Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. AI-Generated George Carlin Drops Comedy Special
  2. Beaver Ponds May Exacerbate Warming In Arctic, Scientists Say
  3. eBay To Pay $3 Million Penalty For Employees Sending Live Cockroaches, Fetal Pig To Bloggers
  4. X Announces Peer-To-Peer Payment Service Will Launch In 2024
  5. SpaceX Sends First Text Messages Using Starlink Satellites
  6. Polestar CEO Promises To Keep Apple CarPlay and Android Auto Around
  7. Valve Takes Action Against Team Fortress 2, Portal Fan Projects After Years of Leniency
  8. Biggest Linux Kernel Release Ever Welcomes bcachefs File System, Jettisons Itanium
  9. FAA Investigating Whether Boeing 737 Max 9 Conformed To Approved Design
  10. Water Pump Used To Get $1 Billion Stuxnet Malware Into Iranian Nuclear Facility
  11. Hertz is Selling 20,000 Electric Vehicles To Buy Gasoline Cars Instead
  12. Discord is Laying Off 17 Percent of Employees
  13. Google Formally Endorses Right To Repair, Will Lobby To Pass Repair Laws
  14. A Geofence Warrant Typo Cast a Location Dragnet Spanning Two Miles Over San Francisco
  15. State-backed Hackers Are Exploiting New Ivanti VPN Zero-Days - But No Patches Yet

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

AI-Generated George Carlin Drops Comedy Special

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Michaela Zee reports via Variety:
More than 15 years after his death, stand-up comedian George Carlin has been brought back to life in an artificial intelligence-generated special called “George Carlin: I’m Glad I’m Dead.” The hour-long special, which dropped on Tuesday, comes from Dudesy, a comedy AI that hosts a podcast and YouTube show with “Mad TV” alum Will Sasso and podcaster Chad Kultgen.

“I just want to let you know very clearly that what you’re about to hear is not George Carlin. It’s my impersonation of George Carlin that I developed in the exact same way a human impressionist would,” Dudesy said at the beginning of the special. “I listened to all of George Carlin’s material and did my best to imitate his voice, cadence and attitude as well as the subject matter I think would have interested him today. So think of it like Andy Kaufman impersonating Elvis or like Will Ferrell impersonating George W. Bush.”

In the stand-up special, the AI-generated impression of Carlin, who died in 2008 of heart failure, tackled prevalent topics like mass shootings, the American class system, streaming services, social media and AI itself. “There’s one line of work that is most threatened by AI — one job that is most likely to be completely erased because of artificial intelligence: stand-up comedy,” AI-generated Carlin said. “I know what all the stand-up comics across the globe are saying right now: “I’m an artist and my art form is too creative, too nuanced, too subtle to be replicated by a machine. No computer program can tell a fart joke as good as me.’"
Kelly Carlin, the late stand-up comedian’s daughter, posted a statement in response to the special: “My dad spent a lifetime perfecting his craft from his very human life, brain and imagination. No machine will ever replace his genius. These AI generated products are clever attempts at trying to recreate a mind that will never exist again. Let’s let the artist’s work speak for itself. Humans are so afraid of the void that we can’t let what has fallen into it stay there.

Here’s an idea, how about we give some actual living human comedians a listen to? But if you want to listen to the genuine George Carlin, he has 14 specials that you can find anywhere.”

Beaver Ponds May Exacerbate Warming In Arctic, Scientists Say

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
The stream through western Alaska never looked like this before. In aerial photography from the 1980s, it wove cleanly through the tundra, thin as thread. Today, in satellite images, it appears as a string of black patches: one large pond after another, dozens of meters apart. It’s a transformation that is happening across the Arctic, the result of landscape engineering on an impressive scale. But this is no human endeavor to reshape the world. It is the work of the North American beaver, and there is no sign of it stopping. Were the waddling rodents making minor inroads, researchers may never have noticed. But the animals are pouring in, pushing north into new territories. The total number of animals is far from clear, but the ponds they create are hard to miss: in the Arctic tundra of Alaska alone, the number of beaver ponds on streams have doubled to at least 12,000 in the past 20 years. More lodges are dotted along lakes and river banks.

The preponderance of beavers, which can weigh as much as 45kg, follows a collapse in trapping and the warming of a landscape that once proved too bleak for occupation. Global heating has driven the shrubification of the Arctic tundra; the harsh winter is shorter, and there is more free-running water in the coldest months. Instead of felling trees for their dams, the beavers construct them from surrounding shrubs, creating deep ponds in which to build their lodges. The new arrivals cause plenty of disruption. For some communities, the rivers and streams are the roads of the landscape, and the dams make effective roadblocks. As the structures multiply, more land is flooded and there can be less fresh water for drinking downstream. But there are other, less visible effects too. The animals are participants in a feedback loop: climate change opens the landscape to beavers, whose ponds drive further warming, which attracts even more paddle-tailed comrades. Physics suggested this would happen. Beaver ponds are new bodies of water that cover bare permafrost. Because the water is warm — relatively speaking — it thaws the hard ground, which duly releases methane, one of the most potent greenhouse gases.

Scientists now have evidence this is happening. Armed with high-resolution satellite imagery, Tape and his colleagues located beaver ponds in the lower Noatak River basin area of north-western Alaska. They then analyzed infrared images captured by Nasa planes flying over the region. Overlaying the two revealed a clear link between beaver ponds and methane hotspots that extended for tens of meters around the ponds. “The transformation of these streams is a positive feedback that is accelerating the effects of climate change, and that is what’s concerning,” says Tape. “They are accelerating it at every one of these points.” Because the Nasa images give only a snapshot in time, the researchers will head out next year to measure methane on the ground. With more measurements, they hope to understand how the emissions vary with the age of beaver ponds: do ponds release a steady flow of methane, or does the release wane after a decade or two?
“What’s happening here is happening on a huge scale,” says Ken Tape, an ecologist at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, who is tracking the influx of beavers into the sparse northern landscape. “Our modeling work, which is in progress right now, shows that this entire area, the north slope of Alaska, will be colonized by beavers by 2100.”

Re:Now the deniers have something to blame!

By Kernel Kurtz • Score: 4, Funny Thread
At the very least the Beavers should send a representative to next years CoP.

Here Come the Boas

By OYAHHH • Score: 3 Thread

It cannot be but just a short matter of time before the exploding boa population in FL extends to the tundra of Alaska. Thus, correcting this insidious imbalance and returning the world to perfect harmony.

And remember…

By Temkin • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

Beavers ponds are entirely non-anthropogenic… They own this via natural evolution & adaptation. Who are we as Hominids to judge their right to impact climate in this way?

Mild

By eneville • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This is relatively mild compared to what industrial farming does. Maybe beavers have some impact but it’s low.

Species makes huge effect on the environment!

By troon • Score: 3 Thread

So up to 12,000 beavers have made a small change to a stream, and that’s exacerbating climate change?

The 8 billion large primates (mostly) further south have nothing to do with it?

eBay To Pay $3 Million Penalty For Employees Sending Live Cockroaches, Fetal Pig To Bloggers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
E-commerce giant eBay agreed to pay a $3 million penalty for the harassment and stalking of a Massachusetts couple by several of its employees. “The couple, Ina and David Steiner, had been subjected to threats and bizarre deliveries, including live spiders, cockroaches, a funeral wreath and a bloody pig mask in August 2019,” reports CBS News. From the report:
Thursday’s fine comes after several eBay employees ran a harassment and intimidation campaign against the Steiners, who publish a news website focusing on players in the e-commerce industry. “eBay engaged in absolutely horrific, criminal conduct. The company’s employees and contractors involved in this campaign put the victims through pure hell, in a petrifying campaign aimed at silencing their reporting and protecting the eBay brand,” Levy said. “We left no stone unturned in our mission to hold accountable every individual who turned the victims’ world upside-down through a never-ending nightmare of menacing and criminal acts.”

The Justice Department criminally charged eBay with two counts of stalking through interstate travel, two counts of stalking through electronic communications services, one count of witness tampering and one count of obstruction of justice. The company agreed to pay $3 million as part of a deferred prosecution agreement. Under the agreement, eBay will be required to retain an independent corporate compliance monitor for three years, officials said, to “ensure that eBay’s senior leadership sets a tone that makes compliance with the law paramount, implements safeguards to prevent future criminal activity, and makes clear to every eBay employee that the idea of terrorizing innocent people and obstructing investigations will not be tolerated,” Levy said.

Former U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling said the plan to target the Steiners, which he described as a “campaign of terror,” was hatched in April 2019 at eBay. Devin Wenig, eBay’s CEO at the time, shared a link to a post Ina Steiner had written about his annual pay. The company’s chief communications officer, Steve Wymer, responded: “We are going to crush this lady.” About a month later, Wenig texted: “Take her down.” Prosecutors said Wymer later texted eBay security director Jim Baugh. “I want to see ashes. As long as it takes. Whatever it takes,” Wymer wrote. Investigators said Baugh set up a meeting with security staff and dispatched a team to Boston, about 20 miles from where the Steiners live. “Senior executives at eBay were frustrated with the newsletter’s tone and content, and with the comments posted beneath the newsletter’s articles,” the Department of Justice wrote in its Thursday announcement.
Two former eBay security executives were sentenced to prison over the incident.

3 Million

By RegistrationIsDumb83 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So that’s what, 15 minutes of revenue on eBay? These penalties need to be based on the size of the business so they’re actually a deterrent. Especially given the original scheme was to silence criticism of eBay, it’d be easy for them to just look at it as a cost of doing business.

Re:People need to go to jail for this.

By Firethorn • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Two former eBay security executives were sentenced to prison over the incident.

Short of the CEO, “executives” aren’t “underlings”.

I’m surprised anybody got prison time, so this is a positive.

$57 Million exit package!

By blahbooboo • Score: 3 Thread
eBay CEO Wenig given $57 million in his eBay exit package. Sounds like justice was not done…

Re:3 Million

By Col. Klink (retired) • Score: 4, Funny Thread

"…makes clear to every eBay employee that the idea of terrorizing innocent people and obstructing investigations will not be tolerated.”

I want the contract to build their corporate training module on “not terrorizing innocent people”.

“The Daily Express” wrote an article criticizing your unethical business practices. Choose all of the appropriate responses:

___ Send them live spiders
___ Send them cockroaches
___ Send them a letter stating your point of view
___ Send them a funeral wreath stating your point of view
___ Investigate the claims and take internal action to address them
___ Send them a bloody pig mask

Re:3 Million

By Impy the Impiuos Imp • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Let’s read tfa. Two guys are already sitting in jail over it. And a company is a lot more than a handful of asses.

X Announces Peer-To-Peer Payment Service Will Launch In 2024

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
SonicSpike shares a report from Forbes:
X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, announced it would begin rolling out a peer-to-peer payment service similar to Venmo or PayPal this year — a feature the social media site’s billionaire owner Elon Musk has long pushed as part of his plan to develop an “everything app.” X officially announced the new feature in a blog post, touting the new service designed to enhance “user utility and new opportunities for commerce.” The company did not give a timeframe on when the new service would be available, but Musk previously told Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood it could launch as early as “mid-2024.”

According to the company, the new payment service will “showcas[e] the power of living more of your life in one place,” as owner Elon Musk continues to promote X as a future “everything app” capable of handling social media, video and other original content on the same site. X Payments has registered to do business in at least 32 states, according to public records, and has acquired a money transmitter license needed to process payments in 10, TechCrunch reported in December.

Not falling for it

By Powercntrl • Score: 3 Thread

I’m not giving a social media company (especially ones run by anyone named Musk or Zuck) access to my bank account. Considering how their primary business is run, it’d be like if the city’s sanitation department started selling sandwiches at the local landfill. Yum. /s

Besides, Musk had his chance with X back in the day. He needs to spend less time chasing missed opportunities and more on worrying about his existing businesses. As it is, it certainly seems like he’s got his fingers in too many pies.

“The everything app”??

By Sebby • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

a feature the social media site’s billionaire owner Elon Musk has long pushed as part of his plan to develop an “everything app.”

More like “the nobody-uses-it-anymore app”.

So⦠not using BTC

By Plugh • Score: 3 Thread
Nor DOGE. Noted.

Re:Suspended again!

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

No company could possibly be stupid enough to suspend *all* features for misbehaving on the social-media side of things.

It wouldn’t be the first time. Microsoft does it if you misbehave on Xbox Live. Getting your Apple ID suspended also locks you out of all things you had tied to it.

Not interested, but makes sense

By Chuck Chunder • Score: 3 Thread
You can push megabytes of data about and hope to make some money on advertising attached to it or you can push kilobytes of data representing about money and directly take a percentage of that money as it whizzes past.

Musk seems intent on turning Twitter into grifter-central, so perhaps won’t be for “everyone” but I imagine it will capture at least a niche.

SpaceX Sends First Text Messages Using Starlink Satellites

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Just six days after being launched atop a Falcon 9 rocket, one of SpaceX’s six Starlink satellites was used to send text messages for the first time. Space.com reports:
That update didn’t reveal what the first Starlink direct-to-cell text said. In a post on X on Wednesday, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said the message was “LFGMF2024,” but the chances are fairly high that he was joking. […] Beaming connectivity service from satellites directly to smartphones — which SpaceX is doing via a partnership with T-Mobile — is a difficult proposition, as SpaceX noted in Wednesday’s update.

“For example, in terrestrial networks cell towers are stationary, but in a satellite network they move at tens of thousands of miles per hour relative to users on Earth,” SpaceX wrote. “This requires seamless handoffs between satellites and accommodations for factors like Doppler shift and timing delays that challenge phone-to-space communications. Cell phones are also incredibly difficult to connect to satellites hundreds of kilometers away, given a mobile phone’s low antenna gain and transmit power.”

The direct-to-cell Starlink satellites overcome these challenges thanks to “innovative new custom silicon, phased-array antennas and advanced software algorithms,” SpaceX added. Overcoming tough challenges can lead to great rewards, and that’s the case here, according to SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell. “Satellite connectivity direct to cell phones will have a tremendous impact around the world, helping people communicate wherever and whenever they want or need to,” Shotwell said via X on Wednesday.

China Balloon

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 3 Thread

Some people were saying that the China balloon couldn’t actually do missile silo deployment inventories from 60K feet.

Your Tesla’s warranty is about to expire

By jfdavis668 • Score: 3 Thread
The need to make sure the can reach EVERYBODY about selling you an extended warranty.

From the article:

By Sitnalta • Score: 3 Thread

“Elon Musk said the message was “LFGMF2024,” but the chances are fairly high that he was joking.”

First time reporting on Elon Musk, I see.

Polestar CEO Promises To Keep Apple CarPlay and Android Auto Around

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
Polestar CEO Thomas Ingenlath couldn’t be happier with the integration of Google built-in, the branded product that embeds Google apps and services directly into the company’s EVs. But don’t expect the EV maker to drop Android Auto or Apple CarPlay as a result. On the sidelines of CES 2024, Ingenlath committed to sticking with Android Auto and Apple CarPlay, the middleware that allows drivers to project their smartphone onto the car’s infotainment display. He went a step further and questioned automakers that have. GM, for instance, decided not to make the new 2024 Chevy Blazer EV compatible with Android Auto or Apple CarPlay.

“It’s still too important for our customers to have the choice,” Ingenlath said during an interview at CES 2024. He later added that, in his view, removing the option isn’t the right way of treating customers. “Our priority is very clear; We have a really fantastic system together with Google,” he said. While Ingenlath admitted that adding that Google Built-in provides the best experience, he asked “why would we try to dogmatically educate our customers?” Polestar has been a champion of Google built-in. However, it’s willingness to keep Android Auto and Apple CarPlay is notable because it illustrates the complexity of appeasing customers even if it might overshadow the native technology in the vehicle.
“Ingenlath seems convinced that as Google built-in improves and continues to add apps and services, consumers will give up Android Auto or Apple CarPlay on there own,” adds TechCrunch. “And the updates do keep coming.”
“At CES 2024, for instance, Polestar announced that the Chrome browser would start rolling out to Polestar 2 in beta, allowing drivers to surf the internet via the central vehicle display while parked. Ingenlath hinted of more improvements in the future, including more precise navigation in Google Maps that drills down to the specific lane as well as customized features designed for Polestar customers.”

This is frustrating

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

Apple Car Play or Android Auto

What if I want an iPhone and an Auto or an Android phone and a Car?

What about a truck or SUV? They’re neither! (car or auto, I mean)

Re:No idea who “Polestar” is

By Powercntrl • Score: 4 Thread

But I’m surprised that car companies are ditching AA and Carplay.

Because EVs presently aren’t as profitable as ICE vehicles, so auto makers are looking for new sources of revenue. Once they’ve got you locked into their single infotainment platform, then they can sell you subscriptions for things you could already do for free on your phone.

Personally, I’ve owned vehicles without a dashboard that looks like it belongs on the bridge of the starship Enterprise for most of my adult life, and given the option I’d still prefer a vehicle with no infotainment display. But that design has essentially been outlawed for new vehicles ever since back-up cameras became mandatory equipment.

Re:all crap

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Apple Carplay and Android Auto basically just use the vehicle’s infotainment system as a display and input device; all the actual heavy lifting is done on your phone. In the same way as you could upgrade your PC but keep using the same monitor and mouse, it’s as obsolescence-proof as tech can reasonably get.

It’s still a big distracting screen in the middle of your dash (or in the case of some automakers, partially protruding into your view of the windshield) though, and yeah, some of us aren’t real big fans of that aspect.

Valve Takes Action Against Team Fortress 2, Portal Fan Projects After Years of Leniency

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Dustin Bailey reports via GamesRadar:
Valve has suddenly taken action against multiple fan games, stunning a fandom that had grown used to the company’s freewheeling stance on unofficial community projects. One of those projects was Team Fortress: Source 2, an effort to bring the beloved multiplayer game back to life in a more modern engine using the S&box project. The project had already run into development difficulties and had essentially been on hiatus since September 2023, but now Valve has issued a DMCA takedown against it, effectively serving as the “nail in the coffin” for the project, as the devs explain on X. […]

The other project is Portal 64, a demake of the 2009 puzzle game that ports it to run on an actual N64. Developer James Lambert had been working on the project for years, but it gained substantial notoriety this past December with the release of First Slice, a playable demo featuring the first 13 test chambers. It doesn’t appear that Valve issued a formal DMCA against Portal 64, but the end result is the same. In a Patreon post (which was eventually made public on X), Lambert said he had “been in communication with Valve about the future of the project. There is some news and it isn’t good. Because the project depends on Nintendo’s proprietary libraries, they have asked me to take the project down.”

I’m not fully clear on what “proprietary libraries” means here, but it seems likely that Portal 64 was developed using some variation of Nintendo’s official development tools for N64, which were never officially released to the public. Open-source alternatives to those tools do exist, but might not have been in use here. […] Given Valve’s historic acceptance of fan games, the moves have been pretty shocking to the community.

So much for TF3…

By JoeDuncan • Score: 3 Thread
… now that Valve’s totally jumped the shark :(

“How dare you port this game to a dead system…”

By Moryath • Score: 3 Thread
This is why copyright needs reforming. By the time most software reaches public domain, every possible system it was written for will be dead.

Not looking into details much

By Cley Faye • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The TF:Source project was ripping assets without permissions outside of their original game and engine, causing a DMCA. Since Valve is usually ok with modding, and they also have occasionally given permission to use their ressources, you can’t pin that one on them. More like people just started ripping stuff out with no care at all and are now acting like the victims.
The Portal64 project did not get a DMCA as far as anything I’ve read about it so far goes, but it was the result of the (almost certain) trouble that would come with using Nintendo proprietary code without permission too (granted, getting permission from Nintendo is probably quite hard at this point).
I’ll agree that the current IP system, especially regarding old, unmaintained games and content, is troublesome. But as it is right now, I find it hard to infer “Valve will DMCA everything under the sun” from these cases.

Biggest Linux Kernel Release Ever Welcomes bcachefs File System, Jettisons Itanium

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Linux kernel 6.7 has been released, including support for the new next-gen copy-on-write (COW) bcachefs file system. The Register reports:
Linus Torvalds announced the release on Sunday, noting that it is “one of the largest kernel releases we’ve ever had.” Among the bigger and more visible changes are a whole new file system, along with fresh functionality for several existing ones; improved graphics support for several vendors’ hardware; and the removal of an entire CPU architecture. […] The single biggest feature of 6.7 is the new bcachefs file system, which we examined in March 2022. As this is the first release of Linux to include the new file system, it definitely would be premature to trust any important data to it yet, but this is a welcome change. The executive summary is that bcachefs is a next-generation file system that, like Btrfs and ZFS, provides COW functionality. COW enables the almost instant creation of “snapshots” of all or part of a drive or volume, which enables the OS to make disk operations transactional: In other words, to provide an “undo” function for complex sets of disk write operations.

Having a COW file system on Linux isn’t new. The existing next-gen file system in the kernel, Btrfs, also supports COW snapshots. The version in 6.7 sees several refinements. It inherits a feature implemented for Steam OS: Two Btrfs file systems with the same ID can be mounted simultaneously, for failover scenarios. It also has improved quota support and a new raid_stripe_tree that improves handling of arrays of dissimilar drives. Btrfs remains somewhat controversial. Red Hat banished it from RHEL years ago (although Oracle Linux still offers it) but SUSE’s distros depend heavily upon it. It will be interesting to see how quickly SUSE’s Snapper tool gains support for bcachefs: This new COW contender may reveal unquestioned assumptions built into the code. Since Snapper is also used in several non-SUSE distros, including Spiral Linux, Garuda, and siduction, they’re tied to Btrfs as well.

The other widely used FOSS next-gen file system, OpenZFS, also supports COW, but licensing conflicts prevent ZFS being fully integrated into the Linux kernel. So although multiple distros (such as NixOS, Proxmox, TrueNAS Scale, Ubuntu, and Void Linux) support ZFS, it must remain separate and distinct. This results in limitations, such as the ZFS Advanced Read Cache being separate from Linux’s page cache. Bcachefs is all-GPL and doesn’t suffer from such limitations. It aims to supply the important features of ZFS, such as integrated volume management, while being as fast as ext4 or XFS, and also surpass Btrfs in both performance and, crucially, reliability.
A full list of changes in this release can be viewed via KernelNewbies.

Re:Jettisons Itanium?

By test321 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Summarizing lwn https://lwn.net/Articles/95046… According to the maintainer of the EFI subsystem: it is nearly impossible to test boot sequence on Itanium because of no availability of physical machines or availability is only remote (which is a problem for failed boot sequences), and he wrote “while I know of at least 2 people (on cc) that test stuff on itanium, and package software for it, I don’t think there are any actual users remaining”. The maintainer of glibc was also in favour of dropping support for Itanium. A group of hobbyists was interested in maintaining but kernel+glibc would be quite a lot of work.

Re:Jettisons Itanium?

By Gavino • Score: 5, Informative Thread
PowerPC and MIPS aren’t actually dead architectures. MIPS still gets used in the embedded space, and POWER is still evolving and coming out with new stuff. Itanium’s only maker was Intel, and they buried it years ago. It’s dead, Jim. As for support - any architecture that uses Itanium is old and doesn’t need the latest kernel. There are LTS kernels that will be supported beyond 2025 that will still have Itanium, and HP can always maintain one of those branches with backports if they are contractually obliged to. Nothing to see here, move along.

Re:Frustrating

By suutar • Score: 5, Informative Thread

That may also come back to the licensing issues, especially if it came from Oracle ZFS.

Re:Frustrating

By Tailhook • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Watching the journey of, first, btrfs, and now bcachefs, has been extremely frustrating

File systems are not a priority for the tech companies that fund Linux developers. There are relatively few people actually dealing with Linux file system work today, whereas there were significantly more in the past, despite the fact that most of the legacy file systems were comparatively simple. The most widely used file systems in Linux (ext4, xfs, etc.) are all basically in maintenance mode today.

Few people care about the kernel’s various obsolescent file systems because they rely on SAN devices that provide file and block service, cloud systems that provide file and block service, proprietary hardware to manage aggregated devices, clustered software defined storage (Ceph, et al.) and other solutions that all do effectively the same thing from the perspective of the Linux OS: segregate the responsibility for managing storage away the OS. When some sort of abstract block device is used by a Linux kernel the file system used to scribble a name space on it doesn’t really matter much.

What does that mean for bcachefs? Sadly it’s probably never going to get the amount of developer horsepower needed to really iron out the work well enough that someone could put into mission critical service. It’s very ambitious and a great achievement that it’s gotten as far as it has, but don’t kid yourself: bcachefs is going to need years of work by dedicated talent, and there isn’t anyone willing to write the checks to fund all that.

Re:Frustrating

By MightyMartian • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Oracle is the one creating the uncertainty of a potential hostile environment. Quit blaming the kernel team for yet another hostile corporation.

FAA Investigating Whether Boeing 737 Max 9 Conformed To Approved Design

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Federal Aviation Administration on Thursday said it had opened an investigation into whether Boeing failed to ensure that its 737 Max 9 plane was safe and manufactured to match the design approved by the agency. The New York Times (non-paywalled source):
The F.A.A. said the investigation stemmed from the loss of a fuselage panel of a Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines shortly after it took off on Friday from Portland, Ore., leaving a hole in the side of the passenger cabin. The plane returned to Portland for an emergency landing. “This incident should have never happened and it cannot happen again,” the agency said.

In a letter to Boeing dated Jan. 10, the F.A.A. said that after the Portland incident, it was notified of additional issues with other Boeing 737 Max 9 planes. The letter does not detail what other issues were reported to the agency. Alaska and United Airlines, which operate most of the Max 9s in use in the United States, said on Monday that they discovered loose hardware on the panel when conducting preliminary inspections on their planes. The new investigation is the latest setback for Boeing, which is one of just two suppliers of large planes for most airlines. The company has struggled to regain the public’s trust after two crashes, in Indonesia in 2018 and Ethiopia in 2019, involving the 737 Max 8 killed a total of 346 people.

Certification

By neilo_1701D • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It certainly puts into a different perspective Boeing’s request to avoid certifying one of their other models!

Re:Certification

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There’s not only the immediate issue of how this happened, but that it happened after the issues from a couple years ago. How does one potty train Boeing without starving it or keeping a regulatory foot shoved in its ass?

The potty training metaphor is an apt one. Except, this isn’t like potty training a baby/toddler that’s never grasped the concept before. This is like a full-grown adult becoming so drunk on their own stupidity that they can’t remember where the bathroom is. And in that case? Shove the regulatory foot DEEP in its ass and keep stomping until they comply.

More and more it seems like the regulatory bodies in America serve only the business sectors they are supposed to be regulating for the public good. The public good has been transferred into wealth aggregation. Anything that increases wealth among those that already have plenty is deemed a public good by most regulatory bodies. Concerns among the population are of no concern at all to the regulators.

Re:Vote with your dollars

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I would say we aren’t nationalizing Boeing enough. Airbus is 25% state owned, I don’t think Boeing is any % owned by the USG and I would say we should change that, it’s clearly working out for Airbus in that market. I think with such large, important companies the government should be able to exert a tempering influence on it. Boeing is too important a company to be reckless in the pursuit of higher margins.

If you are a company that is in fact too big to fail then as part of your culture you have a responsibility not just to your shareholders but the citizenry as a whole, in this case worldwide. Write it into their charter. You did it, you built a company that can never go bankrupt, that means profits is sorta secondary in a lot of places.

don’t let the manufacturers self cenrifce

By Joe_Dragon • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

don’t let the manufacturers have self certification.
As that just makes the TOP only care about the bonus they get from cutting costs.

FAA needs to step in

By Varenthos • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
FAA needs to pull something really drastic on Boeing for this fustercluck that they call the MAX fleet of planes. Ground them all and force them to go through FAA certification, then make any design corrections (at Boeing’s cost) to every existing MAX before it’s deemed airworthy again. Something that is really going to hurt them, but not quite bankrupt them.

The sort of issues we’re seeing from Boeing lately are absolutely unacceptable. They should’ve never happened. They should never be allowed to self-certify, because..... that’s the dumbest thing ever. Nothing good has ever happened from companies being able to police themselves. The PHBs and beancounters take over and force bad things that would’ve never been allowed otherwise, all in the name of profit. When it comes to air travel, safety absolutely must be priority-one, which will never happen when the PHBs and beancounters are calling the shots.

Water Pump Used To Get $1 Billion Stuxnet Malware Into Iranian Nuclear Facility

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from SecurityWeek.com:
A Dutch engineer recruited by the country’s intelligence services used a water pump to deploy the now-infamous Stuxnet malware in an Iranian nuclear facility, according to a two-year investigation conducted by Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant. Stuxnet, whose existence came to light in 2010, is widely believed to be the work of the United States and Israel, its goal being to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program by compromising industrial control systems (ICS) associated with nuclear centrifuges. The malware, which had worm capabilities, is said to have infected hundreds of thousands of devices and caused physical damage to hundreds of machines.

De Volkskrant’s investigation, which involved interviews with dozens of people, found that the AIVD, the general intelligence and security service of the Netherlands, the Dutch equivalent of the CIA, recruited Erik van Sabben, a then 36-year-old Dutch national working at a heavy transport company in Dubai. Van Sabben was allegedly recruited in 2005 — a couple of years before the Stuxnet malware was triggered — after American and Israeli intelligence agencies asked their Dutch counterpart for help. However, the Dutch agency reportedly did not inform its country’s government and it was not aware of the full extent of the operation. Van Sabben was described as perfect for the job as he had a technical background, he was doing business in Iran and was married to an Iranian woman.

It’s believed that the Stuxnet malware was planted on a water pump that the Dutch national installed in the nuclear complex in Natanz, which he had infiltrated. It’s unclear if Van Sabben knew exactly what he was doing, but his family said he appeared to have panicked at around the time of the Stuxnet attack. […] Michael Hayden, who at the time was the chief of the CIA, did agree to talk to De Volkskrant, but could not confirm whether Stuxnet was indeed delivered via water pumps due to it still being classified information. One interesting piece of information that has come to light in De Volkskrant’s investigation is that Hayden reportedly told one of the newspaper’s sources that it cost between $1 and $2 billion to develop Stuxnet.

Dead, two weeks after payload deployment

By kalpol • Score: 5, Informative Thread
“Van Sabben passed away in the United Arab Emirates two weeks after the Stuxnet attack as a result of a motorcycle accident. "

Stuxnet wasn’t even worth it

By systemd-anonymousd • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Stuxnet began to successfully interfere with the centrifuges, but Mossad was impatient and got greedy, and pushed an update that would make the sabotage happen more frequently. An engineer noticed the malware attempting to update by pure chance, and it led to the *massively expensive* operation being discovered and made worthless. They did manage to get a few nuclear engineers executed by the Iranian government, however, as they were suspected of the sabotage.

I really recommend Episode 7 of the Malicious Life podcast, which goes into great detail about Stuxet

What about his wife’s family?

By rapjr • Score: 4 Thread
Now that the participation of this engineer has been outed will there be repercussions for his wife’s family in Iran?

Stuxnet in a water pump?

By manu0601 • Score: 3 Thread

Article says

Ralph Langner, a researcher who conducted an in-depth analysis of Stuxnet after the malware’s existence came to light, noted that “a water pump cannot carry a copy of Stuxnet”.

Indeed, I wonder how it moved laterally from the water pump. Was it a connected water pump? What fool would grant network access to a water pump in a nuclear facility?

Hertz is Selling 20,000 Electric Vehicles To Buy Gasoline Cars Instead

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
quonset writes:
Hertz rental has announced it’s selling off one third of its 20,000 electric vehicle fleet and replacing them with gas powered vehicles. The reason? It’s costing them too much to repair damaged EVs and their depreciation is hurting the bottom line.

"[C]ollision and damage repairs on an EV can often run about twice that associated with a comparable combustion engine vehicle,” Hertz CEO Stephen Scherr said in a recent analyst call. And EV price declines in the new car market have pushed down the resale value of Hertz’s used EV rental cars.

Love EVs, hating renting them…

By rwrife • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I’m a Tesla owner and thought it would be nice to rent an EV in Phoenix earlier this year....it was total regret, they gave me the car with 20% battery and then I couldn’t find anywhere to charge the vehicle, whole week was a total nightmare.

Re:Let them use public transportation.

By cayenne8 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Yup, in most areas in the US, the bus system isn’t very convenient, nor is it on time nor does it go where YOU might want to go yourself.

You have to walk long distances to a stop, and then wait....ride, likely transfer a few times and then final stop and walk from there to destination.

This is bad enough where I live in that for a large part of the year, it is extremely hot and humid, and rainy....so you likely won’t look or smell great at your destination.

And that is all just going somewhere, talk about a PITA trying to do you weekly grocery shopping via bus!?!?

And for the most part, no one wants to sit on a bus next to a smelly bum.

Re:Let them use public transportation.

By ShanghaiBill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

My place of work, my kids’ school, and the grocery store are all closer to my house than the nearest bus stop.

Most people advocating public transit live in NYC or Europe and have no idea how poorly transit works in suburban sprawl.

Re:Let them use public transportation.

By CAIMLAS • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There’s nothing ignorant about it. You just have rose colored glasses and don’t understand the use case of a rental car.

People rent a car for using it, not letting it sit and charge.

If I’m on a business trip, I’m going to get fired if I spend half the trip sitting there waiting for an EV to charge.

If I’m on a personal trip, I’m also not going to want to wait anywhere near a charging station for it to charge.

For instance, the last couple vehicle rentals I’ve done were:

* Turo car share - a Ram Rebel for 5 people to travel from LA to Joshua Tree on a Friday and back on a Sunday, with gear. No EV was capable of this.
* From Denver to a location 5 hours away in the AM, and returning the same evening.
* From a remote location (in the winter) 10 hours to Lincoln, NE, then Omaha, NE in the same day, and returning the following day.
* From Omaha to Denver area mountains for the weekend. Car was never near an EV charger the entire time (except at the source of the trip, in Omaha).

These are the “good parts” of modern car ownership, and EVs are unable to capitalize on them. That’s why they suck for rentals: you’ve got to plan your entire trip (usually in a strange area to begin with) around vehicle maintenance.

EVs are really only suitable for commuter travel: from point A to point B, around town, returning to the same charging station every night, with less than 200 miles of travel per day. If Hertz is charging more for recharging than actual cost (which they probably were), it’s not even worthwhile for same-day car rentals.

Re:Let them use public transportation.

By Kernel Kurtz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Hertz is selling EVs because people are willing to (ignorantly IMHO) pay more for fuel than otherwise, or are afraid of charging.

By their very nature the large majority of people renting cars will not be charging them at home, so they are likely to be pretty much entirely reliant on public charging. The effectiveness of that varies greatly depending on location, which is problematic on it’s own, and that is before even considering the added issue that many of these people are completely unfamiliar with charging routines to begin with.

Without home charging EVs are nowhere near as easy to deal with as gas cars. Hertz is just discovering this.

Discord is Laying Off 17 Percent of Employees

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Discord is laying off 17 percent of its staff, a move that CEO Jason Citron said is meant to “sharpen our focus and improve the way we work together to bring more agility to our organization.” From a report:
The cuts were announced today to employees in an all-hands meeting and internal memo The Verge has obtained. They’ll impact 170 people across various departments.

Based on Citron’s message to employees and my understanding of the business, Discord isn’t in dire financial straits, though it has yet to become profitable and is still trying to revive user growth after a surge during the pandemic. In his memo to employees, which you can read in full below, Citron said Discord grew its headcount too fast over the last few years — an admission that has become quite common among tech CEOs as of late. “We grew quickly and expanded our workforce even faster, increasing by 5x since 2020,” Citron wrote. “As a result, we took on more projects and became less efficient in how we operated.”

They might consider less user hostility

By HBI • Score: 3, Informative Thread

I don’t want fake virtual “gifts” and bright pink begs for them that can’t be silenced. I don’t want animated emoji. I want reasonably priced chat, voice and video services. I’m willing to pay - i’ve been paying for it for years now. Why the value proposition keeps getting worse is the question I have. That and the excessive prices have caused me to reconsider upgrading/activating new Discord sites and seeking alternatives.

Way to take a dump on a gold mine. Greed. The very enshittification that Doctorow was talking about.

Re:Musk started a trend

By Luckyo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Is this a publicly traded company? No?

Then the valuation is literally an opinion and nothing more. We don’t know the actual value until it’s sold or taken public again, because what matters is not opinion of one of many owners, but what a potential buyer would be willing to pay.

After all, who would’ve believed that twitter is worth what Musk paid for it a day before the offer was made?

This whole “valuation by private entity, it’s totally the same thing as a price tag in a store” economic illiteracy is really endemic lately.

Re:Musk started a trend

By quonset • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It should be noted, despite the teeth gnashing at the time, twitter has been plugging along just fine despite all the doom and gloom predictions.

Banks have lost over $2 billion so far on the deal, and Twitter’s value has plunged 71%. Twitter has lost 50% of its ad revenue and is still cash flow negative. Anti-semitism is flourishing and that pedo guy is agreeing with it. Advertisers are fleeing the dumpster fire after he told them to go fuck themselves, and what does Musk do? Blames someone else. You’ll note the coward has not followed through on any of his supposed lawsuits because he knows he’ll lose. His so-called free speech is a joke when he bans accounts which make fun of him or document the failings of Twitter, while at the same time lets people promote child abuse.

But sure, everything’s fine.

Still waiting how they plan to make money anyway

By Opportunist • Score: 3 Thread

Let’s be serious here, I have taken a look at their app. As far as I can tell, there are no ads. As far as I can tell, there is no compelling reason to drop any money on any “server” you have with them unless you’re in some way into vanity features. Their target audience is a fairly young market that has little to no money but a considerable amount of time and tech knowledge, along startup companies that need a cheap way to form a “community”, who don’t have the money and talent to set something like this up on a cloud service, in other words, again not exactly the AAA studios.

Who the hell is supposed to finance that whole deal?

Google Formally Endorses Right To Repair, Will Lobby To Pass Repair Laws

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Google formally endorsed the concept of right to repair Thursday and is set to testify in favor of a strong right to repair bill in Oregon later Thursday, a massive step forward for the right to repair movement. 404 Media:
“Google believes that users should have more control over repair — including access to the same documentation, parts and tools that original equipment manufacturer (OEM) repair channels have — which is often referred to as ‘Right to Repair,’" Google’s Steven Nickel wrote in a white paper published Thursday.

Crucially, Google specifically says that regulators should ban “parts pairing,” which is a tactic used by Apple, John Deere, and other major manufacturers to artificially restrict which repair parts can be used with a given device: “Policies should constrain OEMs from imposing unfair anti-repair practices. For example, parts-pairing, the practice of using software barriers to obstruct consumers and independent repair shops from replacing components, or other restrictive impediments to repair should be discouraged,” the white paper says.

When ?

By weirdow • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Schematics, Datasheets, programming guides, spare parts…

In other words

By DarkOx • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Google did the math and determined this will cost Apple a lot more than it will cost them.

Ink, please

By MoxFulder • Score: 4 Thread

regulators should ban “parts pairing,” which is a tactic used by Apple, John Deere, and other major manufacturers to artificially restrict which repair parts can be used with a given device:

Cool, let’s make sure this includes Hewlett-Packard and its multiple decades of bricking and degrading printers that use “unauthorized ink”

Clasic MBA Playbook*

By williamyf • Score: 3 Thread

When you are starting, and doubly so if it is in a new market, you want as little legislation as possible, so that you can explore and make mistakes.

Once you grow and become big, and that n\new market matures, you want a lot of lesgislation to make it harder for new competitors (or disruptors) to appear**.

Try to imaggine a small and scrappy startup traying to compete in consumer electronics trying to stay abreast of the RtR laws of the 50 states, or, if there is a federal law, if the terms are too onerous (like having spare parts available for,say, 10 years). Big companies have lawyers, paralegals and assistants in the payroll that can handle such things, small scrappy bootstraped startups may not.

Also, it does help that Google’s “Phisical stuff making” % of earnings is significantly smaller than that of other companies making Physical stuff.

* I should know, I am an electronics engineer with an MBA.
** This type of things are called “a barrier of entry”

Be careful

By RitchCraft • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

When big companies suddenly support something they previously actively lobbied against there is usually a hidden reason that benefits, a loophole if you will, said company. Apple is a good example of this. Let’s not forget the New York bill that passed as well with a giant loophole that basically made it useless.

A Geofence Warrant Typo Cast a Location Dragnet Spanning Two Miles Over San Francisco

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Zack Whittaker, reporting for TechCrunch:
Civil liberties advocates have long argued that “geofence” search warrants are unconstitutional for their ability to ensnare entirely innocent people who were nearby at the time a crime was committed. But errors in the geofence warrant applications that go before a judge can violate the privacy of vastly more people — in one case almost two miles away.

Attorneys at the ACLU of Northern California found what they called an “alarming error” in a geofence warrant application that "resulted in a warrant stretching nearly two miles across San Francisco.” The error, likely caused by a typo, allowed the requesting law enforcement agency to capture information on anyone who entered the stretch of San Francisco erroneously marked on the search warrant.

“Many private homes were also captured in the massive sweep,” wrote Jake Snow, ACLU staff attorney, in a blog post about the findings. It’s not known which law enforcement agency requested the nearly two-mile-long geofence warrant, or for how long the warrant was in effect. The attorneys questioned how many other geofence warrant application mistakes had slipped through and resulted in the return of vastly more data in error.

We should just make it illegal to collect and stor

By saloomy • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Location data on users. Either by tech companies, or cell phone carriers. Real time info only. We should do this constitutionally, so it’s above reproach.

Logs for Thee…

By geekmux • Score: 3 Thread

…It’s not known which law enforcement agency requested the nearly two-mile-long geofence warrant…

Right, because the agency wearing literal body cams tasked with enforcing the law couldn’t possibly have audit log mandates, right?

…or for how long the warrant was in effect.

Yes. Tell me how you are (somehow) fully compliant with all data retention mandates while confirming once again you have zero capability to prove it.

Just a little oopsie

By WolfgangVL • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Don’t worry about it. Just a typo. Nothing fishy going on here, no sir-ee-

Length of time? Issuing agency? No idea. Read the warrant you say? This is official business citizen, time to move along. Stop filming. SIT DOWN! STAND UP! SIT DOWN STAND UP! STOP RESISTING.

State-backed Hackers Are Exploiting New Ivanti VPN Zero-Days - But No Patches Yet

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
U.S. software giant Ivanti has confirmed that hackers are exploiting two critical-rated vulnerabilities affecting its widely-used corporate VPN appliance, but said that patches won’t be available until the end of the month. From a report:
Ivanti said the two vulnerabilities — tracked as CVE-2023-46805 and CVE-2024-21887 — were found in its Ivanti Connect Secure software. Formerly known as Pulse Connect Secure, this is a remote access VPN solution that enables remote and mobile users to access corporate resources over the internet. Ivanti said it is aware of “less than 10 customers” impacted so far by the “zero day” vulnerabilities, described as such given Ivanti had zero time to fix the flaws before they were maliciously exploited.

Unacceptable

By mysidia • Score: 4, Informative Thread

it is aware of “less than 10 customers” impacted so far by t..

Sorry, the one main job of your security product is to secure remote access. The acceptable number of customers, define as anyone using your product, to be impacted by remote code execution from the Unsecure side into a network appliance whose purpose is to provide security is in fact 0, Zero..

People should never buy products from or by them again, ever, even if you do finally get those overdue patches out MUCH later than you should.

Ivanti is having a month!

By EvilSS • Score: 3 Thread
There was a truckload of CSVs for their desktop management suite now Pulse VPN is a problem… again. Wish I could say I was surprised. I did a lot of work with AppSense going back almost a decade before they were bought then bought again by what became Ivanti. Ivanti ruined that group and it went from a product I recommended regularly for Citrix/VDI deployments to one I actively recommend against.