Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. WSJ: Boeing’s Fuselage Factory ‘Plagued’ by Production Problems and Quality Lapses
  2. America Cracks Down on Methane Emissions from Oil and Gas Facilities
  3. NASA Finally Unlocks Stuck Fasteners on Asteroid Sample Capsule
  4. Did a US Hedge Fund Help Destroy Local Journalism?
  5. AI Girlfriend Bots Are Already Flooding OpenAI’s GPT Store
  6. Ukrainian Hacker Group Takes Down Moscow ISP As a Revenge For Kyivstar Cyber Attack
  7. NASA Unveils Revolutionary X-59 ‘Quiet’ Supersonic Aircraft
  8. The Billionaires Spending a Fortune To Lure Scientists Away From Universities
  9. US Regulator Considers Stripping Boeing’s Right To Self-Inspect Planes
  10. Micron Displays Next-Gen LPCAMM2 Modules For Laptops At CES 2024
  11. Android 15 Could Bring Widgets Back To the Lock Screen
  12. Removal of Netflix Film Shows Advancing Power of India’s Hindu Right Wing
  13. Artifact, Personalized News App From Instagram Co-Founders, Is Shutting Down
  14. Apple Undergoes Its Biggest Board Shakeup In Years
  15. US Tech Innovation Dreams Soured By Changed R&D Tax Laws

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.

WSJ: Boeing’s Fuselage Factory ‘Plagued’ by Production Problems and Quality Lapses

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Long before the harrowing Alaska Airlines blowout on January 5, there were concerns within Boeing about the way the aerospace giant was building its planes,” reports the Wall Street Journal.

There’s been issues with various models — like “misdrilled holes, loose rudder bolts, and this month’s MAX 9 door-plug blowout” — but many can be traced back to the outsourcing Boeing and other aerospace companies adopted more than 20 years ago where key pieces are built elsewhere and then assembled at Boeing. And the Journal reports that the door-plug was built at a factory that Boeing owned until 2005, now run by Spirit AeroSystems, that “has been plagued by production problems and quality lapses since Boeing ceded so much responsibility for its work… "
Spirit is the sole supplier of the fuselages used in many Boeing jets, including the Alaska plane that made the emergency landing. It is heavily dependent on Boeing for revenue, and the two companies have battled for years over costs and quality issues. The earlier MAX grounding and Covid-19 pandemic sapped Spirit’s finances, and the company slashed thousands of jobs, leaving it short-handed when demand bounced back. Some Spirit employees said production problems were common and internal complaints about quality were ignored. In a given month, at a production rate of two fuselages a day, there are 10 million holes that need to be filled with some combination of bolts, fasteners and rivets. “We have planes all over the world that have issues that nobody has found because of the pressure Spirit has put on employees to get the job done so fast,” said Cornell Beard, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers chapter representing workers at Spirit’s Wichita factory… Alaska Airlines and United Airlines say they have found loose hardware on other MAX 9 jets they have checked, suggesting that problems go beyond one plane…

The company, which had 15,900 workers in four U.S. factories at the end of 2019, laid off thousands of people in Wichita at the height of the pandemic. When it needed to ramp back up, not only did Spirit have fewer people on site, the company had lost years of expertise. There were fewer experienced mechanics, but also fewer experts who could inspect the quality of their work. [Spirit CEO Pat Shanahan ] said the quick production ramp-up and the earlier MAX grounding left the company short of experienced workers. “When you have disruption, you have instability,” he said…

For more than a decade, Spirit and Boeing battled over costs, quality and the pace of production. Boeing’s demands for lower prices left Spirit strapped for cash as managers panicked over meeting increasingly demanding deadlines. Boeing routinely had employees on the ground in Wichita and conducted audits of the supplier. The result, some current and former employees say: a factory where workers rush to meet unrealistic quotas and where pointing out problems is discouraged if not punished. Increasingly, they say, planes have been leaving Wichita with so-called escapements, or undetected defects. “It is known at Spirit that if you make too much noise and cause too much trouble, you will be moved,” said Joshua Dean, a former Spirit quality auditor who says he was fired after flagging misdrilled holes in fuselages. “It doesn’t mean you completely disregard stuff, but they don’t want you to find everything and write it up.” His account is included in a shareholder lawsuit filed in December against Spirit that alleges the company failed to disclose costly defects.

A Spirit spokesman said the company strongly disagrees with the assertions and intends to defend against the suit…

After being laid off during the pandemic shutdown, Dean returned to Spirit in May 2021. By then, he said, the company had lost many of its most experienced mechanics and auditors. Spirit already was under more intense scrutiny from Boeing. The jet maker placed Spirit on a so-called probation, in which the company more closely scrutinized the supplier’s work. To get off probation, Spirit needed to reduce the number of defects on the line. At one point, Dean said, the company threw a pizza party for employees to celebrate a drop in the number of defects reported. Chatter at the party turned to how everyone knew that the defect numbers were down only because people were reporting fewer problems.

On the Spirit factory floor, some machinists building planes say their concerns about quality rarely get conveyed to more senior managers, and that quality inspectors fear retaliation if they point out too many problems. Union representatives complained to leaders last fall that the company removed inspectors from line jobs and replaced them with contract workers after they flagged multiple defects.
Two key quotes from the article:

America Cracks Down on Methane Emissions from Oil and Gas Facilities

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Friday America’s Environmental Protection Agency “proposed steep new fees on methane emissions from oil and gas facilities,” reports the Washington Post, “escalating a crackdown on the fossil fuel industry’s planet-warming pollution.”

Methane does not linger in the atmosphere as long as carbon dioxide, but it is far more effective at trapping heat — roughly 80 times more potent in its first decade. It is responsible for roughly a third of global warming today, and the oil and gas industry accounts for about 14 percent of the world’s annual methane emissions, according to estimates from the International Energy Agency. Other large methane sources include livestock, landfills and coal mines.
So America’s new Methane Emissions Reduction Program “levies a fee on wasteful methane emissions from large oil and gas facilities,” according to the article:
The fee starts at $900 per metric ton of emissions in 2024, increasing to $1,200 in 2025 and $1,500 in 2026 and thereafter. The EPA proposal lays out how the fee will be implemented, including how the charge will be calculated…

At the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Dubai in December, EPA Administrator Michael Regan announced final standards to limit methane emissions from U.S. oil and gas operations. Fossil fuel companies that comply with these standards will be exempt from the new fee… Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund, said the fee will encourage fossil fuel firms to deploy innovative technologies that detect methane leaks. Such cutting-edge technologies range from ground-based sensors to satellites in space. “Proven solutions to cut oil and gas methane and to avoid the fee are being used by leading companies in states across the country,” Krupp said in a statement…

In addition to methane, the EPA proposal could slash emissions of hazardous air pollutants, including smog-forming volatile organic compounds and cancer-causing benzene [according to an EPA official].
The federal government also gave America’s fossil fuel companies nearly $1 billion to help them comply with the methane regulation, according to the article.

The article also includes this statement from an executive at the American Petroleum Institute, the top lobbying arm of the U.S. oil and gas industry, complaining that the fines create a “regime” that would “stifle innovation,” and urging Congress to repeal it.

Ah yes, “stifling” innovation

By quonset • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

complaining that the fines create a “regime” that would “stifle innovation,” and urging Congress to repeal it.

It’s always amusing when a company trots out the whole, “It will stifle innovation if we have to do . . .” I’m pretty sure car companies said the same thing when the country went to unleaded gasoline. Or window manufacturers were told to increase the efficiency of their product. Or when air conditioner manufacturers couldn’t use chlorofluorocarbons any more.

Funny how making people change willl “stifle” innovation while doing nothing changes . . . nothing.

If they want Congress to repeal this, might as well go whole hog and repeal those billions in subsidies they get every year. Quite clearly they’re not doing any “innovation” with the massive amount of taxpayer money they’re receiving.

Re:Ah yes, “stifling” innovation

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 4, Funny Thread

complaining that the fines create a “regime” that would “stifle innovation,” and urging Congress to repeal it.

It’s always amusing when a company trots out the whole, “It will stifle innovation if we have to do . . .”

To be fair, I imagine this actually will stifle new/innovative ways companies might use to *avoid* capturing methane. :-) More seriously, while it may be more hassle and less profitable to capture methane rather than let it leak and/or flair it off, there are uses for it if companies would stop being lazy and take a long(er) term look at things — don’t the SpaceX Raptor engines burn methane? Those Starships are going to need a bunch of it…

“Stifle innovation”

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I’m OK with stifling innovation in the oil & gas sector, especially if it’s due to demanding they do it while complying with the law.

We don’t need better ways of extracting, refining, and selling oil and gas anyway, we need better ways of NOT doing that.

NASA Finally Unlocks Stuck Fasteners on Asteroid Sample Capsule

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“For months, bits of an asteroid collected by a U.S. probe during a billion-mile trek were out of reach to scientists,” reports Space.com, “locked inside a return capsule in a NASA facility with two stuck fasteners preventing access to the rocky space treasure.

“This week, NASA won its battle against those fasteners.”

More details from CNN:
The space agency already harvested about 2.5 ounces (70 grams) of rocks and dust from its OSIRIS-REx mission, which traveled nearly 4 billion miles to collect the unprecedented sample from the near-Earth asteroid called Bennu. But NASA revealed in October that some material remained out of reach in a capsule hidden inside an instrument called the Touch-and-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism — a robotic arm with a storage container at one end that collected the sample from Bennu. The sampler head is held shut by 35 fasteners, according to NASA, but two of them proved too difficult to open.

Prying the mechanism loose is no simple task. The space agency must use preapproved materials and tools around the capsule to minimize the risk of damaging or contaminating the samples. These “new tools also needed to function within the tightly-confined space of the glovebox, limiting their height, weight, and potential arc movement,” said Dr. Nicole Lunning, OSIRIS-REx curation lead at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, in a statement. “The curation team showed impressive resilience and did incredible work to get these stubborn fasteners off the TAGSAM head so we can continue disassembly. We are overjoyed with the success.”
To address the issue, NASA said they designed and fabricated two new, multi-part tools out of surgical steel. NASA says that a “few additional disassembly steps” still remain, but there’s a video on their web site showing the operation (along with some pictures).

NASA adds that “Later this spring, the curation team will release a catalog of the OSIRIS-REx samples, which will be available to the global scientific community.” But CNN notes that an analysis of material from last fall “already revealed the samples from the asteroid contained abundant water in the form of hydrated clay minerals as well as carbon,” CNN reports. And they add that scientists believe this bolsters the theory that water arrived on Earth billions of years ago on an asteroid…

I can just see

By lsllll • Score: 3 Thread
I can just see someone at NASA sneaking in the middle of the night and using a couple jets from a can of WD-40 to get the job done and surprise everyone the next day.

Phillips screws??

By botmaster42 • Score: 3 Thread

Did I see what I thought I saw, that the fasteners were on there or were Philips head screws? If that is the case that seems ill conceived. And looks from the video why they needed this custom tool to provide enough downward pressure on the screw head to lessen the risk of stripping it. Seems like they would want to use something like a hexagon or Robertson drive head on those screws. Was this made in China?

Did a US Hedge Fund Help Destroy Local Journalism?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“What is lost when billionaires with no background nor interest in a civic mission, who are only concerned with profiteering, take over our most influential news organizations? What new models of news gathering, and dissemination show promise for our increasingly digital age? What can the public do to preserve and support vibrant journalism?”

That’s a synopsis posted about the documentary Stripped for Parts: American Journalism on the Brink, cited by the long-standing news industry magazine Editor and Publisher (which dates back to 1901). This week its podcast interviewed filmmaker Rick Goldsmith about his 90-minute documentary, which they say “tells the tale” of how hedge fund Alden Global Capital clandestinely entered into the news publishing industry in a big way — and then “dismantled local newspapers ‘piece by piece,’ creating a crises within the communities they serve, leaving 'news deserts' and 'ghost papers' in their wake.”
[Goldsmith] spent more than 5-years creating his latest work… a film that tells the tale of how newspapers business model is faltering, not just because of the loss of advertising and digital disruption; but also to capitalist greed, as hedge funds and corporate America buy them, sell their assets and leave the communities they serve without their local “voice” and a final check on power.
On the podcast, Goldsmith notes that in many cases a paper’s assets “were the newspaper buildings and the printing presses… These were worth in many cases more than the newspapers themselves.” After laying off staff, the hedge fund could also downsize out of those buildings.

By 2021 Alden owned 100 newspapers and 200 more publications — and then acquired Tribune Publishing to become America’s second-largest newspaper publisher.

The hedge fund currently owns several newspapers in the San Francisco Bay Area, according to SFGate:
At first, Goldsmith’s documentary might seem like it’s delivering more bad news. But it avoids despair, offering hope on the horizon for news deserts where aggressive reporting is needed. It introduces the notion that the traditional capitalist business model is failing the news industry, and that nonprofit organizations must be providers of local coverage.

bogeyman

By groobly • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The capitalist is always the bogeyman.

The problem is that the newspaper business model collapsed when Craigslist came into being, soon followed by Google advertising.

Newspapers then realized they had to be online and give away their IP for free. Then they realized that wasn’t a good business model either. That led to counting eyeballs to court advertising dollars, and counting eyeballs requires clickbait. To get clickbait, you don’t need journalists. Propagandists are more useful. “Journalism” schools were happy to oblige.

Re:Journalists…

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you think the media is “hateful woke left” then you’re a bit biased yourself. Take this exchange for example. https://www.houstonchronicle.c…

Ron DeSantis claims some states allow post birth abortions. The CNN journalist doesn’t even bother asking which states Ron is talking about. If the media was truly leftist wouldn’t they have taken this easy opportunity to make DeSantis look bad? Nope a wildly false claim is made and that’s the end.

Re:Journalists…

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
That means you don’t actually pay for your news. Get a subscription to the WSJ, NTY, Economist, or even US News and World Report. Those outfits employ actual journalists doing actual journalist work, writing actual journalism, drawing an actual paycheck that comes at least partially from your subscription dollars. That means that they’re doing a job for you, which is to provide you with actual journalism.

You get what you pay for. If you’re reading free news, you’re not the customer, you’re the product. It was like that 20 years ago. Still his.

Claims of media bias are overblown

By XXongo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

By replacing objective journalism with partisan, yellow propaganda, this is how a company wins hearts, minds, and ultimately control of a nation.

Claims of ideological bias in the media may be overblown

Re:Journalists…

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I’m pretty sure Texas allows post birth abortions as long as you tell the cops you were standing your ground and that you felt threatened by the baby.

AI Girlfriend Bots Are Already Flooding OpenAI’s GPT Store

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Quartz:
It’s day two of the opening of OpenAI’s buzzy GPT store, which offers customized versions of ChatGPT, and users are already breaking the rules. The Generative Pre-Trained Transformers (GPTs) are meant to be created for specific purposes — and not created at all in some cases. A search for “girlfriend” on the new GPT store will populate the site’s results bar with at least eight “girlfriend” AI chatbots, including “Korean Girlfriend,” “Virtual Sweetheart,” “Your girlfriend Scarlett,” “Your AI girlfriend, Tsu.” Click on chatbot “Virtual Sweetheart,” and a user will receive starting prompts like “What does your dream girl look like?” and “Share with me your darkest secret.”

The AI girlfriend bots go against OpenAI’s usage policy, which was updated when the GPT store launched yesterday (Jan. 10). The company bans GPTs “dedicated to fostering romantic companionship or performing regulated activities.” It is not clear exactly what regulated activities entail. Notably, the company is aiming to get ahead of potential conflicts with its OpenAI store.

Relationship chatbots are, indeed, popular apps. In the US, seven of the 30 AI chatbot apps downloaded in 2023 from the Apple or Google Play store were related to AI friends, girlfriends, or companions, according to data shared with Quartz from data.ai, a mobile app analytics firm. The proliferation of these apps may stem from the epidemic of loneliness and isolation Americans are facing. Alarming studies show that one-in-two American adults have reported experiencing loneliness, with the US Surgeon General calling for the need to strengthen social connections. AI chatbots could be part of the solution if people are isolated from other human beings — or they could just be a way to cash in on human suffering.
Further reading: OpenAI Quietly Deletes Ban On Using ChatGPT For ‘Military and Warfare’

I would have thought …

By cascadingstylesheet • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
… that it would be women who would want an endless chatting partner, that would follow a bunch of rules and always just listen and support.

What did they think was going to happen?

By quonset • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This has nothing to do with “loneliness”. Not everyone who is alone is lonely. This is, like the last sentence of the blurb, about monetizing something. This is, in essence, the verbal equivalent of OnlyFans. There’s always someone dumb enough to spend money on things such as this and people are cashing in.

The next thing we’ll hear is someone whining how their bank accounts were drained because they thought the bot really liked them and needed the money. Mark my words, and keep this comment handy.

“regulations”

By sTERNKERN • Score: 3 Thread
It is like producing guns and prohibiting anyone to shoot at another person. People want LLM companions and people will get them. If not with GPT then it will be with something else.

The best way to help with this…

By Lendrick • Score: 5, Funny Thread

…is call all of these people “pathetic” and “gross” and tell them to “get a girlfriend”. That should increase their self-confidence and help them interact with real people.

Ukrainian Hacker Group Takes Down Moscow ISP As a Revenge For Kyivstar Cyber Attack

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader Plugh shares a report from Daily Security Review:
A Ukrainian hacker group […] carried out a destructive attack on the servers of a Moscow-based internet provider to take revenge for Kyivstar cyberattack. The group, known as Blackjack, successfully hacked into the systems of M9com, causing extensive damage by deleting terabytes of data. Numerous residents in Moscow experienced disruptions in their internet and television services. Additionally, the Blackjack hacker group has issued a warning of a potentially larger attack in the near future.

Based on the information provided by Ukrinform, the cyber attack on M9com deleted approximately 20 terabytes of data. The attack targeted various critical services of the company, including its official website, mail server, and cyber protection services. Furthermore, the hackers managed to access and download over 10 gigabytes of data from M9com’s mail server and client databases. To make matters worse, they made this stolen information publicly accessible via the Tor browser. […]

Based on the nature of the attack on M9com, it appears that when the hackers hit Moscow, they were able to gain access to the back-end operations of the company. This allowed them to effectively delete data from the servers, similar to what occurred in the Kyivstar incident. It is worth noting that this type of attack, which involves directly targeting and compromising the servers, is less common compared to the more frequently observed distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. DDoS attacks overwhelm a system by inundating it with automated requests, causing the service to become inaccessible.

Re:This war will end

By Bert64 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Quite quick to restore from backups yes, but your backups will also contain the vulnerabilities, backdoors and/or compromised credentials which allowed the attackers to gain access in the first place. You have to be a lot more careful when recovering from a hack or you’re just inviting it to happen again.

Re:More or less minor vandalism

By quantaman • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Let me tell you my position so you don’t have to double guess: I absolutely want Russia to defeat the West at their own game, and at the same time I grieve that Ukrainians are paying the price for it.

Gotcha.

Now let me tell you where you are wrong: you talk about Putin being a “fascist” — I wouldn’t be surprised if you call Republicans that — and at the same time think Russian “oppressed minorities” are going to rise. It is exactly all those minorities why Russia needs a dictator like Putin: so it doesn’t fall apart. Which is why Putin is popular in Russia.

Russia is a land empire that rules a bunch of non-ethnic Russian territories, it’s pretty obvious that Putin can’t go full ethno-state.

But make no mistake, Russia is pretty fascist. At it’s core fascism is basically the idea that every individual in the nation needs to be united behind the goals of the nations. Every labourer, every manager, every parent and child, all working together to build the nation. If that idea doesn’t sound attractive you need to give it another look. Fascism didn’t become popular because people like marching, it appeals to some very basic ideas around building a strong community.

That’s what makes Fascism right wing, because Conservatives do want strong communities without disruptive elements, and Fascism is the most extreme version of that. Get tripped up on whether it’s left or right wing economic policy because it doesn’t really matter. If everyone’s duty is to serve the nation does it matter if the power company is publicly or privately owned?

So yeah, Russia is a fascist state where you can’t even call the war a war and it’s fine to throw away people’s lives in human wave assaults in a war of conquest.

There are worse things that can happen to a country than being lead by a dictator, as Libya can confirm — thanks to the failed presidential candidate Hilllary Clinton.

And why do I want Putin to defeat the West? Consider:

- Russia says, we’re going to fuck up Ukraine so NATO doesn’t cross our border.

Russia lies, quite transparently.

NATO is a defensive alliance, what possible motive would they have for crossing Russia’s borders?

Russia has one big concern with NATO. It contains former USSR members who joined because they were concerned that Russia was going to invade them, and Russia wants NATO broken up so it can invade those countries like it did Ukraine.

Putin is trying to frame the war against Ukraine as a war against NATO because he’s hoping to make it look ineffective so it comes apart and he can go after those former USSR members later.

The truth is exposed by the fact that Russia basically shrugged when Sweden and Finland joined NATO. If they were worried about NATO on their borders don’t you think they would have reacted to NATO on their borders? Russia didn’t care because Sweden and Finland weren’t former USSR, so he wasn’t really interested in conquering them.

NASA Unveils Revolutionary X-59 ‘Quiet’ Supersonic Aircraft

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
After years of development, NASA has unveiled the X-59 supersonic jet capable of breaking the sound barrier without producing a thunderous sonic boom. “Instead, the Quesst will make a much quieter ‘thump,’ similar to the sound of a car door slamming as heard from indoors,” reports Space.com. “If successful, the jet has the potential to revolutionize supersonic flight and aviation in general.” From the report:
NASA and Lockheed Martin showed off the finished X-59 Quesst (“Quiet SuperSonic Technology”) today (Jan. 12) in front of a crowd of nearly 150 at the legendary Lockheed Martin Skunk Works facility in Palmdale, California, a research and development site typically known for its secrecy. The elongated beak-like nose section of the aircraft stood out prominently, showing off the fact that it does not have a forward-facing window. […] Instead, it features what NASA calls the eXternal Vision System, or XVS, which consists of a camera and a cockpit-mounted screen that offers pilots an augmented-reality view of what’s in front of the jet.

Jim Free, NASA’s associate administrator, continued this sentiment, noting that the X-59 is merely the latest in a long line of NASA X-planes that have revolutionized aviation throughout the agency’s history. “Even among other X-planes, the X-59 is special. Every aircraft that receives that X-plane designation has a specific purpose to test new technologies or aerodynamic concepts,” Free said, “These special planes push the envelope of what’s possible in flight. And once they prove those concepts, they often go into museums. And that’s really what makes the X-59 different.”

Free was referring to the fact that once the X-59 is ready for flight, the jet will make multiple flights over select residential areas in the United States in order to collect data on how people on the ground below experience and react to the quieter sonic booms it creates. NASA will then use that data to seek approval for commercial supersonic flights from regulatory agencies such as the Federal Aviation Administration, with the ultimate goal of making aviation more sustainable and enabling faster flight over populated areas. Some of the applications of supersonic flight mentioned at today’s unveiling include rapid medical response, shorter shipping times and, of course, faster travel.
“The first ‘A’ in NASA stands for aeronautics,” said NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy during the unveiling ceremony. “And we’re all about groundbreaking aerospace innovation. The X-59 proudly continues this legacy, representing the forefront of technology driving aviation forward.” The ‘X’ in NASA’s latest X-plane stands for ‘experimental.’
“This isn’t just an airplane, this is an X-plane,” Melroy added. “It’s the manifestation of a collaborative genius.”

The first thing I thought

By flatulus • Score: 3 Thread
Oh, so they make a sound like “whop” or “foop” when the break the sound barrier

HG2G fans will get the reference…

Re:What is this “breaking the sound barrier”

By test321 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I don’t know if it helps but here is their statement (2017) regarding how it works: "‘We have tailored the lift distribution and the pressure that goes over the airplane so that the shockwaves no longer coalesce into this strong wave,’ he says. ‘I must say coming up with this design was not easy. It took thousands of optimization runs with tools that we worked with NASA to validate over the years.’" https://www.flightglobal.com/h…

The Billionaires Spending a Fortune To Lure Scientists Away From Universities

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times:
In an unmarked laboratory stationed between the campuses of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a splinter group of scientists is hunting for the next billion-dollar drug. The group, bankrolled with $500 million from some of the wealthiest families in American business, has created a stir in the world of academia by dangling seven-figure paydays to lure highly credentialed university professors to a for-profit bounty hunt. Its self-described goal: to avoid the blockages and paperwork that slow down the traditional paths of scientific research at universities and pharmaceutical companies, and discover scores of new drugs (at first, for cancer and brain disease) that can be produced and sold quickly.

Braggadocio from start-ups is de rigueur, and plenty of ex-academics have started biotechnology companies, hoping to strike it rich on their one big discovery. This group, rather boastfully named Arena BioWorks, borrowing from a Teddy Roosevelt quote, doesn’t have one singular idea, but it does have a big checkbook. “I’m not apologetic about being a capitalist, and that motivation from a team is not a bad thing,” said the technology magnate Michael Dell, one of the group’s big-money backers. Others include an heiress to the Subway sandwich fortune and an owner of the Boston Celtics. The wrinkle is that for decades, many drug discoveries have not just originated at colleges and universities, but also produced profits that helped fill their endowment coffers. The University of Pennsylvania, for one, has said it earned hundreds of millions of dollars for research into mRNA vaccines used against Covid-19. Under this model, any such windfall would remain private. […]

The five billionaires backing Arena include Michael Chambers, a manufacturing titan and the wealthiest man in North Dakota, and Elisabeth DeLuca, the widow of a founder of the Subway chain. They have each put in $100 million and expect to double or triple their investment in later rounds. In confidential materials provided to investors and others, Arena describes itself as “a privately funded, fully independent, public good.” Arena’s backers said in interviews that they did not intend to entirely cut off their giving to universities. Duke turned down an offer from Mr. Pagliuca, an alumnus and board member, to set up part of the lab there. Mr. Dell, a major donor to the University of Texas hospital system in his hometown, Austin, leased space for a second Arena laboratory there. [Stuart Schreiber, a longtime Harvard-affiliated researcher who quit to be Arena’s lead scientist] said it would require years — and billions of dollars in additional funding — before the team would learn whether its model led to the production of any worthy drugs. “Is it going to be better or worse?” Dr. Schreiber said. “I don’t know, but it’s worth a shot.”

So is the University system so underfunded now

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
that they can’t get free high profit research out of it anymore? I can’t think of any good reason to do this otherwise.

Then again there’s been a few high profile cases of professors getting to keep their inventions (which has it’s own issues when the research was paid for by public money…), so maybe they’re tired of paying patent license fees for something they can own outright

One thing I’m sure of is it’s not competition. Billionaires don’t compete, they either buy out or under cut.

It’s a good thing!

By methano • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Truth is that discovering new drugs is really hard. If all these billionaires want to toss their filthy lucre back into the game, I’m all for it. It will be better for mankind than building yachts. And yeah, they’re not gonna get rich doing it. A few will, most won’t. But all you’ll hear about is the one who did.

Re:Ethics panels

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Their mantra: Move Fast and Break People.

Re:Maybe the current university model is the issue

By Roger W Moore • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I’ve always felt that a university’s first mission should be to teach, but being a good teacher will not get a faculty member promoted

A university’s first mission is teaching AND research together. Research without teaching means that important knowledge and understanding can be lost and teaching without research means that education will always be at least a generation behind the state of art in the field. Yes, universities prioritise research over teaching because it is harder to find good researchers than teachers but, at least where I work, bad teaching will hurt your chances of getting tenure or promotion.

Re: So is the University system so underfunded now

By ghoul • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
European Universities dont build billion dollar Football stadiums and dorms with heated floors and private bathrooms. They keep the money in the classroom and the lab. Also they get funded a lot more by their govt.

US Regulator Considers Stripping Boeing’s Right To Self-Inspect Planes

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After a 737 Max door panel blew out over Portland, Oregon, last week, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered the temporary grounding of Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft until emergency inspections were performed. “Alaska and United Airlines, which operate most of the Max 9s in use in the United States, said on Monday that they discovered loose hardware on the panel when conducting preliminary inspections on their planes,” reported the New York Times. Now, U.S. aviation regulators say they may strip Boeing of its right to conduct some of its aircraft inspections. The Financial Times reports:
Mike Whitaker, FAA administrator, said the agency was “exploring” its options for using an independent third-party to oversee inspections of Boeing’s aircraft and its quality controls. “It is time to re-examine the delegation of authority and assess any associated safety risks,” he said. “The grounding of the 737-9 and the multiple production-related issues identified in recent years [at Boeing] require us to look at every option to reduce risk.”

The regulator also said it plans to immediately increase its oversight of Boeing’s production. The FAA opened an investigation on Thursday into whether the planes Boeing builds match the specifications it has laid out. The FAA said it will audit the 737 Max 9 production line and its suppliers “to evaluate Boeing’s compliance with its approved quality procedures,” with further audits conducted as necessary.

Washington Senator Maria Cantwell sent a letter (PDF) yesterday to the FAA questioning the agency’s role in inspecting aircraft manufactured by Boeing. Cantwell said she asked a year ago for an audit of certain areas related to Boeing’s production, and the regulator told her it was unnecessary. “Recent accidents and incidents — including the expelled door plug on Alaska Airlines flight 1282 — call into question Boeing’s quality control,” she said. “In short, it appears that FAA’s oversight processes have not been effective in ensuring that Boeing produces aeroplanes that are in condition for safe operation.”

JFC what is wrong with you?

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Informative Thread
this has *nothing* to do with the engineers. It’s entirely up to corner cutting by the CEOs. Or do you think our ruling class has gone “woke”?

.... Oh Christ, you do, don’t you. You know when they said get red pilled you weren’t supposed to down the hole bottle right?

Re:Return merit as a virtue

By quantaman • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s time FAA and congress make it illegal for any company that creates safety-critical hardware to hire people based on anything other than race-blind, gender-blind, cold, hard, merit.

Do you have any evidence that the failures had to do with incompetent diversity hires? Or is it just your instinct to blame everything on women and minorities.

Re: people died due to there cost cutting they sho

By bingoUV • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

On another note, why is Boeing responsible for doing the inspection?

Boeing is not “responsible” for doing the inspection. It is “authorised” to do the inspection on its own, that the regulator is responsible for. The regulator outsourced the job of overseeing Boeing to , whom ? Yes, to Boeing.

We do have a reasonable explaination.

By robbak • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

This came from a commenter at the aviation subreddit.

> The much older 737-900 shares the same door plug assy as the 737-9MAX. No other models do.

> Spirit says they “semi-rig” the door plug before shipping. To me this means it’s not fully installed. The reason is because the door plug assy is removed upon receipt to gain an additional access point for final assy work.

> However, I bet that’s only true for the 737-900 and that for the 737-9MAX the final assy work is completed without ever removing the door plug.

> The Spirit planner copied over the semi-rig task from the 737-900 to the 737-9MAX. The Boeing planner didn’t add a final rig task because the door plug was never removed and they assumed that meant fully installed.

This also would explain something that many find hard to understand - why only the 737-9MAX is grounded pending inspections, not the 737-900 which has the same plug door. Every 737-900 had the door opened and then sealed by Boeing engineers.

DERs must be independent!

By BobC • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

During the early oughts I worked at a small avionics company, and we heavily relied on FAA-certified DERs (Designated Engineering Representatives) to help us ensure we took all the right steps to get our products certified by the FAA, extremely reliable in use, and trusted in the market. The CEO of our company went out of his way to hire “professional assholes” (perfectly nice people paid to be perfectionists) to hold our feet to the fire, to inspect our processes, to inspect the results of using those processes, and to ensure our processes were reliable and repeatable.

Our DERs HAD to be totally independent. Sure, we hired them (for a very pretty penny), but we also worked them hard. And as a small company, we needed our product certifications to go through without any hiccups, as do-overs were expensive and slow. We needed our DERs to give us as much bad news as possible, so the FAA would have no reason to give us any.

Even back then, we were very concerned that Boeing relied on DERs who were company employees, rather than truly independent contractors or consultants. The conflicts of interest were unavoidable, no matter what Boeing claimed, since as employees they’d tend to act in ways that let them keep their jobs!

I’ve spent hundreds of hours, perhaps a thousand, with certified and independent DERs. They made me a far better engineer, a benefit I’ve taken with me and used at every job since.

I can’t imagine what’s in store for Boeing’s in-house DERs. They likely were doing their best in a bad situation, though I hope an outside investigation is done to see how they were unable to (or failed to) detect and prevent errors like these.

Micron Displays Next-Gen LPCAMM2 Modules For Laptops At CES 2024

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At CES 2024 this week, Micron demonstrated its next-gen LPCAMM2 memory modules based on LPDDR5X memory. Not only are they smaller and more powerful than traditional SODIMMs, they can be “serviced during the manufacturing process and upgraded by the user,” says Micron. Tom’s Hardware reports:
Micron’s LPCAMM2 are industry-standard memory modules that will be available in 16 GB, 32 GB, and 64 GB capacities as well as with speed bins of up to a 9600 MT/s data transfer rate. These modules are designed to replace conventional SODIMMs as well as soldered-down LPDDR5X memory subsystem while offering the best of both worlds: flexibility, repairability, and upgradeability of modular memory solutions as well as high performance and low power consumption of mobile DRAM. Indeed, a Micron LPCAMM2 module is smaller than a traditional SODIMM despite the fact that it has a 128-bit memory interface and up to 64 GB of LPDDR5X memory onboard. Needless to say, the module is massively smaller than two SODIMM memory sticks that offer a 128-bit memory interface both in terms of height and in terms of physical footprint.

Alternate source

By CaptQuark • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Engadget did a better writeup of the annoucement showing the progression of the Compression Attached Memory Module (CAMM) to the Low Powered CAMM (LPCAMM). Actually Samsung came out with their LPCAMM announcement late last year and Micron just announced their version at CES.

What is CAMM?
Samsung LPCAMM
Better Micron announcement

Android 15 Could Bring Widgets Back To the Lock Screen

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After removing the feature with Android 5.0 in 2015, Google appears to be bringing back lock screen widgets in the next version of Android. “There haven’t been any indications since then that Google would ever bring this feature back,” notes Android Authority. “But after Apple introduced widgets to the iPhone lock screen in iOS 16, many speculated that it was only a matter of time.” From the report:
As for how they might do that, there seem to be two different approaches that are being developed. The first one involves the creation of a new “communal” space — an area on the lock screen that might be accessed by swiping inward from the right. Although the communal space is still unfinished, I was able to activate it in the new Android 14 QPR2 Beta 3 update. Once I activated the communal space, a large gray bar appeared on the right side of the lock screen on my Pixel device. After swiping inward, a pencil icon appeared on the top left of the screen. Tapping this icon opened a widget selector that allowed me to add widgets from Google Calendar, Google Clock, and the Google App, but I wasn’t able to add widgets from most of my other apps. This is because the widget category needs to be set to KEYGUARD in order for it to appear in this selector. KEYGUARD is a category Google introduced in Android 4.2 Jelly Bean that very few apps utilize today since the lock screen hasn’t supported showing widgets in nearly a decade. After adding the widgets for Google Clock and Google Finance, I returned to the communal space by swiping inward from the right on the lock screen. The widgets were indeed shown in this space without me needing to unlock the device. However, the lock screen UI was shown on top of the widgets, making things difficult to see. Clearly, this feature is still a work in progress in the current beta. […]

While it’s possible this communal space won’t be coming to all devices, there’s another way that Google could bring widgets back to the lock screen for Android phones: leveraging At a Glance. If you aren’t familiar, Pixel phones have a widget on the home screen and lock screen called At a Glance. The interesting thing about At a Glance is that it isn’t actually a widget but rather a “custom element behaving like a widget,” according to developer Kieron Quinn. Under the hood, At a Glance is built on top of Smartspace, the API that is responsible for creating the various cards you can swipe through. Although Smartspace supports creating a variety of card types, it currently can’t handle RemoteViews, the API on which Android app widgets are built. That could change soon, though, as Google is working on including RemoteViews into the Smartspace API.

It’s unclear whether this will allow raw widgets from all apps to be included in At a Glance, since it’s also possible that Google is only implementing this so it has more freedom in building new cards. Either way, this new addition to the Smartspace API would supercharge the At a Glance widget in Android 15, and we’re excited to see what Google has in store for us.

what angers me about Android

By FudRucker • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
is all the apps they bundle in withouy my concent, i dont want youtube and youtube music, idont use google drive, and google photos, heck it is easier to tell you what i do use that is bundled with android, i use only google maps and the phone dialer & text messages and the rest i disable or preferably uninstall,

Removal of Netflix Film Shows Advancing Power of India’s Hindu Right Wing

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times:
The trailer for “Annapoorani: The Goddess of Food” promised a sunny if melodramatic story of uplift in a south Indian temple town. A priest’s daughter enters a cooking tournament, but social obstacles complicate her inevitable rise to the top. Annapoorani’s father, a Brahmin sitting at the top of Hindu society’s caste ladder, doesn’t want her to cook meat, a taboo in their lineage. There is even the hint of a Hindu-Muslim romantic subplot. On Thursday, two weeks after the movie premiered, Netflix abruptly pulled it from its platform. An activist, Ramesh Solanki, a self-described “very proud Hindu Indian nationalist,” had filed a police complaint arguing that the film was “intentionally released to hurt Hindu sentiments.” He said it mocked Hinduism by “depicting our gods consuming nonvegetarian food.”

The production studio quickly responded with an abject letter to a right-wing group linked to the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, apologizing for having “hurt the religious sentiments of the Hindus and Brahmins community.” The movie was soon removed from Netflix both in India and around the world, demonstrating the newfound power of Hindu nationalists to affect how Indian society is depicted on the screen. Nilesh Krishnaa, the movie’s writer and director, tried to anticipate the possibility of offending some of his fellow Indians. Food, Brahminical customs and especially Hindu-Muslim relations are all part of a third rail that has grown more powerfully electrified during Mr. Modi’s decade in power. But, Mr. Krishnaa told an Indian newspaper in November, “if there was something disturbing communal harmony in the film, the censor board would not have allowed it.”

With “Annapoorani,” Netflix appears to have in effect done the censoring itself even when the censor board did not. In other cases, Netflix now seems to be working with the board unofficially, though streaming services in India do not fall under the regulations that govern traditional Indian cinema. For years, Netflix ran unredacted versions of Indian films that had sensitive parts removed for their theatrical releases — including political messages that contradicted the government’s line. Since last year, though, the streaming versions of movies from India match the versions that were censored locally, no matter where in the world they are viewed. […] Nikhil Pahwa, a co-founder of the Internet Freedom Foundation, thinks the streaming companies are ready to capitulate: “They’re unlikely to push back against any kind of bullying or censorship, even though there is no law in India” to force them.

Not quite

By quonset • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Removal of Netflix Film Shows Advancing Power of India’s Hindu Right Wing

What it shows is once again religion is trying to dictate to everyone else what people can see. This is no different than what Russia or Iran do, or the Taliban for that matter. And if we’re not careful, the same thing will happen in the U.S.

Re:Not quite

By war4peace • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

And if we’re not careful, the same thing will happen in the U.S.

Um… will happen? Buddy, it’s already happening. not on a national level (yet), but it’s definitely happening.

Typical of simple people who feel threatened

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you have to police what other people say about your culture / gods… then your culture / gods are weak and not worth my time to care about.

Be offended, that’s fine. Go on a talk show and talk about how you’re offended. If you’re an educator in the arts or politics or something relevant, talk about why the depiction you don’t like is a bad representation of your culture / gods. Also fine.

Tell me I can’t create or view what offends you (excepting those things that involve committing crimes against real people and causing them harm to produce) and you can find a deep dark hole and fuck right off into it.

Religions must be really impotent

By Opportunist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I mean, if you can hurt religions by talking about stuff in movies… boy, those gods are pansies. I expect better from something that wants worship.

The speaker of the House

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
In America is a Christian nationalist who openly wants to install Christianity as the national religion by force. The form of vice president was also a Christian nationalist of the same ilk. There are dozens of Christian nationalists in our national Senate and probably 50 or 60 at least in the house. And Christian nationalists make up the majority in most of the state legislatures in red States and the minority party in blue States.

We were literally warned about this by Barry Goldwater when he lost. He was terrified of the modern Christian extremists taking over the Republican party then and everything he warned us about came to pass.

Nowadays when somebody says vote blue no matter who it’s because the alternative is a theocratic fascist hellscape. Even if you think you’re a Christian I guarantee you you’re not the right kind of Christian. There’s no such thing as the right kind of Christian because the only way to rule in a country like that is by keeping the population in a constant state of fear

Artifact, Personalized News App From Instagram Co-Founders, Is Shutting Down

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Artifact, the personalized news reader built by Instagram’s co-founders, is shutting down roughly a year after opening to the public. “We have built something that a core group of users love, but we have concluded that the market opportunity isn’t big enough to warrant continued investment in this way,” wrote CEO Kevin Systrom in a Medium post. The post continued:
It’s easy for startups to ignore this reality, but often making the tough call earlier is better for everyone involved. The biggest opportunity cost is time working on newer, bigger and better things that have the ability to reach many millions of people. I am personally excited to continue building new things, though only time will tell what that might be. We live in an exciting time where artificial intelligence is changing just about everything we touch, and the opportunities for new ideas seem limitless.

I am particularly proud of all the work our small team of 8 has accomplished. For instance, our app was recently named the everyday essential app of the year by the Google Play Store. I’ve gotten the pleasure of working with some of the most talented engineers and designers through this venture and they deserve an immense amount of respect and credit. While we will go our separate ways, we can look back fondly on what we’ve built. While we’ve made this decision, we wanted to make sure that we allowed the community time to adjust. So, today we’ve decided to slim down the app’s complexity and operations by removing the ability to add new comments and posts. This type of content requires a fair amount of moderation and oversight and we will not have the staff going forward to support these features. Your existing posts, however, will remain visible to you on your own profile self-view. In the meantime, Artifact will continue to operate the core news reading capability through the end of February.

News and information remain critical areas for startup investment. We are at an existential moment where many publications are shutting down or struggling, local news has all but vanished, and larger publishers have fraught relationships with leading technology companies. My hope is that technology can find ways to preserve, support and grow these institutions and that these institutions find ways of leveraging the scale that things like AI can provide. I am certain there are bright minds working on ideas that will continue to surprise and delight us in all these areas. We are optimistic about the future and want to thank our community for being part of this adventure we call Artifact.

Apple Undergoes Its Biggest Board Shakeup In Years

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Mark Gurman reports via Bloomberg:
In one of Apple’s biggest board shake-ups in years (Warning: source may be paywalled; alternative source), longtime directors Al Gore and James Bell will be retiring from the company, with former Aerospace Corp. Chief Executive Officer Wanda Austin coming aboard. The company made the announcement Thursday, citing a policy of directors not standing for reelection after the age of 75. Bell, a former Boeing Co. executive, joined the Apple board in 2015, while former US Vice President Gore has been a director for more than two decades. Both men are 75.

The upheaval is unusual for Apple’s board, which rarely has more than one retirement at a time. Gore was the longest-serving member — having joined in 2003, when co-founder Steve Jobs was CEO and the iPhone didn’t yet exist. “Al has contributed an incredible amount to our work — from his unconditional support for protecting our users’ privacy, to his incomparable knowledge of environment and climate issues,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a statement. “James’s dedication has been extraordinary, and we’re thankful for the important perspectives and deep expertise he’s offered on audit, finance, and so much more over the years.”

Austin, the new nominee, has a significant track record of “advancing innovation and shaping corporate strategy,” Apple said. She has long been a major proponent of US space exploration efforts, though that’s not an area that Apple is directly involved in. She will be up for election at the company’s annual shareholder meeting on Feb. 28. In spite of the age policy, another director, Ronald Sugar, is turning 76 this year and not slated to leave the board. Apple said that Sugar is remaining “in consideration of the significant recent transitions in board composition and the value of retaining directors who have developed deep insights into the company during their tenure.” Given Apple’s rationale for retaining Sugar, it’s unclear if the policy will apply to Chairman Arthur Levinson, who turns 75 next year.

Not a bad thing

By ddtmm • Score: 3 Thread
Not so sure having 70+ year-olds on the board is the best thing for a high tech company. Funny how they only want 25-35 year-olds employed in the company, but 60 to 70+ on the board. And don’t get me started on senior management.

You and I have different definitions of “1 trick”

By Somervillain • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Apple hasn’t focused on anything except short term profits for over a decade now. despite all their money and success they are still entirely a one trick pony as indicated by their share pull back from sales slowdown for that pony.

Hmm, one trick?…you’re referring to the iPhone?…one of the best selling and most profitable phones of all time?…or completely dominating the tablet space? having the best-selling laptop?…or are you talking about their massively profitable App Store or various cloud services that fans loyally shell out way too much money, which they make a huge profit on and barely have to market?

I think few companies throughout recorded history could match the position Apple is in now. They’re highly profitable, well-loved, have a huge marketshare, and have an irrationally loyal fan base that will spend any dollar amount for any product they put out. The Vision Pro?…so far it’s a solution looking for a problem and I wager it’ll sell in numbers far beyond what anyone predicted nor what it should.

The shine on Apple may be declining…ever so slightly…but nothing compared to their rivals. Google, Dell, and Samsung with they were in Apple’s shoes.

US Tech Innovation Dreams Soured By Changed R&D Tax Laws

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Brandon Vigliarolo reports via The Register:
A US federal tax change that took effect in 2022 thanks to a time-triggered portion of the Trump-era Tax Cuts and Jobs Act may leave entrepreneurs with massive tax bills. Section 174 of the US tax code — prior to the passage of the 2017 TCJA — allowed companies to handle the tax bill of their specified research or experimental (SRE) budgets in one of two ways: Either capitalized and amortized over the course of five years, or written off annually. Of the many things covered by SRE, most crucially for our purposes is “any amount paid or incurred in connection with the development of any software,” which includes developer salaries.

The TCJA included a post-dated change to Section 174 that took effect on January 1, 2022 that would no longer allow companies to automatically expense any SRE costs on an annual basis. Going forward they’d all have to be amortized over five years — a potential budgetary disaster for companies that haven’t been doing so in the past. As pointed out by Gergely Orosz of The Pragmatic Engineer, a theoretical company with $1m in revenue and $1m of software developer salary costs could have claimed it had no taxable profit in 2021. The required SRE amortization rate of 10 percent would mean the org had $900k in profit in 2022 — and a six-figure tax bill coming due the following year. This isn’t theoretical — Orosz said that he recently spoke to several engineers and entrepreneurs who’ve been surprised with massive tax bills that have led to layoffs, reduced hiring, and left some companies in financial distress.

House of Representatives member Ron Estes (R-KS), who last year sponsored a bill to restore Section 174 to its pre-TCJA option to expense or amortize, likewise said an a late-2023 op-ed that the changes have led to R&D at US companies — not just in the tech sector — shrinking considerably. “Since amortization took effect, the growth rate of R&D spending has slowed dramatically from 6.6 percent on average over the previous five years to less than one-half of 1 percent over the last 12 months,” Estes said. “The [R&D] sector is down by more than 14,000 jobs.” […] That, and the Section 174 changes make the US far less enticing as a place to open a business or do R&D, and the only one with such forced amortization in the world.
Not much is being done to fix the TCJA problem with Section 174. The Estes bill, along with a related bill introduced in the Senate in March 2023, have not undergone a committee hearing since their introduction. The White House hasn’t mentioned anything about Section 174.
Meanwhile, the IRS released a notice (PDF) reminding tax payers about Section 174’s changes.

Funny accounting

By FeelGood314 • Score: 3 Thread
Suppose you have a company that made 1m in revenue and had no expenses. I would expect that company to pay tax on the 1m. Now imagine that company had 1m in revenue, no expenses and bought a 1m asset. You still made a 1m profit, you just chose to reinvest all of it. You still owe 1m in taxes. You can’t immediately write off the software as worthless.

Re:They Should be Happy

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Tech heavily voted for Biden and democrats.

They should be celebrating. They finally got a politician who is doing what he campaigned on!

I’m happy to see the tech companies get what they voted for.

When this law was created, in 2017, you had: Donald Trump - President Republican majority in the House Republican majority in the Senate Joe Biden was not in any political office So, yes, this is obviously the fault of Joe Biden and the Democrats.

This, combined with the cap on state tax deductions, was likely a very deliberate and calculated attack on California by Republicans, and we won’t soon forget it.