Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Ford’s Electrified Vehicle Sales Dropped 31% in April From One Year Ago
  2. Open Source Project Shuts Down Over Legal Threats from 3D Printer Company Bambu Lab
  3. Most Polymarket Users Lose Money, While Top 1% Claim 76.5% of Gains, Study Finds
  4. PlayStation3 Emulator Devs Politely Ask Contributors to Stop Submitting ‘AI Slop’ Pull Requests
  5. Honda Patents a Fake Clutch for Electric Motorcycles
  6. Big Tech is Moving Data Through the Gulf Using Fiber-Optic Cables Alongside Iraq’s Oil Pipelines
  7. Challenging UPS and FedEx, Amazon Opens Its Shipping Network to All Businesses
  8. GM Secretly Sold California Drivers’ Data, Agrees to Pay $12.75M In Privacy Settlement
  9. Amazon Relents, Lets its Programmers Use OpenAI’s Codex and Anthropic’s Claude
  10. Rocket Lab Reports Growing Demand for Commercial Space Products. Stock Surges 34%
  11. Unemployment Ticked Up in America’s IT Sector
  12. The EU Considers Restricting Use of US Cloud Platforms for Sensitive Government Data
  13. NYT: ‘Meta’s Embrace of AI Is Making Its Employees Miserable’
  14. ‘Changing of the Guard’? AMD, Intel, and Micron Soar While Nvidia Lags
  15. Open Source Registries Join Linux Foundation Working Group to Address Machine-Generated Traffic

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.

Ford’s Electrified Vehicle Sales Dropped 31% in April From One Year Ago

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Ford’s sales of electrified vehicles — including hybrids and all-electric models — dropped 31% from April 2025, reports Electrek. “Hybrid sales fell 32% to 15,758 vehicles, while EV sales continued to crash with just 3,655 all-electric models sold last month, 25% fewer than in the year prior.”
After discontinuing the F-150 Lightning in December, sales of the electric pickup have been in free fall. Ford sold just 884 Lightnings last month, 49% less than it did last April. The Mustang Mach-E isn’t doing much better. Sales fell another 9% year over year in April, to just 2,670 models last month. Through the first four months of 2026, Ford’s EV sales have fallen 61% from last year, with F-150 Lightning and Mustang Mach-E sales down 67% and 50%, respectively. Ford has sold just over 10,500 electric vehicles in total so far this year… For comparison, Toyota sold just over 10,000 bZ models in the first quarter alone. That’s more than Ford’s total EV sales in Q1.
April was Ford’s fourth straight month of lower sales figures from 2025, the article points out. So Ford is bringing back “employee pricing” discounts on most new 2025 and 2026 Ford and Lincoln vehicles., while also offering “purchase incentives” of up to $9,000 for 2025 Lightning models and up to $6,000 for 2025 Mustang Mach-Es. “It’s also offering EV buyers a free Level 2 home charger, 24/7 live support, and proactive roadside assistance through its Power Promise program.”

Market forces at work

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 3 Thread

If Ford would manufacture an EV that people actually want, they’d sell more of them. They are perceived as a market laggard for EVs for a reason and their bread and butter is still the pick-up truck and SUV markets.

Ford’s stock price has bounced around between a few dollars and just over $10 for much of the past 20 years. Their systemic problems extend well past their current EV market share.

Symptomatic of US decline

By DrXym • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Kind of ironic that a company that at the turn of the 20th century killed off so many coachbuilder automobile competitors by pioneering machine tools, mass assembly etc. is now finding itself on the wrong side of the equation because it can’t keep up with electric tech.

Ford does make other EVs in Europe but even there a couple of their models are just reskinned Volkswagens ID.5s. They have the in-house developed Puma Electric I guess which is generally considered an okay car but nobody really talks about it. And of course the Mach-E which looks cool but is too expensive and getting kind of old. And a few electric vans. That’s it.

Just like with other US companies they’re watching their market shrink because they’re simply not investing in emergent technologies. I’m sure they’ll hang on for a bit in some niches but their consumer offerings outside of the Americas look like they are in terminal decline.

Open Source Project Shuts Down Over Legal Threats from 3D Printer Company Bambu Lab

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The free/open source project OrcaSlicer is a popular fork of 3D printer slicing software from Bambu Lab. But Tuesday independent developer Pawel Jarczak shuttered the project “following legal threats from Bambu Lab,” reports Tom’s Hardware:
Jarczak’s fork of OrcaSlicer would have allowed users to bypass Bambu Connect, a middleware application that severely limits OrcaSlicer’s access to remote printer functions in the name of security. Jarczak said in a note on GitHub that Bambu Lab threatened him with a cease and desist letter and accused him of reverse engineering its software in order to impersonate Bambu Studio.
From Bambu Lab’s blog post:
Bambu Studio is an open-source project under the AGPL-3.0 license. Anyone can take its code, modify it, and distribute it… That’s what OrcaSlicer does, and 734 other forks do as well. We have no issue with that and never have. At the same time, a license for code is not a pass to our cloud infrastructure… Our cloud is a private service. Access to it is governed by a user agreement, not the AGPL license… [T]he modification in question worked by injecting falsified identity metadata into network communication. In simple terms: it pretended to be the official Bambu Studio client when communicating with our servers… If this method were widely adopted or incorrectly configured, thousands of clients could simultaneously hit our servers while impersonating the official client.
“User-Agent is not authentication,” counters OrcaSlicer’s developer. “It is only self-declared client metadata. Any program can set any User-Agent.” And “the User-Agent construction comes directly from Bambu Lab’s own public AGPL Bambu Studio code.... So on what basis can anyone claim that I am not allowed to use this specific part of AGPL-licensed code under the AGPL license…? My work was based on publicly available Bambu Studio source code together with my own integration layer.”

But the bottom line is that Bambu Lab “contacted me directly and demanded removal of the solution.”
I asked whether I could publish the private correspondence in full for transparency. That request was refused… They also referred to legal materials and stated that a cease and desist letter had been prepared…

I removed the repository voluntarily. That removal should not be interpreted as an admission that all legal or technical allegations made against the project were correct. I removed it because I have no interest in maintaining a prolonged dispute around this particular implementation, and no interest in continuing to distribute it.
YouTuber and right-to-repair advocate Louis Rossmann reviewed the correspondence from Bambu Lab — then pledged $10,000 for legal expenses if the developer returned his code online. (“I think that their legal claim is bullshit,” Rossman said Saturday in a YouTube video for his 2.5 million subscribers. “I’m not a lawyer, but I’m willing to put my money where my mouth is.”)

The video now has over 129,000 views so far. “Rossman has not started a crowdfunding site yet,” Tom’s Hardware notes, “stating in the comments that he wants to prove to Jarczak that he has supporters willing to put their money where their mouth is. The video had over 129,000 views so far, with commenters vowing to back the case as requested.”

Stop purchasing Bambu products

By CommunityMember • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Threats of lawsuits (especially to open source products, which do not have deep pockets) are the new corporate approach to what would appear to be appropriate reverse engineering. The only way forward, if you disagree, is to refuse to purchase any Bambu products.

Private correspondence?

By innocent_white_lamb • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“I asked whether I could publish the private correspondence in full for transparency. That request was refused.”

If you send me an unsolicited letter then that letter becomes my property.

I don’t see what grounds you can order me not to publish it. Or burn it. Or use it as a signal flag on my yacht.

Something is “off the record” or “confidential” only if both parties agree to that beforehand.

Orca Slicer is not shutting down

By Guspaz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The developer of a fork of Orca Slicer that is designed to communicate directly with Bambu Labs printers is shutting down his fork. Orca Slicer, which supports many printers, is not shutting down.

Re:Private correspondence?

By 0123456 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The grounds are usually that Big Company X can afford to sue Little Guy Y and Little Guy Y can’t afford to defend himself even if the suit has no legal basis.

As they say, America has the best legal system money can buy.

Can free ICQ clients use ICQ servers, reloaded

By buchner.johannes • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The response of “User-Agent is not authentication” is a strawman response to “Unofficial clients should not use our servers”. They used it as identification of clients, not authentication. Would the developers be happier if they had used an API key for the web interaction, but package that fixed API key into the app? Would that be “authentication” and thus better to them? It’s the same effect, and the open source clone would copy it too.

Same discussion as 30 years ago with open source clones of messaging apps such as ICQ. The open source client pretends, on those days through reverse engineering, to be the official client. Ultimately, it was okay then, because it was beneficial for the operators to have a larger network of users who can talk to each other. Does this dynamic apply here?

Most Polymarket Users Lose Money, While Top 1% Claim 76.5% of Gains, Study Finds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In Polymarket’s prediction market, “most people end up losing money,” reports the Washington Post — typically a few bucks.

“Since Polymarket launched in 2022, a few thousand people have lost the bulk of the money… and an even smaller group — .05 percent of users — has gone home with most of the overall profits, according to a new analysis from finance researcher Pat Akey and colleagues.”
A lot of users aren’t that good at predicting the future. They’re losing money at roughly the same rate as online gamblers betting on sports and other real-life events at traditional sportsbooks, according to the U.K. gambling regulator’s analysis of 2024 data. On Polymarket, the odds of making a profit are slightly higher on weather and tech markets — and a little lower on sports…

On Polymarket, just 1,200 people took more than half the profits — $591 million, or more than $100,000 each. [“The top 1% of users capture 76.5% of all trading gains,” the researchers write.] When you dabble in prediction markets, you’re competing against these sophisticated players who consistently win. Most of those 1,200 big winners didn’t place just a few smart bets. They appear to be pros making thousands of trades, mostly in the past year and a half, that were probably automated. One user made $3 million since January on more than a million trades about the Oscars, according to TRM Labs…

The most profitable participants are also just good at picking what to bet on, Akey found, winning so often it was statistically unlikely to be dumb luck. They had some sort of edge — expertise, deep research or, perhaps, inside knowledge.
“Our results suggest that the informational benefits of prediction markets come at a cost to unsophisticated participants,” the researchers conclude.

The fact that anyone is getting any gains

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It’s just up to various forms of insider information. Not trading because this isn’t trades this is gambling.

Also 94% of the bets

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Or just regular sports betting. The silly stuff gets all the press but in reality it’s all just a sports betting platform. It was just a stupid way to get around state regulations using the current incredibly corrupt national government.

Re:The fact that anyone is getting any gains

By korgitser • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Insider trading, but with the fun twist of looting not the stock market, but the general populace. Now there’s a direct and no fuss way for our leadership to take money out of our pockets.

“Informational benefits”

By GameboyRMH • Score: 3 Thread

When people start treating these casinos as a source of predictive information is when they’ll become the most dangerous:

https://insights.som.yale.edu/…

The usual moaners

By greytree • Score: 3 Thread
No surprise that we hear from the usual crowd of Commie moaners who have something against the simple everyday folk who use their hard-earned insider knowledge and White House tip-offs to advance themselves.

PlayStation3 Emulator Devs Politely Ask Contributors to Stop Submitting ‘AI Slop’ Pull Requests

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Open-source PS3 emulator RPCS3 “has been around since 2011,” Kotaku notes, and has made 70% of the PlayStation 3’s library fully playable, “bolstered in part by the many users who contribute to its GitHub page.” But their dev team “took to X today to very kindly and civilly request that users ‘stop submitting AI slop code pull requests’ to its GitHub page.”
Then they immediately proceeded to tell the AI-brain-rotted tech bros attempting to justify their vibe-coding nonsense to kick rocks in the replies, which is somewhat less civil but far more entertaining to read…

My favorite one was when someone asked how the team was certain they weren’t rejecting human-written code, to which RPCS3 replied: “You can’t possibly handwrite the type of shit AI slop we have been seeing.”

Re:AI Slop

By T34L • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

If AI produced high quality outputs, people wouldn’t complain about AI use, because there would be no way to tell things are produced by AI. They complain because they can tell, because it’s largely garbage.

I have been working extensively through Claude Code, with usage paid by my job, and if you want anything mildly serious that isn’t just webapp slop reinventing the same onboarding page over and over, it it takes poring over pretty much every single thing it produces to make sure it didn’t just fuck it all up. You have to handhold it at every step of the way, constantly build up validation pipelines. It’s still worth it to me, and I suppose my boss, because it allows me to rapidly begin developing with fairly specific tooling I have very little experience with, and I can just get an MVP out of the door in days instead of spending months on learning the proper way. But it’s not without making short term sacrifices to code quality and accepting that it’s a shortcut that’s producing tech debt that’ll be due later. It has a purpose, but people firing off that janky ass code that they don’t intend to ever maintain into someone else’s codebase must be insanely infuriating.

Programming graffiti

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 3 Thread
I can understand the people who generate AI slop to sell books and music but what’s the point to generating AI code? It’s like giving a paintbrush to a monkey and calling the monkey’s owner, a great artist. This is graffiti, where 99% of ‘artists’ are really excusing their abuse of someone else’s property (Notice: It’s never their own.) with delusions of grandeur. Unfortunately, everyone else has to suffer.

Honda Patents a Fake Clutch for Electric Motorcycles

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Electrek:
A newly revealed Honda patent shows the company developing a simulated electronic clutch system for electric motorcycles, complete with torque-boost launches and even haptic feedback designed to mimic the feel of a combustion engine.... Instead of using a traditional mechanical clutch, the system uses electronics to alter how the motor responds based on clutch lever position. Pull the clutch halfway in, and the system proportionally reduces motor output. Pull it fully, and power is cut entirely, regardless of throttle position.

But the more interesting part is how Honda intends to recreate the behavior riders actually use clutches for. According to the patent as reported by AMCN, riders could preload the throttle while holding in the clutch lever, then rapidly release the lever to trigger a burst of torque — essentially simulating the hard launches motocross riders rely on with gas bikes. Honda believes that could be useful in competitive riding situations where precise power modulation matters, especially on loose terrain or during aggressive starts.

Honda also appears to be working on recreating the feel of a gas bike, not just the control inputs. The patent describes multiple vibration motors placed in the handlebars and near the clutch lever to provide haptic feedback that simulates engine vibration and even the “bite point” sensation of a clutch engaging. In other words, Honda may be trying to make an electric dirt bike feel mechanically alive, or at least the old-school idea of what a breathing dirt bike used to feel like.

I’d buy an e-MX bike with a real clutch first

By MasterOfGoingFaster • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Honestly, just add a flywheel and give us a real clutch. MX clutches are used to modulate power delivery, and by pre-spinning the flywheel with the clutch in, we have the ability to have instant stored kinetic energy to help maintain speed thru the whoops. We also use this for pitch control in the air - not sure this would work in a simulated clutch.

Just what we need

By divide overflow • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So we’re taking a superior, simpler power source and drive chain and adding a fake clutch to make it simulate an older, inferior power source and drive chain.
Brilliant. In 25 years people will look at these and wonder “what the hell were they thinking?”

The definition of the word

By jenningsthecat • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The American Heritage Dictionary defines “ersatz” as follows:
adjective Being a usually inferior imitation or substitute; artificial.
adjective Not genuine; fake

Honda’s faux clutch strikes me as slightly less ersatz than the vroom-vroom noises pasted on to some electric cars to make them mimic IC vehicles. Still, the idea seems a bit silly. It’s like the video game version of a traditional motorcycle.

I’d rather see drivers / riders of these new vehicles lean into their unique characteristics. I think they should develop a new mythos, rather than pasting pictures of yesterday’s glories on these whole new beasts. Clinging to the trappings of an IC engine when you have stoopid amounts of torque available throughout most of your RPM range just strikes me as kind of lame.

Big Tech is Moving Data Through the Gulf Using Fiber-Optic Cables Alongside Iraq’s Oil Pipelines

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Major American cloud companies with data centers in the Persian Gulf “are channeling data out of the war zone through fiber-optic cables that an Iraqi telecom has strung alongside crude-oil pipelines,” reports RestofWorld.org:
The data centers serve customers in more than 190 countries, processing transactions, storing files, and running applications for businesses and individuals from Latin America to South Asia. When Iranian drones struck Amazon’s facilities in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain on March 1, the effects spread across the region. Apps of major banks in the UAE, including Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, stopped working. Payment and delivery platforms went offline. Snowflake, a U.S. enterprise software company used by thousands of businesses globally, reported Middle East service disruptions tied directly to the Amazon Web Services outage. Amazon told its customers to migrate their workloads out of the Middle East…

[Data from] banking, payment, and enterprise platforms normally travels to Europe through cables running under the Red Sea and the Strait of Hormuz, then connects onward to users across the world. The war has put those cables at risk. The overland route through Iraq is meant to serve as a backup if the sea cables are disabled. The overland route through Iraq is meant to serve as a backup if the sea cables are disabled… [Martin Frank, strategic adviser for IQ Networks, the company that built the network, told Rest of World this overland route is already carrying live traffic.] The company, based in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, runs fiber from the southern tip of Iraq to the Turkish border. It is now extending the network through gas-pipeline corridors across Turkey to the European border, with the first link expected early next year, Frank said. When that extension is complete, cloud providers will — for the first time — have the option of an unbroken land-based fiber path from the Gulf into the European network, connecting onward to Frankfurt, Amsterdam, London, and Marseille, from where their data connects back to U.S. users.

The advantage of this alternative route is that oil and gas pipelines come with their own security perimeters, access roads, and maintenance corridors already built around them, allowing a telecom company to lay fiber without digging new trenches through difficult terrain. Iraq avoided the fate of earlier overland routes that collapsed because of a sustained period of stability, and because existing pipeline infrastructure provided ready-made corridors for laying fiber, Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at network intelligence firm Kentik, told Rest of World… IQ Networks’ route, called the Silk Route Transit, has been running since November 2023. The network currently carries enough data to stream about 400,000 high-definition videos simultaneously, Frank said.

The land route is faster. Data traveling through submarine cables from the Gulf to Europe takes about 150 milliseconds. The Iraqi terrestrial route cuts that to roughly 70 milliseconds — a difference that matters for video calls, financial transactions, and applications that run on artificial intelligence, according to IQ Networks.

Nothing new under the sun

By williamyf • Score: 3 Thread

The Williams Company strung fiber optic cables inside decomisiones Gas Pipes, that was Wiltel. first iteration bought by LDDS, second one bought by Level 3
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Quest laid down fiber alongside train right of way, using a special plough moved by a locomotive
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Ditto for laying bahaul fibre in the eguts/sewers of large cities. Or using the actual sewer pipes to bring the access fiber to buildings or houses…

If the rights of ways are aquired for something else already, laying the fiber is easy and cheap, and a nice way to earn additional revenues on your existing rights of way

Thanks a lot, guys

By PPH • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

Now Iran knows what to target.

You should have said that the cables were all connected to a node located under Vladimir Putin’s palace.

For now…

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

Iran should tell Trump they’re using this to get him to blow it up for them. :-)

Re:This is a problem?

By yuvcifjt • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

All this because America on behest of their master in the terrorist apartheid regime started an illegal war against civilians.
Marco Rubio stated as much, that America was pulled into the war.

Not only has that made Iranian people side more with their government, especially after revelations that Trump was providing weapons to protestors early in the year, but the new government has become more hardline.

Imagine if Iran unjustly attacked America to “save Americans from their Epstein paedophiles and corrupt MAGA politicians”, while bombing a children school in New York on the first day, and then going on to destroy other schools and hospitals in the following weeks - you wouldn’t become more patriotic and rally around your government to go after the attackers?!

Iran is doing exactly as they stated they would, and gave us at least a year’s notice of their intentions to close the strait, and bomb American interests in the Middle East - also exactly what the terrorist apartheid regime wanted: they want to destroy the Middle East, especially UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia as almost half of Saudi Arabia is part of the “Greater Israel project”.

Thanks to the terrorist apartheid regime, we have been giving over 20 years of warnings to Iran to destroy their country - they had plenty of time to prepare.
Remember former NATO commander and US Army General Wesley Clark shortly after 9/11: plan to “take out” seven countries in five years, naming Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Iran.

Challenging UPS and FedEx, Amazon Opens Its Shipping Network to All Businesses

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
This week Amazon opened up its parcel shipping, fulfillment, and distribution “to businesses of all types and sizes.” Any business can now ship, store, and deliver “using the same supply chain that supports Amazon,” according to Monday’s announcement of “Amazon Supply Chain Services.”

The move sent shares of UPS and FedEx “tumbling” Monday writes GeekWire. And though both stocks bounced back as the week went on, GeekWire sees this as the latest example of Amazon “turning its internal capabilities into products and services for sale…”

“Amazon had already surpassed both carriers to become the nation’s largest parcel shipper by volume, according to parcel-analytics firm ShipMatrix.”
Initial customers include Procter & Gamble, which is using Amazon’s freight network to transport raw materials; 3M, which is using it to move products to distribution centers; Lands’ End, which is fulfilling orders across sales channels from Amazon’s warehouses; and American Eagle Outfitters, which is using Amazon’s parcel service for last-mile delivery. The service can fulfill orders placed through platforms that compete with Amazon’s own marketplace, including Walmart, Shopify, TikTok, and others… Peter Larsen, vice president of Amazon Supply Chain Services, compared the launch to the origins of Amazon’s cloud business…

In addition to putting Amazon in competition with existing players in the logistics industry, the move also raises questions about data privacy. Amazon has faced accusations of using nonpublic seller data to compete against merchants on its marketplace, which it has denied. Larsen told the Wall Street Journal that the company prohibits using supply chain customer data for its own marketplace decisions, noting that hundreds of thousands of Amazon sellers already trust the company to fulfill orders placed on rival platforms.
The article notes taht in his annual shareholder letter Amazon’s CEO “said the company is also exploring selling its custom AI chips and robotics to outside customers.”

Great

By bistromath007 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Can we please nationalize them now, so we have a post office again?

Re:Great

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Well Republicans have spent the last 40 years divesting it away, sabotaging and underfunding it in an effort to show how incapable it is and turn public sentiment against it and yet it still has been able to maintain a high level of service.

It’s because

By wakeboarder • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They want FedEx and UPS gone, once they do then they can take over the whole supply chain. And the government will let them. They will undercut UPS and FedEx, and use anti competitive practices.

Re:Great

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Why blame any of that? Why not blame the real culprits? Or do you not like accountability?

https://apwu.org/the-usps-fair…

Re:Blame the unions

By Midnight Thunder • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Then again you wouldn’t have unionised workers if they were being treated fairly in the first place?

GM Secretly Sold California Drivers’ Data, Agrees to Pay $12.75M In Privacy Settlement

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“General Motors sold the data of California drivers without their knowledge or consent,” says California’s attorney general, “and despite numerous statements reassuring drivers that it would not do so.”

In 2024, The New York Times "reported that automakers including GM were sharing information about their customers’ driving behavior with insurance companies,” remembers TechCrunch, “and that some customers were concerned that their insurance rates had gone up as a result.”

Now General Motors “has reached a privacy-related settlement with a group of law enforcement agencies led by California Attorney General Rob Bonta…”
The settlement announcement from Bonta’s office similarly alleges that GM sold “the names, contact information, geolocation data, and driving behavior data of hundreds of thousands of Californians” to Verisk Analytics and LexisNexis Risk Solutions, which are both data brokers. Bonta’s office further alleges that this data was collected through GM’s OnStar program, and that the company made roughly $20 million from data sales.

However, Bonta’s office also said the data did not lead to increased insurance prices in California, “likely because under California’s insurance laws, insurers are prohibited from using driving data to set insurance rates.” As part of the settlement, GM has agreed to pay $12.75 million in civil penalties and to stop selling driving data to any consumer reporting agencies for five years, Bonta’s office said. GM has also agreed to delete any driver data that it still retains within 180 days (unless it obtains consent from customers), and to request that Lexis and Verisk delete that data.
“This trove of information included precise and personal location data that could identify the everyday habits and movements of Californians,” according to the attorney general’s announcement. The settlement “requires General Motors to abandon these illegal practices, and underscores the importance of the data minimization in California’s privacy law — companies can’t just hold on to data and use it later for another purpose.”

“Modern cars are rolling data collection machines,” said San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins. “Californians must have confidence that they know what data is being collected, how it is being used, and what their opt-out rights are… This case sends a strong message that law enforcement will take action when California privacy laws are not scrupulously followed.”

Why so little?

By rnmartinez • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If they made $20 mil, a multiple of the profit, and not a percentage, would be more appropriate

Re:MBA strikes again

By rudy_wayne • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

....the company made roughly $20 million from data sales.

Which means that the fine must be more than $20 Million, otherwise, what’s the point?

Spend 12, make 20. Sounds like a good deal that will be repeated in the future.

So they made a profit?

By dirk • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

So let me get this straight. They sold data they shouldn’t have for $20 million. They settled for $12.75 million. So they made a profit of $7.25 million. So what exactly is the incentive for them not to do this again? They don’t make as much as they want if they get caught, but they still make money. This is how you encourage companies to do this, not discourage them.

Re:Soo, does my Chevy contain spyware?

By rtkluttz • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

If you have one that has cellular connectivity and an infotainment system, espeically EV’s, the only way that I have found is to track down the telematics module for your car and locate the antenna connector and put a resistor on it to disable it completely. Just disconnecting the shark fin is not enough since the wire itself or even just the connector can function enough that it can still get signal through when it is in areas with very strong signal. But then you use something like a mobile 4G/5G hotspot with true firewall capability and connect the car to that through its ability to use external wifi. Then you block access to GM and onstar sites while still letting things like google maps through for nav so that you don’t brick your entire infotainment system. This is what I do on both of my GM EV’s.

So they made 20 million dollars

By NXIL • Score: 3 Thread

And got fined about 12 million dollars.

That is nice.

Amazon Relents, Lets its Programmers Use OpenAI’s Codex and Anthropic’s Claude

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Futurism:
In November, Amazon leaders sent an internal memo to employees, pushing them to use its in-house code generating tool, Kiro, over third-party alternatives from competitors. “While we continue to support existing tools in use today, we do not plan to support additional third party, AI development tools,” the memo read, as quoted by Reuters at the time. “As part of our builder community, you all play a critical role shaping these products and we use your feedback to aggressively improve them.”

It was an unusual development, considering the tens of billions of dollars the e-commerce giant has invested in its competitors in the space, including Anthropic and OpenAI… Half a year later, Amazon is singing a dramatically different tune. As Business Insider reports, Amazon is officially throwing in the towel, succumbing to growing calls among employees for access to OpenAI’s Codex and Anthropic’s Claude… Given the unfortunate optics of opening the floodgates for Codex and Claude Code, an Amazon spokesperson told the publication in a statement that teams are still “primarily using” Kiro, claiming that 83 percent of engineers at the company are leaning on it.

Sounds familiar

By jlowery • Score: 4, Informative Thread

That is a classic corporate “vanity project” trap. It’s a common mistake: a company mistakes its captive audience (employees) for a test market, forgetting that internal tools need to solve a problem, not create a new chore.

I worked at a company that tried to force an internal social media site on us. The catch? They weren’t a social media company. It never took off. It was a textbook example of why you should stick to your core competencies.

Rocket Lab Reports Growing Demand for Commercial Space Products. Stock Surges 34%

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For just the first three months of 2026, Rocket Lab’s launch business reports $63.7 million in revenue, reports CNBC — plus another $136.7 million from its space systems business. Besides beating Wall Street’s expectations, Rocket Lab also announced that its backlog has more than doubled from a year ago to $2.2 billion, and that it’s buying space robotics company Motiv Space Systems.

Friday its stock price shot up 34% in one day…
Rocket Lab’s stock has more than quadrupled over the past year, benefiting from skyrocketing demand for businesses tied to the space economy ahead of SpaceX’s hotly anticipated IPO later this year. Demand for space systems and satellites is also escalating as President Donald Trump pursues his ambitious Golden Dome missile defense project and NASA’s crewed Artemis missions rev up.

Rocket Lab said Thursday that it signed its largest contract ever with a confidential customer for its Neutron and Electron rockets through 2029, weeks after landing a $190 million deal for 20 hypersonic test flights… “The demand signal is clear,” CEO Peter Beck said on an earnings call with analysts, calling the pace of new product releases from the company this year “relentless”.... Rocket Lab’s good news lifted other space companies. Firefly Aeropspace and Intuitive Machines both jumped more than 20, while Redwire gained 19%. Voyager Technologies rose 14%.
“The company anticipates revenue between $225 million and $240 million during the second quarter.”

uh, golden shower went down toilet

By oumuamua • Score: 3 Thread
If US missiles could not defend tiny areas in Gulf States .... how is it going to protect the entire US: Iran has hit far more U.S. military assets than reported, satellite images show https://www.washingtonpost.com…
Also let’s look at the real motivating reason to make it; so the USA can do wars of aggression against other nuclear powers without fear of being nuked in return

Unemployment Ticked Up in America’s IT Sector

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IT sector unemployment “increased to 3.8% in April from 3.6% in March,” reports the Wall Street Journal.

But they add that the increase reflects “an ongoing uncertainty in tech as AI continues to play havoc with hiring. That’s according to analysis from consulting firm Janco Associates, which bases its findings on data from the U.S. Labor Department.”
On Friday, the department said the economy added 115,000 jobs, buoyed by gains in industries including retail, transportation and warehousing and healthcare. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.3%. But the information sector lost 13,000 jobs in April.

While it’s still too early to say exactly how AI is affecting employment overall, some businesses, especially in the tech industry, have said it’s part of the reason they’re cutting staff. In April, Meta Platforms said it would lay off 10% of its staff, or roughly 8,000 people, as it seeks to streamline operations and pay for its own massive investments in AI. Nike will reduce its workforce by roughly 1,400 workers, or about 2%, mostly in its tech department, as it simplifies global operations. And Snap is planning to eliminate 16% of its workforce, or about 1,000 positions, as it aims to boost efficiency. In other areas of IT, which includes telecommunications and data-processing, employment is now down 11%, or 342,000 jobs, from its most recent peak in November 2022.

But there’s not just AI to blame. Inflation and economic uncertainty linked to the Iran conflict is giving some chief executives and tech leaders reason to pull back or pause their IT hiring, said Janco Chief Executive Victor Janulaitis.
The article even notes that postings for software developer jobs “are up 15% year-over-year on job-search platform Indeed, according to Hannah Calhoon, its vice president of AI”. But employers do seem to be looking for experienced developers, which could pose a problem for recent college graduates.

meh

By fluffernutter • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Does unemployment really mean much in a sector where they hire as many cheap offshore workers as they can to keep labor costs as low as possible?

GIGO

By guygo • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

“bases its findings on data from the U.S. Labor Department” and we have all seen just how reliable totally-not-manipulated data coming from this administration is.

Headline seems extremely deceptive

By thecombatwombat • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Yes, over the last month it ticked up from 3.6% to 3.8%. It peaked at SEVEN percent at one point in 12 months. The trend is unquestionably, wildly down.

Those are both the lowest readings in 12 months. It’s been hovering near 5% all year. It’s been consistently over the national average.

It’s not under the average, very solidly trending down all year. But the headline is a .2% increase and noise about AI.

There’s downturn in progress

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Informative Thread

You can’t attack education, non-whites, non-MAGA, all your allies, enact random tariffs, and then disrupt the world’s flow of oil, all while building a kleptocracy and expect anything but a major long term downward trend.

You can no longer trust the government numbers. They’re lying, and anyone who won’t lie gets fired. Unemployment is probably higher than they’re telling you.

Arrogance

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Down here in Belgium, IT people can be overly arrogant. It is a specific group, plenty of them are nice, but oh boy, inflated egos are very present in that sector. These guys think they are gods because they understand a for loop and can glue together a few libraries.
I am a teacher, occasionally they cross my path. They are experts in … everything. They explain me how modern teaching methods work and explain in detail everything my colleagues and I do is wrong and outdated. It of course explains the bad results of their kids. I mean, it is all just a matter of finding the right algorithm and persisting. It is not a common talent and surely a teacher does not have that. Too bad the job is not well payed, else they would be happy to join our miserable team and show us how it is done.
I love it when these guys enter my web. I am an old hardware engineer. I designed and modeled integrated circuits. I have a decade and a half experience in designing integrated circuits. Digital, analog, firmware, a bit of management here and there, you name it. I know the corporate (electronics) world very well. Anyway, the art is to sneek in a tiny remark that makes them realize they are missing something about me. Preferably after they have spread a ton of sht about … everything. The tone of the message often changes in the next meeting, especially if I see that they checked my linkedin profile… Although one took it personal and started to harass me. I hope these guys are toned down a bit by the decline in jobs in IT. Regretfully, I have seen how big companies shrink. They fire the nice, hard working people, the ones that really know how to do their job. They keep the bulldozer personalities. It ends up with people who think that shouting the specs will make them become reality faster. (“You have to be an asshole to get things done and I have no problem with being that!”. ) It then ends in a sort of bulldozer destruction derby. Run away, get some popcorn and watch how the super egos self destruct. Get another job in the process. Why not something lower profile? I have no regrets and finally got a basic understanding of humanity. Cheers!

The EU Considers Restricting Use of US Cloud Platforms for Sensitive Government Data

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CNBC reports:
The European Union is considering rules that would restrict its member governments’ use of U.S. cloud providers to handle sensitive data, sources familiar with the talks told CNBC.

The European Commission — the EU’s executive branch — is expected to present its “Tech Sovereignty Package” on May 27, which will include a range of measures aimed at bolstering the bloc’s strategic autonomy in key digital areas. As part of preparations for that package, discussions are taking place within the Commission around limiting the exposure of sensitive public-sector data to cloud platforms provided by companies outside of the EU, two Commission officials, who asked to remain anonymous as they weren’t authorized to discuss private talks, told CNBC… “The core idea is defining sectors that have to be hosted on European cloud capacity,” one of the officials said. They added that companies providing cloud solutions from third countries, including the U.S., could be impacted. Proposals would not prohibit overseas companies’ cloud platforms from government contracts entirely, but limit their use in processing sensitive data at public sector organizations, depending on the level of sensitivity, they added. The officials said that talks are ongoing and yet to be finalized…

The officials told CNBC there are discussions around proposing that financial, judicial and health data processed by governments and public-sector organizations require high levels of sovereign cloud infrastructure.

Re:About time

By dinfinity • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Must be the way of thinking that only ruthless exploitation and/or suffering can lead to success.
It is a way to rationalize and justify the suffering. If not for success, then why all the hardship?

Re:They’ve realized the US is run by a thug

By psycho12345 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
In the US, Trump will be gone in 2029 but the Reich Court will still be there, the Heritage Foundation, Federalisti Society, and various Reich wing law groups and oligarchs will still be in place. So the fascist oligarchy will still be in place in America, and will continue to its pogrom of non whites and non male from all positions of power and economic opportunity until it is a Christian slaver nazi state, their new Reich.

Re:So sad

By sound+vision • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What America “prefers” doesn’t matter so much as what America “got” last year, which is Iron Curtain, not free markets.

Re:So sad

By Rumagent • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

America prefers anything over socialist democrats getting in the way of a vibrant free market. Why do Europeans cling to big government?

It is more honest to say that those in power prefers it. Polling in the US shows consistent support for universal healthcare and making tuition at public colleges free for instance - both examples of the dreaded “big government”.

And yes. I agree, the whole world has gotten a fine demonstration of your values.

Re: And replace them with what?

By dskoll • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Open-source code is much safer the proprietary code. It can be audited, and in the specific cases of Linux and PostgreSQL, there are enough EU developers working on them to fork the project if the USA gets too insane.

To me, the most important things to do to mitigate risk are: (1) No dependence on proprietary US software, and (2) no dependece on US-based cloud services. I think that’s the best we can do for now.

NYT: ‘Meta’s Embrace of AI Is Making Its Employees Miserable’

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“Meta’s embrace of AI is making its employees miserable,” reports the New York Times.

And “After Meta said late last month that it would start tracking employees’ computer use, hundreds of workers spoke up.” (One employee even told Meta’s CTO in an internal post, “Your callousness to the concerns of your own employees is concerning.”
In an internal post last month, Meta told its U.S. employees that it was making a change that would affect tens of thousands of them. What employees typed into their computer, how they moved their mouse, where they clicked and what they saw on their screen would be tracked, Meta said. The goal, the company said, was to capture employee data so Meta’s artificial intelligence models could learn “how people actually complete everyday tasks using computers.” Many workers immediately revolted. In online comments, they blasted the tracking as a privacy violation, calling it antisocial and callous… [One engineering manager even asked “How do we opt out?”] “There is no option to opt-out on your corporate laptop,” replied Andrew Bosworth, Meta’s chief technology officer. Employees reacted by posting more than 100 angry and surprised emoji, according to the messages....

Meta is pushing its 78,000 employees to adopt AI tools and factoring their use of the technology in performance reviews. The company is also tracking employees’ computer work to feed and train its AI models. And it is cutting jobs to offset its AI spending, saying last month that it would slash 10% of its workforce. That has led to anger and anxiety as employees await news of whether they are affected by the layoffs, which are slated to be carried out May 20, according to 11 current and former Meta employees. Some said they no longer saw Meta as a place for a long career. Others were looking for new jobs or trying to signal that they wanted to be laid off so they could receive severance pay, the current and former employees said. “It’s incredibly demoralizing,” an employee who does user research wrote in an internal post, which was reviewed by the Times…

Meta also introduced internal dashboards to track employees’ consumption of “tokens,” a unit of AI use that is roughly equivalent to four characters of text, four people said. Some said the dashboards were a pressure tactic to encourage competition with colleagues. That led some employees to make so many AI agents that others had to introduce agents to find agents, and agents to rate agents, two people said.

So they are just getting what they gave?

By jvkjvk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Considering the company that they work for, this is merely karma.

Re:META is doing this to make them quit

By DrXym • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
European employees can complain about violation of their privacy from this tracking. I expect lawyers could also make a strong case that training an AI amounts to constructive dismissal and take Facebook to their country’s labour relations tribunals over it.

Unionize

By DrXym • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
This is a clear cut situation where workers should unionize to push back on this bullshit.

Re:What did they expect?

By geekmux • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Theyre working for a company founded by a thieving sociopath that treats its users as monetisable assets. Why did they think theyd get special treatment when push came to shove?

The ignorant irony of being offended about corporate spyware while working for a company that specializes in profit building by abusing every legal spyware possible (aka their own app), is slap-able. But somewhat expected.

Mark acted that way and became Fuck-You rich as a result. That, is a GenMe magnet of opportunity at every attitude.

Re:META is doing this to make them quit

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That’s actually a smart strategy.

It’s also a sociopathic one.

That it’s SOP doesn’t make it any less so, but rather an indictment against our capitalism-first culture.

‘Changing of the Guard’? AMD, Intel, and Micron Soar While Nvidia Lags

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While Nvidia has dominated the “infrastructure boom” since 2022’s launch of ChatGPT and “the generative AI craze,” CNBC writes that “This week offered the starkest illustration yet of what MIzuho analyst Jordan Klein said could be a ‘changing of the guard in AI.’"
Chipmakers Advanced Micro Devices and Intel notched gains of about 25%, while memory maker Micron jumped more than 37% and fiber-optic cable maker Corning climbed about 18%. All four of those companies have more than doubled in value this year, with Intel leading the way, up well over 200%. Nvidia, meanwhile, is only slightly ahead of the Nasdaq in 2026, gaining 15% for the year, aided by an 8% rally this week. In spreading the wealth to a wider swath of hardware companies, investors are clearly betting that the bull market in AI has long legs and that data centers are going to need a wider array of advanced components for years to come.

Memory has been the biggest theme of late due to a global shortage that’s driven up prices and turned Micron, a 47-year-old company tucked in a sleepy corner of the semiconductor market, into one of the hottest trades over the past 12 months. Micron blew past an $800 billion market capitalization for the first time this week, and the stock is now up over 750% in the past year. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra told CNBC in March that key customers are only getting “50% to two-thirds of their requirements” because of supply issues. The memory market is largely dominated by Micron, along with Korea-based Samsung and SK Hynix, which are also both in the midst of historic rallies…

Bank of America estimates the data center CPU market could more than double from $27 billion in 2025 to $60 billion in 2030. AMD’s quarterly results this week underscored the emerging trend, as earnings, revenue and guidance sailed past estimates on strong data center growth. The company has long led the CPU charge, and CEO Lisa Su said on the earnings call that AMD now expects 35% growth over the next three to five years in the server CPU market, up from a forecast of 18% growth that the company provided in November.
The article cites two other big movers:

Smaller companies can easily show bigger % gains

By Tony Isaac • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When you’re the giant of the industry, as NVidia is, you can’t keep increasing by triple digits every year. If you’re smaller, those bigger percentages are easier to achieve, even if the absolute numbers aren’t as big.

Re: Up 10x since 2022

By conradp • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Exactly. NVDA is up 75% from one year ago - not exactly the stock market laggard the article makes it out ot be. Even though a few other stocks did better.

So…

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 3 Thread
We might get some hand-me-down optical 1Tbps IB HCAs in 10 years on eBay if GameStop doesn’t acquire and ruin them.

Re:Up 10x since 2022

By quonset • Score: 4 Thread

Here’s the thing, if Nvidia was any other company you wouldn’t be able to buy the stock for any price. Their numbers keep blowing past even optimistic estimates, their growth keeps climbing, and they can’t make their products fast enough. All of this as the (current) industry behemoth in GPUs They even recently announced getting into the quantum side of things.

Will this last forever? No, of course not. No one can. But at the moment there doesn’t appear to be a ceiling for them. And yet, every time they release earnings their stock gets dumped becasue people believe this is the time they’ve hit their peak. When the companies making the chips say they have orders filled through 2027, what would make people think Nvidia has hit is peak?

Nvidia should be at or near $300/share at this point. It’s only because of whiny “investors” it’s not. When they report on the 20th they will again blow past everything and once again we’ll watch them get penalized for doing so.

Normal rotation

By Mspangler • Score: 3 Thread

It looks like a normal in-sector rotation to me. Nvidia moved first, now the others in the space are following.

Open Source Registries Join Linux Foundation Working Group to Address Machine-Generated Traffic

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Under the nonprofit Linux Foundation, “a new Sustaining Package Registries Working Group will seek to identify concrete funding, governance, and security practices,” reports ZDNet, “to keep code flowing as download counts grow.... Because software builds, continuous integration pipelines, and AI systems hammer registries at machine speed rather than human speed, the sites can’t keep up.

“That growth has brought a surge in bot traffic, automated publishing, security reports, and outright abuse, exposing what the working group bluntly calls a ‘sustainability gap’.” Sonatype CTO Brian Fox, who oversees the Maven Central Java registry, estimates open-source registries saw 10 trillion downloads in 2025. And “The same pattern is appearing across ecosystems. More machine traffic. More automation. More scanning. More expectations around uptime, integrity, provenance, and policy enforcement. More cost. More support burden. More dependency on infrastructure that the industry still talks about as though it runs on goodwill and spare time.”

ZDNet reports that “To tackle that, Sonatype has teamed up with the Linux Foundation and other package registry leaders, including Alpha-Omega, Eclipse Foundation (OpenVSX), OpenJS Foundation, OpenSSF, Packagist, Python Software Foundation, Ruby Central (RubyGems), and the Rust Foundation (Crates).”
The idea is to give operators a neutral forum to discuss money, governance, and shared operational burdens openly. Once that’s dealt with, they’ll coordinate how to explain those realities back to companies and organizations that have long assumed registries are “free.” No, they’re not. They never were. As the Linux Foundation pointed out, “Registries today run primarily on two things: (1) infrastructure donations and credits; and (2) heroic efforts from small paid teams (themselves funded by donations and grants) and unpaid volunteers that operate and maintain registry services. The bulk of donations and grants comes from a small set of donors and doesn’t scale with demands on the registry.”

The working group is explicitly positioned as a venue where registry leaders and ecosystem stakeholders can align on “practical, community-minded” ways to sustain that infrastructure, rather than each operator improvising its own survival plan in isolation.
ZDNet says the group will also coordinate security practices and information, and craft frameworks “that make it politically and legally possible to introduce sustainable funding models without fracturing communities.” And they will also “align messaging and educational content so developers, companies, and policymakers finally understand what it costs to run these services.”

They oughta just torrent it.

By T34L • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It feels like it’d be in the best self interest of all the agentic “developers” to mirror all the open source sources and documentation in decentralized, peer to peer manner. It should be pretty trivial to get an identical “security” guarantee by just validating checksums of whatever you download with the authoritative hosts at fraction of cost to them, while potentially saving everyone a lot of bandwidth and time, as it’s pretty likely half the time the agents would just download the sources from the bazillion other agents fetching the same libraries from within the same datacenter.

With how bleak things look with Github, it feels like something decentralized to host FOSS will be needed sooner rather than later anyway, outside of the infinite needs of our infinite monkeys.

I had to shut down automated access

By dskoll • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I have a few open-source packages I wrote and maintain and I had to block downloads of one of them behind a form that required entering the answer to a question. CI systems from all over the world were just hammering my system.

I think this is the future: No more automated downloads. If you want automated access to packages, you’ll have to download them once by hand and make your own mirror.

I’ve also had to password-protect my forgejo instance to block AI bots. The password is given right on the welcome page, but so far bots are not smart enough to recognize and use it.

Re:I had to shut down automated access

By T34L • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Do you feel at least a little bit of an urge to make a honeypot version that no human would ever download on accident but which CIs would grab, that’d simply fail unpredictably, maybe with error messages that’d be extremely clear to a human but contain some safety guardrail breaking verbiage that’d take an LLM for a lengthy thinking token loop?

Re:I had to shut down automated access

By martin-boundary • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Not sure that makes sense in this context: “each operator improvising its own survival plan in isolation” is the essence of open source. Scratch your own itch. Do it without endless coordination and compromises with other people being required. Explain and share your solution. If others like it, they can use it. If not, they can improvise their own.