Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Study of 12,000 EU Firms Finds AI’s Productivity Gains Are Real
  2. Ohio Newspaper Removes Writing From Reporters’ Jobs, Hands It To an ‘AI Rewrite Specialist’
  3. Andrew Yang Warns AI Will Displace Millions of White-Collar Workers Within 18 Months
  4. Linus Torvalds on How Linux Went From One-Man Show To Group Effort
  5. Vermont EV Buses Prove Unreliable For Transportation This Winter
  6. Microsoft Says Bug Causes Copilot To Summarize Confidential Emails
  7. Leaked Email Suggests Ring Plans To Expand ‘Search Party’ Surveillance Beyond Dogs
  8. WordPress Gets AI Assistant That Can Edit Text, Generate Images and Tweak Your Site
  9. Lab-Grown Meat Exists (But Nobody Wants To Eat It)
  10. FDA Reverses Decision and Agrees To Review Moderna’s Flu Vaccine
  11. India Tells University To Leave AI Summit After Presenting Chinese Robot as Its Own
  12. Thousands of CEOs Just Admitted AI Had No Impact On Employment Or Productivity
  13. Single Dose of DMT Rapidly Reduces Symptoms of Major Depression
  14. Air Pollution Emerges As a Direct Risk Factor For Alzheimer’s Disease
  15. Bayer Agrees To $7.25 Billion Proposed Settlement Over Thousands of Roundup Cancer Lawsuits

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.

Study of 12,000 EU Firms Finds AI’s Productivity Gains Are Real

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A study of more than 12,000 European firms found that AI adoption causally increases labour productivity by 4% on average across the EU, and that it does so without reducing employment in the short run.

Researchers from the Bank for International Settlements and the European Investment Bank used an instrumental variable strategy that matched EU firms to comparable US firms by sector, size, investment intensity and other characteristics, then used the AI adoption rates of those US counterparts as a proxy for exogenous AI exposure among European firms.

The productivity gains, however, skewed heavily toward medium and large companies. Among large firms, 45% had deployed AI, compared to just 24% of small firms. The study also found that complementary investments mattered enormously: an extra percentage point of spending on workforce training amplified AI’s productivity effect by 5.9%, and an extra point on software and data infrastructure added 2.4%.

Ohio Newspaper Removes Writing From Reporters’ Jobs, Hands It To an ‘AI Rewrite Specialist’

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Cleveland.com, the digital arm of Ohio’s Plain Dealer newspaper, has removed writing from the workloads of certain reporters and handed that job to what editor Chris Quinn calls an “AI rewrite specialist” who turns reporter-gathered material into article drafts.

The reporters on these beats — covering Lorain, Lake, Geauga, and most recently Medina County — are assigned entirely to reporting, spending their time on in-person interviews and meeting sources for coffee. Editors review the AI-produced drafts and reporters get the final say before publication.

Quinn says the arrangement has effectively freed up an extra workday per week for each reporter. The newsroom adopted this model last year to expand local coverage into counties it could no longer staff with full teams, and Quinn described the setup in a February 14 letter after a college journalism student withdrew from a reporting role over the newsroom’s use of AI. Quinn blamed journalism schools for the student’s reaction, saying professors have repeatedly told students that AI is bad.

Andrew Yang Warns AI Will Displace Millions of White-Collar Workers Within 18 Months

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Andrew Yang, the former presidential candidate and longtime Universal Basic Income advocate, published a blog post this week warning that AI is about to displace millions of white-collar workers in the U.S. over the next 12 to 18 months, a wave he has taken to calling “the Fuckening.”

Yang cited a conversation with the CEO of a publicly traded tech company who said the firm is cutting 15% of its workforce now and plans another 20% cut in two years, followed by yet another 20% two years after that. The U.S. currently has about 70 million white-collar workers, and Yang expects that number to fall by 20 to 50% over the next several years.

Underemployment among recent college graduates has already hit 52%, and only 30% of graduating seniors have landed a job in their field. Yang’s proposed remedy remains the same one he ran on in 2020: Universal Basic Income.

that’s his evidence?

By hdyoung • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
His evidence for a AI white collar armageddon is a single unnamed tech company that plans 50% staff cuts over the next few years? Sorry, but during a recession a 50% staff cut for a tech company is basically a normal tuesday. And recessions happen almost every decade like clockwork, regardless of AI.

I’m not losing any sleep about my job. At least, not in the 18 month period. The AI revolution will unfold over decades.

Man selling UBI overstates the need for it

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
Are any people *without* a vested interest in AI taking over warning us, or is it just politicians and salesmen with something to push ?

UBI isn’t a solution

By Powercntrl • Score: 3 Thread

For a moment, let’s ignore the economic elephant in the room that is inflation and pretend UBI will work as advertised. You’re still stuck living on a fixed government income, which only lets you participate in capitalism in a very limited manner. UBI offers no upward mobility if you really can’t find work because the robots took all the jobs you’d be qualified for.

Sure, Yang likes to imagine that UBI would free you to do some side hustle, but you have to remember, just like that inflation we’re not supposed to be talking about, everyone else on UBI would have exactly the same idea. Gig work offers would go *poof* quicker than you can accept them, as 1,000s of others would also be trying to supplement their government stipend income.

Hilariously, Yang was once asked during one of his interviews a few years back about how people could afford housing on UBI, since it clearly wouldn’t be enough for a mortgage payment in any market. He unironically suggested getting roommates. That alone should tell you what a joke of a concept this is, because if most people were okay with buying a house as a partnership with a bunch of strangers, we’d already be doing this now.

Linus Torvalds on How Linux Went From One-Man Show To Group Effort

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Linus Torvalds has told The Register how Linux went from a solo hobby project on a single 386 PC in Helsinki to a genuinely collaborative effort, and the path involved crowdsourced checks, an FTP mirror at MIT, and a licensing decision that opened the floodgates.

Torvalds released the first public snapshot, Linux 0.02, on October 5, 1991, on a Finnish FTP server — about 10,000 lines of code that he had cross-compiled under Minix. He originally wanted to call it “Freax,” but his friend Ari Lemmke, who set up the server, named the directory “Linux” instead. Early contributor Theodore Ts’o set up the first North American mirror on his VAXstation at MIT, since the sole 64 kbps link between Finland and the US made downloads painful. That mirror gave developers on this side of the Atlantic their first practical access to the kernel.

Another early developer, Dirk Hohndel, recalled that Torvalds initially threw away incoming patches and reimplemented them from scratch — a habit he eventually dropped because it did not scale. When Torvalds could not afford to upgrade his underpowered 386, developer H. Peter Anvin collected checks from contributors through his university mailbox and wired the funds to Finland, covering the international banking fees himself. Torvalds got a 486DX/2. In 1992, he moved the kernel to the GPL, and the first full distributions appeared in 1992-1993, turning Linux from a kernel into installable systems.

Re:a bloated mess indeed.

By UnknowingFool • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Bloated linux that no longer supports the original hardware on which it was developed and is also constantly breaking old working parts in order to “make it better”

*Sigh*. Linux can run today on 386 chips. The versions that support it are widely available for download. Newer Linux versions have moved on from 40 year old processors that are no longer sold. While you are at it, current Linux no longer runs on Itanium, IBM Cell Blade, etc. There is a difference in that Linux still will run with Linux will always accommodate every old platform with the newest versions.

Bloated in the sense that there are a gazillion embedded platforms which kinda resemble each other but all have to use their own specific kernel patches which offcourse aren’t compatible with any latest kernel.

Linux is a kernel. All kernels must have their own specific implementations and patches for specific hardware during compile. Or are you asserting Linux on x86 must work on ARM out of the box without compiling?

and then it gets even more bloated because some asshats figure the whole system/distribution needs to be more “easily” configurable like windows is and add this insanity that is systemd to it and all the little morons just flock to it because it appeals to their sense of new-ish is better. All the while forgetting the past lessons which were hard earned.

Distros are not under the control of Linus. He is responsible for the kernel.

Then again, just look at the world, people hardly ever learn and the stupid bullshit keeps on ruining life every few generations. But sure, several others go on defending that linux isn’t bloated, as usual.

Who is ruining life? If you want to run older Linux on your older hardware, no one is stopping you. You seem to want the impossible where Linux works on all things equally without any complications.

Vermont EV Buses Prove Unreliable For Transportation This Winter

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader writes:

Electric buses are proving unreliable this winter for Vermont’s Green Mountain Transit, as it needs to be over 41 degrees for the buses to charge, but due to a battery recall the buses are a fire hazard and can’t be charged in a garage.

Spokesman for energy workers advocacy group Power the Future Larry Behrens told the Center Square: “Taxpayers were sold an $8 million ‘solution’ that can’t operate in cold weather when the home for these buses is in New England.”

“We’re beyond the point where this looks like incompetence and starts to smell like fraud,” Behrens said.

“When government rushes money out the door to satisfy green mandates, basic questions about performance, safety, and value for taxpayers are always pushed aside,” Behrens said. “Americans deserve to know who approved this purchase and why the red flags were ignored.”

General manager at Green Mountain Transit (GMT) Clayton Clark told The Center Square that “the federal government provides public transit agencies with new buses through a competitive grant application process, and success is not a given.”

Cold weather and batteries

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Seem like a uniquely American problem. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/0…

Are batteries different in Norway? This smells like typical corruption and incompetence.

Astroturfing

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Not that these concerns aren’t worth discussing but consider the narrative in this article and who is presenting it:

“energy workers advocacy group Power the Future”

Now for one thing “energy workers” pretty much means “oil and gas industry” and when you go the website of Power the Future it’s full of them representing themselves on Fox news. “We believe America is blessed with abundant and reliable energy sources that have been the lifeblood of our national advancement and prosperity.” Come on, that’s a dog whistle as loud as a bullhorn.

Second one is “Institute for Energy Research” and that itself has a Wikipedia entry “IER is often described as a front group for the fossil fuel industry.[3][4][5] It was initially formed by Charles Koch, receives donations from many large companies like Exxon, and publishes a stream of reports and position papers opposing any efforts to control greenhouse gasses.”

So is there a real issue here? Maybe but the article and how it’s being presented is presenting a narrative, exactly the type of thing climate deniers accuse their opposition of doing all the time. Interesting aint it?

Bad title, bad summary: missing key information

By UnknowingFool • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The buses are fine to drive in winter. The issue is the buses cannot charge in temperatures under 41F at the moment. What is missing is that the buses were able at one point and why. From the article:

Clark also explained that the five electric buses were “operating well” until November 2025 when the batteries “were recalled for fire hazard.”

The recall prompted a software update from New Flyer to “decrease the likelihood for fire” that “included only allowing the bus to charge to 75% and to not allow charging when the battery is below 41 degrees,” Clark explained.

“Previously we could charge in any temperature to 100%,” Clark said.

“Since the barrier to charging under 41 degrees is simply a software update, the manufacturer could find a technical solution that could resolve the problem this week,” Clark said. “We are seeking a financial remedy from New Flyer that could lead to litigation if not resolved.”

“New Flyer has indicated that replacement batteries will be installed within 18-24 months,” Clark said.

The actual problem: The buses need replacement batteries as the current ones pose a fire risk. To allow the buses to operate with existing batteries, software restrictions were installed to not allow the buses to charge under 41F. The software could be changed or the buses could get their replacement batteries sooner. The summary makes it seems like there are zero solutions to the issue.

Re:Astroturfing

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Sure but you’re doing the same thing by leaving out the context of that issue: the trucks originally were working with charging in any temp and in the garage but then there was a fire risk issue with a recall on the batteries so the manufacturer did a software update for safety that places restrictions on charging to mitigate fire risk until the replacement.

Now sure that kinda sucks in the winter sure but this is somewhat new tech but that is hardly showing the idea is failing or anywhere close to “fraud” as the narrative here is presented. Meanwhile the bus company already said they have more busses with newer batteries on order.

If the article was called “new EV bus program experience growing pains in winter” that’s more fair to whats happening.

Working in Canada

By Comboman • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Halifax has had 60 electric buses in it’s fleet since May of last year (and yes, they are charged indoors). Maybe people argue with you because you are full of shit.

Microsoft Says Bug Causes Copilot To Summarize Confidential Emails

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft says a Microsoft 365 Copilot bug has been causing the AI assistant to summarize confidential emails since late January, bypassing data loss prevention (DLP) policies that organizations rely on to protect sensitive information. From a report:
According to a service alert seen by BleepingComputer, this bug (tracked under CW1226324 and first detected on January 21) affects the Copilot “work tab” chat feature, which incorrectly reads and summarizes emails stored in users’ Sent Items and Drafts folders, including messages that carry confidentiality labels explicitly designed to restrict access by automated tools.

Copilot Chat (short for Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat) is the company’s AI-powered, content-aware chat that lets users interact with AI agents. Microsoft began rolling out Copilot Chat to Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote for paying Microsoft 365 business customers in September 2025.

User hostile - prioritize sales over customers.

By AleRunner • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Once again a reminder of the risk of using Microsoft software (and many other, but not all, proprietary systems). Now it’s an “unspecified code error”, so I’ll speculate a bit, but there’s plenty of history here, so we can guess the truth.

There are ways for external software to interface with Exchange / Office 356. In fact, AI systems could happily be built to work directly with IMAP and other standardized interfaces. That’s what Microsoft would expect external software companies to use and they would almost always mean that simple correct configuration of the mail server would stop that software being able to see the contents of these mails at all.

Instead of giving their own software the standard interfaces and allowing everyone who uses it to have control in the standard ways, Microsoft wants Copilot to have an advantage over the competition. They allow non standard, special interfaces for Copilot whilst the competition have to stick with the standards and suffer slower development. The user suffers from more complexity (two separate interfaces), more bugs and, like here, total loss of control and security. Microsoft sells out the user for more of their own sales.

bug

By bugs2squash • Score: 4, Funny Thread
so they’re saying the software is bugged ?

Well, they have to monetize all this AI somehow

By Megahard • Score: 4, Funny Thread

“Here’s a summary of all your confidential emails. It would be a shame if this all got out somehow.”

You can’t do this with confidential data

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

You can’t run badly tested software relying on alpha level technology (AI) and have any reasonable expectations it’s going to work properly. Why are people doing this? There’s a reason AI is being banned in any workplace with NDAs, trade secrets, and customer data.

All the CEOs and MBAs out there mandating that their employees use AI daily as much as possible, despite only being alpha testing level, are idiots.

Leaked Email Suggests Ring Plans To Expand ‘Search Party’ Surveillance Beyond Dogs

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Ring’s AI-powered “Search Party” feature, which links neighborhood cameras into a networked surveillance system to find lost dogs, was never intended to stop at pets, according to an internal email from founder Jamie Siminoff obtained by 404 Media.

Siminoff told employees in early October, shortly after the feature launched, that Search Party was introduced “first for finding dogs” and that the technology would eventually help “zero out crime in neighborhoods.” The on-by-default feature faced intense backlash after Ring promoted it during a Super Bowl ad. Ring has since also rolled out “Familiar Faces,” a facial recognition tool that identifies friends and family on a user’s camera, and “Fire Watch,” an AI-based fire alert system.

A Ring spokesperson told the publication Search Party does not process human biometrics or track people.

They don’t process human biometrics..

By Shmoe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

But they provide facial recognition of familiar people. What kind of doublespeak is this?

So …

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

… cats as well?

“Expand”

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

For the slow in the audience, this was the purpose all along. The “find missing dogs” thing was the marketing approach to sell this furthering of this new addition to the surveillance state.

Re:ELI5… why is this bad?

By ceoyoyo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Are your garbage bins not precisely in the location required by your home owners’ association? Lawn a trifle too long, or maybe cut with an unapproved pattern?

Do you live in a “border” city, i.e. one that is within 100 miles of a coast, land border or international airport? Have you been engaging in antisocial behaviour such as gathering in groups and/or protesting outside of designated free speech zones?

Have you carried identifiable literature or membership insignia from a non-state sanctioned organization, or entered or exited a known or suspected meeting place of such an organization or residence of known or suspected members of such an organization?

Re:ELI5… why is this bad?

By lordmatthias215 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Look at it this way: this is not the first mass surveillance tool available to government agencies. Pick any of the ones currently deployed and you will be able to find a history of agents abusing the system to stalk their ex-girlfriends, domestic partners, etc. and even attempt to interfere with their lives or liberties (see spiteful additions to the Do Not Fly list).

That’s individual abuse alone, before even considering the propensity for law enforcement agencies to deploy technologies unlawfully or inappropriately, or for an agency or administration to inappropriately label a group of people criminals for exercising speech rights the government finds inconvenient.

WordPress Gets AI Assistant That Can Edit Text, Generate Images and Tweak Your Site

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
WordPress has started rolling out an AI assistant built into its site editor and media library that can edit and translate text, generate and edit images through Google’s Nano Banana model, and make structural changes to sites like creating new pages or swapping fonts.

Users can also invoke the assistant by tagging "@ai” in block notes, a commenting feature added to the site editor in December’s WordPress 6.9 update. The tool is opt-in — users need to toggle on “AI tools” in their site settings — though sites originally created using WordPress’s AI website builder, launched last year, will have it enabled by default.

What fresh new Hell is this?

By nightflameauto • Score: 3 Thread

I can have all the downsides of Wordpress, with the added downsides of AI assisted content creation AND AI assisted page layout? This is amazing! What an absolute game changer! Can it negatively impact site security and performance in fun and interesting ways while it’s at it? That would be super helpful.

Lab-Grown Meat Exists (But Nobody Wants To Eat It)

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
In 2013, scientists unveiled the first lab-grown burger at a cost of $330,000. By 2023, the FDA approved cultivated chicken for sale. The price had dropped to around $10-$30 per pound, and over $3 billion in investor money had poured into more than 175 companies developing meat grown from animal cells instead of slaughtered animals.

The promise is straightforward: real meat, no slaughter required. You could eat beef without killing cattle, chicken without industrial farming, steak without ethical compromise. The technology works. Federal regulators approved it as safe. And nearly a third of US states have banned it or are trying to. Not because it’s dangerous — because it threatens something deeper than food safety.

Start with a small sample of animal cells — a biopsy, not a slaughter. Place them in a bioreactor with nutrients. The cells multiply, forming muscle tissue identical to conventional meat at the cellular level. Nutritionally comparable, same protein content, but grown without raising and killing an animal.

The process uses 64-90% less land than conventional meat production and drastically reduces greenhouse gas emissions. No factory farms, no slaughterhouses, no ethical compromise for people who love meat but hate industrial animal agriculture. For vegetarians who gave up meat for ethical reasons, it offers something impossible before: guilt-free steak.

[…] Here’s where the dream hits reality. Consumer surveys show people perceive conventional meat as tastier and healthier than lab-grown alternatives. Fewer consumers are willing to try cultivated options than expected. The words “lab-grown” and “cultivated” don’t exactly make mouths water.

Something about meat grown in a bioreactor triggers deep discomfort for many people, even those who claim to care about animal welfare and environmental impact. It’s the same psychological barrier that made “Frankenfood” stick as a label for GMOs. Meat is supposed to come from animals, raised on farms, connected to land and tradition. Growing it in a facility feels wrong to people in ways they struggle to articulate.

Price

By GoJays • Score: 5 Thread
Slightly different, but a few years ago in Canada there was a push for plant based meat replacements. The problem was not that I wouldn’t be willing to eat it, it was the price. In fact, I was curious as one of my siblings is a vegan, so it would be nice if there was something we both could enjoy. “Beyond Meat” for example would sell 4 burger patties for $18. Whereas I could buy 8 ground beef patties for $15. When the company starts by charging double the price for a “meat substitute” it’s hard to get people on board.

Headline needs an update

By r_naked • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“Lab-Grown Meat Exists (But Nobody Can Buy It)"

It isn’t available in stores — only in restaurants, and a very select few.

I just did a search, and there is nothing available in my state. Sorry, I am not hoping on a plane to go try lab-grown meat…

Lastly, there are people that I know that *SWEAR* Diet Coke tastes EXACTLY like normal Coke. They are full of shit, the two taste NOTHING alike.

So, if this lab-grown meat is like Diet Coke, HARD FUCKING PASS. But, it looks like I want get to find out anytime soon because you can’t fucking buy it.

Re:Does it have the structure of meat?

By noshellswill • Score: 4, Funny Thread
You picked the right wood —- slurry — for feaumeat. It looks, feels and tastes like possum-shite.

Re:Deeper than food safety

By SirSpanksALot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It’s even more than that… Lab grown meat is significantly more expensive… The general population *might* entertain the idea when it’s at price parity with normal meat. And if it becomes cheaper than normal meat, I think you’ll see it take off - although most people that are financially secure will continue eating normal meat as a status symbol.

Re: Deeper than food safety

By shanen • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

4) Wait until it costs less.

When it is significantly cheaper than natural meat, there will be plenty of people willing to eat it. Some of them will even consider the nutritional statistics and long-term side effects.

This is mostly an expression of disappointment with the FP branch. These topics got plenty of play in the later parts of the discussion.

But let me go for informative to close. Not lab-grown meat, but non-meat patties created using processing techniques developed in laboratories. I’m referring to a non-beef burger offered by Mos Burger. I’ve eaten it and enjoyed it and it’s been on the menu for a while, so they must be making some money from it. The raw ingredients are vegetables, probably mostly beans, but it tastes like some kind of meat and has the right “mouth feel”. If the primary ingredients were algae or bacteria grown in a big vat, I’m sure some people would be willing to eat it if the price was right. Quite a popular fast food chain locally, but of course the real test will be when McDonald’s adds the option. (But I don’t eat at burger places very often these years, and when I eat at Mos Burger I prefer an option with jalapenos..)

FDA Reverses Decision and Agrees To Review Moderna’s Flu Vaccine

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Food and Drug Administration has reversed its decision on Moderna’s flu vaccine and has agreed to review it for possible approval, Moderna announced on Wednesday. From a report:
Last week, the agency rejected Moderna’s application for review of a new flu vaccine, saying the company’s research design was flawed. But in subsequent discussions the company said that the agency had relented and agreed to begin a review.

Moderna said it split its application for the flu vaccine based on age, seeking a traditional approval for people 50 to 64 years old, and accelerated approval for those 65 and older. The company also said it agreed to conduct an additional study among those 65 and older once the vaccine reached the market. Moderna said on Wednesday that the F.D.A. set a deadline of August to decide whether to approve the vaccine. If it is authorized, it would be available for those older adults in the flu season that begins later this year.

The vaccine uses messenger RNA technology, which Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has repeatedly criticized as unsafe and ineffective. The mRNA approach, which instructs the body to produce a fragment of a virus that sets off an immune response, was widely successful in Covid vaccines and is considered generally safe by public health experts and scientists.

Re:Figures

By sphealey • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“There is no safety or cost reason to prefer this over normal analog protein vaccines. Only advantage MRNA has is reduced up front capex.”

Nice attempt at shaping the discussion to flow down the limited paths you prefer. In reality world the gigantic advantages of having straightforward yearly influenza vaccines be mRNA-based is that (1) after enough experience it would become possible to reformulate the vaccine midseason if the dominant flu strain changes (2) if a 1918 Kansas Flu boils up out of a giant pig farm somewhere it will be possible to create an mRNA vaccine for it and get it into distribution rapidly.

Re:Letting apes…

By dskoll • Score: 5, Informative Thread

mRNA vaccines can’t permanently alter your DNA. They instruct your cells to make proteins and that’s all. Even this US government website admits that.

Re:Letting apes…

By thegreatemu • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Would you get on a plane that only had 6 months on the draft table?

No, but I would get on a plane where the frame, fuselage, engines, control systems, and electronics had been studied and deployed for years, and the avionics software was being upgraded after a 6 months review. Nice strawman disguised as an analogy though!

Re:Letting apes…

By dskoll • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

mRNA technology has been under development for decades. Literally billions of shots have been given to billions of people since 2021; it has saved hundreds of thousands if not millions of lives, and helped reduce the severity of COVID for millions more.

I took the COVID shot. In fact, I’ve had seven of them in the last 5 years. No issues so far. But hey… if you want to join the list of sorry antivaxxers who regret their decision as they’re dying from COVID, you do you.

How to exploit your position in the Trump admin

By rwyoder • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

1. Decline to review Moderna’s new vaccine.
2. Buy MRNA stock on the depressed price.
3. Reverse decision not to review vaccine. Sell at a profit!

India Tells University To Leave AI Summit After Presenting Chinese Robot as Its Own

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
An Indian university has been asked to vacate its stall at the country’s flagship AI summit after a staff member was caught presenting a commercially available robotic dog made in China as its own creation, two government sources said.

“You need to meet Orion. This has been developed by the Centre of Excellence at Galgotias University,” Neha Singh, a professor of communications, told state-run broadcaster DD News this week in remarks that have since gone viral.

But social media users quickly identified the robot as the Unitree Go2, sold by China’s Unitree Robotics for about $2,800 and widely used in research and education globally. The episode has drawn sharp criticism and has cast an uncomfortable spotlight on India’s artificial intelligence ambitions.

Musk’s playbook

By dfghjk • Score: 3 Thread

Copying from Elon Musk’s playbook only works if you can afford a team of lawyers and you are targeting Silicon Valley VC.

“Centre of Excellence”

By Anachronous Coward • Score: 3 Thread

That’s usually analogous to seeing “Democratic Republic” in the name of a country.

Thousands of CEOs Just Admitted AI Had No Impact On Employment Or Productivity

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Fortune:
In 1987, economist and Nobel laureate Robert Solow made a stark observation about the stalling evolution of the Information Age: Following the advent of transistors, microprocessors, integrated circuits, and memory chips of the 1960s, economists and companies expected these new technologies to disrupt workplaces and result in a surge of productivity. Instead, productivity growth slowed, dropping from 2.9% from 1948 to 1973, to 1.1% after 1973. Newfangled computers were actually at times producing too much information, generating agonizingly detailed reports and printing them on reams of paper. What had promised to be a boom to workplace productivity was for several years a bust. This unexpected outcome became known as Solow’s productivity paradox, thanks to the economist’s observation of the phenomenon. “You can see the computer age everywhere but in the productivity statistics,” Solow wrote in a New York Times Book Review article in 1987.

New data on how C-suite executives are — or aren’t — using AI shows history is repeating itself, complicating the similar promises economists and Big Tech founders made about the technology’s impact on the workplace and economy. Despite 374 companies in the S&P 500 mentioning AI in earnings calls — most of which said the technology’s implementation in the firm was entirely positive — according to a Financial Times analysis from September 2024 to 2025, those positive adoptions aren’t being reflected in broader productivity gains.

A study published this month by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that among 6,000 CEOs, chief financial officers, and other executives from firms who responded to various business outlook surveys in the U.S., U.K., Germany, and Australia, the vast majority see little impact from AI on their operations. While about two-thirds of executives reported using AI, that usage amounted to only about 1.5 hours per week, and 25% of respondents reported not using AI in the workplace at all. Nearly 90% of firms said AI has had no impact on employment or productivity over the last three years, the research noted. However, firms’ expectations of AI’s workplace and economic impact remained substantial: Executives also forecast AI will increase productivity by 1.4% and increase output by 0.8% over the next three years. While firms expected a 0.7% cut to employment over this time period, individual employees surveyed saw a 0.5% increase in employment.

well

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Funny Thread

individual employees surveyed saw a 0.5% increase in employment

I’m going to Disneyland!

Incorrect

By GeekWithAKnife • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It had no impact on them or their companies BUT it has increased employment and productivity for Nvidia, Anthorpoc, Open AI, Microsoft etc…

I hear some 10x their productivity.

You just need understand who is selling the shovels to know who’s profiting from the gold rush…

Such a surprise

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Nobody could have predicted this. Well, except anybody with a working mind at a bit of understanding of IT history.

The next AI Winter will be a frigging ice-age!

Re:If that’s the case…

By ledow • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s only when you treat datacentres or AI as something special that the problems start.

It’s just another app, why does that mean they get free reign on polluting rivers, or first dibs on power provision, or are able to override planning laws that have been in place for a hundred years? It’s nonsense.

It’s not AI that’s causing those problems. It’s people literally corrupting the law for quick profit, as always.

If there’s no power / permission / water for a new hospital? Guess what? We shouldn’t be authorising that for a datacentre in the same place either.

We’ve seen technological revolutions before....

By Somervillain • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
In my lifetime: the internet, smartphones, big data, cloud computing…all were technological revolutions. Here’s what we saw:

about 1 year of it being a little more than a news story while businesses figured out what they were doing

then after year 1, early adopters make a big splash earning money by filling existing needs using new technology (Uber, tindr/grindr, Salesforce, Netflix, Google, Amazon, etc)…it’s obviously heavily subsidized by VC, but they’re all over the news…and the hype cycle is about how amazing and innovative these services are (whether or not that claim has merit, you can debate)

Then within 1.5-2 years, every decent company is either adopting this new technology or debating if they should. In the 4 examples above, it’s safe to say, all of them found some use of it, although some companies need an iPhone app, big data, or cloud hosting more than others, obviously.

We’re in year 4 of LLMs. We haven’t gone out of the news phase. No one is disrupting existing markets.

Beyond LLM vendors and suppliers of hardware, LLM-based AI is just a bunch of individual evangelists bragging about how it will make them 10x developers. We keep hearing the promise. We keep seeing demos. We’re all excited…because we’ve spent our whole lives dreaming about HAL or Jarvis or Mother or whichever AI is in your favorite science fiction.

But who is actually making money on this?…besides AI companies, hardware companies, and people involved with building datacenters?

OK, so allegedly, this is producing 10x developers....OK, with 4 years of ChatGPT and these tools being mainstream for 2 years, why is life the same? Why aren’t these 10x developers pushing faster releases…why isn’t /. filled with articles about a renaissance in software quality with AI finding and fixing all those hidden bugs and eeking out incremental performance gains. EVERY codebase that’s over 5 years old I’ve ever seen in my life has some opportunity here and there to become more efficient. Why aren’t there stories about AI leading to smaller binaries?

We have analysts telling us how GLP-1 is impacting fast food and grocery sales…why aren’t there similar stories about how ChatGPT is impacting software releases?…making them faster, more frequent, smaller, more performant, etc…why aren’t companies bragging about releasing features 2x as fast?…they have 10x developers…the productivity gain of making 1 person 10x would impact release schedules tangibly…in fact, releases should go out more than 10x faster because now you don’t have to rely on teams. If you can reduce your team from 10 to 2, you eliminate communication issues, timezone issues, personality conflict, etc. The more 1 person can do, the more efficient everything becomes. Collaboration is major overhead.

Hell, just having AI write my documentation and paperwork would save me a fuckton of time.

Single Dose of DMT Rapidly Reduces Symptoms of Major Depression

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
In a small double-blind clinical trial, a single intravenous dose of DMT produced rapid and clinically meaningful reductions in symptoms of major depressive disorder within a week, with effects lasting up to three months in some patients. “Unlike psilocybin and lysergic acid diethylamide ( LSD), whose effects can last for hours, intravenous DMT has a half-life of around five minutes,” notes ScienceAlert. “Its psychedelic effects are correspondingly brief, potentially making it more practical to administer in clinical settings.” From the report:
“A single dose of DMT with psychotherapeutic support produced a rapid, significant reduction in depressive symptoms, sustained up to three months,” writes a team led by neuroscientists David Erritzoe and Tommaso Barba of Imperial College London. […] They recruited 34 participants with major depression and divided them into two groups of 17 for a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.

In the first stage of the trial, one group received an intravenous dose of DMT, while the other received an active placebo. Neither the researchers nor the participants were informed which participants received the DMT. The doses took around 10 minutes to administer, and a therapist sat with each participant to ensure comfort and safety while the psychedelic effects were active, remaining silent throughout the treatment. The treatment was generally well tolerated. Most side effects were mild to moderate, and included nausea, temporary anxiety, and pain at the injection site. No serious adverse events related to the treatment were reported, although brief increases in heart rate and blood pressure were observed immediately after dosing.

In the second, open-label stage, two weeks after the first dose, all participants were given the opportunity to receive a dose of DMT. Participants were assessed before and at intervals after each dose using the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale. Just a week after the first dose, participants who had received DMT had improved scores compared to the placebo group, and improvements were sustained during follow-up assessments.

Two weeks after the first dose, the participants who received DMT scored about seven points lower, on average, than those who received a placebo. On this commonly used clinical scale, a drop of that size is generally considered a meaningful reduction in symptom severity. There was no significant difference between patients who received one or two doses of DMT, suggesting a single dose may be sufficient. These effects persisted for up to three months, and some patients remained in remission for at least six months following the treatment.
The findings have been published in Nature Medicine.

Re:society is the cause of depression

By korgitser • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Modern society, bullshit jobs, city life, lack of exposrue to nature and the ever-present destruction of the planet… If you are not depressed, something is wrong with you.

Omitted context

By pjt33 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

For those, like me, who were crying out for the summary to say what DMT is, it’s the main active psychedelic of ayahuasca.

Another benefit

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Unlike ayahuasca, DMT is not nearly as likely to make you vomit.

Re:Omitted context

By codeButcher • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Or you could have pointed to something like a Dimethyltryptamine article.

no way to make a double blind trial

By dj245 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The problem with studying drugs like these is that the effects are so profound that there’s no way to achieve a proper double blind trial. It looks like they went through the motions but it would be staggeringly obvious to anyone in the room whether DMT or placebo was given.

Air Pollution Emerges As a Direct Risk Factor For Alzheimer’s Disease

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader walterbyrd shares a report from ABC News:
In a study of nearly 28 million older Americans, long-term exposure to fine particle air pollution raised the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. That link held even after researchers accounted for common conditions like high blood pressure, stroke and depression. Fine particle air pollution, known as PM2.5, consists of tiny particles in the air that come from car exhaust, power plants, wildfires, and burning fuels, according to the American Lung Association. They are small enough to travel deep into the lungs and even reach the bloodstream.

The research, conducted at Emory University and published in PLOS Medicine, tracked health data over nearly two decades to explore whether air pollution harms the brain indirectly by causing high blood pressure or heart disease, which, in turn, leads to dementia. However, these “middleman” conditions accounted for less than 5% of the connection between pollution and Alzheimer’s, the research found. The researchers say this suggests that over 95% of the Alzheimer’s risk comes from the direct impact of breathing in dirty air, likely through inflammation or damage to brain cells.
“The relationship between PM2.5 and AD [Alzheimer’s disease] has been shown to be pretty much linear,” said Kyle Steenland, a professor in the departments of environmental health and epidemiology at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, and senior author of the study. “The reason this is particularly important is that PM2.5 is known to be associated with high blood pressure, stroke and depression — all of which are associated with AD. So, from a prevention standpoint, simply treating these diseases will not get rid of the problem. We have to address exposure to PM2.5.”

Say goodbye to the endangerment finding

By devnulljapan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Just as well no-one is gutting climate policy so the fossil fuel industry can shit all over everything.

Re:Say goodbye to the endangerment finding

By greytree • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Coal plants emit dirty, deadly shit. Global Warming isn’t the only reason to shut them down.
So this isn’t about saving the planet in 20 years time, it’s about saving American lives now:

    “The team estimated that between 1999 and 2020, 460,000 deaths would not have occurred in the absence of emission from the coal power plants.”

https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/deaths-associated-pollution-coal-power-plants

Re:There’s one good thing about alzheimer’s…

By test321 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

(I know you were not trying to be very serious, so don’t take it as a criticism). My experience with relatives who were informal caregivers is more varied
In one case, my friend was the niece of the affected person, who supposedly had not met in a long time. The patient was therefore constantly (repeatedly) happy to rejoin with her long-lost niece.
In another case, the affected person was constantly concerned of not being in her house (she was in elderly care during the day), and being separated from her husband (already deceased). The disease had to be a confusing and stressful experience, being in an unfamiliar place with unfamiliar people for reasons she could not understand.

Not like this is some yuge or unexpected news

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

Here’s basically the same stuff from 5 years ago https://www.nature.com/article…

Also, a link to the study, and not the interpretation of some half-educated journo and his chat-gpt friend is always appreciated.

Re:Say goodbye to the endangerment finding

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

A lot of people did very well out of burning fossil fuels. I don’t just mean the mine owners and oil companies, I mean a lot of ordinary people enjoyed cheap cheap energy. They really don’t want that to change, and seem to think it did them no harm. They have also been convinced that renewables aren’t cheaper, when they clearly are, and that electric stuff like cars and heat pumps don’t work.

History is going to tell an almost unbelievable story of how millions were convinced to trash the planet. I thought my cat was an idiot for chewing up the carboard box he liked to live in, but here we are…

Bayer Agrees To $7.25 Billion Proposed Settlement Over Thousands of Roundup Cancer Lawsuits

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press:
Agrochemical maker Bayer and attorneys for cancer patients announced a proposed $7.25 billion settlement Tuesday to resolve thousands of U.S. lawsuits alleging the company failed to warn people that its popular weedkiller Roundup could cause cancer. The proposed settlement comes as the U.S. Supreme Court is preparing to hear arguments in April on Bayer’s assertion that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s approval of Roundup without a cancer warning should invalidate claims filed in state courts. That case would not be affected by the proposed settlement.

But the settlement would eliminate some of the risk from an eventual Supreme Court ruling. Patients would be assured of receiving settlement money even if the Supreme Court rules in Bayer’s favor. And Bayer would be protected from potentially larger costs if the high court rules against it. Germany-based Bayer, which acquired Roundup maker Monsanto in 2018, disputes the assertion that Roundup’s key ingredient, glyphosate, can cause non-Hodgkin lymphoma. But the company has warned that mounting legal costs are threatening its ability to continue selling the product in U.S. agricultural markets. “Litigation uncertainly has plagued the company for years, and this settlement gives the company a road to closure,” Bayer CEO Bill Anderson said Tuesday.
The proposed settlement could total up to $7.25 billion over 21 years and resolve most of the remaining U.S. lawsuits surrounding the cancer-related harms of Roundup. The report notes that more than 125,000 claims have been filed since 2015, and while many have already been settled, this deal aims to cover most outstanding and future claims tied to past exposure.
Individual payouts would vary widely based on exposure type, age at diagnosis, and cancer severity. Bayer can also cancel the deal if too many plaintiffs opt out.

segregation and off shore companies

By will4 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Expect to see these multinationals to

- Incorporate a company to own the chemical or drug product in the Bahamas (you have to sue them there and not in the USA)
- Lease property, vehicles, etc. to said Bahamas company to extract the revenue and profits
- Wind down and let any companies heading for lawsuit problems go nearly bankrupt
- Have a replacement product ready to go with a newly minted Bahamas company

The net result,

- You can’t sue the deep pocket company since the owner of the product is independent and in the Bahamas.
- Regulators can fine the company all they want, there are no assets to take and a 30 year pay from profits or revenue would result in the company just shutting down
- The deep pocket company gets the revenue and profits and none of the liability
- The contingency based US lawsuits won’t happen as much as the lawyers know that there are no US based assets to get a hold of. Lawyers will not take the case on a contingency basis.

Longer term, large companies in general will split into many smaller companies to isolate risk, shift plants and property ownership to one company and the risks/liability to another company, …

Venture capital will get in there and sell bonds backed by an income stream of 10% of the company revenue for 20 years to further offset risk and cash out up front.

Re:I thought Monsanto owned Roundup

By dunkelfalke • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Yes, Bayer was indeed stupid to buy Monsanto.

Astounding!

By sonamchauhan • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Bayer still sells Roundup!

But yet they are paying 7 Billion dollars to cancer patients as compensation for the damage Roundup causes. And still they sell it

What is this? The cost of doing business ?

Re:Astounding!

By markdavis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

>“Bayer still sells Roundup! But yet they are paying 7 Billion dollars to cancer patients as compensation for the damage Roundup causes. And still they sell it. W hat is this? The cost of doing business ?”

When used properly/carefully, it can be very safe. For example, millions of people use it occasionally to weed flowerbeds, driveways, etc. They use a small sprayer and have extremely limited exposure. The chemical that hits the ground is quickly inactivated. It is effective, convenient, useful, and affordable.....

The problem is when it is used on an industrial scale- spraying/dousing countless acres of entire fields with huge foggers/sprayers, gallons per second (this is now very common with Round-up resistant food crop seeds and planting). Or commercial lawn-care, using it all day, every day. Workers have large exposure levels for long amounts of time and often can’t be bothered to avoid skin contact, washing hands, etc.

There are a ton of very useful chemicals that can be dangerous. It doesn’t mean they should be banned or not sold. But they should come with very clear warnings and training on how and when they should be used, what PPE should be used (if any), and how to treat accidental improper exposure.

all these executives should be charged and tried

By 2TecTom • Score: 3 Thread

and then jailed for cheating lying and stealing but since our legal system is completely corrupt , that will never happen, welcome to classism, corporatocracy and corruption