Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. The AI RAM Shortage is Also Driving Up SSD Prices
  2. Two-Week Social Media ‘Detox’ Erases a Decade of Age-Related Decline, Study Finds
  3. Firefox vs. Chrome: Which Performs Better on a Linux Laptop?
  4. The End of ‘Star Trek’? Every Single Series Now Cancelled
  5. US Demands Reddit Unmask ICE Critic, Summons Firm To Grand Jury
  6. CPUID Site Hijacked To Serve Malware Instead of HWMonitor Downloads
  7. To Fill Air Traffic Controller Shortage, FAA Turns To Gamers
  8. Artemis II Astronauts Splash Down Off California’s Coast
  9. Chimpanzees In Uganda Locked In Vicious ‘Civil War’, Say Researchers
  10. EU Parliament Fails To Renew Loophole Allowing Tech Firms To Report Abuse
  11. Suspect Arrested for Allegedly Throwing Molotov Cocktail at Sam Altman’s Home
  12. Microsoft Begins Removing Copilot Branding From Windows 11 Apps
  13. FBI Extracts Suspect’s Deleted Signal Messages Saved In iPhone Notification Data
  14. Google News Now Prominently Featuring Polymarket Bets
  15. Google Rolls Out Gmail End-To-End Encryption On Mobile Devices

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 AI RAM Shortage is Also Driving Up SSD Prices

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In 2024 the Verge’s consumer tech reporter paid $173 for a WD Black SN850X 2TB SSD. But “now that same SSD costs $649…”

“Like with RAM, demand from the AI industry is swallowing up supply from a limited number of manufacturers, leading to a drastic reduction in the inventory that’s available to consumers” — and skyrocketing prices:
The price on my WD Black drive nearly quadrupled since November 2025, and consumer SSDs across the board are seeing similar increases, much like with RAM. The 4TB version of the popular Samsung 990 Pro SSD previously cost $320, but will now run you nearly $1,000. External SanDisk SSDs saw a 200 percent price hike at the Apple Store in March....

According to price trends from PC Part Picker, NVMe SSD prices began ticking upward in December 2025, with prices on 256GB to 4TB SSDs now double or triple what they were just a few months ago, and continuing to climb.

Two-Week Social Media ‘Detox’ Erases a Decade of Age-Related Decline, Study Finds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Critics say social media is engineered to be as addictive as tobacco or gambling, writes the Washington Post — while adding that “the science has been moving in parallel with the court’s recognition.”
A growing body of research links heavy social media use not only to declines in mental health but to measurable cognitive effects — on attention, memory and focus — that in some studies resemble accelerated aging. Science also suggests we have more control than we realize when it comes to reversing this damage, and the solution is surprisingly simple: Take a break… “Digital detoxes” can sound like a fad. But in one of the largest studies to date, published in PNAS Nexus and involving more than 467 participants with an average age of 32, even a short time away produced striking results — effectively erasing a decade of age-related cognitive decline.

For 14 days, participants used a commercially available app, Freedom, to block internet access on their phones. They were still allowed calls and text messages, essentially turning a smartphone into a dumb phone. Their time online decreased from 314 minutes to 161 minutes, and by the end of the period the participants had improvements in sustained attention, mental health as well as self-reported well-being. The improvement in sustained attention was about the same magnitude as 10 years of age-related decline, the researchers noted, and the effect of the intervention on depression symptoms was larger than antidepressants and similar to that of cognitive behavioral therapy.

But two things were even more mind-blowing… Even those people who cheated and broke the rules after a few days seemed to have positive effects from the break; and in follow-up reports after the two weeks, many people reported the positive effects lingered. “So you don’t have to necessarily restrict yourself forever. Even taking a partial digital detox, even for a few days, seems to work,” Kushlev said.
The article also notes a November study at Harvard published in JAMA Network Open where nearly 400 people ‘found that even a short break can make a measurable difference: After just one week of reduced smartphone use, participants reported drops in anxiety (16.1 percent), depression (24.8 percent) and insomnia (14.5 percent)…”

“Other experiments point in the same direction — whether decreasing social media use by an hour a day for one week or stepping away from just Facebook and Instagram.”

Firefox vs. Chrome: Which Performs Better on a Linux Laptop?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Phoronix staged “a showdown” between Firefox and Chrome, testing them both on an Intel Panther Lake laptop running Ubuntu 26.04.
JetStream 3.0 was announced at the end of March as the latest major web browser benchmark. This updated version of JetStream is focused on intensive portions of modern JavaScript and WebAssembly web applications… Google Chrome 147 came in at 1.47x the performance of Mozilla Firefox 149. A very strong showing for Google’s web browser and to not much surprise Google engineers have been heavily involved in JetStream 3 as part of its open governance model. Chrome debuts very well on JetStream 3 while it will be interesting to see what optimizations Mozilla engineers pursue in the months ahead…

In the recent Speedometer 3.1 benchmark update that is focused on browser responsiveness, Chrome was at 1.24x the performance of Firefox… Firefox picked up wins in the MotionMark and StyleBench browser benchmarks. Google Chrome meanwhile continued to dominate in the JavaScript heavy benchmarks… In some of the WebAssembly benchmarks, there was at least some healthy competition between Firefox and Chrome on Linux.

Across the web browser benchmarks, the Core Ultra X7 358H power consumption came in at 11.44 Watts on average for Chrome and 11.74 Watts for Firefox. Quite close. The slight CPU power difference may come down to the CPU usage with Chrome coming in slightly lower at 8.13% on average to 8.35% with Firefox. Chrome also came in at slightly lower memory consumption across all the benchmarks with total memory usage on average at 4.67GB to Firefox at 4.83GB.

Firefox in my case

By sombragris • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Using 140.9-esr, Firefox is noticeably better in my laptop. Not exactly on power consumption but in these parameters:

These reasons make Firefox the undeniably better choice for my setup. I still have a natively compiled Chromium for those cases where Chrome is required.

Firefox

By Thelasko • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The performance metric that matters most is ad blocking.

Re:Firefox in my case

By crunchy_one • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In Firefox I can use the full uBlock origin. In Chrome I can only use the neutered one.

Important point. Firefox performance has never been an issue for me, but the ability to block ads and tracking is. Chrome may have better scores on performance benchmarks, but the fact that Google is an advertising company that will happily collect and sell my data any way they can, makes any benchmark wins moot. Put simply, it’s not in Google’s best interests to protect my privacy or allow me to shield myself for advertisements, so it’s not in my best interests to trust Chrome.

Re:Firefox

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yeah this, load Firefox up with the usual goodies like UO and run this test again, I guarantee different results. Blocking all that garbage improves performance.

Re:Power consumption

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why would you care about power consumption

“Firefox vs. Chrome: Which Performs Better on a Linux Laptop?”

Some people care about battery life.

The End of ‘Star Trek’? Every Single Series Now Cancelled

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Every single Star Trek series has been canceled…” reports ScreenRant. “There is “no Star Trek in production or greenlit for the first time in nearly a decade.”

While there were five active Star Trek series just a few years ago, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds filmed its fifth and final season in the fall of 2025, and Star Trek: Starfleet Academy “wrapped filming its second and final season at the end of February.” (Though ironically, both Star Trek series still have seasons yet to premiere, with two season of Strange New Worlds mean it may continue airing through 2027.)
TrekCentral reports that the sets for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy are now being torn down… There will be a local online auction for parts of the set on Friday. Additionally, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' sets are also being taken down… Star Trek: Starfleet Academy boasted the largest sets ever built for Star Trek. The demolition of Starfleet Academy’s stunning sets includes the loss of the multi-level atrium, which had the Starfleet Wall of Heroes, the USS Athena’s bridge, and the classrooms.

Just my opinion

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Star Trek went Disney long ago - churn out ill-considered concepts and scripts plastered with nostalgia designed to appeal to the fan base and zeitgeist and certified by a panel ensuring all the right boxes were checked off.

Strange New Worlds was a nice partial deviation from this - they still made sure to pander to all the current ‘sensitivities’, but if the writers of the show didn’t love the original series and its fundamental qualities, I don’t know who does.

The rest of it has been pablum. Academy sounded great until you read the synopsis. “Let’s subvert tropes” followed by “Yeah, the academy is actually just another starship, and we’ll give the kids superpowers”. Their attempts to drop little Easter eggs for classic fans were just insulting - like having aliens show up with the writers obviously having zero idea that in the original series the whole point of their appearance was to watch them die in an unnecessary final act of self-imposed genocide.

Throwing Star Fleet uniforms and phasers into a setting doesn’t make it good. Let it rest until they figure that out.

At Least a Break is Badly Needed

By Kunedog • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Just like Star Wars, the brand has been so devalued by the last decade+ of entries that no one looks forward to anything that’s announced anymore. Giving it a break and getting rid of the current creative team is the bare minimum for anyone to take anything ST seriously.

Re:Get Woke

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

That’s a silly right-wing red-piller idea.

There’s nothing wrong with, you know, not marginalizing groups of people.

Now, throwing bones to the perceived ‘woke’ crowd based on a checklist… that’s going to fail. You can have LGBTQ+ characters so long as that’s not why they’re on the show (unless your show is specifically about members of those groups). When the character description starts and stops with “non-binary gendered”, that is a reliable indicator that the show will be garbage.

Cheese fry mentality

By JBMcB • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
The best analogy I can come up with, is the producers think if you like eating a small plate of chili cheese fries, you are going to love eating an entire chafing tray full of them. Sometimes you only want a bit of something. Then maybe a nice salad, or a baked potato. Then you go back to chili cheese fries later.

It’s also the exact opposite of what happened

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The last Star Trek had all sorts of weird right of Center bullshit mixed into it the turn people off. Star Trek doesn’t work like that. That’s not what anyone comes to Star Trek for.

Nobody wants to see 2000s style anti-terrorism propaganda in their sci-fi. If you’re watching Syfy it’s because you want to see a world past all that bullshit. I can watch it dystopia for a movie maybe get through a book like that but I’m not sitting through multiple seasons of dystopia. And worse I’m not going to pretend that a right-wing future is anything but dystopia. Everyone knows the future of the right wing is bad news it’s just at most if you’re on the right wing you think it’s better than the alternatives.

That’s kind of the thing about the right wing. They don’t think good things can ever happen to everybody. They firmly believe some people have to suffer horribly as long as it’s not them. That’s why right wing science fiction never works in the long run. Sci-fi is about the future and making it better. And the right wing doesn’t believe that better things can happen. Whatever they have in their life right now is as good as it gets. It’s a really depressing world view

US Demands Reddit Unmask ICE Critic, Summons Firm To Grand Jury

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
The Trump administration has stepped up an effort to unmask a Reddit user who criticized Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). After failing to obtain information through a summons issued (PDF) to Reddit, the government reportedly issued a subpoena demanding that Reddit provide the information and appear before a grand jury in Washington, DC. The Intercept described the subpoena today. “According to a subpoena obtained by The Intercept, Reddit has until April 14 to provide a wide range of personal data on one of its users, whom US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have been trying unsuccessfully to identify for more than a month,” the article said.

The legal saga began in US District Court for the Northern District of California. On March 12, the anonymous Reddit user whose information is being sought filed a motion (PDF) to quash a summons seeking a host of information from Reddit. The summons was issued by the Department of Homeland Security and directed Reddit to turn information over to an ICE senior special agent. The summons cited authority under 19 U.S. Code 1509, which is part of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. The motion to quash said the summons is not authorized by the law, which deals with imports of boats, alcoholic drinks, and animals, among other things.

“J. Doe is a US citizen who has not traveled out of the country, is not engaged in any international commerce, has no business concerns outside the United States, and primarily uses their Reddit account to engage in political speech relevant to their local community,” said the filing by the Civil Liberties Defense Center (CLDC), which represents the Reddit user. “Yet the government claims the right to obtain Doe’s name, telephone number, home address, banking and credit card information, IP addresses, telephone model number(s), and the names of any other accounts associated with their Reddit account. The information sought by the government in no way pertains to customs or importing or exporting merchandise, and is clearly intended to chill free speech.”
“We should be very, very, very concerned that they’ve now taken one of these to a grand jury,” said David Greene, senior counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “It’s something to be taken very seriously.”
A Reddit spokesperson told Ars today that “we seek to inform users of any legal process compelling disclosure of their data, as we did in this case, because users should have the agency to protect their own information and are often better positioned to challenge requests that impact them.”

“We do not voluntarily share information with any government, especially not on users exercising their rights to criticize the government or plan a protest. We review every inquiry for legal sufficiency and routinely object to requests that are overbroad or threaten civil rights. When legally compelled to disclose data, we provide only the minimum required and notify the user whenever possible so they can defend their interests.”

Re:Consequence culture

By dskoll • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Consequence culture is a celebrity doing or saying something stupid and then being excoriated by their audiences and the public.

What’s going on here is authoritarian repression of freedom of expression, with the implied threat of serious legal consequences against someone for expressing a viewpoint the government didn’t like.

Miles apart.

Anyone on the right wing want to defend this?

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Something I’ve noticed is lately outside of safe spaces the right wing keeps their damned mouths shut. Every so often one of them will jump in and yell TDS or something but they never actually tried to defend the actions of anyone on their side or any of their policies anymore. Mostly they either avoid conversations outside of safe spaces entirely or they lurk and mod everything they don’t like down.

I think the right wing knows this is going to bite them in the ass personally. I mean the rank and file the members of the Epstein class who are actually arranging all this are benefiting from it greatly. But I don’t think they can stop because they’ve given up too many friends and family.

But come on right wingers. By all means defend this. Tell me why it’s okay for the administration to go after somebody for some Reddit posts. Explain to me why you think it’ll never happen to you.

Re:Consequence culture

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When a new administration comes in and uses the same tactics against those who now cheer such actions and yell “Hooray for our side” will be screaming how unfair it is. All of a sudden, payback makes what seemed like a good idea ta the time wasn’t.

Did that happen when Trump 1.0 ended? I don’t recall that the Biden administration followed the same playbook that Trump did.

Some Trumpists might say yes, pointing to post-Jan 6 prosecutions for example. Well, legitimate crimes need to be prosecuted, even if the other side cries foul.

The problem is that when one side has truly become corrupt, they frame their opponents as corrupt, especially when they’re taken to account later.

Re:Anyone on the right wing want to defend this?

By leptons • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
>They’ve led to far more prosperity and far less suffering than your suggested replacements.

Every Republican president has tanked the economy, and the following Democrat has fixed it. This happened last time trump was in office, and is happening this time too. Biden fixed the economy reasonably well, and trump just fucked it up again. A MILLION AMERICANS DIED UNDER TRUMP that did not have to, because of his ridiculous response to covid. You’re delusional if you think trump is doing anything good for the economy this time around. He started an unnecessary war with IRAN of all places, after campaigning on stopping wars. You people are the worst, you handwave away everything bad trump does because you think “woke” is still a thing on the left, or that it ever was a thing, and that it’s somehow worse than electing a convicted felon insurrectionist as president.

Re:Consequence culture

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Go take a look at how the Biden administration threatened the news media to not cover Joe’s dementia

The news media that didn’t stop talking about it for the entire year of the 2024 election cycle? The thing Jake-fucking-Tapper wrote a goddamned book about? That the conservative media ran with the entire time in lockstep as they tend to do? The media that excoriated the man for his debate performance so much he was pressured to drop out? Oh such a coverup!!!

Meanwhile Joe Biden right now is out being normal in the real world with no “dementia” to speak of and looking more cognizant than the current sitting President. Almost like he didn’t have dementia and was just a man getting older with too much on his plate. Fact is like with Hillaries health concerns Biden’s “dementia” was a conservative fabrication and so called liberal media has actually been in the minority for the past decade and a half but conservatives rely on the media-victim-complex too much to admit it.

he did not prosecute Hillary Clinton for the email server

Or maybe instead of some stupid conspiracy which cuts against everything Trump has ever said and done and there just wasn’t any evidence there after all and conservatives have been lying about her the entire time. Just like with Comey. Just like with Letitia James. Just like with Bolton. Just like with Hunter Biden.

Maybe Trump and Republicans are just a pack of illiberal liars. Maybe that’s our Occam’s Razor here.

CPUID Site Hijacked To Serve Malware Instead of HWMonitor Downloads

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Attackers briefly hijacked part of CPUID’s backend and swapped legitimate download links on its site with malware-laced ones. “The issue hit tools like HWMonitor and CPU-Z, with users on Reddit and elsewhere starting to notice something wasn’t right when installers tripped antivirus alerts or showed up under odd names,” reports The Register. From the report:
CPUID has since confirmed the breach, pinning it on a compromised backend component rather than tampering with its software builds. “Investigations are still ongoing, but it appears that a secondary feature (basically a side API) was compromised for approximately six hours between April 9 and April 10, causing the main website to randomly display malicious links (our signed original files were not compromised),” one of the site’s owners said in a post on X. “The breach was found and has since been fixed.”

The files themselves appear to have been left alone and remain properly signed, so it doesn’t seem like anyone got into the build process. Instead, the problem sat in front of that, in how downloads were being served. For anyone who hit the site during that stretch, though, that distinction offers little comfort. If the link you clicked had been swapped out, you were pulling whatever it pointed to, whether you realized it or not.

So did it get into any distribution?

By Casandro • Score: 3 Thread

I mean who downloads software from some random website?

Re:So did it get into any distribution?

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

From a link on the official site? Everyone!

Re:So did it get into any distribution?

By bjoast • Score: 5, Informative Thread
It was not a random website. It was the official CPUID site, as far as I understood.

To Fill Air Traffic Controller Shortage, FAA Turns To Gamers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times:
As the Trump administration seeks to fill a national shortage of air traffic controllers, officials are targeting a new talent pool: gamers. The Federal Aviation Administration on Friday is making a recruiting push aimed at avid players of video games, as the agency strives to fill thousands of vacancies that lawmakers have said leave the traveling public less safe. In a new YouTube ad, the agency is using flashy graphics and the promise of six-figure salaries to convince video game enthusiasts to apply their trigger fingers in service of air safety.

In recent years, video gamers have emerged as a target demographic for recruiters at a number of federal agencies, including the military and the Department of Homeland Security. They are welcomed for their hand-eye coordination, quick decision-making in complex environments and ability to remain focused on screens for hours on end. “To reach the next generation of air traffic controllers, we need to adapt,” Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a statement. Focusing recruiting efforts on gamers, he added, “taps into a growing demographic of young adults who have many of the hard skills it takes to be a successful controller.”

[…] The F.A.A. plans to begin prioritizing recruiting gamers over more traditional avenues like college fairs, officials said, pointing out that only 25 percent of controllers have a traditional college degree, while the vast majority appear to have logged hours gaming. During the presidential transition in 2024, incoming Trump administration officials polled about 250 new air traffic academy graduates over six weeks. Only two of those interviewed were not gamers, according to F.A.A. officials […]. Students who failed out of the training academy were not similarly queried, officials said, though they have plans to conduct more comprehensive exit interviews in the future. Still, the overwhelming presence of gaming habits among graduates tracked with what they were hearing anecdotally from controllers already certified to work in towers and other air traffic facilities, the officials said, many of whom liked to play video games during breaks in their shifts.

Just one problem

By Tony Isaac • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Gamers know that when you get “killed”, you get another life, and another, and another.

Modernize the environment?

By silentbozo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I mean… you could also try modernizing the environment.

The system as it currently exists is incredibly archaic. Even the stuff that works is aging out.

https://www.aviationtoday.com/…

"…The FAA has been forced to spend the majority of its roughly $3 billion annual equipment budget simply keeping obsolete systems alive. In some facilities, controllers still rely on technology that uses floppy disks. (Yes, you read that right â" floppy disks.)

Replacement parts for certain components are no longer manufactured, pushing the agency into the surreal position of hunting for spares on secondary markets like eBay. This is not a charming anecdote about bureaucratic inertia. It is a structural failure with cascading consequences for airlines, lessors, manufacturers, and avionics suppliers.

The fragility of the system became impossible to ignore last spring, when technical failures twice knocked out radar serving the airspace around Newark Liberty International Airport.

The outages triggered thousands of delays and cancellations at one of the country’s most critical hubs. While redundancy is built into ATC architecture, there have been repeated incidents where both primary and backup systems failed simultaneously, including at the Philadelphia facility that manages traffic into and out of Newark. Safety was preserved, but operational confidence took another hit.”

https://fortune.com/2025/02/01…

“Some FAA systems are a half-century old, as aging tech suffers from lack of replacement parts and support service… …The report from the Government Accountability Office found that the FAA has trouble with upkeep on its equipment, which needs modernization, while airspace demand has seen dramatic growth since the introduction of those systems.

Specifically, according to the FAA officials, aging systems have been difficult to maintain due to the unavailability of parts and retirement of technicians with expertise in maintaining the aging systems,â the report said.

It found that 37% of the FAA’s 138 air traffic control systems were deemed unsustainable, meaning replacements come sparingly and there is a significant lack of funding available to modernize the technology.

For example, the Airport Surface Detection Equipment Model-X, which debuted in the early 2000s, tracks movement on the runway. But spare parts for this device are âoeextremely limited and may require expensive special engineering.â

Additionally, beacon replacement antennas are no longer available as they are on average two decades old. And 25-year-old landing systems used to help aircraft on its final approach now lack manufacturing support.”

https://www.gao.gov/products/g…

“The Federal Aviation Administration relies on information systems to help air traffic controllers keep the airspace safe and efficient. Last year, FAA determined that 51 of its 138 systems are unsustainable, citing outdated functionality, a lack of spare parts, and more.

Over half of these unsustainable systems are especially concerning, but FAA has been slow to modernize. Some system modernization projects won’t be complete for another 10-13 years. FAA also doesn’t have plans to modernize other systems in needâ"3 of which are at least 30 years old.”

Doing ATC at a major commercial airport stressful… now throw in the random possiblity of an ATC zero (https://ifr-magazine.com/system/atc-zero/) due to a critical subsystem failure. This doesn’t even take into account hostile actors or nation-states deliberatly attacking infrastructure or messing with local airspace.

It doesn’t help that age limits on recruitment dramatically narrows the pool of eligible applicants:

https://www.local3news.com/reg…

“In the US, air traffic controllers are required to retire at the age of 56, and the FAA won’t hire anyone older than age 31, because they want candidates to have at least a 25-year career path.”

Re:Modernize the environment?

By SirSlud • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

To be fair, the entire governmental apparatus of the United States seems to be going “Ideology? Super. Caring about reality? Fuck off.”

Giving a shit about the details right now is forest for trees stuff. The electorate has handed over the keys to the child in the backseat, thinking, “Well it can’t be that bad, and the adults were telling us stuff we didn’t like to hear. Yee haw, cut those programs! Tax us less! Money is magic!”

Re:Just one problem

By anonymouscoward52236 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If they are looking at new avenues of finding employees to hire, wouldn’t this technically be a DEI thing? Gamers are diverse… (That’s all DEI was, is finding new candidate pools…)

Re:Just one problem

By karmawarrior • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

> But in reality it was about giving preferential treatment to, often to fill quotas for, women and racial minorities.

No, you made that up. When will right wingers stop lying abut this?

Artemis II Astronauts Splash Down Off California’s Coast

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
NASA’s Artemis II crew safely splashed down off the California coast after completing a 10-day trip around the moon and back. “This is not just an accomplishment for NASA,” sad NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman. “This is an accomplishment for humanity, again, a historic mission to the moon and back.” From a report:
Isaacman is aboard the USS John. P Murtha Navy recovery vessel, where the astronauts will be brought once they’ve been retrieved from the Orion capsule, and he shared “there is a lot to celebrate right now on on a mission well accomplished for Artemis II.”

Isaacman also complimented the crew as “absolutely professional astronauts, wonderful communicators and almost poets” "" as well as “ambassadors from humanity to the stars.” “I can’t imagine a better crew than the Artemis II crew that just completed a perfect mission right now. We are back in the business of sending astronauts to the moon and bringing them back safely.

This is just the beginning. We are going to get back into doing this with frequency, sending missions to the moon until we land on it in 2028 and start building our base.” Isaacman also said it’s time to start preparing for Artemis III, expected to launch in 2027.
You can watch the moment of the splashdown here.

Watched the livestream

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It was good to see all go as planned.

One step closer to Moon Base Alpha.

Re:Watched the livestream

By DamnOregonian • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Hear, hear.

Re:Watched the livestream

By dgatwood • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It was good to see all go as planned.

Except for the tactical radio failure after they landed, where they had to relay comms to Houston and back out to sea because the rescue team couldn’t hear them. That was pure comedy gold. When I heard the words “Did you press the push-to-talk button,” I wept with joy.

No idea what the actual problem was — probably some encrypted communication misconfiguration, channel misconfiguration, stealth mode setting, bad PTT button, or other similar weirdness. And of course, the internal clocks would have drifted by probably several hundred microseconds over the course of the mission because of time dilation, so in the unlikely event that they’re using encryption that is ridiculously timing-sensitive, that could also be an issue, but that seems unlikely.

Strong reason to use plain VHF radios if they aren’t already.

Anyway, I’ll be curious to hear the postmortem on that one.

Everyone’s worry held heatshield together

By BrendaEM • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
When I saw the flown heat-shield with missing bits, I am surprised they went ahead and marked the second one human-qualified.

I will admit

By MAXOMENOS • Score: 3 Thread

There is a part of me that is ever so slightly disappointed that they didn’t emerge from the capsule wearing ape masks.

Chimpanzees In Uganda Locked In Vicious ‘Civil War’, Say Researchers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Researchers say the world’s largest known wild chimpanzee community in Uganda fractured into rival factions and has been locked in a vicious “civil war” for the last eight years. “It is not clear exactly why the once close-knit community of Ngogo chimpanzees at Uganda’s Kibale National Park are at loggerheads, but since 2018 the scientists have recorded 24 killings, including 17 infants,” reports the BBC. From the report:
[O]ver several decades, [lead author Aaron Sandel] said the nearly 200 Ngogo chimpanzees had lived in harmony. There were divided into two sets - known to researchers as Western and Central - but they had existed overall as a cohesive group. Sandel said he first noticed them polarizing in June 2015, when the Western chimpanzees ran away and were chased by the Central group. “Chimpanzees are sort of melodramatic,” he said, explaining that following arguments there would ordinarily be “screaming and chasing” and then later, they would grooming and co-operating.

But following the 2015 dispute, the researchers saw that there was a six-week avoidance period between the two sets, with interactions becoming more infrequent. When they did occur, Sandel said they were “a little more intense, a little more aggressive.” Following the emergence of the two distinct groups in 2018, members of the Western group started attacking the Central chimpanzees. In 24 targeted attacks since the split, at least seven adult males and 17 infants from the Central chimps have been killed, the study found, although the researchers believe the actual number of deaths are higher. The researchers believe many factors such as the group size and subsequent competition of resources, and “male-male competition” for reproducing may be to blame.

But they say there were three likely catalysts:
- The first, were the deaths of five adult males and one adult female — for reasons unknown — in 2014, which could have disrupted social networks and weakened social ties across the subgroups
- The following year, there was a change in the alpha male, which the study says coincided with the first period of separation between the Western and Central groups. “Changes in the dominance hierarchy can increase aggression and avoidance in chimpanzees,” it explained
- The third factor was the deaths of 25 chimpanzees, including four adult males and 10 adult females, as a result of a respiratory epidemic, in 2017, a year before the final separation. One of the adult males who died was “among the last individuals to connect the groups,” the research paper said.
The study has been published in the journal Science.

Monkey see, monkey do, monkey pee all over you

By vistic • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

2015 huh? Maybe the chimps watch FOX News?

News for Nerds

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Put this in terms of the vi/emacs war and perhaps some of us might understand.

Re:News for Nerds

By OrangAsm • Score: 5, Funny Thread
I have heard a chimp can bang out Shakespeare, but there’s no way they’ll ever exit vi.

Astronauts are landing during a monkey civil war?

By schwit1 • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I’ve seen that movie.

https://x.com/CleanComedian69/…

Re:Well, they _are_ our closest relatives …

By XXongo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That is a bit misanthropic. Humans have achieved a scale of cooperation orders of magnitude beyond any other species.

And also a scale of warfare orders of magnitude beyond any other species.

EU Parliament Fails To Renew Loophole Allowing Tech Firms To Report Abuse

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Bruce66423 shares a report from the Guardian:
The European parliament has blocked the extension of a law that permits big tech firms to scan for child sexual exploitation on their platforms, creating a legal gap that child safety experts say will lead to crimes going undetected. The law, which was a carve-out of the EU Privacy Act, was put in place in 2021 as a temporary measure allowing companies to use automated detection technologies to scan messages for harms, including child sexual abuse material (CSAM), grooming and sextortion. However, it expired on April 3, and the EU parliament decided not to vote to extend it, amid privacy concerns from some lawmakers.

The regulatory gap has created uncertainty for big tech companies, because while scanning for harms on their platforms is now illegal, they still remain liable to remove any illegal content hosted on their platforms under a different law, the Digital Services Act. Google, Meta, Snap and Microsoft said they would continue to voluntarily scan their platforms for CSAM, in a joint statement posted on a Google blog.
Bruce66423 adds: “Child abuse as the excuse for avoiding privacy protections. Who would have thought it?”

The good then, the bad and the ugly

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 3 Thread
On the one hand, not making a stop-gap law, the default answer, is good: It needed to sunset.

On the other, this allows a more oppressive law to be rushed through parliament. I’m certain that more than one “think of the children” activist is preparing to shout, that ‘saving’ victims requires everyone abandon their rights.

What a shitty summary of the situation

By djgl • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The measure ran out because those lawmakers, who wanted scanning, wanted to make it mandatory and were not willing to accept a proposed compromise.

What the article forgets to mention is that almost every tech expert was against it. There were also several big petitions that tried to change the lawmaker’s minds.

Scanning of online communication invades the user’s privacy and implementing mandatory scanning as proposed would have enabled the government to abuse it. What these big tech companies now mourn is that they no longer have an excuse to violate their user’s privacy to make money - at least not when sending messages.

Not a loophole

By apparently • Score: 3 Thread
Words have meaning: a loophole in a law is when the intent of the law can be evaded due to things such as ambiguity or an omission within its text.
…this article is just about a law that expired and didn’t get extended. How has /. not replaced their crack editorial team with an LLM yet?

Track record

By DrMrLordX • Score: 3 Thread

How much abusive material did “big tech” firms find over the last few years while scanning private communications?

Suspect Arrested for Allegedly Throwing Molotov Cocktail at Sam Altman’s Home

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
San Francisco police arrested a suspect after a Molotov cocktail was allegedly thrown at Sam Altman’s home and threats were later made outside OpenAI’s headquarters. “Thankfully, no one was hurt,” said OpenAI in a statement to WIRED. “We deeply appreciate how quickly SFPD responded and the support from the city in helping keep our employees safe. The individual is in custody, and we’re assisting law enforcement with their investigation.” From the report:
“At approximately 3:45am PT, an unidentified individual approached Sam’s residence and threw an incendiary device toward the property. The device landed nearby and extinguished. There were no injuries and only minimal damage was reported,” the message to staff reads. “Shortly afterward, an individual matching the suspect’s description was contacted by security outside MB1,” the message continues, referring to OpenAI’s headquarters in San Francisco’s Mission Bay neighborhood. “This person made threatening statements about the building.”

OpenAI’s corporate security team told staff it is cooperating with law enforcement on an investigation, and that employees may notice an increased police and security presence around the office on Friday. The security team said that the company’s offices remain open, but employees were advised to “not let anyone tailgate into the building.”
UPDATE: Sam Altman has responded to the incident.

Honestly.

By jd • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

If you want to deinstall the app, blowing up the owner’s house is not he way to do it.

This was stupid, reckless, does nothing for actually improving AI safety, risks worsening that very safety, risks OpenAI letting their systems being used on more and more extreme products (because all publicity is good publicity), and in short does the exact opposite of anything that anyone could possibly have imagined going through the mind of of this dweeb.

However, it is what we’ve come to expect from the Nu Society that is emerging - violent extremism, senseless violence, thoughtless acts, utter stupidity.

Welcome to the “brave” new world where nobody has any brains but plenty of explosives. Any claim America might have to rationality is degraded every time something pathetic like this takes place, and the rest of the world is honestly in no better shape even if it hasn’t degraded to open violence yet. I am really not happy.

If you’re going to San Francisco

By fjo3 • Score: 3, Funny Thread
You’re going to meet some gentle people there.

I love how we all act surprised

By WolfgangVL • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We’re a whole society full of over stimulated sexed up violent greedy weirdos.

We’re constantly at war, and the majority of our people are all kept just a single paycheck from total financial destruction. Our schools get shot up. Our clinics get bombed, and our people are dying on the streets to drugs and hunger. Our leaders insist half of us are monsters deserving of death while threatening genocide.

But shed a tear for Altmans home. Lookout for those CEOs.

In related news …

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

… OpenAI engineers demonstrate an AI controlled robot that can deliver a projectile much more reliably and accurately than a human.

Seems

By liqu1d • Score: 4, Funny Thread
They asked chatgpt how to construct their incendiary device…

Microsoft Begins Removing Copilot Branding From Windows 11 Apps

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft has started stripping Copilot branding out of Notepad in Windows 11, replacing the old Copilot menu with a more generic “writing tools” label. The AI features themselves aren’t going away, but Microsoft seems to be backing off the heavy-handed Copilot branding and extra entry points. Windows Central reports:
As promised, Microsoft is now beginning its effort to reduce and remove Copilot branding across Windows 11, with the latest Notepad update for Insiders outright removing the Copilot icon and phrasing. Now, the AI menu is simply called “writing tools,” and maintains the same functionality as before. Additionally, Microsoft has also removed references to AI in the Settings area in Notepad. Now, the ability to turn on or off these AI powered writing tools are now listed under “Advanced features.”

This change is present in the latest preview build of Notepad which is now rolling out to all Windows Insiders. The app version is 11.2512.28.0, and you’ll know you have it if you see the Copilot icon replaced with a pen icon instead. […] For Notepad, it appears Microsoft has opted to replace the Copilot menu with something more generic. It’s still the same functionally, but it’s no longer leaning on the tainted Copilot brand. Of course, you can still easily turn off all AI features in Notepad if you don’t want them.
The Verge reports that the “unnecessary Copilot buttons” are also disappearing from the Snipping Tool, Photos, and Widgets.

Translation

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

… replacing the old Copilot menu with a more generic “writing tools” label. The AI features themselves aren’t going away, but …

To more easily trick people into using Copilot.

Microsoft Marketing

By JBMcB • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Is kinda goofy.

1998- MSN Everything!
2002 - XP Everything!
2005 - Live Everything!
2012 - Metro Everything!
2016 - XBox Everything!
2023 - Copilot Everything!

Not everything needs to be one thing.

Textbook definition of a screw up

By battingly • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

You know you’ve screwed up when a key new feature that you’ve added to your product is so reviled that you’re forced to hide its existence.

remapping the key is a half-solution

By TomR teh Pirate • Score: 3 Thread
I used PowerToys to map that dumb key back to CTRL as it’s my go-to for CTRL-C,V,W,X,Y,Z. Even still, it’s not functional when trying to do CTRL+SHIFT+Arrow keys for highlight-jumping complete words in text editors. Even worse, I was never able to get the remap to work in VS Code, despite trying to follow wildly varying online instructions for configuring environment settings in the app, none of which seemed to apply to my installation. I ended up going to Cursor because I got a license at work for it, and the Cursor IDE (a fork of VS Code) gets rid of that horrible mapping, yay.

Re:Microsoft Marketing

By boxless • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Don’t forget .net everything. They even called windows server ‘.net’ at one point.

FBI Extracts Suspect’s Deleted Signal Messages Saved In iPhone Notification Data

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media:
The FBI was able to forensically extract copies of incoming Signal messages from a defendant’s iPhone, even after the app was deleted, because copies of the content were saved in the device’s push notification database, multiple people present for FBI testimony in a recent trial told 404 Media. The case involved a group of people setting off fireworks and vandalizing property at the ICE Prairieland Detention Facility in Alvarado, Texas in July, and one shooting a police officer in the neck. The news shows how forensic extraction — when someone has physical access to a device and is able to run specialized software on it — can yield sensitive data derived from secure messaging apps in unexpected places. Signal already has a setting that blocks message content from displaying in push notifications; the case highlights why such a feature might be important for some users to turn on.

“We learned that specifically on iPhones, if one’s settings in the Signal app allow for message notifications and previews to show up on the lock screen, [then] the iPhone will internally store those notifications/message previews in the internal memory of the device,” a supporter of the defendants who was taking notes during the trial told 404 Media. […] During one day of the related trial, FBI Special Agent Clark Wiethorn testified about some of the collected evidence. A summary of Exhibit 158 published on a group of supporters’ website says, “Messages were recovered from Sharp’s phone through Apple’s internal notification storage — Signal had been removed, but incoming notifications were preserved in internal memory. Only incoming messages were captured (no outgoing).”

404 Media spoke to one of the supporters who was taking notes during the trial, and to Harmony Schuerman, an attorney representing defendant Elizabeth Soto. Schuerman shared notes she took on Exhibit 158. “They were able to capture these chats bc [because] of the way she had notifications set up on her phone — anytime a notification pops up on the lock screen, Apple stores it in the internal memory of the device,” those notes read. The supporter added, “I was in the courtroom on the last day of the state’s case when they had FBI Special Agent Clark testifying about some Signal messages. One set came from Lynette Sharp’s phone (one of the cooperating witnesses), but the interesting detailed messages shown in court were messages that had been set to disappear and had in fact disappeared in the Signal app.”
Further reading: Apple Gave Governments Data On Thousands of Push Notifications

Double whammy

By Dan East • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Sounds like they had two things going on. First was enabling the content to be part of the notifications themselves. Second was never actually clearing out the notifications. Just checked and I have a couple hundred uncleared notifications from my mom’s front doorbell camera. I don’t know what the actual limit is but it is definitely in the hundreds that iOS will maintain.

Know how to use your tech

By jfdavis668 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
If you want security, know how your technology works.

Incredible!

By ArchieBunker • Score: 3 Thread

Can this technology be used to find the Epstein files?

Secure Design

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 3 Thread

It’s reasonable to assume that if you erase an app on a mobile OS that the system will delete the app’s data.

That ought to include any data stored in OS databases that is tagged with the app. It’s not at all unreasonable to expect this. I suspect it’s an oversight though Apple got weird after their standoff with the FBI over the “San Jose bomber”. The GPU backdoor to read arbitrary system memory that Kaspersky found is an example.

Apple should make the change and really secure-erase the flash blocks that were being used. This can be done in the background and collected into the free block map later.

The best some people can do is trust their vendor but having a secret-source platform to trust makes it harder.

And, yes, it would not be surprising to learn Qualcomm and Samsung have similar ‘features’.

Re:Use protection

By flink • Score: 4, Informative Thread

All notification content going through apple in plain text is stupid. (google is the same). All that because you’re not allowed to keep a persistent TCP connection as an app.

Keeping a persistent TCP connection would obliterate your battery. If any app could just do that everyone’s phone would be dying all the time because some opaque (to the user) process was holding a connection and keeping the radio warmed up even when their phone is sleeping in their pocket. The only sane way is to have a system process wake the phone up a pre-defined sane intervals and pick up all the messages at once in a batch.

Also, you are wrong message bodies aren’t going through Apple’s servers in plain text. When signal has pending messages for a user, the signal message server sends an empty “ping” notification for the signal user to Apple. iOS notification service delivers the notification to signal. Signal then wakes up and picks up the encrypted message from the cloud, decrypts it, and pops a notification containing the plain text.

It’s these decrypted messages in the local iOS notification queue that the FBI recovered, NOT the cloud notifications, which contain no sensitive information . You can tell signal not to put the decrypted message in the notification. You can have it instead say “Message from <contact_name>" or just “New messages” or nothing at all.

You don’t need to take my word for it, the app is open source. You can see the notification handling code here:
https://github.com/signalapp/S…

You can see it does nothing with the actual notification content received from Apple’s notification service. It’s just an empty message used to wake the app up whcih then fires off some async jobs to fetch the actual messages.

Google News Now Prominently Featuring Polymarket Bets

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Futurism found that Google News is surfacing Polymarket betting pages alongside traditional news sources. “The bets often appear in the ‘For you’ section of Google News, which is tailored to a user’s personal interests,” the publication reports. “In one instance, it was even the very top result, as with this bet on the price of Bitcoin.” From the report:
In our testing, Polymarket bets are also showing up on the Google News home page. But links from the prediction market can pop up all over Google News, including in searches. In further tests, looking up “will ships transit the strait,” referring to the Strait of Hormuz, returned numerous credible sources like Financial Times, The Guardian, and Reuters. Just below them, however, was a Polymarket bet on the number of ships that would be allowed to pass through the critical oil passageway.

This doesn’t appear to be an accident. When searching “Polymarket” in its search bar, Google News now allows users to choose it as a “source,” directing them to a page that aggregates other Polymarket hits. It’s not the only non-news site that’s selectable as a source — looking up “Reddit” and “X” offers the option, too — but searching for “Kalshi,” another prediction market and Polymarket’s main competitor, doesn’t give the option to use it as a source. […] In light of all this, Polymarket appearing in Google News is a major victory for the prediction platform — rubber-stamping its image as an authority on developing real-world events right alongside genuine real publishers of journalism.

Just use Duck Duck Go

By jenningsthecat • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I end up doing about 15% of my searches on Google, because DDG has some serious deficiencies. But DDG doesn’t feed me polymarket crap, and it even provides a URL which dispenses with the AI bullshit altogether.

It’s long past time for people to start punishing Google for all their anti-society crap by just not using their services. At this point the world would be better off if Google just died.

“Friday”

By sysrammer • Score: 3 Thread

I’m reminded of an old Heinlein novel, “Friday”. One chapter describes an environment of immersive gambling in all walks of life.

A quick setup with shameless copypasta from the usual source:

“Friday is a 1982 science fiction novel by American writer Robert A. Heinlein. It is the story of a female “artificial person”, the eponymous Friday, genetically engineered to be stronger, faster, smarter, and generally better than normal humans. Artificial humans are widely resented, and much of the story deals with Friday’s struggle both against prejudice and to conceal her enhanced attributes from other humans. The story is set in a Balkanized 21st century, in which the nations of the North American continent have been split up into a number of smaller states.”

Friday is a "“combat courier in a quasi-military organization”, traveling across the globe and to some of the near-Earth space colonies.”…“Friday travels through the California Confederacy, the Lone Star Republic…and the Chicago Imperium as she attempts to reach her headquarters.”

Well, ol’ Bob had a lot of fun describing a California Republic, er, Confederacy of the future (no, he didn’t go there—it was just a name). The Governor is some old guy who wore a war bonnet, f’rinstance, and “Lottery Day” is a national holiday. People roll dice with cops to see if they’re really going to get that traffic ticket. It was one of the lighter chapters in the book, and Heinlein played it for laughs. I enjoyed it and imagine people not from California would enjoy it even more. Anyways, Friday happens to win the big jackpot on Lottery Day (a lot of Heinlein’s books work best when the protagonists are independently wealthy). It’s a big scene and the entire population breathlessly awaits the televised results. When she wins she gets the great honor of being presented with the winnings by the Governor in front of the cameras (contraindicated for a combat courier). Shenanigans ensue. More stuff like that, then the story moves along.

Ok, so that’s the relevant bit. I’ll close with this: The book got several awards nods and was a fun read. One critical viewer had this to say, “Heinlein’s ability to write a sentence that makes you want to read the next sentence remains unparalleled…Every sentence and every paragraph and page and chapter lead on to the next, but it’s just one thing after another, there’s no real connection going on. It has no plot, it’s a set of incidents that look as if they’re going somewhere and don’t ever resolve, just stop.” Frankly that’s one of the things I liked about it. While not a stream of consciousness work like perhaps Vonnegut would do (which would have the same criticisms), it was an adventure story dealing with the random hits of an impersonal universe whose only “plot” is to eventually kill you.

Google Rolls Out Gmail End-To-End Encryption On Mobile Devices

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Gmail’s end-to-end encryption is now available on all Android and iOS devices, letting enterprise users send and read encrypted emails directly in the app without any extra tools. “This launch combines the highest level of privacy and data encryption with a user-friendly experience for all users, enabling simple encrypted email for all customers from small businesses to enterprises and public sector,” Google announced in a blog post. BleepingComputer reports:
Starting this week, encrypted messages will be delivered as regular emails to Gmail recipients’ inboxes if they use the Gmail app. Recipients who don’t have the Gmail mobile app and use other email services can read them in a web browser, regardless of the device and service they’re using.

[…] This feature is now available for all client-side encryption (CSE) users with Enterprise Plus licenses and the Assured Controls or Assured Controls Plus add-on after admins enable the Android and iOS clients in the CSE admin interface via the Admin Console. Gmail’s end-to-end encryption (E2EE) feature is powered by the client-side encryption (CSE) technical control, which allows Google Workspace organizations to use encryption keys they control and are stored outside Google’s servers to protect sensitive documents and emails.

What I want for Christmas from the google

By shanen • Score: 3 Thread

Is NOT this encryption. Why don’t I want this encryption? Can’t possibly be because I don’t trust the google anymore, so I am sure that it includes back doors of their convenience.

Can’t imagine how today’s google could convince me that they have changed their business model in a way that they aren’t selling me as the product. Funny related reading is Disrupted by Dan Lyons. Actually a couple of years old, but still funny.

What do I actually want from the google? Right now the #1 priority would be a way to delete the garbage in my google account. Without completely tossing the stuff that I speculate could come back to haunt some criminals. I think that business model is actually to get me to pay for personal information they have acquired without my comprehension and now want to store on my time. But in lack of a “friendly” solution I’m on the verge of wholesale slaughter of the data, hopefully including whatever the google values because it is the data they hope (or want) to use against me. Freedom is a funny thing, too.

By the way, I don’t even know if Gmail still has that confidential email stuff. What I wanted there was an option to auto-bounce any incoming email that tried to use it. Seems moot, since I can’t recall ever seeing such an animal.

Client

By Himmy32 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
E2E doesn’t matter very much if you also control the client.

“End to End”

By Unpopular Opinions • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Except Google can still read, index and process your email messages as they are delivered to them. In reality, this is just taking competition away from reading from the wire. Everything else continues to be managed by Google.

So, Only Google Can Spy on You?

By BrendaEM • Score: 3 Thread
Google putting end-to-end encryption is like putting a pillow on top of the hand-grenade you’re sitting on.