Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Apple’s Early Days: Massive Oral History Shares Stories About Young Wozniak and Jobs
  2. Rivian and Lucid Win Right to Sell Their EVs Directly to Buyers in Washington State
  3. Will Social Media Change After YouTube and Meta’s Court Defeat?
  4. Is It Time For Open Source to Start Charging For Access?
  5. ‘Project Hail Mary’: Real Space Science, Real Astrophotography
  6. World’s Smallest QR Code - Smaller Than Bacteria - Could Store Data for Centuries
  7. This Friendly Robot Just Installed 100 MW of Solar Power
  8. Bluesky’s Newest Product: an AI Tool That Gives You Custom Feeds
  9. Amazon Gambles on $4B Push Into America’s Rural Areas, May Soon Carry More Parcels Than USPS
  10. Apple Now Requires Device-Level Age Verification in the UK. Could the US Be Next?
  11. Jupiter’s Lightning May Have the Force of Nuclear Weapons
  12. What Made Bell Labs So Successful?
  13. Disney Ends $1B OpenAI Investment After Sora’s Surprise Closure. What’s Next?
  14. Do Emergency Microsoft, Oracle Patches Point to Wider Issues?
  15. MacOS 26.4 Adds Warnings For ClickFix Attacks to Its Terminal App

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.

Apple’s Early Days: Massive Oral History Shares Stories About Young Wozniak and Jobs

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Apple’s 50th anniversary is this week — and Fast Company’s Harry McCracken just published an 11,000-word oral history with some fun stories from Apple’s earliest days and the long and winding road to its very first home computers:
Steve Wozniak, cofounder, Apple: I told my dad when I was in high school, “I’m going to own a computer someday.” My dad said, “It costs as much as a house.” And I sat there at the table — I remember right where we were sitting — and I said, “I’ll live in an apartment.” I was going to have a computer if it was ever possible. I didn’t need a house.
Woz even remembers trying to build a home computer early on with a teenaged Steve Jobs and Bill Fernandez from rejected parts procured from local electronics companies. Woz designed it — “not from anybody else’s design or from a manual. And Fernandez was one of those kids that could use a soldering iron.”
Bill Fernandez: The computer was very basic. It was working, and we were starting to talk about how we could hook a teletype up to it. Mrs. Wozniak called a reporter from the San Jose Mercury, and he came over with a photographer. We set up the computer on the floor of Steve Wozniak’s bedroom.

Well, the core integrated circuit that ran the power supply that I built was an old reject part. We turned on the computer, and the power supply smoked and burnt out the circuitry. So we didn’t get our photos in the paper with an article about the boy geniuses.
But within a few years Jobs and Wozniak both wound up with jobs at local tech companies. Atari cofounder Nolan Bushnell remembers that Steve Jobs “wasn’t a good engineer, but he was a great technician. He was pristine in his ability to solder, which was actually important in those days.” Meanwhile Allen Baum had shared Wozniak’s high school interest in computers, and later got Woz a job working at Hewlett-Packard — where employees were allowed to use stockroom parts for private projects. (“When he needed some parts, even if we didn’t have them, I could order them.”) Baum helped with the Apple I and II, and joined Apple a decade later.

Wozniak remembers being inspired to build that first Apple I by the local Homebrew Computing Club, people “talking about great things that would happen to society, that we would be able to communicate like we never did [before] and educate in new ways. And being a geek would be important and have value.” And once he’d built his first computer, “I wanted these people to help create the revolution. And so I passed out my designs with no copyright notices — public domain, open source, everything. A couple of other people in the club did build it.”

But Woz and Jobs had even tried pitching the computer as a Hewlett-Packard product, Woz remembers:
Steve Wozniak: I showed them what it would cost and how it would work and what it could do with my little demos. They had all the engineering people and the marketing people, and they turned me down. That was the first of five turndowns from Hewlett-Packard. Steve Jobs and I had to go into business on our own.
In the end, Randy Wigginton, Apple employee No. 6 remembers witnessing Jobs, Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne the signing of Apple’s founding contract, “which is pretty funny, because I was 15 at the time.” And it was Allen Baum’s father who gave Wozniak and Jobs the bridge loan to buy the parts they’d need for their first 500 computers.

After all the memories, the article concludes that “Trying to connect every dot between Apple, the tiny, dirt-poor 1970s startup, and Apple, the $3.7 trillion 21st-century global colossus, is impossible.”
But this much is clear: The company has always been at its best when its original quirky humanity and willingness to be an outlier shine through.

Mark Johnson, Apple employee No. 13: I was in Cupertino just yesterday. It’s totally different. They own Cupertino now.

Jonathan Rotenberg, who cofounded the Boston Computer Society in 1977 at age 13: People want to hate Apple, because it is big and powerful. But Apple has an underlying moral purpose that is immensely deep and expansive…

Mike Markkula, the early retiree from Intel whose guidance and money turned the garage startup into a company: The culture mattered. People were there for the right reasons — to build something transformative — not just to make money. That alignment produced extraordinary results…

Steve Wozniak: Everything you do in life should have some element of joy in it. Even your work should have an element of joy… When you’re about to die, you have certain memories. And for me, it’s not going to be Apple going public or Apple being huge and all that. It’s really going to be stories from the period when humble people spotted something that was interesting and followed it

I’ll be thinking of that when I die, along with a lot of pranks I played. The important things.

Early prototypes funded by HP policy

By evanh • Score: 3 Thread

I didn’t know about that before.

That’s always a big factor in early experimenting. Who pays for all the components and test equipment? Even when the labour is free, if you don’t have the R&D resources you’re forever dead in the water.

Rivian and Lucid Win Right to Sell Their EVs Directly to Buyers in Washington State

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Wall Street Journal reports that Rivian “just won a yearslong battle with car dealers in Washington state that threatens the model of how cars are sold.”
After fighting to sell its vehicles directly to buyers, Rivian threatened to take its case to voters with a ballot measure to permit direct sales. The dealers blinked. The state’s dealer lobby not only dropped its opposition to a sales loophole for Rivian and rival EV-maker Lucid, but also encouraged lawmakers to approve one. The measure became law this month…

New auto entrants like Rivian, and Tesla before it, have spent years contending with long-established U.S. state laws that require new cars to be sold through independent franchised dealers. The auto startups — typically makers of EVs — argue that they can offer a better experience by selling directly to consumers, much as Apple sells iPhones through its own stores and online. Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe has said the company is committed to direct-only sales because it’s more profitable and gives the company control over how its vehicles are sold, marketed and maintained. The Washington compromise riled traditional automakers, including General Motors, Ford and Toyota, which lobbied against it, arguing it unfairly advantages startups. A trade group representing the automakers called it discriminatory and argued the exception could one day open the door to Chinese EV makers…

German automaker Volkswagen is currently facing several lawsuits from dealers over its plan to sell new Scout vehicles directly to consumers. Dealers say independent franchises are vital to the car-buying process, creating competition between dealerships that keeps prices affordable for consumers, while providing valuable services such as repairs, warranty work and financing… Yet for Washington’s dealers, the prospect of putting franchise laws up for a popular vote laid bare a tough reality: given the choice, many car buyers want the freedom to avoid dealerships. Rivian’s polling, which the company shared with lawmakers, showed nearly 70% of respondents favored allowing direct sales when asked whether they would support manufacturers selling cars directly to consumers…

The fight comes at a critical time for Rivian, which is launching a new, more affordable SUV in a bid to make consistent profits amid a downturn in U.S. EV sales… Rivian is able to directly sell cars in roughly half of U.S. states, but a number of them limit how many locations the company can operate. They can’t disclose the price, though. For that, customers must go online.
The article notes that “Following the win, Rivian executives are eyeing other states that, like Washington, ban direct sales but also allow ballot initiatives: Arkansas, Ohio, Oklahoma, Montana, Nebraska and South Dakota…” It adds that lawmakers (from both parties) in the state of Washington had said “they have long felt pulled between giving consumers more car-buying freedom and protecting dealers, essentially small-business owners who are vital to local economies — and politically powerful.”

But an executive at the Washington State Auto Dealers Association said dealers supported this new law partly because it protects them by barring future automakers from selling directly in the state, and by requiring Rivian and Lucid to adhere to the same regulations that govern how dealers operate.

I live in Washington state

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I’m glad Rivian won, even though I’m unlikely to spend that kind of money on a car.

I’ve bought multiple cars over the past several decades. Buying cars from a dealership SUCKS. The only halfway-decent buying experience I’ve ever had was with CarMax.

No one wants to visit a dealership

By CommunityMember • Score: 5, Informative Thread

many car buyers want the freedom to avoid dealerships.

And this is a surprise? Car salespeople regularly rank as some of the most distrustful and dishonest people in America (depending on the poll, politicians rank higher than car salesmen for dishonesty and distrustful).

The old guard bribed these restrictions

By Tablizer • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

into place to protect their oligopoly. Some blame it on “socialism” when it’s really crony capitalism.

Another example of US archaism

By shilly • Score: 3 Thread

The US has fallen behind the rest of the developed world in so many aspects of life due to ossification of structures driven by regulatory capture and fragmentation. Dealerships have been nothing but pernicious for consumers for decades, keeping ICE sales higher than they’d otherwise be, keeping prices higher than they’d otherwise be, etc etc. The rest of the world looks on with incredulity that you find it so difficult to unfuck yourselves.

Sigh

By ledow • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Only in America could you legally argue that an unnecessary profit-making middle-man was legally required and that it would somehow “reduce costs”.

Will Social Media Change After YouTube and Meta’s Court Defeat?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Yes, this week YouTube and Meta were found negligent in a landmark case about social media addiction.

But “it’s still far from certain what this defeat will change,” argues The Verge‘s senior tech and policy editor, “and what the collateral damage could be.”
If these decisions survive appeal — which isn’t certain — the direct outcome would be multimillion-dollar penalties. Depending on the outcome of several more “bellwether” cases in Los Angeles, a much larger group settlement could be reached down the road… For many activists, the overall goal is to make clear that lawsuits will keep piling up if companies don’t change their business practices…

The best-case outcome of all this has been laid out by people like Julie Angwin, who wrote in The New York Times that companies should be pushed to change “toxic” features like infinite scrolling, beauty filters that encourage body dysmorphia, and algorithms that prioritize “shocking and crude” content. The worst-case scenario falls along the lines of a piece from Mike Masnick at Techdirt, who argued the rulings spell disaster for smaller social networks that could be sued for letting users post and see First Amendment-protected speech under a vague standard of harm. He noted that the New Mexico case hinged partly on arguing that Meta had harmed kids by providing end-to-end encryption in private messaging, creating an incentive to discontinue a feature that protects users’ privacy — and indeed, Meta discontinued end-to-end encryption on Instagram earlier this month.

Blake Reid, a professor at Colorado Law, is more circumspect. “It’s hard right now to forecast what’s going to happen,” Reid told The Verge in an interview. On Bluesky, he noted that companies will likely look for “cold, calculated” ways to avoid legal liability with the minimum possible disruption, not fundamentally rethink their business models. “There are obviously harms here and it’s pretty important that the tort system clocked those harms” in the recent cases, he told The Verge. “It’s just that what comes in the wake of them is less clear to me”.
The article also includes this prediction from legal blogger/Section 230 export Eric Goldman. “There will be even stronger pushes to restrict or ban children from social media.” Goldman argues “This hurts many subpopulations of minors, ranging from LGBTQ teens who will be isolated from communities that can help them navigate their identities to minors on the autism spectrum who can express themselves better online than they can in face-to-face conversations.”

Collateral damage?

By taustin • Score: 3 Thread

Will it cause collateral damage, or will it end (at least some of) it?

Does social media do anything but collateral damage?

Age verfication could mean one thing.

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
Attach a credit card and provide all user(s) data demanded then jump through the required hoops repeatedly as required to maintain access.

The trial lawyers and the corporations will work this all out, it just involves the proper financial transactions. After all, this is all for the children!

Walk away

By SumDog • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I don’t like people legislating to big daddy government to put companies in check. Facebook was funded by Peter Thiel and launched the day after DARPA shut down Digital LifeLog (pure coincidence. no connection. promise. move on.) They are meant to be tracking and manipulation platforms for the State.

If you don’t like it, stop using it! I haven’t shopped at Amazon since 2016. The trouble is the mass of people cannot turn away. I don’t blame them I guess. I only deleted all my big social media accounts (FB, Insta, Xitter) ~4 years ago.

I agree with the lawyer who argued this will hurt smaller websites. The UK has effectively destroyed any and all small independent forums. They’re trying to go after websites not even hosted or affiliated with the UK! It’s insane.

Stuff like this could destroy the future of the fediverse.

Six years ago I wrote a proposal for Section 230 reform that I think is relevant:

https://battlepenguin.com/poli…

Children shouldn’t be on social media

By peppepz • Score: 3 Thread

This hurts many subpopulations of minors, ranging from LGBTQ teens who will be isolated from communities that can help them navigate their identities to minors on the autism spectrum who can express themselves better online than they can in face-to-face conversations.

I call bulllshit on this. Children do not have the maturity that is required for unfiltered access to the adult world, let alone for using a service designed around exploiting human fragilities for commercial exploitation. Sensitive kids, if anything, have a much higher chance of getting hurt by either the addictive mechanism of the service itself or by weirdos they can encounter online than the chance of meeting some “community” that can help them better than their parents or a specialist could. They’ll have plenty of time for navigating after their brain has formed.

Is It Time For Open Source to Start Charging For Access?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“It’s time to charge for access,” argues a new opinion piece at The Register. Begging billion-dollar companies to fund open source projects just isn’t enough, writes long-time tech reporter Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols:
Screw fair. Screw asking for dimes. You can’t live off one-off charity donations… Depending on what people put in a tip jar is no way to fund anything of value… [A]ccording to a 2024 Tidelift maintainer report, 60 percent of open source maintainers are unpaid, and 60 percent have quit or considered quitting, largely due to burnout and lack of compensation. Oh, and of those getting paid, only 26 percent earn more than $1,000 a year for their work. They’d be better paid asking “Would you like fries with that?” at your local McDonald’s…

Some organizations do support maintainers, for example, there’s HeroDevs and its $20 million Open Source Sustainability Fund. Its mission is to pay maintainers of critical, often end-of-life open source components so they can keep shipping patches without burning out. Sentry’s Open Source Pledge/Fund has given hundreds of thousands of dollars per year directly to maintainers of the packages Sentry depends on. Sentry is one of the few vendors that systematically maps its dependency tree and then actually cuts checks to the people maintaining that stack, as opposed to just talking about “giving back.”

Sentry is on to something. We have the Linux Foundation to manage commercial open source projects, the Apache Foundation to oversee its various open source programs, the Open Source Initiative (OSI) to coordinate open source licenses, and many more for various specific projects. It’s time we had an organization with the mission of ensuring that the top programmers and maintainers of valuable open source projects get a cut of the tech billionaire pie.

We must realign how businesses work with open source so that payment is no longer an optional charitable gift but a cost of doing business. To do that, we need an organization to create a viable, supportable path from big business to individual programmer. It’s time for someone to step up and make this happen. Businesses, open source software, and maintainers will all be better off for it.
One possible future… Bruce Perens wrote the original Open Source definition in 1997, and now proposes a not-for-profit corporation developing “the Post Open Collection” of software, distributing its licensing fees to developers while providing services like user support, documentation, hardware-based authentication for developers, and even help with government compliance and lobbying.

Why now?

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This has literally been the case now for 40 years, and yet the open source movement is stronger than ever. So why now? Also charging for access? Stallman will rip your balls off.

How economic models work

By shanen • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

This has literally been the case now for 40 years, and yet the open source movement is stronger than ever. So why now? Also charging for access? Stallman will rip your balls off.

Citation needed.

My current citation is Microsoft Secrets by Cusumano and Selby. Kind of old, so maybe someone can say how much things have changed over the years, but the point is that they are too optimized about getting more money. And they dominate the real world.

OSS is “stronger than ever”? In which dimension? I can’t think of one. Even programmer satisfaction.

Me? I’m still hung up on the notion of a better structured charitable approach. Recovering costs, where the costs include appropriate payments for the programming work. The CSB (Charity Share Brokerage) will earn their way be providing project planning and management support. But I’m sure there will never be a CSB and it is too late to even try at this point. Very minor consolation that Microsoft also found project management difficult even back then…

If payment’s required to access open-source sw

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

… then that project is really can’t be described as open source anymore.

Time for a tax.

By pirodude • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Vaughan-Nichols is right about the problem and wrong about the solution. Voluntary pledge funds and tip jars have existed for a decade and the 60% unpaid figure hasn’t moved. Sentry is admirable precisely because it’s an exception, the model doesn’t scale because it depends on individual corporate virtue, which is in shorter supply than VC funding.

Perens’ Post Open licensing approach is interesting but creates a two-tier ecosystem: “free for individuals, pay for commercial use” sounds clean until you realize it breaks the fundamental property that made open source eat the world. The moment a license is commercial-use-restricted, it’s not open source, it’s source-available, and enterprises will treat it accordingly (avoid it, fork it before the license change, or just use the last MIT-licensed version forever).

What’s actually needed: mandatory contribution structured as a fee, not a license restriction. Here’s one way to do it. Small flat fee on all US commercial revenue above $5M (the entire world runs on OSS, everyone pays to maintain it), larger marginal fee on companies whose products directly incorporate OSS. Fees flow into a scoring-based royalty pool: your project’s share is proportional to how much commercial revenue depends on it, revenue-weighted so a hedge fund running its entire risk engine on a niche numerical library counts for more than fifty startups using the same package for weekend side projects. Maintainers register and claim their allocation like music royalties, no government agency decides who gets hired, just checks cut proportional to actual commercial stakes.

The core insight: you can’t solve a collective action problem with voluntary action. You solve it by making the externality visible in the price.

Good for basic income, no?

By blue trane • Score: 3 Thread

Unless this is really about fidelity to economics and not software, can you imagine the pure engineering productivity unleashed if engineers had a decent guaranteed inflation-proofed basic income and didn’t have to listen to bosses telling them to artificially restrict access and features due to advertiser pressure?

‘Project Hail Mary’: Real Space Science, Real Astrophotography

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Project Hail Mary has now grossed $300.8 million globally after earning another $54.1 million this weekend from 86 markets, reports Variety, noting that after just nine days it’s now Amazon MGM’s highest-grossing film ever.

And last weekend it had the best opening for a “non-franchise” movie in three years, adds the Associated Press — the best since 2023’s Oppenheimer:
Project Hail Mary, which cost nearly $200 million to produce… is on an enviable trajectory. Its second weekend hold was even better than that of Oppenheimer, which collected $46.7 million in its follow-up frame.
But the movie is based on a book by The Martian author Andy Weir, described by one news outlet as “a former software engineer and self-proclaimed ‘lifelong space nerd’… known for his realistic and clear-eyed approach to scientifically technical stories.”
Project Hail Mary has plenty of real science in it, whether it be space mathematics, physics, or astrobiology… The film’s namesake project is even comprised of the space programs of other nations, such as Roscosmos from Russia, the Chinese space program, and the European Space Agency…

The story relies on work NASA has done regarding exoplanets, or planets outside our solar system… [This includes a nearby star named Tau Ceti approximately 12 light years from Earth which is orbited by four planets — two once thought to be in "the habitable zone" where liquid water can exist.] Tau Ceti has long been the setting used by sci-fi authors and storytellers. Isaac Asimov used it for his Robot series. Arthur C. Clarke’s “Rama” spacecraft came across a mysterious tetrahedron in the Tau Ceti system. Authors Ursula K. Le Guin and Kim Stanley Robinson also set stories in Tau Ceti, and it also serves as the extrasolar setting of the 1968 Jane Fonda film Barbarella. Most recently, the Bungie video game Marathon is set in the far-off system, serving as part of the background story for the extraction shooter, about a large-scale plan to colonize the Tau Ceti system.
The movie also mentions 40 Eridani A, according to the article, a real star about 16 light-years away that was said to be orbited by the fictional planet Vulcan, home to Star Trek‘s Mr. Spock. It’s also mentioned in Frank Herbert’s Dune as the star system of the planets Ix and Richese (“noted for their machine culture and miniaturisation,” according to the Stellar Australis site’s “Project Dune” page).

And in a video on IMAX’s YouTube channel, the film’s directors explain how for a crucial scene they used non-visible-light photography, which is also an important part of modern astronomy. “Even the credits incorporate real astrophotography into the final moments,” the article points out, using the work of award-winning Australian astrophotographer Rod Prazeres. “The only difference between his work of capturing space data in images and what ended up on the big screen was that he gave them ‘starless versions’ of his photographs to make it easier to place credit text over them.”

Prazeres wrote on his web site that he was touched the producers “wanted the real thing… In a world where CGI and AI are everywhere, it meant a lot…”

Worth reading the book than seeing it

By JakFrost • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I ended up hearing about this movie coming out from the same author that did the Martian whose name is Andy Weir.

So I immediately got the book and read it and after that went to see the movie. I ended up reading his other book, the one that was in between about the girl at the space station and that was pretty enjoyable so.

This movie’s definitely enjoyable and we want to see it in a nice theater where we have dinner and drinks and it was definitely worth it. Since I read the book week in advance, it was a nice little visual representation of the book and it was very faithful to the book.

The author definitely captured the ability of doing hard science space stories and making them appealing in book form and also in visual movie form.p

Re: Has Anyone Here Seen It?

By Tomahawk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I did and really enjoyed it. Worth seeing in the cinema, imho.

Re: Has Anyone Here Seen It?

By rayzat • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I saw it and was very much entertained. It remained true to the book but can also stand on it’s own.

Re:AI Editor Slop

By EditorDavid • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Nice to see you commenting, Jak! (I haven’t seen the movie, so I’m glad someone did and weighed in on whether it’s worth seeing.)

I’ve updated that sentence so it describes 40 Eridani A as “mentioned in Frank Herbert’s Dune as the home of Ix and Richese (“noted for their machine culture and miniaturisation,” according to the Stellar Australis site’s “Project Dune” page). Hope that’s more informative for you than the original version (which was taken straight from the original article). No AI involved — and I wasn’t dictating it [on] a phone while walking in the market either. :)

Re:Has Anyone Here Seen It?

By dskoll • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yes, I saw it. I also read the book. I preferred the book, but I also enjoyed the movie a lot..

The movie was quite faithful to the book, and even though it was a long movie (over 2.5 hours) it didn’t seem long and it moved along quite nicely. The alien creature was pretty much exactly what I had pictured while I was reading the book, and they did a good job imbuing it with personality.

I think the movie was worth seeing in a movie theatre.

World’s Smallest QR Code - Smaller Than Bacteria - Could Store Data for Centuries

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Scientists have created a microscopic QR code so tiny it can only be seen with an electron microscope,” reports Science Daily. It’s “smaller than most bacteria and now officially a world record.”

“But this isn’t just about size; it’s about durability. By engraving data into ultra-stable ceramic materials, the team has opened the door to storing information that could last for centuries or even millennia without needing power or maintenance.”
Scientists at TU Wien, working with data storage company Cerabyte, produced a QR code measuring just 1.98 square micrometers… officially confirmed and recorded in the Guinness Book of Records…

Each pixel measures just 49 nanometers, which is about ten times smaller than the wavelength of visible light. As a result, the pattern is completely invisible under normal conditions and cannot be resolved using visible light. However, when viewed with an electron microscope, the QR code can be clearly and reliably read. The storage capacity is also impressive. More than 2 terabytes of data could fit within the area of a single A4 sheet of paper using this approach…

This work points toward a more sustainable future for data storage, where information can be preserved securely for the long term with minimal energy use.
“We live in the information age, yet we store our knowledge in media that are astonishingly short-lived,” says Alexander Kirnbaue (from the thin film materials science division at Vienna’s Tu Wein research university). “With ceramic storage media, we are pursuing a similar approach to that of ancient cultures, whose inscriptions we can still read today…”

“We now aim to use other materials, increase writing speeds, and develop scalable manufacturing processes so that ceramic data storage can be used not only in laboratories but also in industrial applications.”

accelerated aging test not yet completed

By optikos • Score: 3 Thread
Although it can be written for the here and now, accelerated aging (and more importantly actual aging) has not yet been performed to see whether this marking will fade or deteriorate. We know only that the white ceramic itself will last for that many centuries, not that the black marking will last that long or remain high enough contrast for that many centuries.

What about the future?

By InterGuru • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Who says that future generations will have electron microscopes or the ability to read QR codes. Lots of technology is lost when civilizations collapse. In the future we might not even realize that the ceramic chip contains any information.

I can get 10% off next purchase next century!

By bussdriver • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I hope the webserver is still working.

Re: accelerated aging test not yet completed

By SnotMelon • Score: 5, Informative Thread
It’s not a black material printed onto white ceramic, it just looks like that from the electron microscope image. They used ion beam etching to engraved the qr code into a flat ceramic surface. Assuming it’s not subject to weathering it should last a pretty long time given what’s know about ancient ceramics.

This Friendly Robot Just Installed 100 MW of Solar Power

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Utility-scale solar construction… by robots! It’s “one of the largest real-world demonstrations,” notes Electrek, with 100 MW of capacity installed by the “Maximo” robots from AES, one of the world’s top power companies.

Maximo uses AI “to automate the heavy lifting of solar panels and accelerate solar installation,” according to their web page, which shows a video of Maximo at work installing a vast field of solar panels in Kern County, California. With assistance from Nvidia, the Maximo team could “develop, test and refine robotic capabilities through physics-based simulation and AI driven modeling before deploying updates in the field,” reports Electrek, and they’re aiming for a full GW of solar generating capacity:
After completing the first half of the Bellefield complex last summer, Maximo engineers went into a higher gear, with the latest version 3.0 robots consistently surpassing an installation rate of one module per minute, with construction crews installing as many as 24 solar panel modules per hour, per person. If that sounds fast, that’s because it is. At full tilt, the latest Maximo robot-equipped crews have nearly doubled the output of traditional installation methods at similar solar locations throughout Southern California.

“Reaching 100 MW is an important milestone for Maximo and for the role robotics can play in solar construction,” explains Chris Shelton, president of Maximo. “It demonstrates that field robotics can move beyond experimentation and deliver consistent results at utility scale. As solar deployment continues to accelerate globally, technologies that improve installation speed, quality and reliability will become increasingly important....”

Like just about every other business that demands a high degree of physical labor, the construction industry is facing huge labor shortages, making machines like Maximo that provide real efficiency gains welcome additions to the job site.
“The combination of AI, vision, robotics and simulation driven engineering reduced development and validation timelines,” the Maximo team said in a statement, “and increased confidence in field performance as the robotic fleet scaled.”

It’s a shame

By Whooty McWhooface • Score: 3, Funny Thread
Their gonna fall just short of the 1.21 Gigawatts Doc Brown needs.

Electrek sucks ***. it’s mostly clickbait

By rta • Score: 3 Thread

I read the headline. Was excited.

a second later saw it was an “electrek.co” link and my heart sank.
Clicked through anyway… and sadly confirmed that it is a kernel of truth, but wrapped in misleading exaggeration. It’s propaganda and boosterism rather than a concise and informative take. And this happens basically for every /. story from them.

e.g. i look forward to this summer’s inevitable series about the records for how many hundreds of days California has run on 100% solar energy....
i forget exactly the phrasing, but it’s the same technically true, but it doesn’t mean what they claim it means thing every time.

basically it is not “p-hacking” it’s “importance hacking”:

Importance Hack - get a result that is actually not interesting, not important, and not valuable, but write about it in such a way that reviewers are convinced it is interesting, important, and/or valuable so that it gets published. In other words, Importance Hacking means taking a result that competent peer reviewers would not be likely to view as worthy of publication, and telling a story about those results that causes those reviewers to misperceive it as being worthy of publication. Unlike p-hacked results, importance hacked results do replicate. If you re-did the same study on a similar population, you would be very likely to get the same results as the original study. But the results don’t have the meaning or importance that they were claimed to have.

from https://www.clearerthinking.or…

i got this concept from the “Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg” podcast where it comes up every once in a while. He’s some math PhD dude who some years ago started running replication studies in Psychology. He’s some sort of mover in the Rationality space… i should look up his full bio because i’ve only inferred his path so far. In any case, the podcast is not about the replication stuff per se, just interviews with various people about data / thinking / psychology stuff.
  Often a good podcast https://podcast.clearerthinkin… i wish he was somewhat tougher on his guests, but still generally gets them to fair presentation of their views, for better or worse.

What about everything else?

By WaffleMonster • Score: 3 Thread

Screwing panels into place once you’ve poured all the concrete, installed ground mounts, run all the wiring and electrical boxes is like getting to the 10 yard line and only then breaking out the automation.

Re: Looks like a robotic arm on a rail

By WaffleMonster • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Solar panels on deserts are regreening them so they are cooling not heating.

Sand reflects about 70% of solar energy, solar panels reflect about 10% plus another 20% in harvested energy which still leaves you with twice the amount of absorbed energy vs sand.

Greening occurs due to reduced surface temperatures / evaporation due to panel shading.

Plunking down solar panels is 1% of the effort

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 3 Thread
This is complete bullshit. The 99% is clearing brush, leveling ground, removing rocks, staking down overlapping sections of vegetation barriers, making electrical connections, programming equipment, and cementing and caging cables and junction boxes so the copper doesn’t get stolen.

Bluesky’s Newest Product: an AI Tool That Gives You Custom Feeds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“What happens when you can describe the social experience you want and have it built for you…?” asks Bluesky? “We’ve just started experimenting, but we’re sharing it now because we want you to build alongside us.”

Called “Attie” — because it’s built with Bluesky’s decentralized publishing framework, AT Protocol (which is open source) — the new assistant turns natural language prompts into social feeds, without users having to know how to code. (It’s part of Bluesky’s mission to “develop and drive large-scale adoption of technologies for open and decentralized public conversation.”)

Engadget reports:
On the Attie website, examples include prompts like, “Show me electronic music and experimental sound from people in my network” or “Builders working on agent infrastructure and open protocol design.”

“It feels more like having a conversation than configuring software,” [writes Bluesky’s former CEO/current chief innovation officer, Jay Graber, in a blog post]. “You describe the sort of posts you want to see, and the coding agent builds the feed you described.”

Graber added that Attie is a separate app from Bluesky and users don’t have to use the new AI assistant if they don’t want to. However, since Attie and Bluesky were built on the same framework, it could mean there will be some cross-app implementation between the two or any other app built on the AT Protocol.
“Attie is open for beta signups today, and we’ll be sharing what we learn along the way,” Graber writes in the blog post. “To learn more about Attie, visit: Attie.AI. Come help us find out what this can be.”

The blog post warns that “Right now, AI is undermining human agency at the same time it’s enhancing it,” since “The proliferation of low-quality AI-generated content is making public social networks noisier and less trustworthy…” And in a world where “signal is getting harder to find… The major platforms aren’t trying to fix this problem.”
They’re using AI to increase the time users spend on-platform, to harvest training data, and to shape what users see and believe through systems they can’t inspect and didn’t choose. We think AI should serve people, not platforms…

An open protocol puts this power directly in users’ hands. You can use it to build your own feeds, create software that works the way you want it to, and find signal in the noise. We built the AT Protocol so anyone could build any app they imagine on top of it, but until recently “anyone” really meant “anyone who can code.” Agentic coding tools change that. For the first time, an open protocol can be genuinely open to everyone…

The Atmosphere [Bluesky’s interoperable ecosystem] is an open data layer with a clearly defined schema for applications, which makes it uniquely well-suited for coding agents to build on… Bluesky will continue to evolve as a social app millions of people rely on. Attie will be where we experiment with agentic social.

AI is an accelerant on whatever it’s applied to. I want it to accelerate decentralizing social and putting power back in users’ hands. But I don’t think the most interesting things built on AT Protocol will come from us. They’re going to come from everyone who picks up these tools and starts building.

Third Party Tooling

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The previous custom feed first party custom feed generator was a pain, but there’s already third party tools that are already pretty easy to use without needing the AI buzzword. Skyfeed and Bluesky Feed Creator are pretty nice.

Unnecessary

By jrnvk • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

Bluesky is already a monolith of a certain viewpoint, these tools cannot possibly change that experience any.

Re:Hmm…

By Himmy32 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

RSS feeds never went away, here’s even the link to the Slashdot RSS feed. There’s some RSS feed aggregators, but just like you pointed out with Slashdot the RSS sources aren’t some sort of neutral panacea. Because no matter who is producing information will have a bias.

Bluesky is oddly better than most in that regard because the open protocol with the feed and filter system allows to pick feeds or create your own in order to have control over your own experience. And with that power comes the same power as other social media to live in the echo chamber of your choice. But in addition to that, there’s also the ability to filter out the political echo chambers and just get a feed on a fandom, hobby, or obscure topic. Won’t even have a CEO forcing their politics into your feed.

Re:Custom feeds of garbage

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Oddly enough, the feed and filter system being discussed also allows for an equally echo-y right wing experience, if you desire that. Their may be less right wing voices but they aren’t absent and could be filtered for.

Re:Custom feeds of garbage

By Himmy32 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

The moderation is also customizable. There’s also community moderation and you could subscribe to your own moderation service.

As for the default moderation service which does skew left, the default setting on the “Intolerance” moderation category is “Warn”. So even when moderated, those views aren’t blocked and you can turn the settings on that category.

So again with a very few minor tweaks, you could use the service in the way you desire. Unless that conduct is rising to the level to that violates the Anti-Harassment Community Guideline.

Amazon Gambles on $4B Push Into America’s Rural Areas, May Soon Carry More Parcels Than USPS

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
In many rural areas, America’s online shoppers can wait half a week or more for deliveries. But Amazon started a $4 billion “rural delivery push” last year, reports Bloomberg, and has now cut delivery times to under 24 hours for 1 in 5 rural and small-town households, with 48-hour delivery to 62% of rural households.
The payoff could be huge. Rural shoppers in the US collectively spend $1 trillion a year on clothing, electronics, household goods and other items, representing about 20% of retail purchases excluding cars and gasoline, according to Morgan Stanley. Amazon aims to recondition those shoppers to expect quick delivery, which would play to its strengths and make the company top-of-mind for online purchases… “Rural America is often overlooked,” said Sky Canaves, an analyst at EMarketer Inc. who tracks online sales. “This is the opportunity Amazon is trying to seize because e-commerce growth is getting harder to come by....”

Amazon’s rural push will require a lot more rural business owners willing to make deliveries… Today, Amazon delivers more parcels overall than UPS and FedEx, which are both shedding workers and shrinking their delivery networks, including in rural areas. By picking up the slack, Amazon is expected to become the largest parcel carrier in the US — surpassing the postal service — in 2028, according to the shipping software company Pitney Bowes. Amazon currently delivers two of three orders itself. For rural shoppers, the most visible change will be fewer brown UPS trucks, fewer packages delivered by mail carriers and more small business owners pulling up in their minivans.
Amazon’s relationship with America’s postal service “has become rocky following a dispute over contract terms,” notes the Wall Street Journal. But they also share an interesting calculation by Marc Wulfraat, president of MWPVL International, a supply-chain consultancy monitoring the e-commerce company’s logistics network. . At Amazon’s current pace of constructing 40 to 50 new delivery hubs each year, he estimates Amazon will be able to ship packages to every single U.S. ZIP Code within four years.

Re:It pays off

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yep. Hamstring the USPS so your rich buddies can privatize it.

Re:Can Amazon find DSPs in the most rural of rural

By PPH • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

First, as someone else stated, a DSP is generally a business. Not an individual. That said, I do know some people who have incorporated themselves just to get around the whole “We deal with businesses, not individuals” rules.

But then, it comes down to what contract terms Amazon offers DSPs. Certainly, nobody in their right mind* is going to partner with Amazon for a price that won’t cover their expenses. Rural areas with high fuel costs per delivery will bid more for their service. Or not sign up. Amazon, if they are not dumb as rocks, will add this variable cost to the bottom line of each purchase. After all, they are not the USPS with universal service written into law.

*Uber/Lyft will make a liar out of me. There are people living on the edge of poverty for the opportunity to buy a car, insurance, fuel and maintenance just to chauffeur some zoomers around.

Re:It pays off

By quonset • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Delivery vehicles are small.

They were in the process of being replaced with larger vehicles, most of which would be electric. The postal carriers who got to the drive the new ones raved about how comfortable they were, how large they were, and importantly, had air conditioning. I said were because his Orangeness wanted all the vehicles removed even if meant paying a $1.5 billion penalty to clear everything out.

Fortunately, Republicans tripped themselves up because the bill they put this provision into needed a 60 vote majority, not a simple majority. Needless to say, no more of these vehicles will be purchased.

Apple Now Requires Device-Level Age Verification in the UK. Could the US Be Next?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Apple unveiled new device-level age restrictions in the UK on Wednesday. “After downloading a new update, users will now have to confirm that they are 18 or older to access unrestricted features,” reports Gizmodo.

“Users will be able to confirm their age with a credit card or by scanning an ID.”
For those underage or who have not confirmed their age, Apple will turn on Web Content Filter and Communication Safety, which will not only restrict access to certain apps or websites, but will also monitor messages, shared photo albums, AirDrop, and FaceTime calls for nudity. Apple didn’t specify exactly which services and features are banned for under-18 users, but it will likely be in compliance with UK legislation…

The British government does not require Apple and other OS providers to institute device-level age checks, but it does restrict minor access to online pornography under the Online Safety Act, which passed in 2023. So far, that restriction has only been implemented at the website level, but UK officials have been worried about easy loopholes to evade the age restrictions, like VPNs.

The broader tech industry has been campaigning for some time to use device-level age checks instead in response to the rising tide of under-16 social media and internet bans around the world. Last month, in a landmark social media trial in California, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg also supported this idea, saying that conducting age verification “at the level of the phone is just a lot clearer than having every single app out there have to do this separately.” Pornhub-operator Aylo had advocated for device-level restrictions in the UK as well, and even sent out letters to Apple, Google, and Microsoft in November asking for OS-level age verification…

The most obvious question: Could this be brought stateside?

Will, not could, come to the USA

By dskoll • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

A large number of states, including California, Colorado, Illinois and New York, have already passed or are passing stupid device age-attestation laws like this one. These laws purport to apply to just about any OS on any general-purpose computing device, if the device is capable of downloading software. If the laws are not fought, it means open-source is in trouble and mass surveillance will become the norm.

ownership

By tiananmen tank man • Score: 3 Thread

you only have a license to use your iPhone, when you clicked agree.

Laws.

By msauve • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
Instead of laws, how about parents take responsibility for parenting?

The most obvious question

By MpVpRb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Does it work?
Kids are smart and really good at finding workarounds
The likely outcome is political theater, where politicians claim success while kids get creative
The other likely outcome is annoyance and failure when the tech goes wrong

Device level will not work

By Frissysan • Score: 3 Thread
I suppose it could work for a phone, but other devices can have multiple users. It would be much better done at the account level.

Jupiter’s Lightning May Have the Force of Nuclear Weapons

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
How powerful is Jupiter’s lightning? Thick clouds cover the view, notes Science magazine. But using an instrument on NASA’s Juno spacecraft (orbiting Jupiter for the past decade), researchers determined Jupiter’s lightning bolts are 100 to 10,000 times more energetic than earth’s:
A single bolt of lightning on Earth releases about 1 billion joules of energy. That means the most extreme bolts of jovian lightning carry 10 trillion joules of energy, equivalent to 2400 tons of TNT, or one-sixth the power of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan. Based on the rates of flashes seen by Juno, storms on this tempestuous world can unleash the force of multiple nuclear weapons every minute…

The four storms Juno studied were monstrous, says Michael Wong, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Berkeley and one of the study’s authors. There were three flashes per second on average, often emerging from the hearts of storms that are 3000 kilometers across, longer than the distance from New York City to Denver.
The researchers used the Hubble Space Telescope (and photographs from Juno’s camera) to track Jupiter’s storms with such precision that their radiometer could then pick out individual lightning flashes, according to the article.
“It’s just a massive ball of gas. It makes sense that there’s very energetic lightning happening,” says Daniel Mitchard, a lightning physicist at Cardiff University who wasn’t involved with the new study. But confirming such suspicions “is exciting,” he says, because lightning plays an important role in forging complex chemistry — including the sort that primordial life is built on.
Thanks to Slashdot reader sciencehabit for sharing the article.

What Made Bell Labs So Successful?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Bell Labs “created many of the foundational innovations of the modern age,” writes Jon Gertner, author of The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation — from transistors and telecommunications satellites to Unix and the C programming language.

But what was the secret to its success? he asks in a new article for the Wall Street Journal. Start with its lucky arrival in a “problem-rich” environment, suggests Arno Penzias, winner of one of Bell Labs’ 11 Nobel Prizes:
It was Bell Labs’ responsibility, in other words, to create technologies for designing, expanding and improving an unruly communications network of cables and microwave links and glass fibers. The Labs also had to figure out ways to create underwater conduits, as well as switching centers that could manage the growing number of customers and escalating amounts of data.... Money mattered, too. Being connected to AT&T, the largest company in the world, was an advantage. The Labs’ budget was enormous, and accounting conventions allowed its parent company to make huge and continuing investments in R & D. The generous funding, moreover, allowed scientists and engineers to buy and build expensive equipment — for instance, anechoic chambers to create the world’s quietest rooms…

The most fortunate part of Bell Labs’ situation, however, was that in being attached to a monopoly it could partake in long-term thinking… Without competition nipping at its heels, Bell Labs engineers had the luxury of working out difficult ideas over decades. The first conceptualization of a cellular phone network, for instance, came out of the Labs in the late 1940s; it wasn’t until the late 1970s that technicians began testing one in Chicago to gauge its potential. The challenge of deploying these technologies was immense. (The regulatory hurdles were formidable, too....)
The article also credits the visionary management of Mervin Kelly — who fortunately also “had access to funding in a decade when most executives and universities didn’t” to hire the brightest people. (By the early 1980s Bell Labs employed about 25,000 researchers, technicians and support staff, with an annual budget of $2 billion — roughly $7 billion in today’s dollars.) “The Labs’ involvement in World War II suggested to Kelly that an exciting postwar era of electronics was approaching, but that the technical problems would be so complex that they required a mix of expertise — not just physicists, but material scientists, chemists, electrical engineers, circuitry experts and the like.”
At Bell Labs, Kelly would sometimes handpick teams and create such a mix, as was the case for the transistor invention in the late 1940s. He came to see innovation arising not from like-minded or similarly trained people conversing with each other, but from a friction of ideas and approaches. It meant hiring researchers who had different personalities and favored a range of experimental angles. It also meant personally designing a campus in Murray Hill where departments were spread apart, so that scientists and engineers would be forced to walk, mingle and engage in serendipitous conversations and debate ideas. Meanwhile, under Kelly, the Labs focused on hiring people who were deeply curious, not just smart. Kelly saw it as his professional duty to do far more than what was expected, with his laboratory and vast resources, to create new technologies…

The breakup of AT&T’s monopoly, which led to a steady shrinking of Bell Labs’ staff, budget and remit, shows us that no matter how forward looking your employees and managers may be, they will not necessarily see the future coming. It likewise suggests that technological progress is too unpredictable for one organization, no matter how powerful or smart, to control. Famously, Bell Labs managers didn’t see value in the Arpanet, which eventually led to today’s internet.

And yet, for at least five decades, Bell Labs created a blueprint for the global development of communications and electronics. In understanding why it did so, I tend to think its ultimate secret may be hiding in plain sight. The secret has to do with Bell Labs’ structure — not only being connected to a fabulously profitable monopoly, but being connected to a company that could move theoretical and applied research into a huge manufacturing division that made telecom equipment (at Western Electric) and ultimately into a dynamic operating system (the AT&T network)… Scientists and engineers at the Labs understood their ideas would be implemented, if they passed muster, into the huge system its parent company was running.
Bell Labs racked up about 30,000 patents, according to the article, and celebrated its 100th anniversary last April.

It is now part of Finland-based Nokia.

Typo in summary

By Tim the Gecko • Score: 5, Informative Thread
It should be Arno Penzias, not Arno Penzia.

Did the author miss the biggest issue?

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
In the room? I actually got a little angry reading that blurb. I was alive when Bell Labs collapsed and I remember the sequence of events very clearly. The number one ingredient that made bell labs a massive success was tax law.

For most of the 1900s, research was tax deductible for companies. Companies could run research labs for the benefit of both themselves and larger society, and Uncle Sam would give them a tax break. The result was a huge ecosystem of top tier corporate labs that bridged the gap between ivory tower research and application. Bell labs was just one of many. There was also GE labs, PARC, IBM labs, Xerox, Kodak. Im probably forgetting a few of the big ones as well. Then, the voters decided that they didn’t like giving companies a tax break for that. I dont remember if it was liberals or conservatives who changed their minds. Maybe both. As soon as that tax break was gone, the managers at each company started requiring each of their lab divisions to actually turn a profit. Every single one of them was closed within a few years, or hung on as a tiny ghost of what it used to be.

Taxes

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Taxes made them successful. We used to have super high taxes for the wealthy and corporations. This created a use it or lose it mentality among businesses because they couldn’t just pocket all the money themselves because it would be taxed up the wazoo at a certain point. There were ways around taxes even back then but they weren’t nearly as effective as they are now where you have billionaires paying an effective tax rate of 0%

Also stock BuyBacks used to be illegal. Stock BuyBacks mean that companies don’t invest anymore they hold on to their cash so that they can do BuyBacks and pump the stock during downturn. This is exactly why stock BuyBacks were illegal for so long.

I don’t think folks realize how much of a role public policy plays in their daily lives or the myriad of knock-on effects from those kind of policies. There’s an idea of a chesterton’s fence, which is a fence that you don’t pull down unless you know damn well why it was put up. High taxes and Wall Street regulation were a classic chesterton’s fence.

diversity of thought and approach

By davidwr • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

He came to see innovation arising not from like-minded or similarly trained people conversing with each other, but from a friction of ideas and approaches. It meant hiring researchers who had different personalities and favored a range of experimental angles.

Intellectual diversity makes for better teams.

Technology hills and valleys

By Tablizer • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I don’t believe it’s because of the tax-breaks, for they still exist, but that the low-hanging-fruit of solid state electronics R&D have dried up. Software has replaced hardware for many functions of machines, and software needs less “big lab” R&D since it can be done in pajamas. Corporate hardware labs just stopped being able to pay their way.

If say quantum computing started spewing innovations, a similar “gold rush” of R&D may appear again. This is not saying “everything has been invented already”, but rather that technology doesn’t progress at a steady pace. The AI boom (bubble?) has produced AI labs, but I doubt its lab boom will last as long as the solid state boom.

Disney Ends $1B OpenAI Investment After Sora’s Surprise Closure. What’s Next?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Just six days ago — and 30 minutes after a Disney-OpenAI meeting about a project with Sora — Disney’s team was “blindsided” with the news Sora was being discontinued, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters, describing OpenAI’s move as “a big rug-pull.”

Even some Sora employees were surprised by the cancellation. It was just 14 weeks ago Disney announced a $1 billion investment in OpenAI’s AI-powered video generation tool — plus a three-year licensing deal. But that deal “never closed,” Reuters adds, citing two other people familiar with the matter, “and no money changed hands.” (Although the two sides are still “discussing if there is another way they can partner or invest with one another, one of the people familiar with the matter said.”)

But Variety wonders if the end of the Sora deal is "a blessing in disguise” for Disney:
Before Disney’s officially sanctioned AI-generated versions of Mickey Mouse, Darth Vader, Baby Yoda, Deadpool and more debuted in OpenAI’s Sora, the AI company abruptly pulled the plug on the video app…

[M]any aficionados of Disney’s franchises were not, in fact, excited about what Sora’s video generator might do to the likes of the Avengers superheroes or the characters from Frozen or Moana. And despite [departed Disney CEO Bob] Iger’s bullishness on the Sora deal, other Disney execs were said to be concerned that going into business with OpenAI would expose the Magic Kingdom’s crown jewels to the risk of being turned into so much AI slop, according to industry sources. Hollywood unions — for which AI adoption has been a hot-button issue — weren’t thrilled about the Disney-Sora deal either. “Disney’s announcement with OpenAI appears to sanction its theft of our work and cedes the value of what we create to a tech company that has built its business off our backs,” the Writers Guild of America said in December… [S]ources say, Disney was encountering roadblocks in getting the OK from voice actors for the Sora pact…

At least publicly, Disney says it is still looking at ways it can tap into the AI ecosystem. The company, in a statement Tuesday, said, “we will continue to engage with AI platforms to find new ways to meet fans where they are while responsibly embracing new technologies that respect IP and the rights of creators.” But at this point, Disney may decide that “meeting fans where they are” means keeping its beloved and world-famous characters away from the AI machinery.
Or, as Gizmodo puts it, “Disney Says It Will Find Ways to Peddle Slop Elsewhere After Pulling Out of OpenAI Deal.”

But Deadline sees the deal’s collapses as a lost opportunity:
The OpenAI partnership was a template on which to build, potentially allowing for other deals that end the exploitation of human creativity by unscrupulous AI models. It was also the kind of partnership that was palatable for the Human Artistry Campaign and Creators Coalition on AI, lobby groups that have been critical of tech business models and command support from A-listers including Scarlett Johansson, Cate Blanchett and Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

Dr. Moiya McTier, an advisor to the Human Artistry Campaign, puts it this way: Part of the problem is getting “artsy people and the techie people to talk.” OpenAI sinking Sora will not make these discussions easier. It’s a move that starkly exposes Hollywood’s vulnerability to the capriciousness of big tech.

Re:Disney’s WAR on Men, White culture, and familie

By MeneM1978 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Wow. Pretty cool to see. Like, EVERYTHING you wrote is false. Even your signature! Well done!

Good

By Frissysan • Score: 3 Thread
Sounds to me like Disney dodged a bullet.

Do Emergency Microsoft, Oracle Patches Point to Wider Issues?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Emergency out-of-band fixes issued by enterprise IT giants Microsoft and Oracle have shone a spotlight on issues around both update cycles and patching,” reports Computer Weekly:
Microsoft’s emergency update, KB5085516, addresses an issue that arose after installing the mandatory cumulative updates pushed live on Patch Tuesday earlier this month. According to Microsoft, it has since emerged that many users experienced problems signing into applications with a Microsoft account, seeing a “no internet” error message even though the device had a working connection. This had the effect of preventing access to multiple services and applications. It should be noted that organisations using Entra ID did not experience the issue.

But Microsoft’s emergency patch comes just days after it doubled down on a commitment to software quality, reliability and stability. In a blog post published just 24 hours prior to the latest update, Pavan Davuluri of Microsoft’s Windows Insider Program Team said updates should be “predictable and easy to plan around”.
Michael Bell, founder/CEO of Suzu Labs tells Computer Weekly that Microsoft’s patch for the sign-in bug follows “separate hotpatches for RRAS remote code execution flaws and a Bluetooth visibility bug. Three emergency fixes in eight days does not shout reliability era.”
Oracle’s patch, meanwhile, addresses CVE-2026-21992, a remote code execution flaw in the REST:WebServices component of Oracle Identity Manager and the Web Services Security component of Oracle Web Services Manager in Oracle Fusion Middleware. It carries a CVSS score of 9.8 and can be exploited by an unauthenticated attacker with network access over HTTP.

Depends

By The MAZZTer • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think Microsoft in general does a great job considering they test numerous software packages going back decades, as I understand it.

"

The real question is, each time this happens, do they sit down and have a meeting and discuss why the problem happened, what they can do to keep it from happening again, and then implement a solution in their testing? If so then it’s fine. It’s only if they fail to learn from each emergency that we have a problem.

Same should apply to Oracle.

Also not sure why we’re discussing these specific Microsoft and Oracle bugs. The bugs are not similar at all. Microsoft’s isn’t even a security issue like Oracle’s is.

Apply Betteridge’s Law

By swillden • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

And the law of large numbers. Statistically, there will but patch clusters, the same way there are clusters of every other random-ish event. The fact that one happens to occur right after Microsoft promises a commitment to predictable patch schedules means not just nothing the but opposite. Any commitment to doing better means that they recognize they haven’t been doing well enough, and obviously it’s not possible to do significantly better immediately; changing processes takes time, and observing the effects of those changes takes even longer.

So, no, this cluster of patches doesn’t tell us anything in particular beyond what we already knew: That emergency patches are relatively common.

Yes, at least for Microsoft

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It is called a mountain of technological debt. The whole thing is a fragile mess and cannot be fixed anymore, but any changes come with huge risks. Essentially, fixing one thing breaks three others in surprising and unexpected places. Which is pretty much the pattern we are seeing.

As to that “commitment to software quality, reliability and stability”, that is just them acknowledging there is a serious issue because they understand they cannot hide it. So they decided to at least get some fake appearance of honesty out of it. Of course, the commitment is not real. Same as “Security is our highest priority” stated by MS twice now after massive screw-ups. The screw-ups simply continued after that.

Hence MS will just continue to slowly make things worse, because the mess they made cannot be fixed and their business model requires constant changes in functionality, which the most effective enemy of “quality, reliability and stability”. In a sense, MS products are low key “constant delivery scams”, where the next version or the one after is promised to finally be the one that is great and will make it all worthwhile. They would actually need to throw it (Windows, Office, Azure, etc.) away and start over and they would need to get actually competent and experienced engineers to make the decisions. People which they probably do not even employ anymore and whose value MS management never understood.

Well, guess what, if you massively prioritize revenue over engineering quality, you can, in a over-hyped and immature field, make stellar profits for a while. What you cannot do is deliver a good product. And at some time (and MS is there already), you cannot even deliver a mediocre product anymore.

Doubled down on a commitment to software quality..

By Vomitgod • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Microsoft’s emergency patch comes just days after it doubled down on a commitment to software quality, reliability and stability.

Yet still released Windows 11.....

Re:Depends

By mikeymikec • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Microsoft gutted their QA: https://www.ghacks.net/2019/09…

MacOS 26.4 Adds Warnings For ClickFix Attacks to Its Terminal App

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
An anonymous Slashdot reader writes:
ClickFix attacks are ramping up. These attacks have users copy and paste a string to something that can execute a command line — like the Windows Run dialog, or a shell prompt.

But MacRumors reports that macOS 26.4 Tahoe (updated earlier this week) introduces a new feature to its Terminal app where it will detect ClickFix attempts and stop them by prompting the user if they really wanted to run those commands.
According to MacRumors, the warning readers “Possible malware, Paste blocked.”

“Your Mac has not been harmed. Scammers often encourage pasting text into Terminal to try and harm your Mac or compromise your privacy....”

There is also a “Paste Anyway” option if users still wish to proceed.

Re:Please don’t

By martin-boundary • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Problem wide open. Microsoft already thought of this solution at least 25 years ago.

They implemented warnings by interrupting the code, opening a pop-up window with two options: proceed or bloc?. I’ll give you a guess how that panned out.

There is only one outcome when users are repeatedly interrupted for security reasons. They learn to press yes without even reading the message, while being annoyed by the interruption. Black hats love that.

Re:And the Apple haters squawk.

By larwe • Score: 5, Informative Thread
True but useless. For a long complex commandline input, it saves a lot of work to be able to paste it in. Not to mention the possibility that a typo might have undesirable consequences.

Re:Question

By larwe • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Current versions of MacOS have something called “System Integrity Protection” which restricts certain directories from being tampered with even in a su’d shell. It can be disabled, but it’s a very off-label way to run the OS and the consequences could be … spicy.

Re:Question

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Funny Thread

You know run su and then accidentally do something dumb?

I’m pretty sure my Mac will let me run su and then send a text to my ex, but I’m not going to try it.

Re:Question

By caseih • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Yes you can. You have to boot into recovery mode and then change the security level. This is already something you have to do to load third-part (even signed) kexts, which are sometimes required for certain types of presumably poorly written (or not Apple-blessed) hardware drivers.

Apparently this is even still possible on the iPhone chipped MacBook Neo.