate Lincolnites did okay with their video.

The hard part is in a post AI world you’re competing with so much slop for attention. The Old guard have built-in audiences, even guys who have been posting for five or six years. But these days it’s really hard to find anything new.

Blind Listening Test Finds Audiophiles Unable To Distinguish Copper Cable From a Banana or Wet Mud

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
A moderator on diyAudio set up an experiment to determine whether listeners could differentiate between audio run through pro audio copper wire, a banana, and wet mud. Spoiler alert: the results indicated that users were unable to accurately distinguish between these different ‘interfaces.’

Pano, the moderator who built the experiment, invited other members on the forum to listen to various sound clips with four different versions: one taken from the original CD file, with the three others recorded through 180cm of pro audio copper wire, via 20cm of wet mud, through 120cm of old microphone cable soldered to US pennies, and via a 13cm banana, and 120cm of the same setup as earlier.

Initial test results showed that it’s extremely difficult for listeners to correctly pick out which audio track used which wiring setup. “The amazing thing is how much alike these files sound. The mud should sound perfectly awful, but it doesn’t,” Pano said. “All of the re-recordings should be obvious, but they aren’t.”

The solution…

By jm007 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The solution of course is to just raise the prices of mud, pennies and bananas so the rubes that bought magic copper wires don’t feel so stupid.

Just picking nits.... but is there any other type of mud than ‘wet’? Otherwise it’s just dirt, no?

Re:The solution…

By korgitser • Score: 5, Funny Thread
I can see the price of banana plugs going up tho…

Re:The solution…

By taustin • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Specially bred, genetically modified bananas create for the purpose. With directional arrows.

The only people more gullible than audiophiles are wine snobs.

How many audiophiles do you reckon

By sabbede • Score: 3 Thread
read this and thought to themselves, “well, I’d be able to tell.”?

Tara Quantum

By JBMcB • Score: 3 Thread
I bought a garbage bag full of audiophile cables from an estate sale for something like $30. I replaced the Monoprice cables on my stereo with them. I notice no difference, but they do look nice. It’s also amusing to me having the $30 Logitech Bluetooth audio receiver hooked up to my stereo with $200 Tara Quantum IV cables. One of the cables weighs more than the receiver itself.

The only thing I’ve noticed about cables is that RCA ended cables tend to fail eventually. The cheap ones are glued on and, after time, the glue dries out and they’ll loose connection. I’ll shell out a couple extra dollars for a balanced Neutrik ended cable. Not because they sound better, but because the ends are soldered and clamped onto the wire. I’ve never had one fail, while I’ve had a half dozen RCA cables fail.

Micron’s PCIe 6.0 SSD Hits Mass Production at 28 GB/s

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Micron has begun mass production of the 9650 series, the industry’s first PCIe 6.0 SSD, capable of sequential read speeds up to 28 GB/s and random read performance of 5.5 million IOPS — roughly double the throughput of the fastest PCIe 5.0 drives available today.

The drive targets AI and data center workloads and ships in E1.S and E3.S form factors across two variants: the Pro, available in capacities up to 30.72 TB, and the endurance-oriented Max, topping out at 25.6 TB. Both variants share the same peak sequential and random speeds but diverge on mixed workloads and endurance ratings — the Max 25.6 TB carries a random endurance rating of 140,160 TBW compared to 56,064 TBW on the Pro 30.72 TB.

Power draw holds at 25 watts, unchanged from high-end PCIe 5.0 enterprise SSDs, though the 9650 is Micron’s first drive to support liquid cooling alongside air. Consumer platforms are not expected to adopt PCIe 6.0 until 2030.

Sure, but…

By Locke2005 • Score: 3 Thread
Can it store my ENTIRE porn collection?

Meh

By slaker • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

28GB/s under conditions that will never be met for more than a few seconds at a time given most enterprise workloads isn’t nearly as interesting as getting 200k IOPS+ sustained random reads for arbitrary lengths of time, and that’s something that’s theoretically possible even on PCIe gen 3, albeit not on any drives that currently exist.

99% of Adults Over 40 Have Shoulder ‘Abnormalities’ on an MRI, Study Finds

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Up to a third of people worldwide have shoulder pain; it’s one of the most common musculoskeletal complaints. But medical imaging might not reveal the problem — in fact, it could even cloud it. From a report:
In a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine this week, 99 percent of adults over 40 were found to have at least one abnormality in a rotator cuff on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The rotator cuff is the group of muscles and tendons in a shoulder joint that keeps the upper arm bone securely in the shoulder socket — and is often blamed for pain and other symptoms.

The trouble is, the vast majority of the people in the study had no problems with their shoulders. The finding calls into question the growing use of MRIs to try to diagnose shoulder pain — and, in turn, the growing problem of overtreatment of rotator cuff (RC) abnormalities, which includes partial- and full-thickness tears as well as signs of tendinopathy (tendon swelling and thickening). “While we cannot dismiss the possibility that some RC tears may contribute to shoulder symptoms, our findings indicate that we are currently unable to distinguish clinically meaningful MRI abnormalities from incidental findings,” the study authors concluded.

Forgive me for being pedantic, but

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 3 Thread

If 99% of people have something abnormal, isn’t it in fact the norm?

Re:obviously

By alvinrod • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
You’re missing what the article is about. What you say is true, but it’s also claiming that when people without problems are given an MRI the results make it appear as though they do have a problem. If a person did have a problem they’d need an MRI anyway to determine where the problem is and how to fix it. Unless the surgeons are going to replace the entire arm, how would they know what needs to be operated on without the MRI? This only prevents needless surgeries for those who had an MRI for some other reason but had their doctor point out something that looks like a shoulder problem.

This seems like a good start for a longitudinal study. Do these people develop shoulder problems later and the MRI is just catching in very early? Is there some other factor that can predict those who will later have shoulder problems vs. those who won’t? This study may not tell us much by itself, but it tells us what questions we ought to be asking to explain the results. The first step is to replicate the results from this study to ensure it wasn’t due to some fluke or other factor that wasn’t controlled for and from there to develop other studies to help us understand what’s happening better. I think that makes it a rather useful study.

Re:obviously

By EvilSS • Score: 5, Informative Thread
This was the selection criteria for the study:

In 2022, the Health 2000 database was reviewed to identify all individuals eligible for the FIMAGE study. To be eligible, participants had to meet the following criteria: (1) prior participation in the Health 2000 survey, (2) valid consent for the Health 2000 follow-up, (3) ability to communicate in Finnish or Swedish, (4) ambulatory status, (5) maximum age of 75 years at the time of sampling, and (6) residence within the catchment areas of the 5 university hospitals, ensuring reasonable access to a 3-Tesla (3T) MRI facility.

You will note that “has shoulder problem” is not one of the criteria.

The study population:

A total of 602 participants (median age, 58 [range, 41-76] years) underwent clinical shoulder examination and bilateral shoulder MRI and were included in the study. Of these, 313 (52.0%) were females and 289 (48.0%) were males. At the time of the research visit, 110 participants (18%) reported current shoulder symptoms. Among the asymptomatic group, 294 participants (60%) reported a previous history of shoulder symptoms

So 18% reported current shoulder symptoms, and of those who didn’t, 40% reported having no history of shoulder symptoms.

China Once Stole Foreign Ideas. Now It Wants To Protect Its Own

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
China’s courts are now handling more than 550,000 intellectual-property cases a year — making it the world’s most litigious country for IP disputes — as the nation’s own companies, once notorious for copying foreign designs and technology, find themselves on the defensive against a domestic counterfeiting epidemic fueled by excess factory capacity.

The problem runs from knockoff “Lafufu” plush toys (cheap copies of Pop Mart’s wildly popular Labubu dolls, which prompted a nationwide crackdown and a Shanghai police bust of a $1.7 million stash in July) to copied motorcycles and solar panels. Judges in Shanghai, the preferred venue for IP litigation, are working through cases at a rate of roughly one per day, and it still takes three months for a case to land on a court’s docket.

Chinese companies are also increasingly clashing abroad: patent-related cases involving Chinese businesses in America surged 56% in 2023, according to data from GEN, a Chinese law firm. Luckin Coffee and Trina Solar have both filed suits against foreign-based copycats.

The Business Plan

By The Cat • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Steal until you have it all, then hire a security guard.

Yes, the building is on fire. Don’t panic.

By cpurdy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This is an interesting topic, and one with precedent. It turns out that the United States was accused for many years of stealing inventions from the UK and other European countries (IIRC: starting with the industrial revolution and its relationship to fabric production), and as its economic dominance emerged, its IP protectionism grew with it. It has long been predicted that China would take a similar path, and while it does mean (with extra thanks to trump) that the sun is rapidly setting on the US empire, we shouldn’t freak out about this. The correct course of action (as exhibited by China) is to invest heavily in education, modernization, infrastructure, and strategic subsidies. Unfortunately, the US is currently investing in corruption, culture wars, and nihilism instead, but we must assume that these errors are correctable and worth correcting.

Re: The Business Plan

By AvitarX • Score: 4 Thread

The part about copyright comes before the amendments.

The laws have changed but the constitution has had it as available from the start.

Re:The Business Plan

By DamnOregonian • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Copyright and patent protection bare literally baked into the un-amended Constitution.
I get it- America touched you in the bad place. It’s fine to be mad at it for that. But just making shit up to make yourself feel better about it? That’s weak sauce.

Re:Yes, the building is on fire. Don’t panic.

By mccalli • Score: 4, Informative Thread
That’s absolutely incorrect, and US ‘piracy’ of publishing rights in the 19th century is well documented.

Mazda Finally Admits Its Infotainment System Is the Worst

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Mazda, the automaker that for years defended its scroll-wheel infotainment system as a safer alternative to touchscreens, is abandoning the approach entirely in the 2026 CX-5 in favor of a 15.6-inch touchscreen and zero physical buttons.

The current lineup — the CX-50 Hybrid, CX-70 and CX-90 — still relies on a console-mounted scroll wheel and dedicated action buttons to navigate a tablet-like screen perched atop the dashboard. Upper-trim CX-70 and CX-90 models do have 12.3-inch touchscreens, but touch input only works when parked and only inside CarPlay; it disables automatically once the car is in drive.

The new CX-5 goes the other direction entirely, eliminating all hard buttons including the volume knob and physical climate controls that current models still offer. Mazda says the touchscreen is safe because core functions like climate are pinned to a persistent bottom bar — an approach Ford, Rivian, and most of the industry adopted years ago.

Mazda was correct

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Only tactile feedback has any hope of keeping your eyes on the road while using the dash.

It’s not as convenient for a dynamic interface… but as a driver your job is to keep the car, its occupants, and the world around it safe, not to choose the next song you want to hear.

Push-button activated voice command is a nice alternative.

Re:Mazda was correct

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Hear me out.

Our infotainment is the worst. Everybody says so.

But what if it could be even worser?

Just give me buttons

By FictionPimp • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I don’t want a touch screen, I want buttons. Buttons for my hvac, buttons for preset stations, buttons for my heated seats, buttons for my everything.

Then give me voice controls.

I have never touched the touch screen on my BMW. I either use voice controls, buttons on the wheel, or the physical buttons and nobs provided. Who wants to clean a greasy screen?

Mazda has its finger on the pulse

By Phanatic1a • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Right as other manufacturers realize physical buttons are good actually and are changing back:

https://www.businessinsider.co…
https://www.autoblog.com/news/…

Are you kidding? It’s the best.

By PhantomHarlock • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I own a Mazda with the center console scrollwheel. It is completely awesome. No reaching whatsoever, and very easy to navigate. It should be a model for everyone else. It got high praises when first introduced. Nothing has changed. This sounds like they just want to lower the cost of the car by getting rid of the wheel, button and associated wiring. I’m planning on a replacing my current Mazda with a slightly used one anyhow, which will still have the scroll wheel. Unbelievable. So dissapointed at Mazda.

‘Software Isn’t Dead, But Its Cosy Business Model Might Be’

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The software industry’s decades-old habit of charging companies a flat fee for every employee who uses a product is running into a fundamental problem: AI agents don’t sit in chairs, and they don’t need licences.

As autonomous agents take on tasks that human workers once handled, the per-seat pricing model that made SaaS revenue so predictable is giving way to consumption-based and hybrid alternatives. Snowflake and Databricks (valued at $134 billion) already charge based on usage. Salesforce initially priced its Agentforce customer relations bot at $2 per conversation but faced customer pushback and now offers action-based pricing, upfront credits and fixed fees.

ServiceNow’s finance chief Amit Zavery said last month that some customers aren’t ready for purely consumption-based models. Goldman Sachs estimates US software spending will nearly triple to $2.8 trillion by 2037 as automated tasks blur the boundary between IT and wage budgets, but that money will no longer arrive in the neat recurring instalments that investors and private equity firms have come to expect.

Lol, what?

By jvkjvk • Score: 5, Informative Thread

>AI agents don’t sit in chairs, and they don’t need licences.

Yeah, right. I don’t think so. If it is using the software, it is going to need a license. Multiple agents, multiple licenses. It’s not hard.

False premise…

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 3 Thread
“AI agents don’t sit in chairs, and they don’t need licences.”

I wouldn’t be surprised if the juiciest days of SaaS rent seeking are behind us(if nothing else, SaaS vendor numbers were starting to look less promising prior to the ‘AI’ craze; arguably one of the reasons why they all jumped on it like rabid animals hoping that it would salvage their growth); but this premise seems deeply and obviously flawed. Per-seat licensing has never involved chairs; and (especially when you are dealing with software contracts high value enough that you can litigate, rather than relying purely on DRM) you can make whatever you want need a license.

There’s obviously no completely ironclad way to stop your customers from using a scraper to hide their activities; just as you can’t entirely prevent account sharing between employees who should be licensed separately; but there’s nothing about ‘agents’ that is any harder to require a license for.

Valve’s Steam Deck OLED Will Be ‘Intermittently’ Out of Stock Because of the RAM Crisis

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Valve has updated the Steam Deck website to say that the Steam Deck OLED may be out of stock "intermittently in some regions due to memory and storage shortages.” From a report:
The PC gaming handheld has been out of stock in the US and other parts of the world for a few days, and thanks to this update, we now know why. The update comes shortly after Valve delayed the Steam Machine, Steam Frame, and Steam Controller from a planned shipping window of early 2026 because of the memory and storage crunch.

“We have work to do to land on concrete pricing and launch dates that we can confidently announce, being mindful of how quickly the circumstances around both of those things can change,” Valve said in a post about that announcement from earlier this month. Its goal is to launch that new hardware sometime in the first half of 2026, and the company is working to finalize its plans “as soon as possible.”

Re:Vertical Integration

By Buchenskjoll • Score: 4, Funny Thread
I guess RAM wasn’t built in a day.

Re:Vertical Integration

By BeepBoopBeep • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Samsung + SK Hynix (Korea) supply more than 50% of DRAM, followed by Micron as top 3 … DRAM is not dominated by Taiwan

Thanks Sam

By doragasu • Score: 3 Thread

Being able to generate tons of text, image and video slop with simple text prompts is for sure worth all the troubles it’s causing.

Sony Tech Can Identify Original Music in AI-Generated Songs

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Sony Group has developed a technology that can identify the underlying music used in tunes generated by AI, making it possible for songwriters to seek compensation from AI developers if their music was used. From a report:
Sony Group’s technology analyzes which musicians’ songs were used in learning and generating music. It can quantify the contribution of each original work, such as “30% of the music used by the Beatles and 10% by Queen,” for example.

If the AI developer agrees to cooperate for the analysis, Sony Group will obtain data by connecting to the developer’s base model system. When cooperation is not attainable, the technology estimates the original work by comparing AI-generated music with existing music. The AI boom has sparked numerous cases in which AI developers are accused of using copyrighted music, video and writing without permission to train machines. In the music industry, AI-generated songs using the voices of well-known singers have been distributed online. The Japanese company thinks the technology will help create a system that distributes revenue generated by AI music to original songwriters based on their contribution.

What about human-generated songs?

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Nothing is completely original, everything is influenced by things that came before. What happens if they run it on human-generated music? Do they expect Oasis to pay royalties to The Beatles because they are clearly an evolution of the earlier band’s style?

Not how any of it works

By topham • Score: 4 Thread

Sony wants in on this here because they’d get to set the rules.

Within a decade every new band, with or without AI would be triggering a percentage derived number and paying royalties or, more likely, ceasing to exist.

Not how this works

By AcidFnTonic • Score: 4 Thread

No that is not how this works. This is an attempt to extort anyone using the 4/4 time signature because some fuzzy algorithm decided 4/4 was owned by the studios.

Re:Should Bach and Haydn be compensated …

By Guignol • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Of course not, what a weird idea
Sony should be…

Melancholy Elephants, by Spider Robinson

By sfsp • Score: 3 Thread

This needs to be killed, with prejudice.

https://www.baen.com/chapters/W200011/0671319744___1.htm

EU Parliament Blocks AI Features Over Cyber, Privacy Fears

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The European Parliament has disabled AI features on the work devices of lawmakers and their staff over cybersecurity and data protection concerns, according to an internal email seen by POLITICO. The chamber emailed its members on Monday to say it had disabled “built-in artificial intelligence features” on corporate tablets after its IT department assessed it couldn’t guarantee the security of the tools’ data.

“Some of these features use cloud services to carry out tasks that could be handled locally, sending data off the device,” the Parliament’s e-MEP tech support desk said in the email. “As these features continue to evolve and become available on more devices, the full extent of data shared with service providers is still being assessed. Until this is fully clarified, it is considered safer to keep such features disabled.”

Good

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This should be the default on all devices. AI features should be a selectable add-on.

Re: Treat EU legislators like 12 year olds

By toutankh • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The EU parliament is also one of few legislative entities in the Western world that care about consumer protection. I don’t agree with everything it produces, but that doesn’t mean they’re always wrong. Although twelve year olds tend to think in such absolutes.

Re:Treat EU legislators like 12 year olds

By Malenfrant • Score: 5, Informative Thread

After looking further into this, it was indeed an amendment put in by bigots to try and wreck a piece of legislation they don’t agree with but know they are in the minority on. The legislation was to cement recognition of trans women as women, and trans men as men. This amendment could have been used to bypass this because if passed, then if a trans man can get pregnant they would be a women not a man and this could then also be used to argue the vice-versa. It was an attempt to scupper a vote they were going to lose by making the legislation unworkable and was rejected on that basis.

I’ll see you and raise…

By jddj • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

There ought to be a “one switch” law: Cut off all on-device AI features with a single switch.

If you want to pick and choose, use some, not others, OK, that’s on you, you can’t use the switch.

But if you just want it all off, you shouldn’t have to continuously pore through arcane and poorly-named menus looking to find where the tech bros have wormed it in, or turned it back on with an update.

One switch. I want it off. All of it.

Re:Treat EU legislators like 12 year olds

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Bigots sure do think about trans people a lot…

Secondhand Laptop Market Goes ‘Mainstream’ Amid Memory Crunch

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Sales of refurbished PCs are on the up amid shortages of key components, including memory chips, that are making brand new devices more expensive. From a report:
Stats compiled by market watcher Context show sales of refurbished PCs via distribution climbed 7 percent in calendar Q4 across five of the biggest European markets — Italy, the UK, Germany, Spain, and France.

Affordability is the primary driver in the secondhand segment, the analyst says, with around 40 percent of sales driven by budget-conscious users shopping in the $235 to $355 price band for laptops. The $355 to $475 tier is also expanding — representing 23 percent of the refurbished market, up from 15 percent a year earlier — indicating some buyers are prepared to spend a bit more for improved specifications.

Mainstream, huh?

By dwywit • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I haven’t bought a new laptop in years. There’s a company in Australia (and many other countries I assume) who acquire ex-govt and ex-lease laptops. Business-grade laptops.

They get a new SSD and a bloat-free copy of windows, a 12-month warranty (excludes battery), and free shipping, for about 1/3 the price of a new machine. Currently typing this on a Lenovo i7-8550 with 12GB memory, a 240GB NVMe and a 500GB SSD in the spare slot. It’ll do me for another couple of years.

You can keep windows or install your choice of distro. My “other” laptop has similar specs and runs Debian Trixie.

I hate seeing perfectly usable hardware go to waste, so every time I visit a pensioner with some creaking, wheezing old desktop, I point them to a “new” second-hand laptop.

Yes and no

By DrMrLordX • Score: 3 Thread

Complete systems maybe, but if they’re refurbs then good luck. The secondhand market is falling apart for machines that have been stripped of RAM and/or storage. You will not find replacements at prices that make any sense. Perfectly good, working machines that have been repaired and restored to working condition can’t be sold if they were stripped of RAM/storage prior to sale on the secondhand market.

Can’t wait

By TTL0 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I have a feeling that the next Slashdot story will be about the amount of personal information and private pictures being recovered from secondhand laptops whose owners thought the HD was wiped.

Also good for desktop Linux

By xack • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Put a desktop distro on an old Laptop and you no longer have to worry about TPM or CPU requirements and arbitrary end of support deadlines. And yes Linux will support you beyond 2032 unlike so called “LTSC” versions of Microsoft OSes.

Just remember, if a company doesn’t support Linux it means they like abusing you with enshittification. Stop worrying about the year of the Linux desktop, and instead think about the year the Windows desktop abandons you.

Re:Yes and no

By necro81 • Score: 4, Funny Thread

The secondhand market is falling apart for machines that have been stripped of RAM and/or storage.

So Apple integrating the RAM into their M-processors was just forward thinking!

The Music Industry Enters Its Less-Is-More Era

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
The music industry’s long romance with an ever-expanding catalog of songs appears to be souring, as streaming platforms and rights holders confront a daily deluge that now includes 60,000 wholly AI-generated tracks uploaded to Deezer alone — roughly 39% of the French service’s daily intake, a statistic the company shared during Grammys week last month.

Streaming services now host 253 million songs, according to Luminate’s most recent annual report, after adding 51 million tracks over the course of 2025 at an average pace of 106,000 uploads a day. Spotify has already responded by requiring songs to hit at least 1,000 plays in the previous 12 months to qualify for royalties, and Luminate reported that 88% of tracks received 1,000 or fewer plays in 2025.

The distribution layer is in flux too: Universal Music Group is trying to acquire Downtown Music, owner of DIY distributor CD Baby, TuneCore’s head recently stepped down without a planned replacement, and DistroKid is reportedly up for sale.

What scares me

By Slashythenkilly • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Some people dont know the difference between AI generated videos, deepfakes, music, and written content, which to its credit, might be decent at first but then starts to unravel.

Lest anyone think the problem is just AI slop

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The music industry has always earned the majority of its revenue from a small percentage of extremely popular acts. Part of it is that the industry is gatekept to where your music won’t be promoted if you’re not already well connected, and the other part of it is just human nature over what becomes popular. Some stuff clicks with the masses, and some doesn’t, no matter how much money you throw at promoting it (there’s plenty of examples of “manufactured” pop stars flopping). It’s also a safe assumption that a lot of good music goes unheard too, because it’s buried under a mountain of crap and the musician just happens to be a nobody.

That’s the entertainment industry for you.

Re:Lest anyone think the problem is just AI slop

By thogard • Score: 4, Informative Thread

The business side of music has been trying to control how much new music is released ever since reproduction because easy in the early days of printed sheet music.

About 25 years ago a radio station in Melbourne had a contest where bands had to send in an album that was less than a year old and had at least 3 songs that weren’t covers. Their listening area was about 3 million people and they got 3,000 entries. To me that implies that there is a band for every thousand people who is producing an album worth of music every year. That would imply there should be about 8 million new albums every year globally.

Re: can we go back to the 60-80’s and maybe the 90

By fluffernutter • Score: 4, Funny Thread

No, that’s “do you really want to hurt me”

Re:can we go back to the 60-80’s and maybe the 90’

By bn-7bc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Well the 60s had good music (I was born in 1980 so donæt blame nostalgia). Did the 60s allso hjave a lot of crap? yes but that got filtered out over the decades and we are just left with tghe good bits now. give the same timespan tå 80-90s music and I suspect we might have a somewhat simmilar result.