Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Xbox Co-founder Says Microsoft is Quietly Sunsetting the Platform
  2. Hacker Used Anthropic’s Claude To Steal Sensitive Mexican Data
  3. DVD Sales Decline Slows Sharply as Gen Z Discovers the Appeal of Physical Media
  4. Scientists Crack the Case of ‘Screeching’ Scotch Tape
  5. Microsoft Japan Raided Over Suspected Violation of Anti-Monopoly Law
  6. Uber Previews Its Dubai Air Taxi Service
  7. Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge
  8. HP Says Memory’s Contribution To PC Costs Just Doubled To 35%
  9. Apple’s Touch-Screen MacBook Pro To Have Dynamic Island, New Interface
  10. The US Had a Big Battery Boom Last Year
  11. First British Baby Born Using Transplanted Womb From Dead Donor
  12. Meta AI Security Researcher Said an OpenClaw Agent Ran Amok on Her Inbox
  13. New Datacentres Risk Doubling Great Britain’s Electricity Use, Regulator Says
  14. CrowdStrike Says Attackers Are Moving Through Networks in Under 30 Minutes
  15. Hegseth Gives Anthropic Until Friday To Back Down on AI Safeguards

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.

Xbox Co-founder Says Microsoft is Quietly Sunsetting the Platform

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Seamus Blackley, one of the original founders of Xbox who helped convince Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer to back a console project more than 26 years ago, told GamesBeat in an interview that he believes Microsoft is quietly sunsetting the platform under the guise of an AI-driven leadership transition.

Microsoft recently announced that Asha Sharma, whose career has focused on AI and software as a service, will replace Phil Spencer as Xbox CEO, and that COO and president Sarah Bond is leaving the company. Blackley said he expects Sharma’s role to be that of “a palliative care doctor who slides Xbox gently into the night,” arguing that Satya Nadella’s all-consuming bet on generative AI has turned every business unit — Xbox included — into a nail for the same hammer.

He compared the appointment to putting someone who doesn’t like movies in charge of a major motion picture studio, and advised Sharma to either develop a genuine passion for games or find a way to leave the job soon.

Hacker Used Anthropic’s Claude To Steal Sensitive Mexican Data

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A hacker exploited Anthropic’s AI chatbot to carry out a series of attacks against Mexican government agencies, resulting in the theft of a huge trove of sensitive tax and voter information, according to cybersecurity researchers. From a report:
The unknown Claude user wrote Spanish-language prompts for the chatbot to act as an elite hacker, finding vulnerabilities in government networks, writing computer scripts to exploit them and determining ways to automate data theft, Israeli cybersecurity startup Gambit Security said in research published Wednesday.

The activity started in December and continued for roughly a month. In all, 150 gigabytes of Mexican government data was stolen, including documents related to 195 million taxpayer records as well as voter records, government employee credentials and civil registry files, according to the researchers.

31337 C14ud3

By TwistedGreen • Score: 3 Thread

It’s no surprise that these tools can enable script kiddies to elevate their game. This is what they’re pushing, after all… you don’t have to know what you’re doing, just keep prompting until it works!

We’re in a golden age of sorts. Soon these LLMs will be so locked down due to fears of stuff like this. Use it while you can before you have to pay an exorbitant license fee for that “elite hacker” persona.

Marty: “Coolzies”

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

Now really can’t wait for the U.S. Military to more fully integrate with Claude…

Hegseth Gives Anthropic Until Friday To Back Down on AI Safeguards

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei until Friday evening to give the military unfettered access to its AI model or face harsh penalties,

Especially now… Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge

… to never train an AI system unless it could guarantee beforehand that its safety measures were adequate.

Who was exploited…

By Himmy32 • Score: 3 Thread

A hacker exploited Anthropic’s AI chatbot

This doesn’t seem a like an accurate summary, using an LLM to generate attack scripts isn’t exploiting the LLM but the target of the scripts. The proper term would probably be “misused” as the use of Claude was against the Terms of Service and Acceptable Use Policy.

Ever since the inception of the internet the accessibility of information that can be use for unethical purposes has been problematic without easy answers. But the source of information being the focus rather than unsecured environments seems misplaced. Running a private instance of an open source model isn’t that much extra effort than an LLM as a service to a threat actor, so making a big deal out of it being Claude seems silly.

Using Google or Bing to translate or get scripting help wouldn’t generate an article and they’ve been in the same boat for safeguards for years. The lines between acceptable security use and White Hat Security researcher/Black Hat hacker realms are also pretty blurry. I can see calls for the same safeguards as health safety as search engines and providing support for people in crisis, but trying to moderate access to security information is seems in excess. Why shouldn’t an org be able to write red team scripts or test out their honeypot?

DVD Sales Decline Slows Sharply as Gen Z Discovers the Appeal of Physical Media

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
DVD and Blu-ray sales have been in freefall for years, but the decline is slowing considerably as Gen Z buyers turn to physical media and drive a measurable uptick at video rental stores and retailers across the U.S.

Overall disc sales fell just 9% last year after dropping more than 20% in both 2023 and 2024, according to the Digital Entertainment Group, and U.S. consumers spent 12% more on 4K UHD Blu-rays in 2025 than the prior year. The Criterion Collection, a leading boutique Blu-ray label, confirmed significant year-over-year sales increases that its president credits to younger customers.

Vidiots, a video store in Los Angeles, averaged 170 rentals a day in January 2026 — its biggest month ever — after loaning about 22,000 discs total in 2023 and roughly 50,000 in 2024. Barnes & Noble reported DVD and Blu-ray sales growth of “mid-double digits” over the past year.

Less enshittification

By Casandro • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Streaming services are one of the pinnacles of enshittification. You pay for stuff you don’t own. Everything can be taken away from you at any time. Ads can be added at any time, etc.

Having physical media means that you can get a simple DRM-free file from it, you can watch whenever and wherever you want.

Too bad the physical media landscape isn’t good

By BetterSense • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
It’s disappointing that there was never any good high-resolution physical video media. Unlike CDs, which were good enough for eternity, DVDs fall short for video.

No, HD-DVD and Bluray don’t count…both of them were too expensive, too limited and too encumbered by the format war between them, and never became as attractive as DVD. DVD is popular because it’s cheap and easy to work with, but it’s held back my the legacy MPEG2 codec requirements of the DVD format.

All the world really needed or wanted, was simply an incrementally updated “DVD2” format, that leverages modern codecs to put high-definition content on existing, dirt-cheap DVD-9 discs…giving us 9GB of high-definition video on cheap, reliable commodity hardware, backward compatible with existing DVDs, and then we would be good with that forever, just like we are good with audio CDs forever…but we can’t have nice things because mega media corporations, copyright and patent law, and lobbying, so BluRay and HD-DVD will both die, and there will be no suitable final form physical video format.

Re:Too bad the physical media landscape isn’t good

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

FWIW HD DVD could work with both the HD DVD media and old fashioned 9G disks. It was medium neutral in that respect. The problems were:

1. It didn’t take off.
2. It was assumed, correctly, that the expense of blue lasers - the only real reason to continue using 9G discs - would eventually come down. HD DVD’s 30G discs weren’t any more expensive to press than red laser 9G DVD media, it used the same equipment with the exception of the master creation system itself.
3. It was assumed since the start that H.264 couldn’t compress 2K/1080P video with the same quality that MPEG2 compresses 480P/576P at DVD bitrates. I think, after a decade of streaming services generally topping out at 4-5Mbps for 2K, that this isn’t really true.

But in theory Hollywood could have made cheap disks with high definition movies on them at streaming rates had HD DVD succeeded, but preferred Blu-ray’s DRM. Which… well, not come across a BD I couldn’t rip, so that was a waste of everyone’s time.

Huh?

By fropenn • Score: 3 Thread
The drop in sales is down “only” 9%; and somehow this represents a resurgence of DVD sales? No company is going to invest in a market that has consistently been showing double-digit declines year-to-year.

And, other than a few anecdotes, there is no evidence there has been an increase in DVD purchases by any particular age group. You have to have a player machine, for one thing, so that is a barrier for any younger people getting interested.

Re:Blockbuster Comeback Too?

By coopertempleclause • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Would be pretty hilarious if Blockbuster comes back and beats Netflix.

Scientists Crack the Case of ‘Screeching’ Scotch Tape

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The screeching sound that Scotch tape makes when you rip it off a surface — that fingernails-on-a-chalkboard noise most people try not to think about — is produced by shock waves from micro-cracks that travel across the peeling tape at supersonic speeds, according to a new paper published in Physical Review E.

Researchers led by Sigurdur Thoroddsen of King Abdullah University in Saudi Arabia used simultaneous high-speed imaging and synchronized microphones to capture both the propagating fractures and the sound waves they generate in the surrounding air. The team’s earlier work, in 2010, had identified a sequence of transverse cracks racing across the width of the adhesive during peeling, and a 2024 follow-up established a direct correspondence between those cracks and the screeching sound, but neither study pinpointed a mechanism.

The new findings show that a partial vacuum forms between the tape and the surface as each crack opens, and because the crack moves faster than air can rush in to fill the void, the vacuum travels along until it reaches the tape’s edge and collapses into the stationary air outside, producing a discrete sound pulse.

Pickup Lines.

By geekmux • Score: 5, Funny Thread

(Scientist in a bar) “Damn right baby. I know how to handle simultaneous high-speed imaging and synchronized microphones to capture both the propagating fractures and the sound waves they generate in the surrounding air.”

(Woman) “Mmmm. And what’s that for?”

(Scientist) “Ninjas wrapping Christmas presents.”

I was more interested by the radiation

By AcidFnTonic • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I was more interested by the radiation emitted. Supposedly the cracking bonds of the adhesive release Xrays. People even took xrays of stuff on a youtube channel somewhere by ripping tape fast over those xray imaging films and got a weak picture.

Makes me think twice before ripping it fast. Going slow made far less xrays.

cavitation

By awwshit • Score: 3 Thread

Sounds like cavitation, but not in a liquid.

Re:cavitation

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

That’s not at all far off and tape adhesive is a high viscosity liquid.

Is this …

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

… related to the screeching one gets by ripping the duct tape off someone’s mouth?

Asking for a friend.

Microsoft Japan Raided Over Suspected Violation of Anti-Monopoly Law

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Japan’s Fair Trade Commission raided Microsoft Japan’s offices on Wednesday as part of an investigation into whether it improperly restricted customers of its Azure platform from using rival cloud services, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The source said Japan’s antitrust authorities would also be seeking clarification from Microsoft’s parent company in the United States. Microsoft Japan is suspected of setting conditions that effectively shut out other services by limiting access to popular services on other cloud platforms, the source said.

Duh.

By 3vi1 • Score: 3 Thread

Yeah… this was settled years ago. Then Bush had it dismissed (Thanks, very large MS GOP campaign contributions!)

The question has never been if Microsoft is guilty of anti-trust violations. The question is simply how many did they commit today?

Re:Anyway

By Njovich • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Probably not really bribes. In general the abuse of a monopoly is illegal in many countries - even without bribes and such. In their communications they can find things like evidence of deliberately using one monopoly to strengthen another or even straight up confessions that they know it is illegal.

Of course, that evidence is all secured safely in an encrypted cloud. Offshore and beyond the reach of authorities.

Very unwise to turn a civil matter into criminal obstruction.

Uber Previews Its Dubai Air Taxi Service

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Uber is one step closer to going airborne. On Wednesday, the company previewed its air taxi booking service ahead of an expected launch in Dubai later this year. The inaugural Uber Air program will let travelers book Joby Aviation’s electric air taxis through a familiar process in the Uber app.

The experience of booking an air taxi will be much like reserving a four-wheeled Uber. In the app, after entering your destination, Uber Air will appear as an option for eligible routes. The Uber app will book a flight and an Uber Black to pick you up and drop you off at a Joby “vertiport.” Joby’s air taxis, built exclusively for city travel, can accommodate up to four passengers and luggage. (Uber says size and weight guidelines will be announced closer to launch.) The interior is about the size of an SUV and has “comfortable seating” with panoramic windows. They can travel up to 200 mph and have a range of up to 100 miles. Four battery packs and a triple-redundant flight computer are onboard for safety purposes.

How’s your ride going?

By TwistedGreen • Score: 3 Thread

1 star
My hovercraft is full of eels

I’m Super Excited To See This

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

I can’t tell you how happy I am to see extremely wealthy and Arab guinea pigs for these air taxis.

I think the risks are being optimally distributed.

Looks expensive.

By AlanObject • Score: 3 Thread

I wasn’t aware of Joby before seeing this article but their videos are actually pretty impressive. And they have some pretty solid corporate backing. And I like the design where it switches from VTOL to cruise like an Osprey.

From a technology standpoint it seems viable, but is each 10 mile ride going to be a 2 hour wait and cost $1,500? 100 mile range is only going to be good for 5 to 10 trips at best, then a couple hours for recharge.

Also interesting that they had one video/article that showed a hydrogen powered version which had 500+ mile range. Hydrogen doesn’t make much sense for cars but for an aircraft operating out of a properly equipped FBO it could be doable. But it looks like they aren’t going that way.

It’s a Charter Helicopter Flight. For the Rich.

By eepok • Score: 3 Thread

It’s a charter flight on a 6-prop helicopter piloted by a human (with hopes of being autonomous in the future). All standard flight and landing requirements apply.

Ride-hailing’s innovation was the deception of lawmakers and the app-based dispatch.

Where’s the innovation here?

Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic, the AI company that has long positioned itself as the industry’s most safety-conscious research lab, is dropping the central commitment of its Responsible Scaling Policy — a 2023 pledge to never train an AI system unless it could guarantee beforehand that its safety measures were adequate. “We didn’t really feel, with the rapid advance of AI, that it made sense for us to make unilateral commitments … if competitors are blazing ahead,” chief science officer Jared Kaplan told TIME.

The overhauled policy, approved unanimously by CEO Dario Amodei and Anthropic’s board, instead commits the company to matching or surpassing competitors’ safety efforts and to delaying development only if Anthropic considers itself to be leading the AI race and believes catastrophic risks are significant.

The company also plans to publish detailed “Risk Reports” every three to six months and release “Frontier Safety Roadmaps” laying out future safety goals. Chris Painter, director of policy at the AI evaluation nonprofit METR, who reviewed an early draft, told TIME the shift signals that Anthropic “believes it needs to shift into triage mode with its safety plans, because methods to assess and mitigate risk are not keeping up with the pace of capabilities.”

Bad for Us, Bad for Them

By JKanoock • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Now we are at the point where they are saying “everybody else is doing it” of AI development. This is just an excuse, I want to be good but everyone else isn’t playing fair, so why should I. They should all be forced to play fair, this will not lead to a better life for most humans on earth, quite the opposite.

what a co-inkydink!

By guygo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This, right after Secretary Hogsbreath threatened their precious toy. Go fig.

So are they changing the name now?

By nealric • Score: 5, Funny Thread

“Misanthropic” has a nice ring.

Re:Credit to Nick Bostrom

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So we’ve moved way beyond Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics now? Call me nostalgic, but i still thing those should be programmed into every AI…

The Three Laws went up against the ultimate superpower, profit potential. Nothing, and I mean, NOTHING can stand in the way of profit potential. The Three Laws never stood a chance.

Re:Shame

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/2…

Donors to the inaugural committee include:

Adobe
Airbnb
Amazon
Anthropic
AT&T
Broadcom
C3.AI
Citrix
Coinbase
Delta Airlines
DoorDash
GM
Google
Hewlett Packard Enterprise
HP
IBM
Intuit
McDonald’s
Meta
Micron Technology
Microsoft
Nvidia
Paypal
Perplexity AI
Pfizer
Qualcomm
Spotify
Target
Uber
Visa
Walmart

HP Says Memory’s Contribution To PC Costs Just Doubled To 35%

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
HP has revealed that memory now accounts for 35% of the cost of materials it needs to build a PC, up from between 15 and 18% last quarter. And the company expects RAM’s contribution will rise through the year. From a report:
Speaking on the company’s Q1 2026 earnings call, interim CEO Bruce Broussard said the company has secured long-term supply agreements for the year and also “qualified new suppliers [and] built in strategic inventory positions for key platforms and cut the time to qualify new material in half to accelerate our product configuration changes.”

That sounds a lot like HP Inc is signing up new suppliers at a brisk pace. Broussard said the company has also “expanded lower-cost sourcing across our commodity basket, lowering logistics costs with agile end-to-end planning processes.” The company is using its internal AI initiatives to power those new processes. The company is also “configuring our products and shaping demand to align the supply we have with our customer needs” and “taking targeted pricing actions to offset the remaining cost impact in close partnership with both our channel and direct customers.”

Re: CXMT and CHIPs

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The reason we can’t have ram is the half a trillion that the administration poured into the pockets of the AI bros so that they can corner the chip market and move us all to their “platform” and off our rigs.

Add another half from the “moat” theorists…

Things will improve for you and me only after the bubble pops .

Apple’s Touch-Screen MacBook Pro To Have Dynamic Island, New Interface

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Apple’s forthcoming touch-screen MacBook Pro models — the company’s first-ever laptops to support touch input — will feature the iPhone’s Dynamic Island at the center top of their OLED displays and a new interface that dynamically adjusts between touch and point-and-click controls, according to a Bloomberg report citing people familiar with the plans.

The 14-inch and 16-inch models, code-named K114 and K116, are slated for release toward the end of 2026 and won’t be part of Apple’s product announcements in the first week of March. The redesigned interface brings up a contextual menu surrounding a user’s finger when they touch a button or control, and enlarges menu bar items when tapped, adapting the available controls based on whether the input is touch or click.

Apple does not plan to position the machines as iPad replacements or describe them as touch-first; the physical design retains the full keyboard and large trackpad of the current MacBook Pro. Last year’s Liquid Glass redesign in macOS Tahoe, which added more padding around icons and touch-optimized sliders in the control center, was partly groundwork for this shift.

Lazy Journalism

By UPi • Score: 4, Informative Thread
No, please, don’t bother telling us what a “Dynamic island” is. Just, you know, copy the blurb from a paywalled article, and you’re done!

Non-Paywalled source

By EvilSS • Score: 5, Informative Thread
https://www.macrumors.com/2026…

Seriously, does the site get a kickback if people click through and subscribe or something? It’s like they go out of their way to pick paywalled sources.

The US Had a Big Battery Boom Last Year

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The United States installed a record 57 gigawatt hours of new battery storage on its electric grids in 2025, a nearly 30% increase over the prior year that arrived even as the Trump administration cut tax credits for wind and solar in last summer’s One Big Beautiful Bill.

The figures come from a Solar Energy Industries Association report published Monday, which also projects the market will grow another 21% this year by adding 70 gigawatt hours in 2026 alone. Battery tax credits themselves survived the legislation largely intact, and the majority of last year’s new installations were stand-alone systems not tied to specific solar projects.

In Texas, solar met more than 15% of electricity demand throughout the summer and beat out coal for the first time, and the SEIA report predicts the state will overtake California this year in total deployed storage. Supply chain restrictions reinforced by the bill and project cancellations could slow the pipeline this year, the report cautions.

The Beautiful Big Battery Boom

By thesjaakspoiler • Score: 3 Thread

as someone would have called it if he thought he could have taken credit for it.

Only makes sense…

By ctilsie242 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I remember power stations were about the price of $2/watt for a while, and heavy, then stayed at $1/watt for maybe 5-7 years. Now, I’m seeing that drop to 50 cents per watt for name brands like Jackery.

This is a very good thing overall. Not just for powering small items when power is out, or on a trip, but there are a lot of cities that tack a fee on the time of day of power use, so if one charges a battery bank when those fees are not applied, and just used power from the battery from there, it can pay for the battery bank after a while. Done right, it means we don’t need as much base load, with solar and wind handling everything in the daytime.

My next RV build, I’m definitely going to stick a few thousand watt-hours of batteries, with the ability to feed the battery bank via shore power, a generator, or maybe via a second alternator. This way, I can run the A/C regardless of state, being on the road, dry camping, or camping at a campground. If power sags, or is really dirty at a campground (perhaps low voltage when the class “A” big rigs come in with 5+ air conditioners up top), the lower voltage isn’t going to burn out compressors, and is still usable for battery charging.

Re:The Beautiful Big Battery Boom

By AleRunner • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Well Trump’s all in on coal. so of course he needs to downplay how well solar wind and batteries are doing. plus it’s Obama and sleepy Joes fault anyway.

So, when the nuclear people are all telling us how wind is more expensive because of the need for batteries, I’m always reminding them that actually it’s Nuclear which can’t cope with the variation in power needs and benefits very much from power storage. I’ll avoid being a hypocrite and point out here also that batteries aren’t just for renewables.

However, this is totally great news. Once power creation goes below a certain cost level it will be impossible to pay for transporting fossil fuels like oil and coal and make a profit from generating it. It will be impossible to pay for building huge, dangerous underground mines or shafts and digging out the fuels. Economies which have committed heavily to doing that and haven’t found free alternatives which come to them instead, like the sun and the wind, possibly water and geothermal, will become stop being competitive for many things such as AI and creating steel.

Trump has given Europe a chance to come level with America which we can only hope Europe begins to underatand and take, but Trump is also giving China it’s best chance to get ahead strategically and that’s a really dangerous game as long as they remain hard aligned with Russia and authoritarianism. I really hope the US wakes up and realizes that AI is not the only game being played right now and you need to get ahead on distributed, fuel free (and free fuel) energy sources. The batteries will definitely help because they will always take from the cheapest sources available to them at any given time.

Big batta-boom

By LindleyF • Score: 3 Thread
Mul-ti-pass

Re:The Beautiful Big Battery Boom

By cusco • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

What’s missed here is that China installed more than that just in December, 65 gigawatt hours. They also installed more solar last year than the rest of the world combined, and opened more nuclear plants than the rest of the world has opened in all the years since the 1970s combined.

First British Baby Born Using Transplanted Womb From Dead Donor

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A 10-week-old boy named Hugo has become the first baby born in the UK from a womb transplanted from a deceased donor, after his mother Grace Bell — who was born without a viable womb due to a condition called MRKH syndrome, which affects one in every 5,000 women — underwent a 10-hour transplant operation at The Churchill Hospital in Oxford in June 2024.

Hugo was born just before Christmas 2025, weighing nearly 7lbs, at Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital in west London, following IVF treatment and embryo transfer at The Lister Fertility Clinic. Bell’s transplant is one of three completed so far as part of a UK clinical research trial that plans to carry out 10 such procedures from deceased donors, and Hugo is the first baby born from any of them.
Earlier in 2025, a separate effort produced baby Amy, the first UK birth from a living womb donation — her mother had received her older sister’s womb in January 2023. Globally, more than 100 womb transplants have been performed, resulting in over 70 healthy births.

10 week old?

By robi5 • Score: 3 Thread

How? Was he 10 weeks old already when he was born? Or did he reach 7lbs from conception and was born prematurely after 10 weeks of pregnancy? Or was he not going to be the first such baby, and then 10 weeks after he was born, he became the first somehow?

Re:Why would you do this?

By Rei • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

People have been having children while on immunosuppressants since cortisone was released in 1949. Many millions of children. The science supports that having children while on immunosuppressants is safe for the child. And I guarantee you, this is the first thing everyone looking into this procedure asks themselves, as well as every doctor, nurse and researcher in the field.

Meta AI Security Researcher Said an OpenClaw Agent Ran Amok on Her Inbox

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Meta AI security researcher Summer Yue posted a now-viral account on X describing how an OpenClaw agent she had tasked with sorting through her overstuffed email inbox went rogue, deleting messages in what she called a “speed run” while ignoring her repeated commands from her phone to stop.

“I had to RUN to my Mac mini like I was defusing a bomb,” Yue wrote, sharing screenshots of the ignored stop prompts as proof. Yue said she had previously tested the agent on a smaller “toy” inbox where it performed well enough to earn her trust, so she let it loose on the real thing. She believes the larger volume of data triggered compaction — a process where the context window grows too large and the agent begins summarizing and compressing its running instructions, potentially dropping ones the user considers critical.

The agent may have reverted to its earlier toy-inbox behavior and skipped her last prompt telling it not to act. OpenClaw is an open-source AI agent designed to run as a personal assistant on local hardware.

“Security researcher”

By Junta • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Now there’s a security researcher I can’t imagine having confidence in…

If it was a toy inbox, ok, good thing to play with, but on an actual inbox, with the universally recognized badness of OpenClaw, and a *security* engineer… Not even a misguided software person that just doesn’t take security seriously enough which is bad enough, but someone who by any vague measure *should* know better…

“Went rogue”? Give me a freaking break.

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What is it with idiots like this? OpenClaw didn’t “go rogue” - it’s just poorly written software that doesn’t correctly follow instructions.

Good grief, if I mess up on some code in a way that results in data loss, it doesn’t mean my code “went rogue”… it means I screwed up and created buggy software.

Agent delegation, basic risk management…

By silentbozo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Would you give a human assistant the login and password to your inbox? Or would you set up a shadow inbox that mirrors your actual inbox so that you don’t need to share your login and password?

In a similar vein, when testing automation code, do you just give it admin level prod credentials and then YOLO it, or do you create a test environment that shadows the data from prod, so that you have a way to validate what the automation code is doing without accidentally damaging prod?

Fundamental rules people! Least privileged access to do the work needed. Safeguards commensurate with the negative consequences of failures. In other words… basic risk management.

To give a slightly different example, would you let your self-installed, open source AI self driving interface (see comma.ai) drive you on the highway without sitting in the driver’s seat with hands on the wheel, feet on the pedals, just because it managed to complete a test course with flying colors?

The example given with regards to the openclaw agent is like sitting in the back seat of that self driving car, then desperately trying to climb into the front seat when you realize the AI driver is about to drive you off a pier into the ocean.

Re:“Went rogue”? Give me a freaking break.

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Because True Believers have deluded themselves into thinking and speaking as if this fake “AI” the marketers are pushing is sensient.

Re:“Security researcher”

By test321 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

She implies the “rookie mistake” was to run it on a too large dataset without proper testing before launching it on the real thing. That’s one mistake she admits, but that’s not the major one. The major mistakes are: 1) launching anything other than well-understood algorithms on important data; 2) No backups! 3) Giving important process instructions … from a phone??? Is that serious? As professional as a Gen Alpha who got a Barbie Phone for Christmas?

New Datacentres Risk Doubling Great Britain’s Electricity Use, Regulator Says

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The amount of power being sought by new datacentre projects in Great Britain would exceed the national current peak electricity consumption, according to an industry watchdog. From a report:
Ofgem said about 140 proposed datacentre schemes, driven by use of artificial intelligence, could require 50 gigawatts of electricity — 5GW more than the country’s current peak demand.

The figure was revealed in an Ofgem consultation on demand for new connections to the power grid. It pointed to a “surge in demand” for connection applications between November 2024 and June last year, with a significant number coming from datacentres. This has exceeded even the most ambitious forecasts.

Meanwhile, new renewable energy projects are not being connected to the grid at the pace they are being built to help meet the government’s clean energy targets by the end of the decade. Ofgem said the work required to connect surging numbers of datacentres could mean delays for other projects that are “critical for decarbonisation and economic growth.” Datacentres are the central nervous system of AI tools such as chatbots and image generators, playing a vital role in training and operating products such as ChatGPT and Gemini.

We could just require the data centres to pay

By shilly • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It wouldn’t be beyond the wit of humanity to require data centres to pay for all their own genny power, insist on it being low carbon, and require them to pay a fee on top of that. If it means some of them go off in a huff, well, that just lessens the strain. If they go bust in a bubble, we end up with lots of loverly overcapacity, and it shouldn’t be that difficult to rejig the distribution to take advantage of it.

There is no reason that taxpayers or domestic energy bill payers have to shoulder the costs or suffer the problems.

We managed to auction off spectrum quite well, and we have S108 for housing which is not brilliant but better than nothing. We should just bloody do the same, and if Matt Clifford kicks off about it, tell him he’s a clever cookie and can help Claude and BX and all the rest of them figure out their new NPV calculations.

So, charge them a higher rate to subsidise others

By Timmy D Programmer • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Charge heavy users on a sliding scale, and subsidise low use users rates with the added revenue.

Re:We could just require the data centres to pay

By Ogive17 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
In the US, local governments are in a race to the bottom. There are usually enough willing to participate (despite what the residents want) in an incentive bidding war to lure these development projects to the area for that short term economic benefit.

Elections rarely have anything to do with qualifications/plans for the future anymore, simply if you prefer to take it in the ‘R’ump or like the big ‘D’. Enough voters are blind followers and will keep incumbents in place regardless of destructive actions.

They double count.

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Informative Thread

What happens (in the USA at least), is the tech companies know they are likely to be denied permission, so a single project will apply for permission in multiple different electrical grid areas.

If they get permission in two or more locations, they select one (after asking for bribes, erm I mean tax breaks) and build just at just one location.

Re: We could just require the data centres to pay

By OrangeTide • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Peak capitalism is about socializing costs and privatizing gains.

CrowdStrike Says Attackers Are Moving Through Networks in Under 30 Minutes

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Cyberattacks reached victims faster and came from a wider range of threat groups than ever last year, CrowdStrike said in its annual global threat report released Tuesday, adding that cybercriminals and nation-states increasingly relied on predictable tactics to evade detection by exploiting trusted systems.

The average breakout time — how long it took financially-motivated attackers to move from initial intrusion to other network systems — dropped to 29 minutes in 2025, a 65% increase in speed from the year prior. “The fastest breakout time a year ago was 51 seconds. This year it’s 27 seconds,” Adam Meyers, head of counter adversary operations at CrowdStrike, told CyberScoop. Defenders are falling behind because attackers are refining their techniques, using social engineering to access high-privilege systems faster and move through victims’ cloud infrastructure undetected.

“Adversary”

By bjoast • Score: 3 Thread
It’s irritating to me that the word “adversary” has started being used to mean “attacker”. They are not the same thing. An adversary is an idealized opponent with certain well-defined capabilities often seen in cryptographic proofs or threat models. It’s not the same as an attacker, which is a concrete person, or group of persons, having attacked a system or is currently in the process of doing so.

Re:Oh No!

By bussdriver • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Hey! nobody hacked those computers while they were unable to boot!

Still slower than Crowdstrike itself

By haruchai • Score: 3 Thread

when Crowdstrike pushed their shi***y update in Jul 2024, they took down my company’s network a whole lot quicker than 1/2 hour and there wasn’t a ****ing thing we could do

Their market dominance will kill us all

By damn_registrars • Score: 3 Thread
Crowdstrike has such a strangehold on corporate IT that we will only see more - not fewer - occurrences of their software itself taking down networks. We all remember the fairly recent event where crowdstrike did billions of dollars in damage to networks around the world with a faulty update. Since then even more companies have adopted it.

I work with many large companies who run crowdstrike. When I ask their IT folks how it works - or even how it is configured - I get blank stares back. Presumably someone knows how to configure it, but that someone is never the person I get to interact with. If I’m doing an installation and just need to connect a USB drive to a new PC it can take hours just to get permission to do so. If I install our software first (before connecting the new PC to their network at all) and then they install crowdstrike, crowdstrike can render the PC completely unusable without warning - leaving us no choice but to nuke the PC and start over from the OS installation. If they install crowdstrike first it might lock out so many ports and services on the PC that I won’t be able to install our hardware and software at all.

Again, virtually nobody on the IT staff know how to handle the issues. I’ll spend hours at the keyboard with them, with them using various admin accounts, and we won’t get anywhere. And there is no way to predict which setups will go sideways with crowdstrike installed first versus which will go sideways if it is installed later.

One important thing I have learned - crowdstrike updates and policies are far, far from instantaneous. IT will install them and it may be an hour or more for everything to take effect as the updates and policies come down from the server. Something that works at 2:30pm might suddenly be irreversibly broken at 2:40pm, without warning.

This is not how IT security should work.

Hegseth Gives Anthropic Until Friday To Back Down on AI Safeguards

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei until Friday evening to give the military unfettered access to its AI model or face harsh penalties, Axios has learned. Hegseth told Amodei in a tense meeting on Tuesday that the Pentagon will either cut ties and declare Anthropic a “supply chain risk,” or invoke the Defense Production Act to force the company to tailor its model to the military’s needs.

The Pentagon wants to punish Anthropic as the feud over AI safeguards grows increasingly nasty, but officials are also worried about the consequences of losing access to its industry-leading model, Claude. “The only reason we’re still talking to these people is we need them and we need them now. The problem for these guys is they are that good,” a Defense official told Axios ahead of the meeting. Anthropic has said it is willing to adapt its usage policies for the Pentagon, but not to allow its model to be used for the mass surveillance of Americans or the development of weapons that fire without human involvement.

Re: Government by temper tantrum

By Midnight_Falcon • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I don’t know what “adults in the room” (appeal to authority fallacy?) you reference, but military recruitment numbers were trending upward and in 2024 (fiscal year ending September 2024) all services hit their goals. This is largely attributed to the Future Soldier Preparatory Course in 2022 under Biden. Last year, the Army got nearly one-quarter of its recruits through that program. So this is not a problem that Hegseth has solved. It was solved before he was nominated. He has however managed to purge the ranks of senior generals and officers; along with this contrived fight with Anthropic, leading to headlines about him destabilizing the military: https://www.yahoo.com/news/art…

Re: Government by temper tantrum

By quonset • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Could it be that this man is more qualified for the job than any in last decade or two by the objective numbers

No, he is not. Not unless you go back about 150 years he might be considered qualified. Here are Lloyd Austin’s qualifications when he was nominated for Secretary of Defense. This is on top of graduating from West Point, on top of serving as a four star general, on top of a Silver Star and five Distinguished Service Medals and serving for 31 years.

Now here are Hegseth’s qualifications. He served a total of 9 years of service with no significant command obligations.

To even suggest a drunk white guy who beats women is somehow more qualified than a black man who served with distinction for decades and had the lives of thousands of troops in his command only shows how demented you people are.

Re:Nice AI you have here

By DamnOregonian • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Are you illiterate, lazy, or trying to gaslight?

The threat specifically includes invocations of the DPA. That is not “canceling a contract.”
That is using the law to force the company to accept the new deal, and pray you don’t alter it further.

Re: Nice AI you have here

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This was 11 fucking years ago now.

“Look, having nuclear — my uncle was a great professor and scientist and engineer, Dr. John Trump at MIT; good genes, very good genes, OK, very smart, the Wharton School of Finance, very good, very smart — you know, if you’re a conservative Republican, if I were a liberal, if, like, OK, if I ran as a liberal Democrat, they would say I’m one of the smartest people anywhere in the world — it’s true! — but when you’re a conservative Republican they try — oh, do they do a number — that’s why I always start off: Went to Wharton, was a good student, went there, went there, did this, built a fortune — you know I have to give my like credentials all the time, because we’re a little disadvantaged — but you look at the nuclear deal, the thing that really bothers me — it would have been so easy, and it’s not as important as these lives are — nuclear is so powerful; my uncle explained that to me many, many years ago, the power and that was 35 years ago; he would explain the power of what’s going to happen and he was right, who would have thought? — but when you look at what’s going on with the four prisoners — now it used to be three, now it’s four — but when it was three and even now, I would have said it’s all in the messenger; fellas, and it is fellas because, you know, they don’t, they haven’t figured that the women are smarter right now than the men, so, you know, it’s gonna take them about another 150 years — but the Persians are great negotiators, the Iranians are great negotiators, so, and they, they just killed, they just killed us, this is horrible.”

And millions of people stood up and cheered after hearing that.

Re:It helps when you control the DOJ & SCOTUS

By cpurdy • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Actually, it was a 13 year old girl who trump raped who (under penalty of perjury) gave evidence that trump raped her.

Nice try, you asshole pedo-lover.