Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. US Had Almost No Job Growth in 2025
  2. EVs Could Be Cheaper To Own Than Gas Cars in Africa by 2040
  3. UK Orders Deletion of Country’s Largest Court Reporting Archive
  4. Are CDs Making a Comeback? A Statistical Analysis
  5. HP Now Rents Gaming Laptops
  6. Sony Will Ship Its Final Blu-ray Recorders This Month
  7. T-Mobile Will Live Translate Regular Phone Calls Without an App
  8. Moderna Says FDA Refuses To Review Its Application for Experimental Flu Shot
  9. Discord Tries To Walk Back Age Verification Panic, Says Most Users Won’t Need Face Scans
  10. The First Signs of Burnout Are Coming From the People Who Embrace AI the Most
  11. Iceland is Planning For the Possibility That Its Climate Could Become Uninhabitable
  12. ByteDance Suspends Seedance 2 Feature That Turns Facial Photos Into Personal Voices Over Potential Risks
  13. White House Eyes Data Center Agreements Amid Energy Price Spikes
  14. Lost Soviet Moon Lander May Have Been Found
  15. Google’s Personal Data Removal Tool Now Covers Government IDs

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.

US Had Almost No Job Growth in 2025

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The U.S. economy experienced almost zero job growth in 2025, according to revised federal data. On a more encouraging note: hiring has picked up in 2026. Preliminary data had indicated that the U.S. economy added 584,000 jobs last year. But the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised that number after it received additional state data, and found that the labor market had added 181,000 jobs in all of 2025. This is far fewer than the 1.46 million jobs that were added in 2024.

One bright spot was last month, when hiring increased by 130,000 roles. This was significantly more than the 55,000 additions that had been expected by economists. “Job gains occurred in health care, social assistance, and construction, while federal government and financial activities lost jobs,” BLS said in a statement.

EVs Could Be Cheaper To Own Than Gas Cars in Africa by 2040

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Electric vehicles accounted for just 1% of new car sales across Africa in 2025, but a study published in Nature Energy by researchers at ETH Zurich finds that EVs paired with solar off-grid charging systems — solar panels, batteries and an inverter — could become cheaper to own than gas-powered equivalents across most of the continent by 2040.

The analysis considered total cost of ownership including sticker price, financing and fuel or charging costs, but excluded policy-related factors like taxes and subsidies. Electric two-wheelers could reach cost parity even sooner, by the end of the decade, thanks to smaller battery packs.

Small cars remain the toughest segment. The biggest obstacle is financing: in some African countries, political instability and economic uncertainty push borrowing costs so high that interest on an EV loan can exceed the vehicle’s purchase price. South Africa, Mauritius and Botswana are already near the financing conditions needed for cost parity; countries like Sudan and Ghana would need drastic cuts.

Big caveats

By larryjoe • Score: 3 Thread

The study has huge caveats:

It is assumed that BEV costs are essentially equivalent to ICE costs. Part of this comes from an assumption that all cars of any type are only leased. However, even with that assumption, this equivalence assumption is certainly not true now and remains to be seen whether it will be true in the future.

It is assumed that the solar-battery home installation is completely free. This is a huge cost that is completely absent from the analysis.

The solar-battery home installation necessarily assumes that the car owner has a home where the car can be parked and where the solar-battery equipment can be located, which restricts car owners to fairly rich people.

the cheapest option for 2040

By OrangeTide • Score: 3 Thread

The cheapest option will be to buy a US college graduation’s student loan and have him pull a rickshaw until he pays you back.

UK Orders Deletion of Country’s Largest Court Reporting Archive

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The UK’s Ministry of Justice has ordered the deletion of the country’s largest court reporting archive [non-paywalled source], a database built by data analysis company Courtsdesk that more than 1,500 journalists across 39 media organizations have used since the lord chancellor approved the project in 2021.

Courtsdesk’s research found that journalists received no advance notice of 1.6 million criminal hearings, that court case listings were accurate on just 4.2% of sitting days, and that half a million weekend cases were heard without any press notification. In November, HM Courts and Tribunal Service issued a cessation notice citing “unauthorized sharing” of court data based on a test feature.

Courtsdesk says it wrote 16 times asking for dialogue and requested a referral to the Information Commissioner’s Office; no referral was made. The government issued a final refusal last week, and the archive must now be deleted within days. Chris Philp, the former justice minister who approved the pilot and now shadow home secretary, has written to courts minister Sarah Sackman demanding the decision be reversed.

Reporting the wrong info

By Snert32 • Score: 3 Thread
If the database is reporting that the government does a poor job (not informing reporters, very low accuracy rate), there are two choices: 1) Do a better job, or 2) Cancel the reporting. Of course, the answer is obvious …

Are CDs Making a Comeback? A Statistical Analysis

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Reports of the compact disc’s death may have been slightly premature, according to a new analysis from Stat Significant that finds CD sales as a share of U.S. music industry revenue have quietly stabilized after years of steep decline. RIAA data shows CD revenue share fell from 7.15% in 2018 to 3.04% in 2022 but has since flatlined at roughly 3%, coming in at 3.14% in 2023 and 3.06% in 2024.

Google search traffic for “CD Player” has ticked upward over the past 16 months after two decades of near-continuous decline, and a May 2023 YouGov poll found 53% of American adults willing to pay for music on CDs — ahead of vinyl at 44% and online streaming at 50%. Respondents under 45 were more likely to express interest in buying physical formats than older cohorts. But on the supply side, Discogs data shows vinyl remains the dominant format for new physical releases; artists have not meaningfully shifted back toward CD production.

why buy in the cloud

By OrangeTide • Score: 3 Thread

When you can rip your own CD? And places like Amazon will sell you physical media and “autorip” much of their catalog (but not all)

For people that only buy one track, it makes sense to drop $1-$2 for a song. And ignore the whole album. That’s perhaps the way popular music works. But for fans of certain bands, we buy the whole album.

Multiple rug pulls

By sphealey • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The streaming services have already done multiple rug pulls, rights-stripping acquisitions, and bankruptcies to take away “purchased” streaming rights and force people to pay a second time (and a third, and a fourth…). But yeah, the people who have CD players with analog outputs and who buy CDs are the dumb ones.

Convenience won already.....

By King_TJ • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I’m a Gen Xer who still really values the concept of holding onto my own music. I don’t like paying for subscriptions to music streaming services that can get rid of a given album or even artist at any time, or who is likely to only offer their greatest hits, vs deeper tracks.

But I resorted to ripping my entire CD collection and hosting everything on a file server at home, with a second copy of my music on my Apple Mac.

The physical media takes up a lot of space and is subject to scuffs/scratches — not to mention a dying popularity of CD players themselves.

I have very little interest in buying music on vinyl at this point in my life. I’ve been there, done that — and the whole format is just inferior. Records wear out with each play and needles on turntables get dull over time. The format doesn’t lend itself to listening in a moving vehicle either. Just a technological step backwards that’s only popular to be retro and trendy.

But yeah, at this point? I’d buy digital tracks or albums and put them on my server/computer … copying to thumb-drives for in-car use as needed. I don’t think physical music CD purchases are necessary anymore, really.

Oh come on now.

By sabbede • Score: 3 Thread
Can we really have an article about the death of Blu-Ray and the rebirth of CDs on the same day?

Can cars start offering CD players again?

By blue trane • Score: 3 Thread

Did they take them away to sell more Sirius XM subscriptions?

HP Now Rents Gaming Laptops

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
HP has quietly launched a gaming laptop subscription service called the OMEN Gaming Subscription that lets customers pay a monthly fee to use one of several gaming laptops but never actually own the hardware, even after paying well past the machine’s retail price.

The service ranges from $50 a month for an HP Victus 15-inch laptop with an RTX 4050 to $130 a month for an Omen Max 16 with an RTX 5080. At current sale prices, subscribers would exceed the cost of buying the laptop outright within 16 to 19 months; at MSRP, that window stretches to roughly 25 months. In exchange for giving up ownership, subscribers get yearly hardware upgrades, next-day replacements, 24/7 support, and an ongoing warranty. There is a 30-day trial period, but cancelling in the second month triggers steep early termination fees — $550 for the Victus 15 and $1,430 for the Omen Max 16. Cancellation becomes free only after the 13th month. HP also offers accessories like the HyperX Cloud Alpha Wireless headset as add-on rentals for $8 a month.

Subscription, or lease?

By flibbidyfloo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
With such steep and restrictive early termination fees, I don’t think this qualifies as a “subscription” - it’s a lease, like you’d have for a new car. Even the most hardcore gamers don’t buy a new laptop every year, and new hardware releases don’t require such, so this seems like a terrible deal.

Horrible terms

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I was going to say that might make sense for short term needs. If you need a better PC for a 6 month job, do this.

But they dissallow the only sensible use for the customer, requiring a year long minimum.

It also illustrates total ignorance of how these kinds of rentals make a profit - people think they want it for 6 months, but end up keeping it for 5 years.

How many people actually end subscriptions when they stop needing them?

Re:Subscription, or lease?

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

LTT looked at it and it does seem like a shitty deal. The cost isn’t far off buying a new laptop every two years, and of course if you do that you can probably sell your old one.

Re:Subscription, or lease?

By jhoegl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Rent to own is famously a tax on the poor. Its never good, its always a scam, and it preys on the poor, often ruining credit.

Re:You will own nothing

By sabbede • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Is that an appropriate way to use Thatcher’s quote about fiscal conservativism? She definitely wasn’t talking about everything going to an "…as a service” model.

Sony Will Ship Its Final Blu-ray Recorders This Month

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Sony will ship its last batch of Blu-ray recorders this month, according to Kyodo News, ending the company’s decades-long run in a product category it helped create. The recorders targeted exclusively the Japanese domestic market, where households used them to record broadcast television. Sony had already stopped manufacturing the devices and recordable discs about a year ago, and the final shipments are clearing out remaining inventory.

Kyodo attributes the segment’s death to the rise of streaming services. Sony will continue selling Blu-ray players “for the time being.” The broader Blu-ray ecosystem remains intact. Asus, LG, and Pioneer still produce PC drives in internal and external USB form factors. Panasonic and Verbatim continue manufacturing Blu-ray media. The format turned 20 last year, having debuted at CES 2006 — one year before Netflix launched its streaming platform.

Their time is up…

By PhantomHarlock • Score: 3 Thread

I haven’t touched my BRD recorder in years. I used to sell videos I made on BD-R and DVD-R, until I started monetizing my YouTube channel, which brings in far more viewers and income with zero work once the video is uploaded. I used to buy printable BRD discs, jewel cases, print an insert for the jewel case, mail the disc…it was a lot of work for not much return. Late 2000’s.

YouTube has democratized the distribution of independent videos. Their revenue split for ads is still the best deal out there. I just don’t know how there is enough drive space in the world to accommodate the amount of video that is uploaded every minute to that service. One source says every minute, 500 hours of video is uploaded to YT. I just can’t see where that all goes. Are they constantly shipping in truckloads of hard drives? Will the whole thing collapse under its own weight? They don’t seem to delete anything except videos that run into policy violations or copyright claims.

Fun story: I was at NAB (The National Association of Broadcaster’s conference) in Las Vegas when the winner of the two dueling HD disc formats was picked. It was down to BluRay Disc championed by Sony, and HD-DVD by Toshiba. The studios decided to throw their weight at the BluRay Consortium during that show, and instantly the HD-DVD booth become a rather sad ghost town. BluRay wasn’t great for independent producers, there were clauses that stated that for commercial discs you HAD to include encryption, even if you didn’t want to, making doing a production run at a disc facility very expensive. It was a licensing scheme designed to make money for the consortium. So I stuck to making BRDs myself as a work around, since my numbers were so small. BRD works for the major labels but it was a terrible format for us small time folk. It was easier to make VHS tapes, you just sent a master to a dupe facility and they cranked them out. Of course, VHS was complete garbage as a format, but it was what we had. Fun times, and now ancient history, thank god.

You CAN record over-the-air…

By rbrander • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Over-the-air HDTV is still putting out up to 18Mb/s per channel. It’s some of the highest-quality streaming that there is, and it’s free!

I’ve been recording it with entirely legal equipment for about five years now, use FFMPEG to crush the huge files down to H265 or H264 for action shows where movement shows some artifacts at H265. But mostly we just watch the shows within a few weeks, lots of room on the SSD of the ultrabook that controls the TV.

http://brander.ca/cordcutcuug

Re:completely passed me by

By fropenn • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Never owned a Blu-ray device or media.

The quality was great, particularly on the sound side (still better than the sound I get from streaming), but the DRM on Blu-Ray was a real pain, and there were numerous updates (thanks, Sony) that bricked many players and made some discs stop working. But, at least they solved the piracy problem /sarcasm.

T-Mobile Will Live Translate Regular Phone Calls Without an App

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
T-Mobile is opening registration today for a beta test of Live Translation, an AI-powered feature that will translate live phone calls into more than 50 languages when it launches this spring.

The feature operates at the network level, so it doesn’t require any specific app or device — beta participants simply dial 87 to activate it on a call. T-Mobile President of Technology and CTO John Saw told The Verge that Live Translation works over VoLTE, VoNR and VoWiFi, meaning it isn’t limited to 5G. The only requirement is that a T-Mobile customer must initiate the translation. The beta will be free, though T-Mobile has not said whether the feature will eventually be paywalled.

Re: I’m curious to see…

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I wouldn’t be hugely surprised to find out they’re already recording just now they can process it to flog to advertisers.

In other words

By The-Ixian • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

T-Mobile is openly admitting that they are listening to all your phone calls

Who’s accountable when it’s wrong?

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 3 Thread
What happens when “John is just going to kill me” — referring to the anticipated outcome of today’s fantasy football league because it looks John’s players are doing exceptionally well at the moment and the speaker’s are doing poorly — is translated into “John is murdering me”? Or worse — I’m sure anyone reading this can think of many sarcastic or idiomatic or exaggerated phrases that are likely to be mistranslated.

When that happens — not if — who is accountable for the consequences? Including the real-world consequences, which could be quite serious?

I already know the answer to this question, without even looking, and the short version is “not T-Mobile”, because there’s no way their attorneys would let this through without a disclaimer so thorough that nobody can get past it. (I wouldn’t be surprised if they spent more on the legalese than on developing the product.) This is today’s business model: let’s come up with something nobody asked for, ship it, and then disclaim all responsibility for the consequences of our choices and actions. If people get hurt or killed, wellllll that’s just good business and it was their own fault anyway - now can we discuss this quarter’s P/L statement and the new executive bonus package?

Moderna Says FDA Refuses To Review Its Application for Experimental Flu Shot

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The Food and Drug Administration has refused to start a review of Moderna’s application for its experimental flu shot, the company announced Tuesday, in another sign of the Trump administration’s influence on tightening vaccine regulations in the U.S. Moderna said the move is inconsistent with previous feedback from the agency from before it submitted the application and started phase three trials on the shot, called mRNA-1010. The drugmaker said it has requested a meeting with the FDA to “understand the path forward.”

Moderna noted that the agency did not identify any specific safety or efficacy issues with the vaccine, but instead objected to the study design, despite previously approving it. The company added that the move won’t impact its 2026 financial guidance. Moderna’s jab showed positive phase three data last year, meeting all of the trial goals. At the time, Moderna said the stand-alone flu shot was key to its efforts to advance a combination vaccine targeting both influenza and Covid-19.

Re: mRNA is dangerous

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What he is mocking is bullshit, and it should be mocked. And so should cowards.

RFK Jr’s own words

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I don’t want to seem like I’m being evasive, but I don’t think people should be taking medical advice from me.” https://www.cbsnews.com/news/r…

Imagine the headlines if Obama appointed a longtime heroin junkie to run the FDA. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/h…

Absolute bollocks

By Wdi • Score: 5, Informative Thread

First, phase 3 studies are by definition not safety studies, but efficacy studies on a large number of test subjects. Safety studies are phase 1.

Second, ethics guidelines stipulate that you must provide state of the art care for those subjects which do not get the new vaccine, with very tight exceptions. For flu shots, it means that everyone gets a shot, either with a traditional vaccine or the new one, since it is universally accepted outside the new FDA that a classical shot is better than placebo.

And of course you can compare the outcomes. Comparing the new vaccine to an established one wrt efficacy and side effects is actually more informative than comparing against placebo.

Re:Idiocy

By Gilgaron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It is often more ethical to design a study where you compare efficacy to a known efficacious solution and see if there’s a benefit, because you don’t need an untreated group. Especially for dangerous pathogens. It’s also normally done for combination treatments where comparing to baseline is pointless, you want to see if two treatments together is more effective than one. I have not figured out the ringwing obsession with double blind placebo trials, I can only figure it is because that’s what they go over first in elementary school science for the scientific method. It is like making the cabinet installer learn forestry and milling before learning how to install high end cabinets, then starting over with plywood production forestry and lamination techniques before installing mid grade cabinets. It’s a bunch of extra expense, risk, and work for no tangible benefit. The administration is also putting pressure on animal models, which is the ethical way to do placebo studies, the whole MAHA approach to infectious disease is fraught.

Re:mRNA is dangerous

By arglebargle_xiv • Score: 5, Funny Thread

It turned me into a newt!

....

I got better.

Discord Tries To Walk Back Age Verification Panic, Says Most Users Won’t Need Face Scans

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Discord has moved to calm a user backlash over its upcoming age verification mandate by clarifying that the “vast majority” of people will never be asked to confirm their age through a face scan or government ID.

The platform said it will instead rely on an internal “age prediction” model that draws on account information, device and activity data, and behavioral patterns across its communities to estimate whether someone is an adult. Users whose age the model cannot confidently determine will still need to submit a video selfie or ID.

Those not verified as adults or identified as under 18 will be placed in a “teen-appropriate” experience that blocks access to age-restricted servers and channels. The clarification came after users threatened to leave the platform and cancel Nitro subscriptions, and after a third-party vendor used by Discord for age verification suffered a data breach last year that exposed user information and a small number of uploaded ID cards.

Discord has 2 targets on its back

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The reality is, “know your customer” and “think of the children” causes identity theft: The effect upon criminals is minimal. Because it’s moved criminal intent from an individual cheating the system, to a corporation of serfs moving illegal goods.

Discord is a target of ‘child safety’ spyware demanded by the governments of the world, and a target of users who realize Discord tracking them, makes them a victim.

What about the highly effective assurance?

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Most countries that introduced age verification requirements state that verification must be “highly effective”. Would this predictive profiling be enough in the court of law?

Re:Same with Roblox. Why do they need selfies?

By allo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

No method (regardless how clever) and solve the root problem: A child can ask its 18 year old friend to unlock the account.
You can find ways to prove age, but there are no reasonable ways to prove the current user is the person who proved to be 18+

Re:Discord has 2 targets on its back

By Entrope • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Concern over FISA orders in situations like this is way overblown. You should be concerned about orders available in any lawsuit, like OpenAI being ordered to hand over lots of its chat logs in the NYT copyright lawsuit. You should be concerned about sales of access to information, like Facebook and Cambridge Analytica. You should be concerned about compromise of material in a jack by criminals or a nation-state. Unless you are a terrorist or foreign intelligence asset, the risk of those dwarfs the risk that a FISA order will compromise your data.

deadbeats

By Dragonseye • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
As far as I’m aware the only true way to stop children from accessing content you don’t want them to see, turn the net off in the house or grow a pair and start parenting.

The First Signs of Burnout Are Coming From the People Who Embrace AI the Most

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The most seductive narrative in American work culture right now isn’t that AI will take your job. It’s that AI will save you from it. That’s the version the industry has spent the last three years selling to millions of nervous people who are eager to buy it. Yes, some white-collar jobs will disappear. But for most other roles, the argument goes, AI is a force multiplier. You become a more capable, more indispensable lawyer, consultant, writer, coder, financial analyst — and so on. The tools work for you, you work less hard, everybody wins.

But a new study published in Harvard Business Review follows that premise to its actual conclusion, and what it finds there isn’t a productivity revolution. It finds companies are at risk of becoming burnout machines.

As part of what they describe as “in-progress research,” UC Berkeley researchers spent eight months inside a 200-person tech company watching what happened when workers genuinely embraced AI. What they found across more than 40 “in-depth” interviews was that nobody was pressured at this company. Nobody was told to hit new targets. People just started doing more because the tools made more feel doable. But because they could do these things, work began bleeding into lunch breaks and late evenings. The employees’ to-do lists expanded to fill every hour that AI freed up, and then kept going.

The most interesting thing I can do with copilot

By piojo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I just found out the most interesting thing I can do with copilot at work: turn it off. In VS code, the bottom right copilot button has a “snooze” option. I use it because inserted garbage comments break my train of thought.

I don’t say it’s not useful. But it does drive me nuts sometimes.

Duh

By locater16 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Fields medal winner June Huh is right, you can only do about 4 hours of real work a day before your neurons get filled with detritus and you need some sleep to wash it out. Stop killing your brain for a company you don’t even own cause it sounds cool and go take a 2 hour lunch ya dumb nerds.

The American work culture

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

has been utter shit for decades. It glorifies overtime over everything else - including over metrics that could be improved with less overtime, such as quality and efficiency.

AI is just more of the same: turbocharged shit.

I’m saying this as an American expat living in Europe and actually having a quality of life and work/life balance I never had stateside.

I embrace it as it comes and experience …

By Qbertino • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

… Chillout time. No joke. My productivity has gone 5x in the last 6 months, especially with the newest models and them spitting out boring but maintainable boilerplate code for me and explaining the details of what they’re doing, but overall my life has become more chill. I’ve started taking naps at noon when I’m in homeoffice.

Then again, I’m an experienced senior webdev, the new product we’re building has is architecture 100% designed and maintained by me alone and with AI I basically have a team 5 juniors around me doing the gruntwork at a whim, just as I have 8-10 API and PL experts in one single chat ready to answer highly specialized questions on some detail of the app I’m building.

Projecting this 3 years out I am sooooo out of a job. But I’m just a websoft nerd no one cares about. Just wait until the bots start driving cars and trucks, doing delivery and cleaning. That’s when the real party starts.

We are certainly not prepared for what is coming for society as a whole. I myself am trying to enjoy the ride as much as I can. Couldn’t say that I mind robots doing my work, as long as I get some sort of cut from the productivity gains, even if that means chasing software-bots around most of the day for -20k of my last salary, as is the state of things right now.

Yeah, pretty much this.

By Qbertino • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Disclaimer: former US American citizen turned European here

The system and culture in the US is pretty broken in key parts, that’s for sure. Europe is aging and has a demographic bomb coming up, but by and large quality of living is higher by default these days. Healthcare, safety nets and a (somewhat) sane system of taxation are all part of this. I hope any US revolution that might be upcoming will be peaceful and that some basics will be factory-reset to some saner defaults.

Iceland is Planning For the Possibility That Its Climate Could Become Uninhabitable

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Iceland in October classified the potential collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation — the ocean current system that ferries warm water northward from the tropics and essentially functions as the country’s central heating — as a national security risk, a designation that amounts to a formal reckoning with the possibility that climate change could render the island nation uninhabitable.

Several recent studies have found the AMOC far more vulnerable to breakdown than scientists had long assumed. One, analyzing nine models under high-emission scenarios, saw the current weaken and collapse in every single instance; even under the Paris agreement’s emission targets, the researchers estimated a 25% chance of shutdown. Stefan Rahmstorf, an oceanographer at Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and a co-author of that study, said it was “wrong to assume this was low probability.” Simulations of a post-collapse world project Icelandic winter extremes plunging to minus-50 degrees Celsius, and sea ice surrounding the country for the first time since Viking settlement.

Iceland’s national strategy for dealing with AMOC risks is scheduled to be finalized by 2028. The country has also flagged that NASA Goddard, a key source of AMOC modeling, has been targeted for significant staff and budget cuts under the current U.S. administration.

Re:So let me get this right…

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Global warming is going to make things colder?

In some areas, yes. Global warming will destabilize existing wind, weather, and ocean currents into new patterns. Some places will loose their current heating and cooling sources.

Drain the Chesapeake Bay and see what happens to the weather around Washington DC and Baltimore. Drain Puget Sound and see what happens to Seattle. Flowing ocean water can have a stabilizing effect on the land area near them.

Stop the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and the warm water that keeps Iceland temperate will stop and no longer be a stabilizing source. Iceland would get colder and the AMOC current would turn to new locations. There are several models that show the best guess of what would happen but suffice it to say it would change weather patterns for numerous locations.

Imagine that!

By Petersko • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

A country looks into the future and sees something bleak. Then they begin to plan for it.

Imagine how stupid they would be if they just denied it, turned a blind eye, and then actively attempted to accelerate directly toward it.

Re:Or…

By Rei • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I mean, to be fair, Denmark nearly did order Iceland evacuated during the Mist Hardships after the eruption of Laki.

We tend not to get “geologically-catastrophic” eruptions here like, say, Yellowstone. But we get “historically-catastrophic” eruptions surprisingly often, once every 100-200 years or so. For example, the largest lava flow on Earth in the entire Holocene is in Iceland, the jórsárhraun, from Bárðarbunga.

Take Laki for example. A 25 kilometer long fissure “unzipped”. Lava fountains peaked at 800-1400m high. The eruption lasted for 9 months. The worst problem was the gas. To give some perspective: Pinatubo was the gassiest eruption of the 20th century, emitting a very high ~20 MT of sulfur dioxide (Mount Saint Helens by contrast was only ~1,5MT). Well, Laki emitted *120 MT* of sulfur dioxide. And 8-15MT of hydrogen fluoride, which is vastly worse. Normally polar volcanoes have little impact on global climate (volcanic climate impacts tend to be strongest poleward of the volcano), but Laki was so intense that the Mississippi River froze at New Orleans and there was ice in the Gulf of Mexico. It disrupted rain cycles around the world and caused famines that killed millions (Egypt suffered particularly badly). Tens of thousands of deaths were reported directly from the gas in the UK (one presumes the sick and elderly who are vulnerable to air pollution). Weak harvests and the poor government response to it aggravated tensions in France, and probably contributed to the French Revolution five years later.

Regarding the latter… it’s funny how things can come full circle. Because the French Revolution ultimately led to Napoleon, and thus the Napoleonic Wars, which led to Denmark losing Norway to Sweden, which led to Denmark clamping down on its remaining colonies (including Iceland), which created the local anger in Iceland that led to the Icelandic independence movement that ultimately led to Iceland’s freedom.

But Laki is hardly the only one. Another good example is Hekla. If you look at old maps of Iceland, they commonly draw Hekla hugely prominently, erupting, using the scariest drawing style they can. Hekla became quite famous in the Middle Ages in Europe as being the entrance to Hell. It was written as being the prison of Judas, people claimed to see souls flying into it during an eruption, etc. It seems to have gotten its fame during the 1104 eruption, which dusted Europe with ash.

But there’s so many more.

ByteDance Suspends Seedance 2 Feature That Turns Facial Photos Into Personal Voices Over Potential Risks

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
hackingbear writes:
China’s Bytedance has released Seedance 2.0, an AI video generator which handles up to four types of input at once: images, videos, audio, and text. Users can combine up to nine images, three videos, and three audio files, up to a total of twelve files. Generated videos run between 4 and 15 [or 60] seconds long and automatically come with sound effects or music.

Its performance is unfortunately so good that it has forced the firm to block its facial-to-voice feature after the model reportedly demonstrated the ability to generate highly accurate personal voice characteristics using only facial images, even without user authorization.

In a recent test, Pan Tianhong, founder of tech media outlet MediaStorm, discovered that uploading a personal facial photo caused the model to produce audio nearly identical to his real voice — without using any voice samples or authorized data. […]

Are there any examples?

By liqu1d • Score: 3 Thread
I’m finding it a tad hard to believe an AI can guess someone’s voice correctly from a photograph.

Re:Are there any examples?

By mattr • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Not an expert in this area. But apparently it is a thing. Funnily enough the feature they are worried about is actually a security attack… ha ha. Welp, this cat is out of the bag unfortunately, so now just the criminals will have it.
1. Foice - Generate voice based on an image as an attack on voiceprint systems
https://www.usenix.org/system/…
2. Speech2Face - the reverse process. https://speech2face.github.io/
3. Predict physical attributes from voice with ML
https://www.researchgate.net/p…

White House Eyes Data Center Agreements Amid Energy Price Spikes

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The Trump administration wants some of the world’s largest technology companies to publicly commit to a new compact governing the rapid expansion of AI data centers, according to two administration officials granted anonymity to discuss private conversations.

A draft of the compact obtained by POLITICO lays out commitments designed to ensure energy-hungry data centers do not raise household electricity prices, strain water supplies or undermine grid reliability, and that the companies driving demand also carry the cost of building new infrastructure.

The proposed pact, which is not final and could be subject to change, is framed as a voluntary agreement between President Donald Trump and major U.S. tech companies and data center developers. It could bind OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Facebook parent Meta and other AI giants to a broad set of energy, water and community principles. None of these companies immediately responded to a request for comment.

Government managed quotas

By algaeman • Score: 3 Thread
This can’t possibly go wrong!

The $10 Trillion asymptote chase

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
The AI companies are chasing the IQ asymptote and they know it but cannot admit it.

GPT n+1 - GPT n < GPT n - GPT n-1

The bubble will burst as new models are released and found wanting.

It is disgusting that evil Altman and co are wasting all this power on this stupid race they know no-one will win.

Non-Binding Nothing Burger

By crunchy_one • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The proposed pact, which is not final and could be subject to change, is framed as a voluntary agreement…

More sound and fury, signifying nothing.

Wait… between who?

By XXongo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The summary: …The proposed pact… is framed as a voluntary agreement between President Donald Trump and major U.S. tech companies and data center developers.

Wait, between who??? This is an agreement between the data companies and Donald Trump, personally?

Why would datacentre operators do this?

By thegarbz • Score: 3 Thread

As it stands datacentre operators are pulling all stops to bypass existing regulations. What makes anyone think they will voluntarily join this agreement?

Funny story about Microsoft in Amsterdam, they are building a huge vertical datacentre. Why vertical? Turns out the regulations governing hyperscale datacentres in the Netherlands considered the power consumption *AND* foot print (law makers are stupid the world over it seems). By building a 20 story datacentre they keep their foot print on the ground below the threshold and their hyperscale datacentre suddenly didn’t need to meet any regulations or approvals for a hyperscale datacentre.

We’re talking about companies that are proposing putting datacentres at the bottom of the ocean, or powering them via magical fairy dust … I mean SMRs. We’re talking about companies who couldn’t get a grid connection resulting in Elon Musk getting 30 small gas turbine generators used typically for temporary construction power to run his datacentre permanently, and then 2 years later tell the local government that he doesn’t need to meet emissions regulations for a power plant because the gas turbines are “not permanent”.

No one is going to give a shit about Trump’s proposal. It makes me wonder … is this just all for show?

Lost Soviet Moon Lander May Have Been Found

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
In 1966, a beach-ball-size robot bounced across the moon. Once it rolled to a stop, its four petal-like covers opened, exposing a camera that sent back the first picture taken on the surface of another world. This was Luna 9, the Soviet lander that was the earliest spacecraft to safely touchdown on the moon. While it paved the way toward interplanetary exploration, Luna 9’s precise whereabouts have remained a mystery ever since.

That may soon change. Two research teams think they might have tracked down the long-lost remains of Luna 9. But there’s a catch: The teams do not agree on the location. “One of them is wrong,” said Anatoly Zak, a space journalist and author who runs RussianSpaceWeb.com and reported on the story last week. The dueling finds highlight a strange fact of the early moon race: The precise resting places of a number of spacecraft that crashed or landed on the moon in the run up to NASA’s Apollo missions are lost to obscurity. A newer generation of spacecraft may at last resolve these mysteries.

Luna 9 launched to the moon on Jan. 31, 1966. While a number of spacecraft had crashed into the lunar surface at that stage of the moon race, it was among the earliest to try what rocket engineers call a soft landing. Its core unit, a spherical suite of scientific instruments, was about two feet across. That size makes it difficult to spot from orbit. “Luna 9 is a very, very small vehicle,” said Mark Robinson, a geologist at the company Intuitive Machines, which has twice landed spacecraft on the moon.

One of them is wrong

By BubbaDave • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

or both

Alternate non-paywalled article

By cruff • Score: 5, Informative Thread
https://www.scientificamerican…

Soviets had some nice “firsts”

By Tablizer • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Notable firsts include but are not limited to:

1) First orbiting satellite.
2) First photo of far-side of the moon
3) First animal in orbit (poor Laika)
4) First human in orbit
5) First space-walk
6) First photo from surface of moon
7) First probe to return data from surface of Mars (short-lived)
8) First automated sample return from moon
9) First photo from surface of another planet (Venus)

Re:One of them is wrong

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Two men say they’re Jesus - ONE man must be wrong!

The millions of people worldwide named Jesús would disagree, I think?

Re:Soviets had some nice “firsts”

By quenda • Score: 4, Funny Thread

We need 3 ark space-ships. One for the MAGAs, one for the wokes, and the rest of us will be along shortly.

Google’s Personal Data Removal Tool Now Covers Government IDs

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Google on Tuesday expanded its “Results about you” tool to let users request the removal of Search results containing government-issued ID numbers — including driver’s licenses, passports and Social Security numbers — adding to the tool’s existing ability to flag results that surface phone numbers, email addresses, and home addresses.

The update, announced on Safer Internet Day, is rolling out in the U.S. over the coming days. Google also streamlined its process for reporting non-consensual explicit images on Search, allowing users to select and submit removal requests for multiple images at once rather than reporting them individually.

Backups?

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

How does Big Tech handle backups with data deletion requests?

I’ve set up backup systems for enterprises in the past where we had a hard requirement of restoring state back to seven years.

“Station wagons full of magtapes”, and such.

I would presume a subpoena would require such retrieval. I can imagine a few cryptographic systems to make that difficult by mixing it with production but that would require extraordinary effort and commitment to privacy, which I would never expect of pretty much any corporation.

Don’t get me wrong, this is a good move, but let’s be careful to not get too cavalier assuming compromising info has been deleted.

It’s a shame but I’m mentally and strategically preparing for services to require ID one by one over the next decade and ending my 1988-present use of the Internet at that point.

Unless the sun does it first.

Oh sure

By awwshit • Score: 3 Thread

Give Google all of my data, so they can ‘remove’ it for me.

Give Palantir my photo, so they can remove it for me.

You can feel the protection.

Does that mean…

By commodore73 • Score: 3 Thread
Do I have to give Google these identifiers to have them removed? Seems like a risk. And no, I didn’t even read the summary.