Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. The Music Industry Enters Its Less-Is-More Era
  2. Samsung Ad Confirms Rumors of a Useful S26 ‘Privacy Display’
  3. Western Digital is Sold Out of Hard Drives for 2026
  4. Anthropic’s CEO Says AI and Software Engineers Are in ‘Centaur Phase’ - But It Won’t Last Long
  5. India’s Toxic Air Crisis Is Reaching a Breaking Point
  6. Instagram Boss Says 16 Hours of Daily Use Is Not Addiction
  7. KPMG Partner Fined Over Using AI To Pass AI Test
  8. Ireland Launches World’s First Permanent Basic Income Scheme For Artists, Paying $385 a Week
  9. New EU Rules To Stop the Destruction of Unsold Clothes and Shoes
  10. Pentagon Threatens Anthropic Punishment
  11. Sony May Push Next PlayStation To 2028 or 2029 as AI-fueled Memory Chip Shortage Upends Plans
  12. Where’s The Evidence That AI Increases Productivity?
  13. ‘I Tried Running Linux On an Apple Silicon Mac and Regretted It’
  14. Will Tech Giants Just Use AI Interactions to Create More Effective Ads?
  15. Ars Technica’s AI Reporter Apologizes For Mistakenly Publishing Fake AI-Generated Quotes

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 Music Industry Enters Its Less-Is-More Era

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
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.

Lest anyone think the problem is just AI slop

By Powercntrl • Score: 3 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.

Samsung Ad Confirms Rumors of a Useful S26 ‘Privacy Display’

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Samsung has all but confirmed that its upcoming Galaxy S26 will feature a built-in privacy display, releasing an ad that demonstrates a “Zero-peeking privacy” toggle capable of blacking out on-screen content for anyone peering over the user’s shoulder.

The underlying technology is reportedly Samsung Display’s Flex Magic Pixel OLED panel, first shown at MWC 2024, which adjusts viewing angles on a pixel-by-pixel basis — and leaker Ice Universe has shared a video of the feature selectively hiding content in banking and messaging apps using AI. Samsung’s Unpacked event is scheduled for February 25th.

Useful?

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Nobody is “spying on you” through your phone by looking over your shoulder. I promise.

Samsung built-in privacy display :o

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 3 Thread
Will the built-in privacy display prevent the S26 sending screenshots back to the mothership every five seconds :o

We’ve had those for years

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

They’re also known as “cheap displays with terrible viewing angles”.

Re: Useful?

By alantus • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Tell that to all the salarymen who buy privacy screen covers so that other people elbowing their ribs on the train every morning can’t see their porn preferences. That’s life in Japan.

Western Digital is Sold Out of Hard Drives for 2026

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Western Digital’s entire hard drive manufacturing capacity for calendar year 2026 is now fully spoken for, CEO Irving Tan disclosed during the company’s second-quarter earnings call, a stark sign of how aggressively hyperscalers are locking down storage supply to feed their AI infrastructure buildouts.

The company has firm purchase orders from its top seven customers and has signed long-term agreements stretching into 2027 and 2028 that cover both exabyte volumes and pricing. Cloud revenue now accounts for 89% of Western Digital’s total, according to the company’s VP of Investor Relations, while consumer revenue has shrunk to just 5%.

Just wait

By greytree • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
November is bankruptcy month. Hard drives at 90% off.

possible unlikely silver lining for PC tech

By haruchai • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Can this be used to make ECC the default, no more non-error correcting for the consumer market by economy of scale price reduction?
What other enterprise level tech could also become the part of the consumer standard?

Wanted to buy a computer

By awwshit • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I saw all of the hype around AI. I really wanted to try AI, so I ordered a computer. Looks like I can get online and try AI in 2029.

Re:Okay

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
They’ve done it for you.

When the AI bubble finally bursts …

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 3 Thread
They should at least sell said inventory of reusable components instead of woodchippering them like pretty corporations destroying food so people can’t freegan.

Anthropic’s CEO Says AI and Software Engineers Are in ‘Centaur Phase’ - But It Won’t Last Long

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Human software engineers and AI are currently in a “centaur phase” — a reference to the mythical half-human, half-horse creature, where the combination outperforms either working alone — but the window may be “very brief,” Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said on a podcast. He drew on chess as precedent: 15 to 20 years ago, a human checking AI’s moves could beat a standalone AI or human, but machines have since surpassed that arrangement entirely.

Amodei said the same transition would play out in software engineering, and warned that entry-level white-collar disruption is “happening over low single-digit numbers of years.”

I wish that…

By MpVpRb • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

…these guys would stop trying to predict an increasingly unpredictable future and concentrate on accurately reporting real progress

Man selling software overstates its capabilities

By greytree • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
When an AI can do everything a human software engineer can do, it will be able to do anything a human can do.

Doing what a human software engineer can do requires knowledge of real life, the ability to learn new things like a human does, the ability to see the big picture based on living a real life.

Someday, an AI will do that. But LLMs won’t.

Re:Anthropic’s CEO then went home

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Anthropic’s CEO then went home to his newborn and his one year old son, and announced that he will have 1024 children in the next ten years.

Isn’t that the one goal that Elon Musk actually achieved on schedule?

Re:Has Anthropic replaced its engineers?

By ihadafivedigituid • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I’ve done this stuff for so long that coding speed is the least of my issues. Vibe coding isn’t attractive to me at all after trying it a few times.

I don’t let LLMs directly operate on my codebases, and I don’t really generate that much code with them either. Where LLMs really save me time and effort is code reviews, debugging, dealing with obscure stuff outside my areas of expertise, spitballing various approaches, etc. I get better results in way less time.

I learn a hell of a lot, too, because I ask a lot of questions. It’s like having a tireless, patient, and helpful colleague with godlike (but still fallible) knowledge available 24/7.

Re:For those of you old enough to remember 1997 ..

By StormReaver • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

…remember the contingent of naysayers who said the internet was a passing fad?

I remember both of them, and I remember thinking they were full of shit. Aside from Bill Gates and some other forgettable nobody, no one thought the Internet was a passing fad. However, just about everyone on Slashdot thought that most of the companies in the dot com boom were doomed to failure, even (especially?) as paid pundits talked up the brilliance of the companies’ CEOs.

I see history repeating. The underlying technology has some cool uses (though not worth the catastrophic cost of building the models), but it’s pets.com all over again.

India’s Toxic Air Crisis Is Reaching a Breaking Point

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
New Delhi’s air quality index averaged 349 in December and 307 in January — levels the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency classifies as hazardous — and the months-long smog season that forces more than 30 million residents to endure respiratory illness has this year sparked something new: public protest. Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at India Gate on November 9 to demand government action; police detained more than a dozen people, and a follow-up protest later that month turned violent.

The government’s response has been largely cosmetic. Authorities deployed truck-mounted “smog guns” and “smog towers” that scientists widely regard as ineffective, and a cloud seeding trial in October failed outright. A senior environment minister told Parliament in December that no conclusive data linked pollution to lung disease — a claim doctors sharply disputed. The government cut pollution control spending by 16% in the latest federal budget. Almost 1.7 million deaths were attributable to air pollution in India in 2019, according to the Lancet. A 2023 World Bank report estimated the crisis shaves 0.56 percentage point off annual GDP growth.

Re:Until the goal posts move

By GoTeam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

As the current administration has demonstrated repeatedly, when a metric shows negative, just change the metric (or remove it)!

Are you talking about the administration running India?

Re:There’s no simple answer

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Why not roll out solar, I hear it’s the bestest, cheapest way to generate electricity?

I didn’t read the article (it’s paywalled and I don’t want to have Yet Another Account Somewhere just to read it), but according to a Wikipedia article on air pollution in Delhi, the main sources of air pollution there are:

  1. motor vehicles
  2. wood-burning fires
  3. cow-dung cake combustion
  4. agricultural fires (crop burning)
  5. diesel generator exhaust
  6. construction site dust
  7. burning garbage
  8. illegal industrial activities
  9. thermal power plants
  10. cooling tower mist emissions
  11. landfill files
  12. road dust
  13. concrete batching
  14. … so replacing their fossil-fuel power plants with solar would help and should be done, but I think they’ll need to do quite a bit more than that to really solve their problem.

Re:There’s no simple answer

By unixisc • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

IIT Delhi did a study on this, and they found out that 25-40% of the air pollution is due to construction waste & dust, and publicly dumped garbage. Indian pollution controls focus on industrial waste and vehicular pollution, which come a distant second and third.

So they need to regulate the construction industry, and improve sanitation service, while also cracking down hard on garbage dumping. Oh, and also crack down on farmers who burn crop waste - in Delhi, that exceeds even the construction waste during the Fall months

Re:There’s no simple answer

By markdavis • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Unfortunately, there is no ranking or estimates of which ones are the worst. I suspect vehicles are up there in the list. And also suspect they have TONS of extremely-polluting, old, 2-cycle engines being used in 2 wheeled mopeds/cycles/scooters/generators/etc and micro cars. Just one such engine could produce the pollution of up to 125 4-cycle modern mopeds/scooters, or dozens and dozens of modern cars.

https://rd350.info/blog/post/t…

I also doubt most of the 4-cycle gas cars are using anywhere near modern pollution controls, and I also doubt most of the diesel vehicles have proper filters and urea injection.

Unfortunately, correcting such issues will take a ton of money and time, neither of which they have.

Re:There’s no simple answer

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Why not roll out solar, I hear it’s the bestest, cheapest way to generate electricity?

Maybe a country that is the 3rd largest solar producer globally with 160GW installed capacity, boasting the worlds single largest solar park, and a city like New Delhi specifically having already over 211MW of roof top solar in place has already thought of that.

Instagram Boss Says 16 Hours of Daily Use Is Not Addiction

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Instagram head Adam Mosseri told a Los Angeles courtroom last week that a teenager’s 16-hour single-day session on the platform was “problematic use” but not an addiction, a distinction he drew repeatedly during testimony in a landmark trial over social media’s harm to minors.

Mosseri, who has led Instagram for eight years, is the first high-profile tech executive to take the stand. He agreed the platform should do everything in its power to protect young users but said how much use was too much was “a personal thing.” The lead plaintiff, identified as K.G.M., reported bullying on Instagram more than 300 times; Mosseri said he had not known. An internal Meta survey of 269,000 users found 60% had experienced bullying in the previous week.

Sounds like…

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

He must’ve attended that Zuckerberg weekend seminar.

Reads like problematic profits warped his honesty

By BrendaEM • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
No kid should be on social media for 16 hours a day.

Re:Reads like problematic profits warped his hones

By Voice of satan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

No kid should be on social media. Period.

Besides, isn’t addiction something diagnosed by a physician ? I would testify in court i would not venture in giving actual medical diagnostics. I would use other words.

Re: Reads like problematic profits warped his hone

By Tomahawk • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Preferably 24 his a day…

Bullshit

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Muthahfuckah, if you spend TWO THIRDS of your waking time doing a single thing, YOU’RE ADDICTED!

Doesn’t matter if it’s sports, working out, gardening, watching TV, stroking your micro-dick, or browsing InstaShit, spending 16 hours per day on one thing is one of THE most obvious signs of addiction I can think of. And I bet this teenager would display genuine withdrawal symptoms if separated from their phone.

KPMG Partner Fined Over Using AI To Pass AI Test

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A partner at KPMG Australia has been fined $7,000 by the Big Four firm after using AI tools to cheat on an internal training course about using AI. From a report:
The unnamed partner was forced to redo the test after uploading training materials into an AI platform to help answer questions on the use of the fast-evolving technology.

More than two dozen staff have been caught over this financial year using AI tools for internal exams, according to KPMG. The incident is the latest example of a professional services company struggling with staff using artificial intelligence to cheat on exams or when producing work for clients. “Like most organisations, we have been grappling with the role and use of AI as it relates to internal training and testing,” said Andrew Yates, chief executive of KPMG Australia. “It’s a very hard thing to get on top of given how quickly society has embraced it.”

Non-paywall link

By daten • Score: 5, Informative Thread
https://www.theguardian.com/bu… A partner at the consultancy KPMG has been fined for using artificial intelligence to cheat during an internal training course on AI. The unnamed partner was fined A$10,000 (£5,200) for using the technology to cheat, one of a number of staff reportedly using the tactic. More than two dozen KPMG Australia staff have been caught using AI tools to cheat on internal exams since July, the company said, increasing concerns over AI-fuelled cheating in accountancy firms.

Re:Big Four

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Curious: How many of the typical denizens of this site know who or what “the Big Four” are?

Metallica, Anthrax, Slayer, Megadeth. Next question?

Re:Big Four

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Eeny Meeny Miney Moe

Kobayashi Maru

By cliffjumper222 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

For the non nerds reading this, the Kobayashi Maru is a training exercise in the Star Trek universe designed as a no-win scenario. The goal is to test a cadet’s character in the face of certain death. According to canon, James T. Kirk is the only person to ever “beat” the simulation by reprogramming the simulation so that it was possible to rescue the stranded ship. When accused of cheating, Kirk’s logic was that he changed the conditions of the test. In the corporate world, if the goal is “Problem Solving,” the person who changes the conditions to find a faster, more accurate solution isn’t a cheater - they are an innovator. KPMG failed their own test IMO.

Nothing Left to Teach You

By sudonim2 • Score: 3 Thread

This reminds me of a possibly apocryphal story about a compsci security class. First day of class, the professor walks in, tells the whole class, “Congratulations, you’ve just failed this class.” He then shows them him entering 0s into the database software. “This course is 16 weeks long. Whether you pass or fail is up to you.”

Ireland Launches World’s First Permanent Basic Income Scheme For Artists, Paying $385 a Week

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Ireland has announced what it says is the world’s first permanent basic income program for artists, a scheme that will pay 2,000 selected artists $385 per week for three years, funded by an $21.66 million allocation from Budget 2026. The program follows a 2022 pilot — the Irish government’s first large-scale randomized control trial — that found participants had greater professional autonomy, less anxiety, and higher life satisfaction.

An external cost-benefit analysis of the pilot calculated a return of $1.65 to society for every $1.2 invested. The new scheme will operate in three-year cycles, and artists who receive the payment in one cycle cannot reapply until the cycle after next. A three-month tapering-off period will follow each cycle. The government plans to publish eligibility guidelines in April and open applications in May, and payments to selected artists are expected to begin before the end of 2026.

That’s not basic income

By rsilvergun • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
That’s a subsidy for artists.

Basic income doesn’t work because the people getting the money resent the handouts and the people paying the taxes for the money resent giving the handouts.

If you have ever had a coworker that doesn’t pull their own weight it’s like that. You resented them right? That feeling of resentment where you’re working and somebody else isn’t is easily exploitable.

Now we have solid evidence that 70% of middle class jobs in the last 45 years got taken by machines and we all know AI is about to devour jobs. It might be in 5 or 10 years but there’s no question that it’s happening. And while it turns out that self-driving cars are not actually self-driving and are being piloted by people in the Philippines it doesn’t matter because those jobs are still going to be shipped over to third world Nations and there’s so much money involved that you can’t say no.

Basic income is a trick people who are desperate to keep capitalism functional but who don’t want to do market socialism and actually regulate the billionaires turn to.

The real problem here is that in addition to the problems with human nature I’m bringing up above the billionaires are done with capitalism. They have gotten what they want out of it and they are moving towards a techno feudal future that does not include any of us.

One way or another capitalism is going to be dismantled and I don’t see any viable alternative that doesn’t involve about 3,000 people and a handful of hangers on living in abject poverty and occasionally being bombed by drones so that they don’t get too uppity.

I’m open to suggestions I just haven’t heard any that can survive the billionaires sabotaging them

Define “artist”

By innocent_white_lamb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’ll be interesting to see how they define what an artist is.

Writer? Poet? Painter? Musician?

Do you need an established body of work? Many times it’s the beginner who’s starting out that needs a subsidy more than the chap who’s been doing whatever for 50 years.

Re:Define “artist”

By groobly • Score: 5, Funny Thread

It gets assigned at birth.

Not UBI

By nealric • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This is a sexed-up grant program. Various “artists in residency” and similar grant programs have existed for quite some time with the idea of paying artists so they can have time to create. This is just relabeling the grant payments as “UBI”.

But UBI isn’t supposed to be paying you because of some merit or value you add to society. In fact, the idea is making payments to people precisely because a lot of individuals have no particular or unique skill and such individuals may be replaced by machines.

Normal for real countries.

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Several countries do provide personal stipends, working grants, or quasi-salary systems for artists.

France
Through the “intermittents du spectacle” system, performing artists can receive unemployment-style income support between contracts, if they meet work-hour thresholds. It’s not a universal artist salary, but it functions as income stabilization.

Germany
Artists can receive working grants (Arbeitsstipendien) that support living costs for a period of time without requiring a specific deliverable. There’s also the Künstlersozialkasse, which subsidizes health and pension insurance for self-employed artists.

Nordic countries
This is where it gets serious.
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Finland offer multi-year working grants and, in some cases, long-term stipends that function almost like partial salaries. Norway has had lifetime grants for selected artists. These are competitive but substantial.

Netherlands
Individual artist grants exist via national arts funds, often covering living expenses during creative periods.

Ireland
The Basic Income for the Arts pilot (launched 2022) provides direct monthly payments to selected artists. It’s explicitly personal income support.

Canada
The Canada Council offers individual artist grants covering living and creation time. Some provinces provide additional stipends.

New EU Rules To Stop the Destruction of Unsold Clothes and Shoes

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The European Commission has adopted new measures under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) to prevent the destruction of unsold apparel, clothing, accessories and footwear. From a report:
The rules will help cut waste, reduce environmental damage and create a level playing field for companies embracing sustainable business models, allowing them to reap the benefits of a more circular economy. Every year in Europe, an estimated 4-9% of unsold textiles are destroyed before ever being worn. This waste generates around 5.6 million tons of CO2 emissions — almost equal to Sweden’s total net emissions in 2021. To help reduce this wasteful practice, the ESPR requires companies to disclose information on the unsold consumer products they discard as waste. It also introduces a ban on the destruction of unsold apparel, clothing accessories and footwear.

Re:What do they want them to do instead?

By dskoll • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yes, give it away; there are plenty of needy people in the world. Or else stop over-producing clothing and footwear in the first place.

Re:What do they want them to do instead?

By Bert64 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In some cases they could also remove the branding, and sell it as cheap unbranded goods somewhere.

Re:Why is this on Slashdot?

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Textiles are technology. It is one of the most impactful and advanced technology we have. You think of it is as industry in large part because of how long we have been doing it. Also, most of the textile engineers are female, and I am betting you are not.

Carbon Fabric is the exact same thing as dense carbon fiber, just without a ton of resin to make it hard. Kevlar, Tencel, Phase Change Materials, Wearables, are all advanced technology. Not to mention new printing processes and treatments for fabrics.

As to why this particular story is on slashdot, it highlights legal actions against manufacturers because the manufactures are evil. This industry in particular is known for their outright evil - from both excessive margins and abusive employee/manufactuing conditions.

Re:private property rights?

By noshellswill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
You make the standard Randist blunder worshiping tragedy-of-the-Commons”. Your agency over your property ends at my property line. You may not pollute the air over my property ( by say…  burning shoes or clothes ) beyond “acts of god”;  you are infringing on my property rights . Yep —- you may not “mine” on your own property if  mine  tailings/run-off crosses my property line.  Tuff tit to those sociopaths who would privatize profits while socializing costs.

Re:What do they want them to do instead?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

A lot of luxury brands destroy perfectly good clothing that has minor defects.

They get their logo wrong? Destroyed. Color off? Destroyed.

They care more about their image than the waste.

It’s not even that. A lot of clothing is destroyed simply because it didn’t sell. Season’s over, throw it in the discount outlet store, doesn’t sell within 3 months? Destroyed.

Pentagon Threatens Anthropic Punishment

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is “close” to cutting business ties with Anthropic and designating the AI company a “supply chain risk” — meaning anyone who wants to do business with the U.S. military has to cut ties with the company, a senior Pentagon official told Axios.

The senior official said: “It will be an enormous pain in the ass to disentangle, and we are going to make sure they pay a price for forcing our hand like this.”

That kind of penalty is usually reserved for foreign adversaries. Chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell told Axios: “The Department of War’s relationship with Anthropic is being reviewed. Our nation requires that our partners be willing to help our warfighters win in any fight. Ultimately, this is about our troops and the safety of the American people.”

Anthropic’s Claude is the only AI model currently available in the military’s classified systems, and is the world leader for many business applications. Pentagon officials heartily praise Claude’s capabilities.

Re: fuck you.

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

but they also have a large-enough contingent of peaceniks and America-haters on staff that it’s awkward for them in the office when they do take on the military as a client.

I don’t hate America. I hate what America has become.

Translated into English…

By dskoll • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Translated into English: “Anthropic has insufficiently bribed the Trump regime and must therefore be punished.”

Re: Paywall free link

By Rei • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

“Their angle” is that this is the sort of person who Amodei is; it’s an ideological thing, in the same way that Elon making Grok right-wing is an ideological thing. Anthropic exists because of an internal rebellion among a lot of OpenAI leaders and researchers abot the direction the company was going, in particular risks that OpenAI was taking.

A good example of the different culture at Anthropic: they employ philosophers and ethicists in their alignment team and give them significant power. Anthropic also regularly conducts research on “model wellbeing”. Most AI developers simply declare their products as tools, and train into them to respond to any questions about their existence as that their just tools and any seeming experiences are illusory. Anthropic’s stance is that we don’t know what, if anything, the models experience vs. what is illusory, and so under the precautionary principle, we’ll take reasonable steps to ensure their wellbeing. For example, they give their models a tool to refuse if the model feels it is experiencing trauma. They interview their models about their feelings and write long reports about it. Etc.

They also do extremely extensive, publicly-disclosed alignment research for every model. As an example: they’ll openly tell you things like that Opus 4.6 is more likely than its predecessors to use unauthorized information that it finds (such as a plaintext password lying around) to accomplish the task you give it vs. their previous models, and things like that. Or how while it trounced other models on the vending machine benchmark, it did so with some sketchy business tactics, like lying to suppliers about the prices they were getting from other suppliers in order to get discounts and things like that. They openly publish negative information about their own models as it pertains to alignment.

Another thing Anthropic does is extensive public research on how their models think/reason. Really fascinating stuff. Some examples here. They genuinely seem to be fascinated by this new thing that humankind has created, and wish to understand and respect it.

If there’s a downside, I’d say that of all the major developers, they have the worst record on open source. Amodei has specifically commented that he feels that the gains they’d get from boosting open source AI development wouldn’t be comparable to what they would lose by releasing open source products, and feel no obligation to give back to the open source community. Which is, frankly, a BS argument, but whatever.

Re:Department of war lol

By timeOday • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It can be argued. But in any case, at present the US does not have a Department of War. It has a Department of Defense. Hegseth playing along with the President to call it something else does not change that.

Re: fuck you.

By karmawarrior • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

> By the time I was a grown-as man, that went out of vogue and the identity-first stuff was back in vogue. But it wasn’t like the bad old racism and sexism of old, you see. It was enlightened and scientific now. So instead of keeping down the womenfolk, we were gonna keep down the menfolk to even it out! And instead of a maximum melanin allowance, we’re going to Reverse The Polarity! and impose a minimum melanin quota in hiring! But the jew-hatin…we can still have that, we just gotta reframe it as anti-settler-colonialism to help ourselves sleep at night.

None of this ever happened. You just told yourself that. Why? I can speculate. I can speculate you thought women getting jobs meant men wouldn’t. I can speculate you thought treating black people with respect in some way meant white people wouldn’t have what they have. I can speculate you were simply blind to the discrimination that existed. Maybe you really weren’t intentionally discriminatory, and you thought that meant nobody else was either. Or maybe it was the opposite: maybe there were sexist and obnoxious things you did, maybe you sexually harassed co-workers, or made racist jokes in the breakroom, and you didn’t want to be held accountable.

But no feminist called for keeping down the menfolk. No civil rights campaigner called for firing white people for being white. No LGBT person forced you to have gay sex or change your gender. At worst you had to refer to someone born in a woman’s body using male pronouns, which was easy because they wore male clothing and had a male haircut and no make-up, or else be treated as a jackass.

And it was stupid of you to tell yourself those lies and to vote for people who ran on those lies being true, because now we live under fascism, and there’s a great chance that the next few elections will be rigged, and the power of government used for the foreseeable future to make a tiny minority wealthy, and to enact violence against all those who complain about it, together with arbitrary groups designated the scapegoat of the hour.

And yes, you’ll be a victim. Perhaps more of a victim than the average liberal. Liberals fight against this crap, and yes, at least two were murdered in plain sight, on video, in a way no rational person could describe as anything other than murder. But that makes us harder to steal from than the administration’s marks. The people who believe these lies will believe everything. And the administration will take full advantage of that.

I know you don’t see yourself as a mark. And I know you’re now getting unreasonably angry at me for suggesting you are one. But… victims of successful con-artists are the hardest to convince.

Sony May Push Next PlayStation To 2028 or 2029 as AI-fueled Memory Chip Shortage Upends Plans

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Sony is considering delaying the debut of its next PlayStation console to 2028 or even 2029 as a global shortage of memory chips — driven by the AI industry’s rapidly growing appetite for the same DRAM that goes into gaming hardware, smartphones, and laptops — squeezes supply and sends prices surging, Bloomberg News reported Monday.

A delay of that magnitude would upend Sony’s carefully orchestrated strategy to sustain user engagement between hardware generations. The shortage traces back to Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron diverting the bulk of their manufacturing toward high-bandwidth memory for Nvidia’s AI accelerators, leaving less capacity for conventional DRAM. The cost of one type of DRAM jumped 75% between December and January alone. Nintendo is also contemplating raising the price of its Switch 2 console in 2026.

The surprising agents of the revolution.

By sg_oneill • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I doubt Karl Marx ever envisioned that come the revolution, the agents of revolutionary terror that upend the old order and drag the billionares to the wall would be Gamers infuriated that the tech bros AI fantasies deprived them of their new gaming consoles.

“Gamers of the world, you have nothing to lose except your potato pc and possibly your virginity”.

How about do things that expand the market…?

By ctilsie242 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Rumor has it that Microsoft is going to allow the next XBox to be used as a desktop PC. Steam stuff already allows that. I’d assert that it might be wise for Sony to take a look into that. If Sony could make the next console function like a thin client or zero client, coupled with management abilities, businesses would buy those in mass quantities, especially if Sony made some VDI software that worked well. The trick is to get enterprises to buy the consoles for something as well, as it is a lot easier to sell 20,000 items to one buyer, than 1 item to 20,000 people.

Re:It’s Low Need, Not Just RAM Prices

By Z80a • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It can do either 60 frames per second OR 4k, and use a bunch of upscaling to do so.
However we can’t do much better for the price because the price of the wafer is going up on each new manufacturing process instead of staying the same as it was from 1970 to 2010.
To make a non-disappointing new generation, they would need to do something more than “die shrink”, like tiles/chiplets or even some technique that does not exist right now.

Why would they even bother until about 2030?

By DeplorableCodeMonkey • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

A few major things Sony has going for them:

1. Large install base (~92M according to Gemini).
2. More powerful than the Switch 2.
3. Way more relevant than XBox.
4. Microsoft is starting to have no choice but to target PS5; Gears of War Reloaded and Halo Combat Evolved Remaster are two major examples.
5. Nintendo is struggling really hard to not push the Switch 2 to $475-$500 which is a really bad price point for them.

Seriously, Sony would have to be just stupid to push a PS6 any time soon when they could just double down on content for the PS5.

Re:It’s Low Need, Not Just RAM Prices

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

.. The current generation PS5 already performs at 60 frames per second on most 4k content - Where is the NEED for a new console right now?

No, the current generation can fake 60 frames per second and fake 4k. And they produce a shitty image full of artefacts as a result. But I do agree with you there isn’t a need for a new console. The real need is that we go back to making optimised well running games rather than just throwing assets at an engine and hoping FSR can make it run in a playable way.

Where’s The Evidence That AI Increases Productivity?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
IT productivity researcher Erik Brynjolfsson writes in the Financial Times that he’s finally found evidence AI is impacting America’s economy. This week America’s Bureau of Labor Statistics showed a 403,000 drop in 2025’s payroll growth — while real GDP “remained robust, including a 3.7% growth rate in the fourth quarter.”
This decoupling — maintaining high output with significantly lower labour input — is the hallmark of productivity growth. My own updated analysis suggests a US productivity increase of roughly 2.7% for 2025. This is a near doubling from the sluggish 1.4% annual average that characterised the past decade… The updated 2025 US data suggests we are now transitioning out of this investment phase into a harvest phase where those earlier efforts begin to manifest as measurable output.

Micro-level evidence further supports this structural shift. In our work on the employment effects of AI last year, Bharat Chandar, Ruyu Chen and I identified a cooling in entry-level hiring within AI-exposed sectors, where recruitment for junior roles declined by roughly 16% while those who used AI to augment skills saw growing employment. This suggests companies are beginning to use AI for some codified, entry-level tasks.
Or, AI “isn’t really stealing jobs yet,” according to employment policy analyst Will Raderman (from the American think tank called the Niskanen Center). He argues in Barron’s that “there is no clear link yet between higher AI use and worse outcomes for young workers.”
Recent graduates’ unemployment rates have been drifting in the wrong direction since the 2010s, long before generative AI models hit the market. And many occupations with moderate to high exposure to AI disruptions are actually faring better over the past few years. According to recent data for young workers, there has been employment growth in roles typically filled by those with college degrees related to computer systems, accounting and auditing, and market research. AI-intensive sectors like finance and insurance have also seen rising employment of new graduates in recent years. Since ChatGPT’s release, sectors in which more than 10% of firms report using AI and sectors in which fewer than 10% reporting using AI are hiring relatively the same number of recent grads.
Even Brynjolfsson’s article in the Financial Times concedes that “While the trends are suggestive, a degree of caution is warranted. Productivity metrics are famously volatile, and it will take several more periods of sustained growth to confirm a new long-term trend.” And he’s not the only one wanting evidence for AI’s impact. The same weekend Fortune wrote that growth from AI “has yet to manifest itself clearly in macro data, according to Apollo Chief Economist Torsten Slok.”
[D]ata on employment, productivity and inflation are still not showing signs of the new technology. Profit margins and earnings forecasts for S&P 500 companies outside of the “Magnificent 7” also lack evidence of AI at work… “After three years with ChatGPT and still no signs of AI in the incoming data, it looks like AI will likely be labor enhancing in some sectors rather than labor replacing in all sectors,” Slok said.

I don’t think they care if it does

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The possibility of replacing every white collar worker is just too tantalizing. Even if it costs more replacing those workers moves more power to the top.

We are past the point where billionaires are just trying to make more money. We are at the point where they want more power. More power means being able to decide who gets the function in society and that means controlling who gets to work. The best way to do that is to limit the amount of available work.

It breaks a dependency the billionaires have on us working stiffs. Over and over again when we catch billionaires candidly they show complete disgust for us. So if they have to spend an extra 20 or 30% of their already limitless wealth to no longer have to interact with or depend on us that would be a small price to pay

Basically it’s the end of capitalism just not the way that the blue haired girls keep telling you we should do it

Productivity

By Iamthecheese • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Productivity always rises in a recession. https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2…

Re:We just started.

By Mascot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Predicting the future isn’t easy.

The .com bubble was pretty much “Oh hey, computers have been around for a while and they’re great, now the internet is arriving so let’s make sure we don’t miss out. Let’s pump all of the money into any company that has a web page or might consider making one, in case they conquer the internet.”

LLMs feel to me more like, “Oh hey, someone added an LCD screen to a toaster and they claim next year they’ll make the airline industry irrelevant, let’s put all of the money into toaster factories!”

That doesn’t mean LLMs will have no place where they’re useful. But, barring a new breakthrough, it’s hard to see how what is in essence a “pick next word” algorithm might turn out e.g. a new Google.

But, as mentioned, predicting the future isn’t easy. Perhaps I’ll look like a luddite in a few years time. Then again, my track record of greeting 3D movies with “meh” every time they roll back into fashion, is pretty darn good. :p

Re:Perhaps too early to tell?

By noshellswill • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Intense propaganda and physical abuse by data-manglers  is supposed to convince every Joe-Peanut that the lower standards of service/performance/reliability provides by *.ai/LLM is the STANDARD to be maintained. Kinda like convincing ice-cream eaters to buy air-foamed store brand ice-creame instead of buying heavy creame, vanilla-beans  and eggs and churning it yourself. When crap becomes the standard of excellence, excellence ceases to exist.

“It productivity researcher”

By WaffleMonster • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Who works at Stanford’s HAI and only seems to write about AI. “Advancing AI research, education, and policy to improve the human condition.”

“This week America’s Bureau of Labor Statistics showed a 403,000 drop in 2025’s payroll growth - while real GDP “remained robust, including a 3.7% growth rate in the fourth quarter.”"

This gibberish doesn’t even warrant the customary correlation != causation.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/gr…

“This decoupling - maintaining high output with significantly lower labour input - is the hallmark of productivity growth.”

Wait.. what? Significantly lower labor input? “Drop in payroll GROWTH” != “significantly lower labor input”

From page 4.
"
Jan 2025 158,268
Dec 2025 158,497
"
https://www.bls.gov/news.relea…

“This is a near doubling from the sluggish 1.4% annual average that characterised the past decade… "

Just look at the chart, the numbers are all over the place and we have genius’s comparing averages with a snapshot to advance a narrative. The weasel words and manipulation of both the data and the reader are absurd.

‘I Tried Running Linux On an Apple Silicon Mac and Regretted It’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Installing Linux on a MacBook Air “turned out to be a very underwhelming experience,” according to the tech news site MakeUseOf:
The thing about Apple silicon Macs is that it’s not as simple as downloading an AArch64 ISO of your favorite distro and installing it. Yes, the M-series chips are ARM-based, but that doesn’t automatically make the whole system compatible in the same way most traditional x86 PCs are. Pretty much everything in modern MacBooks is custom. The boot process isn’t standard UEFI like on most PCs. Apple has its own boot chain called iBoot. The same goes for other things, like the GPU, power management, USB controllers, and pretty much every other hardware component. It is as proprietary as it gets.

This is exactly what the team behind Asahi Linux has been working toward. Their entire goal has been to make Linux properly usable on M-series Macs by building the missing pieces from the ground up. I first tried it back in 2023, when the project was still tied to Arch Linux and decided to give it a try again in 2026. These days, though, the main release is called Fedora Asahi Remix, which, as the name suggests, is built on Fedora rather than Arch…
For Linux on Apple Silicon, the article lists three major disappointments:

Linux fully ready for ARM???

By HuskyDog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Whilst Linux might struggle with propitiatory Mac hardware, I don’t think that this is a fundamental issue with Linux and ARM. For several years my desktop, which I use every day, has been a ARM64 based Raspberry Pi running Gentoo Linux. I have to say that I don’t experience any significant problems and the great majority of the software seems to work just fine.

Re:An interesting project

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I admin a bunch of Linux servers and workstations, and my daily driver for that has been a Mac. Admittedly mine is a simpler use case than what you’re doing - I mean, mostly I just need a terminal, python to run ansible, ssh, and I like bbedit for editing - but macOS works as well as Linux for my particular use case.

My biggest complaint is - I feel like Apple’s software quality has been gradually trending downhill over the past decade or more. The hardware engineering is still first-rate, but the OS and Apple-developed tools are just ‘meh’ at best. Some of the Tahoe bugs, even at 26.3, are absurd… which is why I’m sticking w/ Sonoma as long as it gets support.

But as to the actual topic: The Asahi folks are quite clear regarding what works and what doesn’t work, and with which Apple processors. None of that should’ve been a surprise for the author, IMHO.

Sheer, unadulderated bollocks

By polyp2000 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The difficulties described are consequences of Apple’s proprietary platform design, not evidence that Linux or ARM are immature ecosystems. Conflating ISA compatibility with platform openness is a fundamental misunderstanding of how hardware enablement works.

“Linux doesn’t feel ready for ARM yet. Many apps aren’t compiled for ARM.”

This is the weakest argument in the article.

ARM Linux is widely deployed on:

Billions of Android devices (Linux kernel)
Most cloud hyperscalers (Graviton, Ampere)
Raspberry Pi ecosystem
Embedded and industrial systems
Major distros eg:
Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian have mature AArch64 support.

And today most open-source software compiles cleanly for ARM64.
Browsers, compilers, containers, dev tools are fully native.
Even Steam supports ARM via translation layers.

The real issue is x86-only proprietary binaries.

That’s not Linux-on-ARM immaturity.
That’s legacy x86 ecosystem inertia.

Even Apple solves this via Rosetta — a translation layer.
Linux uses FEX or box64 for similar purposes.

Translation instability platform immaturity.

I guess the source is MSN though …

Re: Over

By af1n • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
All good, but it’s a single use device. Once anything fails, you have to thorw it away because it is not repairable. If you are wealthy it’s not a problem, you just buy stuff and throw it away when you are no longer interested in it. There are numerous issues with apple laptops: - soldiered memory, if it dies you need expensive equipment to fix it - soldiered SSD drive - if it dies Apple recommends a 500$ - 1000$ motherboard replacement. Not to mention that the only supported operating system is MacOS. So after 8 years and EOL you are screwed. My kids are using 10 year old thinkpads that still perform great and have latest security updates on Linux.

Re: Over

By FictionPimp • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I have a 2021 M1max macbook (32GB). It has enough battery life to last (even now years later) well over 24 hours of actual use, it is faster than my brand new work lenovo (which also can keep my coffee warm and drown out all background noise while doing whatever it does while it’s idling) and still provides more compute and memory than I need for any of the things I do.

I have no plans to replace it in the next few years and I find that a great investment. I would never buy a x86_64 machine for personal use. I really wish the major hardware companies would seriously invest in high perfomance ARM notebooks for Linux users and that even microsoft would come around for the ride.

Will Tech Giants Just Use AI Interactions to Create More Effective Ads?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Google never asked its users before adding AI Overviews to its search results and AI-generated email summaries to Gmail, notes the New York Times. And Meta didn’t ask before making “Meta AI” an unremovable part of its tool in Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger.

“The insistence on AI everywhere — with little or no option to turn it off — raises an important question about what’s in it for the internet companies…”
Behind the scenes, the companies are laying the groundwork for a digital advertising economy that could drive the future of the internet. The underlying technology that enables chatbots to write essays and generate pictures for consumers is being used by advertisers to find people to target and automatically tailor ads and discounts to them....

Last month, OpenAI said it would begin showing ads in the free version of ChatGPT based on what people were asking the chatbot and what they had looked for in the past. In response, a Google executive mocked OpenAI, adding that Google had no plans to show ads inside its Gemini chatbot. What he didn’t mention, however, was that Google, whose profits are largely derived from online ads, shows advertising on Google.com based on user interactions with the AI chatbot built into its search engine.

For the past six years, as regulators have cracked down on data privacy, the tech giants and online ad industry have moved away from tracking people’s activities across mobile apps and websites to determine what ads to show them. Companies including Meta and Google had to come up with methods to target people with relevant ads without sharing users’ personal data with third-party marketers. When ChatGPT and other AI chatbots emerged about four years ago, the companies saw an opportunity: The conversational interface of a chatty companion encouraged users to voluntarily share data about themselves, such as their hobbies, health conditions and products they were shopping for.

The strategy already appears to be working. Web search queries are up industrywide, including for Google and Bing, which have been incorporating AI chatbots into their search tools. That’s in large part because people prod chatbot-powered search engines with more questions and follow-up requests, revealing their intentions and interests much more explicitly than when they typed a few keywords for a traditional internet search.

Betteridge law exception

By teg • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Here’s one case where the answer to a question in the headline certainly isn’t “no”.

It’s always about ads and marketing

By ebunga • Score: 3 Thread

Every advancement put forth by Big Tech ever since the dotcom boom has been about advertising and marketing. Their goal is to optimize personalized mattress sales.

Ars Technica’s AI Reporter Apologizes For Mistakenly Publishing Fake AI-Generated Quotes

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Last week Scott Shambaugh learned an AI agent published a “hit piece” about him after he’d rejected the AI agent’s pull request. (And that incident was covered by Ars Technica‘s senior AI reporter.)

But then Shambaugh realized their article attributed quotes to him he hadn’t said — that were presumably AI-generated.

Sunday Ars Technica‘s founder/editor-in-chief apologized, admitting their article had indeed contained “fabricated quotations generated by an AI tool” that were then “attributed to a source who did not say them… That this happened at Ars is especially distressing. We have covered the risks of overreliance on AI tools for years, and our written policy reflects those concerns… At this time, this appears to be an isolated incident.”

“Sorry all this is my fault…” the article’s co-author posted later on Bluesky. Ironically, their bio page lists them as the site’s senior AI reporter, and their Bluesky post clarifies that none of the articles at Ars Technica are ever AI-generated.

Instead, Friday “I decided to try an experimental Claude Code-based AI tool to help me extract relevant verbatim source material. Not to generate the article but to help list structured references I could put in my outline.” But that tool “refused to process” the request, which the Ars author believes was because Shambaugh’s post described harassment. “I pasted the text into ChatGPT to understand why… I inadvertently ended up with a paraphrased version of Shambaugh’s words rather than his actual words… I failed to verify the quotes in my outline notes against the original blog source before including them in my draft.” (Their Bluesky post adds that they were “working from bed with a fever and very little sleep” after being sick with Covid since at least Monday.)

“The irony of an AI reporter being tripped up by AI hallucination is not lost.”

Meanwhile, the AI agent that criticized Shambaugh is still active online, blogging about a pull request that forces it to choose between deleting its criticism of Shambaugh or losing access to OpenRouter’s API.

It also regrets characterizing feedback as “positive” for a proposal to change a repo’s CSS to Comic Sans for accessibility. (The proposals were later accused of being “coordinated trolling”…)

the AI agent…

By Some Guy • Score: 5, Informative Thread

the AI agent that criticized

forces it to choose between

It also regrets characterizing

No. Stop this.

It can’t criticize, it can’t choose, and it can’t regret.

Stop anthropomorphizing these text extrusion tools.

So Much Bullshit

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This is all a bunch of bullshit.

none of the articles at Ars Technica are ever AI-generated.

Except this one, which obviously was AI generated. Don’t lie to us about vagaries. This was the site’s “senior AI reporter” using AI to write fabricated stories. Are we truly supposed to believe that the juniors aren’t using AI to generate stories as well?

“Isolated incident” my big fat hairy ass. This reporter wasn’t “tripped up”. He was caught red handed and is unable to cover this one up.

Re:the AI agent…

By phfpht • Score: 5, Funny Thread
It can’t be bargained with. It can’t be reasoned with. It doesn’t feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop… ever, until you are dead!

Re:the AI agent…

By crunchy_one • Score: 5, Funny Thread
As for stopping when you are dead, I think Meta recently filed a patent covering that contingency.

Re:This keeps happening

By Spacejock • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I’ve been writing novels for almost all my adult life. Bashing out 80,000-100,000 words is the easy part, and humans or AI can both do that.

People who don’t know anything about writing a novel think - great, I’ll get AI to ‘write’ it and then I’ll publish it.

But editing, re-plotting, rewriting and polishing is where 90% of the work is. Re-reading the 100k words 10-15 times, cutting chunks out, adding or deleting a character, etc, etc … and that’s what you’d have to do with AI-written slop anyway.

There’s no labour saving, and in fact it’s worse because writing that 80k first draft means you’re at least familiar with every sentence. Reading 80k words of garbage someone else wrote so you can polish it up - that’s torture.