Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. AI Mistakes Are Infuriating Gamers as Developers Seek Savings
  2. Smartphone Market To Decline 13% in 2026, Marking the Largest Drop Ever Due To the Memory Shortage Crisis
  3. Nasa Announces Artemis III Mission No Longer Aims To Send Humans To Moon
  4. A Chinese Official’s Use of ChatGPT Accidentally Revealed a Global Intimidation Operation
  5. Metacritic Will Kick Out Media Attempting To Submit AI Generated Reviews
  6. Sam Altman Says OpenAI Shares Anthropic’s Red Lines in Pentagon Fight
  7. Netflix Ditches deal for Warner Bros. Discovery After Paramount’s Offer is Deemed Superior
  8. Microsoft: Computer Programming Is Dying, Long Live AI Literacy
  9. Your Smart TV May Be Crawling the Web for AI
  10. OpenAI Raises $110 Billion in the Largest Private Funding Round Ever
  11. Memory Price Hikes Will Kill Off Budget PCs and Smartphones, Analyst Warns
  12. Moon’s Ancient Magnetic Field May Have Flickered On and Off
  13. NASA Reveals Identity of Astronaut Who Suffered Medical Incident Aboard ISS
  14. Anthropic CEO Says AI Company ‘Cannot In Good Conscience Accede’ To Pentagon
  15. Four Convicted Over Spyware Affair That Shook Greece

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.

AI Mistakes Are Infuriating Gamers as Developers Seek Savings

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The $200 billion video game industry is caught between studios eager to cut ballooning development costs through AI and a player base that has grown openly hostile to the technology after a string of visible blunders.

As Bloomberg news, Arc Raiders, a surprise hit from Stockholm-based Embark Studios that sold 12 million copies in three months, was briefly vilified online for its robotic-sounding auto-generated voices — even as CEO Patrick Soderlund insists AI was only used for non-essential elements. EA’s Battlefield 6 and Activision’s Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 both drew gamer anger this winter over thematically mismatched or poorly generated graphics, and Valve’s Steam has added labels to flag games made using AI.

Some 47% of developers polled by research house Omdia said they expect generative AI to reduce game quality, and PC gamers — now facing inflated hardware prices from AI-driven demand for graphics chips — have turned reflexively antagonistic.

WTF do you mean the customer gets a say?!

By ebunga • Score: 3 Thread

You mean we can’t shit down their throats and demand they pay us $70 for the disservice?

Smartphone Market To Decline 13% in 2026, Marking the Largest Drop Ever Due To the Memory Shortage Crisis

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Worldwide smartphone shipments are forecast to decline 12.9% year-on-year (YoY) in 2026 to 1.1 billion units, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker. This decline will bring the smartphone market to its lowest annual shipment volume in more than a decade. The current forecast represents a sharp decline from our November forecast amid the intensifying memory shortage crisis.

Nasa Announces Artemis III Mission No Longer Aims To Send Humans To Moon

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Nasa announced on Friday radical changes to its delayed Artemis III mission to land humans back on the moon, as the US space agency grapples with technical glitches and criticism that it is trying to do too much too soon. From a report:
The abrupt shift in strategy was laid out by the space agency’s recently confirmed administrator, Jared Isaacman. Announcing the changes on Friday, he said that Nasa would introduce at least one new moon flight before attempting to put humans back on the lunar surface for the first time in more than half a century, in 2028.

The new, more incremental approach would give the Nasa team a chance to test flight and refine its technology. As part of the changes, the Artemis II mission to fly humans around the moon this year, without landing, would also be pushed back from its latest scheduled launch on 6 March to 1 April at the earliest.

“Everybody agrees this is the only way forward,” Isaacman told reporters at a news conference. “I know this is how Nasa changed the world, and this is how Nasa is going to do it again.”

Just cancel already

By RitchCraft • Score: 3 Thread

Artemis has been a pork laden boondoggle since its inception. Just cancel this turd already.

A Chinese Official’s Use of ChatGPT Accidentally Revealed a Global Intimidation Operation

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A sprawling Chinese influence operation — accidentally revealed by a Chinese law enforcement official’s use of ChatGPT — focused on intimidating Chinese dissidents abroad, including by impersonating US immigration officials, according to a new report from ChatGPT-maker OpenAI. From a report:
The Chinese law enforcement official used ChatGPT like a diary to document the alleged covert campaign of suppression, OpenAI said. In one instance, Chinese operators allegedly disguised themselves as US immigration officials to warn a US-based Chinese dissident that their public statements had supposedly broken the law, according to the ChatGPT user. In another case, they describe an effort to use forged documents from a US county court to try to get a Chinese dissident’s social media account taken down.

The report offers one of the most vivid examples yet of how authoritarian regimes can use AI tools to document their censorship efforts. The influence operation appeared to involve hundreds of Chinese operators and thousands of fake online accounts on various social media platforms, according to OpenAI.

The real takeaway

By SumDog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So the real take away from this is that OpenAI is monitoring everything you send to ChatGPT, and is probably using some form of search across those hundreds of millions of prompts to find this type of activity.

Not only that

By dskoll • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Also, it accidentally revealed a global dup operation.

Why?

By RobinH • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
Why would someone doing official government business using ChatGPT like a diary to document what they were doing? I don’t understand. Aren’t the context windows limited? Would it even “remember” everything you’ve told it? That just seems like an odd use for an LLM, and obviously OpenAI uses all that information for whatever they want.

Ambitions

By glatiak • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This is increasingly like a cartoon I saw years ago. Kid telling his Dad that when he grew up he wanted to go into organized crime. Without missing a beat his Dad asked ‘which… government or private sector’? Makes one wonder if the Chinese are playing catchup with the other big players… Russia, USA, Israel, etc. Everybody seems to be doing it and there is, sadly, no authoritative place one could turn to discrimiate the real from the fake. Thought is that how can any organized society, economy, etc hold together without reliable information?

Metacritic Will Kick Out Media Attempting To Submit AI Generated Reviews

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
While some see AI as a tool to be used, its specific use and how it is deployed responsibly is being heavily debated online across a wide range of industries. In terms of journalistic content, and in this particular instance, reviews, review aggregator Metacritic has taken a firm stance on content published and submitted to their platform, that have been generated by artificial intelligence in some way.

In a statement by co-founder Marc Doyle, sent to Gamereactor, he says this: “Metacritic has been a reputable review source for a quarter century and has maintained a rigorous vetting process when adding new publications to our slate of critics. However, in certain instances such as a publication being sold or a writing staff having turned over, problems can arise such as plagiarism, theft, or other forms of fraud including AI-generated reviews. Metacritic’s policy is to never include an AI-generated critic review on Metacritic and if we discover that one has been posted, we’ll remove it immediately and sever ties with that publication indefinitely pending a thorough investigation.”

So, what is this about specifically? Well, it’s probably a sound guess, that this pertains to Videogamer’s review of Resident Evil 9: Requiem, which was removed from the platform after a barrage of comments accusing the review of being AI-written, and for the author of being made up.

Sam Altman Says OpenAI Shares Anthropic’s Red Lines in Pentagon Fight

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman wrote in a memo to staff that he will draw the same red lines that sparked a high-stakes fight between rival Anthropic and the Pentagon: no AI for mass surveillance or autonomous lethal weapons. If other leading firms like Google follow suit, this could massively complicate the Pentagon’s efforts to replace Anthropic’s Claude, which was the first model integrated into the military’s most sensitive work. It would also be the first time the nation’s top AI leaders have taken a collective stand about how the U.S. government can and can’t use their technology.

Altman made clear he still wants to strike a deal with the Pentagon that would allow ChatGPT to be used for sensitive military contexts. Despite the show of solidarity, such a deal could see OpenAI replace Anthropic if the Pentagon follows through with its plan to declare the latter a “supply chain risk.”

What a win for xAI

By rickrickles • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Pretty sure xAI won’t feel the same way and would prefer a complete hands-off approach as long as the money comes rolling in.

Re:What a win for xAI

By Whateverthisis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Yep. Just what we need: an AI capable of making kill decisions for autonomous weapons that is deep down deeply racist, fascist, and used primarily for NSFW images.

America!

Shame

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
A shame Altman didn’t have redlines about staying Open and Non-Profit, the money grubbing scumbag.

Still, no-one will care when OpenAI go bust.

“Dear Pentagon / US Government”

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

This coming from Altman sounds very much like a plea for a bigger cash infusion. A moral stance from that man would die of loneliness. Which makes me think this is an immoral plea, and the most obvious logical conclusion is that he’s taking this approach until the right dollar amount is attached to the potential contract.

In fact, seeing Altman join this particular fight makes me think it’s entirely possible they’re all playing that same game. “We have morals, until you pay us not to,” seems to be something this particular administration uses itself, so it wouldn’t shock me to find out others are trying their hand at the same tactic.

Netflix Ditches deal for Warner Bros. Discovery After Paramount’s Offer is Deemed Superior

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Netflix is walking away from a deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming assets after the WBD board on Thursday deemed a revised bid by Paramount Skydance to be a superior offer. From a report:
Earlier this week, Paramount raised its bid to buy the entirety of WBD to $31 per share, up from $30 per share, all cash. It was the latest amendment to Paramount’s multiple offers in recent months — and since moving forward with a hostile bid to buy the company — and it’s now unseated a deal between WBD and Netflix to sell the legacy media company’s studio and streaming businesses for $27.75 per share.

Last week, Netflix granted WBD a seven-day waiver to reengage with Paramount, resulting in the higher bid. Paramount’s offer is for the entirety of WBD, including its pay-TV networks, such as CNN, TBS and TNT. Netflix had four business days to make changes to its own proposal in light of Paramount’s superior bid, the WBD board said in a statement Thursday. Instead, the decision by the streaming giant to walk away puts a pin in a drawn-out saga that saw amended offers from both bidders.

All political!

By gabrieltss • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
This was all political!

Trump all but said “If WB doesn’t sell to my best buddy Larry and his family I will make sure the Netflix deal isn’t ‘ok’ed.”

High Crimes and Misdemeanors anyone?

Netflix payday

By CommunityMember • Score: 3 Thread
Netflix will receive $2.8 billion dollars as a termination fee. Not a bad payday for deciding to exit the ongoing bidding war.

Microsoft: Computer Programming Is Dying, Long Live AI Literacy

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
theodp writes:
On Tuesday, Microsoft GM of Education and Workforce Policy (and former Code.org Chief Academic Officer) Pat Yongpradit posted an obituary of sorts for coders. “Computer programmers and software developers are codified differently in the BLS [Bureau of Labor Statistics] data,” Yongpradit wrote. “The modern AI-infused world needs less computer programmers (coders) and more software developers (more holistic and higher level). So when folks say that there is less hiring of computer programmers, they are right. But there will be more hiring of software developers, especially those who have adopted an AI-forward mindset and skillset. […] The number of just pure computer programming roles has already been declining due to reasons like outsourcing, AI will just accelerate the decline.”

On Wednesday, Yongpradit’s colleague Allyson Knox, Senior Director of Education and Workforce Policy at Microsoft, put another AI nail in the coder coffin, testifying before the House Committee on Education — the Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education on Building an AI-ready America: Teaching in the Age of AI. “Thank you to Chairman Tim Walberg, Ranking Member Bobby Scott, Chair Kevin Kiley, Ranking Member Suzanne Bonamici and members of the Subcommittee for the opportunity to share Microsoft perspective and that of the educators and parents we hear from every day across the country,” Knox wrote in a LinkedIn post.

“Three themes continue to emerge throughout these discussions: 1. Educators want support to build AI literacy and critical thinking skills. 2. Schools need guidance and guardrails to ensure student data is protected and adults remain in control. 3. Teachers want classroom-ready tools, and a voice in shaping them. If we focus on these priorities, we can help ensure AI expands opportunity for every student across the United States.”

Yongpradit and Knox report up to Microsoft President Brad Smith, who last July told Code.org CEO Hadi Partovi it was time for the tech-backed nonprofit to “switch hats” from coding to AI as Microsoft announced a new $4 billion initiative to advance AI education. Smith’s thoughts on the extraordinary promise of AI in education were cited by Knox in her 2026 Congressional testimony. Interestingly, Knox argued for the importance of computer programming literacy in her 2013 Congressional testimony at a hearing on Our Nation of Builders: Training the Builders of the Future. “Congress needs to come up with fresh ideas on how we can continue to train the next generation of builders, programmers, manufacturers, technicians and entrepreneurs,” said Rep. Lee Terry said to open the discussion.

So, are reports of computer programming’s imminent death greatly exaggerated?

modern AI-infused world needs less computer progra

By Finallyjoined!!! • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Fewer..

Re:Welcome our new overlords

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Seems kind of like asking “why learn arithmetic when you have a calculator?”

Much in the same as math education shouldn’t train people to be human calculators.

But this has been the status quo in “programming” for a long time now. If AI changes anything in the long term, it will only change how you solve the problem, with or without a calculator in your hand.

Re:Welcome our new overlords

By msauve • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
>why bother knowing at all how things that we humans invented work?

It’s not like anyone really knows how AIs work. We’ll just let the AIs program the AIs. What could go wrong?

Re:Welcome our new overlords

By Petersko • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Well, the last CPU I truly understood was the 6502. I wrote assembler for it. I knew exactly what it was doing every jiffy. Since then, other than a tiny handful of exceptions, my jobs involved only needing to understand coding to some level of abstraction. One could argue that this is just the next layer of abstraction.

Developers Must Die

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

Microsoft then: Our existence, our survival depends on developers.

Microsoft today: Developers must die.

Your Smart TV May Be Crawling the Web for AI

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Bright Data, a company that operates one of the world’s largest residential proxy networks, has been running an SDK inside smart TV apps that turns those devices into nodes for web crawling — collecting data used by AI companies, among other clients — and most consumers have had no idea it was happening.

The company has published more than 200 first-party apps to LG’s app store alone and still lists Samsung’s Tizen OS and LG’s webOS as supported platforms, though LG says the SDK is “not officially supported” and its operation on webOS “is not guaranteed.” Google, Amazon, and Roku have all since adopted policies restricting or banning background proxy SDKs, and Bright Data no longer supports those platforms.

Several Roku apps still running the SDK disappeared from the store after a journalist with The Verge behind this reporting contacted the company.

Fucking LG

By drinkypoo • Score: 4 Thread

Good thing I’ve never connected my LG TV to a network.

Sucks that I have this malicious turd squatting in my home just waiting to betray me if anyone ever plugs a network cable into it.

Google noticed suspicious traffic from your IP

By dknj • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Got this message for months and could not figure out what it was. Ended up fully power cycling an LG tv and the suspicious traffic went away. Child launched an app and the traffic came back. LG allows backgrounding apps but they get evicted quite easily due to limited resources. Well the app was a 4MB app that used so little resources it never got evicted. Now I see this post and it just furthers the point, do not connect devices to your network you do not trust. In my case I thought I was safe because it was on its own locked down VLAN, but nope. Now they are all going through proxies

“Residential Proxies” are the new Crypto Miners

By xack • Score: 4 Thread
Run by the same sort of people, by the same sort of destroy the world for profit mindset. All this shit needs to be filtered by proper firewalls and antivirus. The fact that Apple and Microsoft have ramped up their anti malware effectiveness means less protected platforms like TV and IOT are being targeted. I’ve heard that pedophiles use residential proxies to post their vile content online evading traditional blacklists. We now need anti virus for servers and Linux thanks to proxy malware.

Cyber security is getting worse due to these networks, AI companies will need to be held accountable for the origin of their training data as it is all in a black box while legitimate human written content is required to have proper citations in any respectable work.

OpenAI Raises $110 Billion in the Largest Private Funding Round Ever

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI has closed what is now the largest private financing in history — a $110 billion round at a $730 billion pre-money valuation that more than doubles the $40 billion raise it completed just a year ago, itself a record for a private tech company at the time.

Amazon invested $50 billion, SoftBank put in $30 billion, and Nvidia committed $30 billion, and additional investors are expected to join as the round progresses. The valuation is a sharp jump from the $500 billion OpenAI commanded in a secondary financing in October, and the round dwarfs recent raises by rivals Anthropic ($30 billion) and xAI ($20 billion).

The company has been telling investors it is now targeting roughly $600 billion in total compute spend by 2030, a more measured figure than the $1.4 trillion in infrastructure commitments CEO Sam Altman had touted months earlier. OpenAI is projecting more than $280 billion in total revenue by 2030, split roughly equally between consumer and enterprise. ChatGPT now has over 900 million weekly active users and more than 50 million paying subscribers.

lol

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 3 Thread

we won’t be seeing any cheap RAM for a while - even an “AI” outfit that has lost half of its market share and has no idea how to make money is drowning in stupid cash.

Memory Price Hikes Will Kill Off Budget PCs and Smartphones, Analyst Warns

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register:
Ballooning memory prices are forecast to kill off entry-level PCs, leading to a decline in global shipments this year — and a similar effect is going to hit smartphones. Analyst biz Gartner is projecting a drop in PC shipments of more than 10 percent during 2026, and a decline of around 8 percent for smartphones, all due to the AI-driven memory shortage. Some types of memory have doubled or quadrupled in price since last year, and Gartner believes DRAM and NAND flash used in PCs and phones is set for a further 130 percent rise by the end of 2026.

The upshot of this is that the budget PC will disappear, simply because vendors won’t be able to build them at a price that will satisfy cost-conscious buyers, according to Gartner research director Ranjit Atwal. “Because the price of memory is increasing so much, vendors lose the ability to provide entry-level PCs — those below about $500,” he told The Register. PC makers could just raise the price of their cheap and cheerful boxes to above that level to compensate for the memory hike, however, price-sensitive buyers simply won’t bite, he added.

Another factor expected to add to declining fortunes of the PC industry this year is AI devices — systems equipped with special hardware for accelerating AI tasks, typically via a neural processing unit (NPU) embedded in the CPU. These systems were predicted to take the market by storm, but they require more memory to support AI processing and vendors like to mark them up to a premium price. “Historically, downgrading specifications was the way to go when prices were being squeezed, but that’s difficult here,” Atwal said. “The thinking was that the average price [of AI PCs] would fall this year, and lead to more adoption,” said Atwal, “but that’s not happening.” The lack of killer applications isn’t helping either.

Other effects

By DarkOx • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I wonder what this does to the fortunes of other budget component makers, and even binning as far as chips makers goes for parts like CPUs.

At some point it becomes rather non-nonsensical to pair expensive memory with some budget CPU, or GPU to constrained to also support AI inference well or play the latest games. Why would try to save $15 on 1Gbps Ethernet PHY vs a 2.5Gbps in a $1000+ computer?

Sure it all adds up and if you an save $15, here and $5 there, and $10 over here pretty soon you have a number that might matter to a consumer but the flip side of that is you’re trying to sell a still expensive machine that barely runs better then the box they are replacing. PCs have not for the most part been CPU bound for most consumer tasks for a while. How are you going to convince someone to drop $1000 on machine with the same 8GB of memory as the one they’re replacing. Consumers are not totally ignorant anymore, they may not know what the bottlenecks on their workloads are but they mostly do understand there is more to ‘how fast’ the computer is than than how big the numbers are on the CPU.

Bad for gamers too

By DeplorableCodeMonkey • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sony and Nintendo both had to increase the costs of their consoles once already, and Nintendo is warning that the Switch 2 might have to go up again because the memory situation is getting that bad.

On a grand scale, my gut says that China is doing to us with AI what we did with military spending to the USSR. The way these companies are inefficiently using capital is insane, but what’s even crazier is how no one in the financial sector or government is willing to say “you’re drunk, go home.”

The one saving grace in all of this is that Tesla is dog-fooding their own AI chips, and Musk has hinted that they might declare war on Nvidia in the nearish future. Allegedly, their chips are faster and more energy efficient than Nvidia’s because they’re specifically designed for AI workloads, particularly in embedded systems like cars and satellites (SpaceX is a fast growing private customer of Tesla here). That could end up shaking up a lot of things if it works out.

YouTube tech reviewers are losing their sh*t

By JoeyRox • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Steve Burke at Gamers Nexus seems to post a daily video about how the industry is ripping off consumers. You can hear the actual rage in his voice, the kind of rage one has when he sees the future of his channel in doubt due to his viewers being unable to afford any of the tech gear he reviews. In other words, self-selfing rage.

Re:Bad for gamers too

By 2TecTom • Score: 4, Funny Thread

gamers can manage, i don’t need more memory or a better GPU because like most gamers, i’ve turn off the eye candy anyways so I can get better FPS.

not to even mention how the classist transnational corporations have turned our games into thier engines of exploitation designed to rip off even children :(

Re:YouTube tech reviewers are losing their sh*t

By 2TecTom • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Steve Burke has more integrity than all the upper management and the owners of these corporations. He’s right to be angry, we should all be angry at how we are all being cheated, lied to and manipulated. Gamers Nexus is one of the few channels producing honsety professional journalism. He has to make up for a corrupt and classist fifth estate which has been taken over by the rich and powerful. If it wasn’t for a few people who bravely speak out, most people wouldn’t even bother to try to understand how bad our situttion really is.

People, we are losing our freedoms and our rights. Once gone, they will be almost impossible to reclaim. Now is the time to get involved and do anything which might help.

Moon’s Ancient Magnetic Field May Have Flickered On and Off

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
sciencehabit quotes a report from Science Magazine:
For decades, planetary scientists have pored over a mystery hidden within the Moon rocks retrieved by Apollo astronauts in the 1960s and ‘70s. Minerals in the rocks record the imprint of a magnetic field, nearly as powerful as Earth’s, that existed more than 3.5 billion years ago and seemed to persist for millions of years. But generating a magnetic field requires a dynamo — a churning, molten core — and most researchers believed the Moon’s tiny core would have long since cooled off, 1 billion years after it formed. Corroborating that picture are other ancient Moon rocks of about the same age that suggest the field was weak — leaving planetary scientists baffled.

Now, researchers are proposing a new way to solve the puzzle. A paper published today in Nature Geoscience theorizes that between 3.5 billion and 4 billion years ago, blobs of titanium-rich magma melted episodically just above the core, rising in plumes that drove volcanic eruptions on the surface. By intermittently stirring up the Moon’s core, these bouts of melting would have caused the Moon’s magnetic field to flicker on in short, powerful bursts. The paper “links a few different concepts that people were thinking about separately, but hadn’t actually brought together,” says Sonia Tikoo, a planetary geophysicist at Stanford University who was not involved in the study.

Hans, you dumpkopf !

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
Das ist nicht fur gefingerpoken und mittengrabben !
Ven ich invited you up zu our dark side moonbase, I have telled you niet to pressen ze switches marked “Magnetisch Veld Generator” !

NASA Reveals Identity of Astronaut Who Suffered Medical Incident Aboard ISS

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader ArchieBunker shares a report from NBC News:
NASA revealed that astronaut Mike Fincke was the crew member who suffered a medical incident at the International Space Station in January, which prompted the agency to carry out the first evacuation due to a medical issue in the space station’s 25-year history. The rare decision to cut a mission short and bring Fincke and three other crew members home early made for a dramatic week in space early this year.

In a statement released by NASA “at the request of Fincke,” the veteran astronaut said he experienced a medical event on Jan. 7 “that required immediate attention” from his space station crew members. “Thanks to their quick response and the guidance of our NASA flight surgeons, my status quickly stabilized,” Fincke, 58, said in the statement. […] In his statement, Fincke thanked his Crew-11 colleagues, along with NASA astronaut Chris Williams and Russian cosmonauts Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikaev, who were also aboard the space station at the time and are still in space. Fincke also thanked the teams at NASA, SpaceX and the medical professionals at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla. “Their professionalism and dedication ensured a positive outcome,” he said.

Fincke ended his statement by saying he is “doing very well” and still actively involved with standard post-flight reconditioning at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. “Spaceflight is an incredible privilege, and sometimes it reminds us just how human we are,” he said. “Thank you for all your support.”

Heart Issue?

By sizzlinkitty • Score: 3 Thread

I’m going to guess this is related to a heart issue, he could have had a small heart attack…

All those people saying it was a pregnancy

By _merlin • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

There were a pile of the usual idiots commenting on every related story here insisting it had to be a pregnancy. Where are they now so we can laugh at them for being wrong about one more thing?

Where’s the lifeboat ?

By butt0nm4n • Score: 3 Thread

And the backup lifeboat?

It’s just a capsule right? Doubles up as the fart box when not in use.

Anthropic CEO Says AI Company ‘Cannot In Good Conscience Accede’ To Pentagon

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press:
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said Thursday the artificial intelligence company "cannot in good conscience accede” to the Pentagon’s demands to allow wider use of its technology. The maker of the AI chatbot Claude said in a statement that it’s not walking away from negotiations, but that new contract language received from the Defense Department “made virtually no progress on preventing Claude’s use for mass surveillance of Americans or in fully autonomous weapons.”

The Pentagon’s top spokesman has reiterated that the military wants to use Anthropic’s artificial intelligence technology in legal ways and will not let the company dictate any limits ahead of a Friday deadline to agree to its demands. Sean Parnell said Thursday on social media that the Pentagon “has no interest in using AI to conduct mass surveillance of Americans (which is illegal) nor do we want to use AI to develop autonomous weapons that operate without human involvement.”

Anthropic’s policies prevent its models, such as its chatbot Claude, from being used for those purposes. It’s the last of its peers — the Pentagon also has contracts with Google, OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI — to not supply its technology to a new U.S. military internal network. Parnell said the Pentagon wants to “use Anthropic’s model for all lawful purposes” but didn’t offer details on what that entailed. He said opening up use of the technology would prevent the company from “jeopardizing critical military operations.” “We will not let ANY company dictate the terms regarding how we make operational decisions,” he said.
In a post on X, Parnell said Anthropic will “have until 5:01 PM ET on Friday to decide. Otherwise, we will terminate our partnership with Anthropic and deem them a supply chain risk for DOW.”

Re:Flip flop

By swillden • Score: 5, Informative Thread

As long as they stay in the news they’re happy with whatever it seems. Although I back their latest decision for however long it lasts.

They didn’t flip flop. They changed their position on one aspect of AI security, while holding the line on a different aspect. It’s like if you decided that you were willing to leave your car doors unlocked, but refused to leave your house unlocked. Different things, different risk calculations.

Re:doublespeak, we’re not stupid sean

By martin-boundary • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
There’s no need to operate illegally if the law can be changed to make formerly illegal things legal going forward.

Re:Odd to root for one of these shops, but

By martin-boundary • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The cost of overturned stupid shit is borne by US taxpayers. So it’s a win-win for Trump and The Government.

Re:Like the DoD really cares about legality…

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
We talking about a government that couldn’t even understand. “Release the Epstein files. Yes, even the Trump ones”.
What on earth makes anyone think they care about laws?

Re:Like the DoD really cares about legality…

By alexgieg • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Maybe, but maybe not. Anthropic was founded by people who left OpenAI due to ethical concerns, and who were 100% willing to remain a non-profit, after the unethical camp overcame them. If there’s anyone in the industry who might stick to “no, we won’t compromise on our ethics no matter what”, it’s them.

If they do remain ethical no matter what, what that might result from that is unclear. If the US government goes nuclear on them, classifying them as a fake “security risk” to force them to lose major clients as punishment, I can see, as one option, them moving to Europe, which is way more focused on ethics than the US, and currently lacks a major AI player, and then letting the US government munch on the slow realization the US lost the current best AI tech stack to the very same future major geopolitical adversary they’ve decided to construct just because.

Four Convicted Over Spyware Affair That Shook Greece

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
A Greek court has convicted four individuals linked to the marketing of Predator spyware in the wiretapping scandal that shook the country in 2022. The BBC reports:
In what became known as "Greece’s Watergate,” surveillance software called Predator was used to target 87 people — among them government ministers, senior military officials and journalists. The four who had marketed the software were found guilty by an Athens court of misdemeanours of violating the confidentiality of telephone communications and illegally accessing personal data and conversations.

The court sentenced the four defendants to lengthy jail sentences, suspended pending appeal. Although they each face 126 years, only eight would be typically served which is the upper limit for misdemeanors. One in three of the dozens of figures targeted had also been under legal surveillance by Greece’s intelligence services (EYP). Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who had placed EYP directly under his supervision, called it a scandal, but no government officials have been charged in court and critics accuse the government of trying to cover up the truth.

The case dates back to the summer of 2022, when the current head of Greek Socialist party Pasok, Nikos Androulakis - then an MEP - was informed by the European Parliament’s IT experts that he had received a malicious text message containing a link. Predator spyware, marketed by the Athens-based Israeli company Intellexa, can get access to a device’s messages, camera, and microphone. Its use was illegal in Greece at that time but a new law passed in 2022 has since legalised state security use of surveillance software under strict conditions. Androulakis also discovered that he had been tracked for “national security reasons” by Greece’s intelligence services. The scandal has since escalated into a debate over democratic accountability in Greece.