Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Replit CEO on AI Breakthroughs: ‘We Don’t Care About Professional Coders Anymore’
  2. Nintendo To Unveil Next-Generation Switch 2 in April
  3. Governments Call For Spyware Regulations In UN Security Council Meeting
  4. Pastor Who Saw Crypto Project In His ‘Dream’ Indicted For Fraud
  5. Sweden Starts Building 100,000 Year Storage Site For Spent Nuclear Fuel
  6. Startup Raises $200 Million To ‘De-Extinct’ the Woolly Mammoth, Thylacine and Dodo
  7. FTC Says Refunds For Razer’s False N95 Face Masks Are Going Out Now
  8. Russia’s Largest Platform For State Procurement Hit By Cyberattack
  9. Comics Distributor Diamond Is Filing For Bankruptcy
  10. Dead Google Apps Domains Can Be Compromised By New Owners
  11. GOG Joins European Federation of Game Archives, Museums and Preservation Projects
  12. Bluesky Is Getting Its Own Photo-Sharing App, Flashes
  13. Telegram Shuts Down Z-Library, Anna’s Archive Channels Over Copyright Infringement
  14. UnitedHealth Hid Its Change Healthcare Data Breach Notice For Months
  15. LinkedIn Wants You To Apply For Fewer Jobs

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.

Replit CEO on AI Breakthroughs: ‘We Don’t Care About Professional Coders Anymore’

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Replit, an AI coding startup platform, has made a dramatic pivot away from professional programmers in a fundamental shift in how software may be created in the future. “We don’t care about professional coders anymore,” CEO Amjad Masad told Semafor, as the company refocuses on helping non-developers build software using AI.

The strategic shift follows the September launch of Replit’s “Agent” tool, which can create working applications from simple text commands. The tool, powered by Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet AI model, has driven a five-fold revenue increase in six months. The move marks a significant departure for Replit, which built its business providing online coding tools for software developers. The company is now betting that AI will make traditional programming skills less crucial, allowing non-technical users to create software through natural language instructions.

Nintendo To Unveil Next-Generation Switch 2 in April

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Nintendo announced on Thursday it will unveil its next-generation Switch 2 gaming console at a digital event on April 2, marking the end of its nearly eight-year-old flagship model. The Japanese gaming giant revealed in a two-minute video that the new device maintains a similar hybrid design to the original Switch but is larger, with redesigned controllers that attach magnetically.

Obligatory

By burtosis • Score: 3 Thread
Let’s hope they make a substantial switch, I’d hate to see tiny incremental progress.

Governments Call For Spyware Regulations In UN Security Council Meeting

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
On Tuesday, the United Nations Security Council held a meeting to discuss the dangers of commercial spyware, which marks the first time this type of software — also known as government or mercenary spyware — has been discussed at the Security Council. The goal of the meeting, according to the U.S. Mission to the UN, was to “address the implications of the proliferation and misuse of commercial spyware for the maintenance of international peace and security.” The United States and 15 other countries called for the meeting. While the meeting was mostly informal and didn’t end with any concrete proposals, most of the countries involved, including France, South Korea, and the United Kingdom, agreed that governments should take action to control the proliferation and abuse of commercial spyware. Russia and China, on the other hand, dismissed the concerns.

John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at The Citizen Lab, a human rights organization that has investigated spyware abuses since 2012, gave testimony in which he sounded the alarm on the proliferation of spyware made by “a secretive global ecosystem of developers, brokers, middlemen, and boutique firms,” which “is threatening international peace and security as well as human rights.” Scott-Railton called Europe “an epicenter of spyware abuses” and a fertile ground for spyware companies, referencing a recent TechCrunch investigation that showed Barcelona has become a hub for spyware companies in the last few years.

Representatives of Poland and Greece, countries that had their own spyware scandals involving software made by NSO Group and Intellexa, respectively, also intervened. Poland’s representative pointed at local legislative efforts to put “more control, including by the judiciary, on the relevant operational activities of the security and intelligence services,” while also recognizing that spyware can be used in a legal way. “We are not saying that the use of spyware is never justified or even required,” said Poland’s representative. And the Greek representative pointed to the country’s 2022 bill to ban the sale of spyware.

Pastor Who Saw Crypto Project In His ‘Dream’ Indicted For Fraud

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A pastor in Pasco, Washington, has been indicted on 26 counts of fraud for orchestrating a cryptocurrency scam that defrauded over 1,500 investors of nearly $5.9 million between 2021 and 2023. Many of the investors were members of his congregation. BleepingComputer reports:
The US Department of Justice says the pastor, Francier Obando Pinillo, 51, used his position to recruit investors into a fraudulent cryptocurrency venture called “Solano Fi,” which he told them “came to him in a dream” and was a guaranteed investment. “Pinillo used his position as pastor to induce members of his congregation and others to invest their money in a cryptocurrency investment business known as Solano Fi,” reads the US Department of Justice announcement. “Pinillo claimed the idea for Solano Fi had come to him in a dream and that it was a safe and guaranteed investment.”

The pastor also set up a Facebook page for Solano Fi to attract more investors outside his direct sphere of influence, as well as a Telegram group named ‘Multimillionarios SolanoFi,’ which had 1,500 members. The indictment alleged that Pinillo promised investors they would receive guaranteed monthly investment returns of 34.9% at no risk whatsoever. The indictment further claims he directed the victims to make cryptocurrency transfers to wallets under his control, and instead of investing the funds, he diverted them for personal use. Investors were provided access to a Solano Fi web app where they could manage their funds; however, the app showed fake balances and investment returns. Those convinced by the fraud were encouraged to recruit more investors for additional returns, expanding the victims’ circle. As in similar scams, when the victims attempted to withdraw money from the Solano Fi app, the transaction failed.

seriously ?

By Tom • Score: 3 Thread

Are any of the “victims” being jailed for utter stupidity?

35% guaranteed return? If you believe that, you deserve to pay the learning fee for that lesson.

Still the best

By waspleg • Score: 3 Thread

https://www.web3isgoinggreat.com/

Crypto is a scam, and an enormously resource intensive wasteful one at that. It’s a shame the cryptobros never put any these resources in to folding proteins for medicine instead.

LAZY asses can’t be bothered to post inidctment

By gavron • Score: 3, Informative Thread

Techdirt often calls people out for talking about a court filing but not including it. I do so here. Neither Slashdot nor Bleepingcomputer nor the US department of injustice bothered to include the filing.

Here is it:
https://www.scribd.com/documen…

US DOJ: Fuck you for issuing lazy press releases and not including the filing.
BLEEPING COMPUTER: Fuck you for rehashing what the government liars say and not including the filing.
SLASHHDOT: Earlly “slasdot weekend with BeauSD”?

As to the discussion, this isn’t about pastors or crypto. It’s a conman who converted funds into his own name. Yes, he is a pastor (so what?) and yes he used crypto (so what?) but the crimes he’s charged with have nothing to do with either.

So forget “pastor”. Forget “crypto”. The headline should read “Con man got people to give him money which he kept for himself.”

The US DOJ are PR liars, and Bleeping Computers repeated it, and then of course slashdot weekd with BeauSD.

Do religion next!

By thegarbz • Score: 3 Thread

I was promised salvation, but I don’t feel forgiven!

On a serious note, given how religion seems to guilt people into parting with their money while offering things that can’t possibly be measured as true, how is that not also fraud?

Re:Still the best

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Now there’s an idea. Rather than ‘folding at home’ as a charity effort, use part of the Bitcoin model. Protein folding in place of mining, with payouts if you’re lucky enough to get a solution.

Big Pharma benefits from the drugs designed based on the results of this project, by injecting money into the system the participation rates would skyrocket.

Sweden Starts Building 100,000 Year Storage Site For Spent Nuclear Fuel

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Sweden has begun constructing a long-term storage facility for spent nuclear fuel in Forsmark, making it only the second country after Finland to build such a site. It is not expected to be completed until the 2080s, but once finished, it will securely house radioactive waste for up to 100,000 years. Reuters reports:
The Forsmark final repository, about 150 kilometers north of Stockholm on Sweden’s east coast, will consist of 60 km of tunnels buried 500 meters down in 1.9 billion year old bedrock. It will be the final home for 12,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel, encased in 5 meter long, corrosion-resistent copper capsules that will be packed in clay and buried. The facility will take its first waste in the late 2030s but will not be completed until around 2080 when the tunnels will be backfilled and closed, Sweden’s Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Company (SKB) said. […]

The Forsmark repository will cost around 12 billion crowns($1.08 billion) and be paid for by the nuclear industry, SKB said. It will have room to hold all the waste produced by Sweden’s nuclear power plants. However, it will not hold fuel from future reactors. Sweden plans to build 10 more reactors by 2045.

link broken

By Barsteward • Score: 4, Informative Thread
No such page on MSN if you click the iink

Re:link broken

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

GP’s link works fine and isn’t as industry shill site.

Sweden isn’t going to build 10 new reactors by 2045. It’s already too late, given that the only builder (EDF) is quoting 20 years after all approvals are done, and isn’t in any position to take 10 new orders right now.

So, 2080 you say?

By gweihir • Score: 3 Thread

That sounds like the usual deeply evil “let future generations pay” mode most of the nuclear industry likes to use to hide its real costs.

Startup Raises $200 Million To ‘De-Extinct’ the Woolly Mammoth, Thylacine and Dodo

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from VentureBeat:
Colossal BioSciences has raised $200 million in a new round of funding to bring back extinct species like the woolly mammoth. Dallas- and Boston-based Colossal is making strides in the scientific breakthroughs toward “de-extinction,” or bringing back extinct species like the woolly mammoth, thylacine and the dodo. […] Since launching in September 2021, Colossal has raised $435 million in total funding. This latest round of capital places the company at a $10.2 billion valuation. Colossal will leverage this latest infusion of capital to continue to advance its genetic engineering technologies while pioneering new revolutionary software, wetware and hardware solutions, which have applications beyond de-extinction including species preservation and human healthcare.

“Our recent successes in creating the technologies necessary for our end-to-end de-extinction toolkit have been met with enthusiasm by the investor community. TWG Global and our other partners have been bullish in their desire to help us scale as quickly and efficiently as possible,” said CEO Colossal Ben Lamm, in a statement. “This funding will grow our team, support new technology development, expand our de-extinction species list, while continuing to allow us to carry forth our mission to make extinction a thing of the past.”
Here’s a summary of the startup’s progress on its efforts to bring back the woolly mammoth, thylacine and the dodo:
Woolly Mammoth De-extinction Progress
- Generated chromosome-scale reference genomes for elephants and the first de novo assembled mammoth genome
- Acquired and aligned 60+ ancient mammoth genomes and 30+ genomes of extant elephant species, improving mammoth-specific variant accuracy
- Derived pluripotent stem cells for Asian elephants, advancing reproductive technologies essential for de-extinction

Thylacine De-extinction Progress
- Created a 99.9% complete ancient genome for the thylacine using long-read and RNA sequencing
- Assembled telomere-to-telomere genomes of dasyurid species to understand evolutionary relationships and support conservation of marsupials
- Progress in genomics and reproductive technologies positions Colossal ahead of schedule on critical de-extinction steps

Dodo De-extinction Progress
- Completed high-coverage genomes for the dodo, its relatives, and the critically endangered manumea
- Developed tools for avian genome engineering, including techniques for craniofacial gene-editing and primordial germ cell cultivation
- Significant advances in avian-specific genetic techniques are driving progress toward dodo restoration and bird conservation

This is a waste of money

By Retired Chemist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This is a waste of money that would be better spent preserving existing species. There is no natural habitat for the three species anymore, so all they would ever be is zoo displays. Just because something is theoretically possible is not a reason to do it.

Re:Doesn’t feel right somehow

By Firethorn • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The genetic diversity would be an issue. Zoo exhibit would be the target for the foreseeable future. Still, it isn’t that bad.

Okay, the three animals listed are the Dodo, Thylacine, and Woolly mammoth.
Had to search to find out what the Thylacine was like.

In the Dodo’s case, it should be relatively easy - I figure that it’d be like a chicken, have most of what’s necessary in instinct. Worst case, you do the raptor thing where they raise it using puppets.

Woolly mammoth - everything I’ve read says that they’re mostly similar to elephants. So, assuming that we use an elephant as a surrogate mother, she can train the baby on zoo-related living at least.

Thylacine - Raise by hand in zoos, if you actually get enough to want to release them into the wild, accept a multi-generational training effort.

I’ll note that I’d place de-extincting a species at closer to $2B or more, not $200M for 3. The latter is barely enough for preparatory efforts like collecting up as much genome information as you can get.

Re:This is a waste of money

By R3d M3rcury • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

No but some day we might have need to do it and our chances of succeeding are much higher if we’ve done it before.

For example, suppose aliens show up trying to communicate with humpback whales and they’ve gone extinct…

Re:Doesn’t feel right somehow

By cstacy • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I get an uneasy feeling about this. It’s like something out of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, on a genomic level.

If God wanted us to deliberately genetically engineer, he would have given us Agriculture and animal husbandry.

Raphus cucullatus

By cstacy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s ok, we will just make sure to they can’t produce lysine, so they will be forever dependent on us for it. Should they escape and go rampaging through a populated city, eventually they will die from lysine deprivation, and everything will be fine.

They’re not 36 foot tall, intelligence-enhanced Dodos.

They were hunted to extinction because they were unafraid of humans. And we introduced other species that ate all their chicks and eggs. Including: Sailors brought animals to the island, including: Monkeys, Dogs, Rats, and Pigs. So never mind the exogenic amino acids. If there’s trouble, we can just do some more generic engineering. A MonkeyDog or RatPig ought to take are of things.

FTC Says Refunds For Razer’s False N95 Face Masks Are Going Out Now

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The FTC is issuing refunds for 6,764 customers who purchased Razer’s Zephyr face mask, which falsely advertised as meeting N95 standards. GameSpot reports:
In May 2024, the FTC announced that a settlement was reached with Razer for more than $1 million. The fine occurred because Razer claimed its face mask met N95 requirements, even though it was never submitted for certification to test whether it removed 95% of airborne particles, per the FTC.

In the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, Razer revealed the N95 face mask with RGB lighting and voice amplification at CES in January 2021. The Razer Zephyr face mask eventually launched in October 2021 for $100. However, just months later in January 2022, Razer removed the N95 claims about the face mask.

At the time of the settlement with the FTC, Razer stated that it disagreed with the agency’s allegations and didn’t “admit to any wrongdoing.” Meanwhile, the FTC says checks must be cashed within 90 days for the Zephyr face mask refunds, while PayPal payments need to be redeemed within 30 days.

Russia’s Largest Platform For State Procurement Hit By Cyberattack

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Roseltorg, Russia’s main electronic trading platform for government and corporate procurement, confirmed it was targeted by a cyberattack claimed by the pro-Ukraine hacker group Yellow Drift. The group allegedly deleted 550 terabytes of data, causing significant operational delays and client concerns. The Record reports:
The company initially confirmed last Thursday that its services had been temporarily suspended, without providing further details. In a recent Telegram statement, Roseltorg disclosed that it had been targeted by “an external attempt to destroy data and the entire infrastructure of electronic trading.” Roseltorg stated that all data and infrastructure affected by the recent attack had been fully restored, and trading systems are expected to resume operations shortly. However, as of the time of writing, the company’s website remains offline.

Last week, the previously unknown pro-Ukraine hacker group Yellow Drift claimed responsibility for the attack on Roseltorg, stating they had deleted 550 terabytes of data, including emails and backups. As proof, the hackers published screenshots from the platform’s allegedly compromised infrastructure on their Telegram channel. “If you support tyranny and sponsor wars, be prepared to return to the Stone Age,” the hackers said.

The cyberattack on Roseltorg is already impacting clients who rely on the platform’s operations, including government agencies, state-owned companies and suppliers. Following the company’s announcement, many clients expressed concerns in the comments section, complaining about potential financial losses and delays in the procurement process. Roseltorg said in a statement that once access to the trading systems is reinstated, all deadlines for procedures, including contract signings, will be automatically extended without requiring any requests from users.

Good

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Go Ukraine!

Other Plan

By godel_56 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Rather than just simple deletion, they may have caused more trouble by keeping a low profile and selectively altering critical information on the platform, so users don’t know what to trust.

Re:Other Plan

By ls671 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s always use it before you get detected versus waiting to potentially cause even more damage. When is the right time to act? Think about Israel who hacked the Hezbollah’s pagers. Apparently, they thought they were about to get detected soon when they acted.

You don’t know for how long the Ukrainians were in before they acted and deleted everything. They might very well have been in for a while doing exactly what you suggested before deleting everything because they thought they were about to get detected.

Re:Good

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They’re in for a tough time, what with the US, Hungary, and Turkey likely doing their best to give Ukraine to Russia in 2025.

Even Canada might go slightly right in the wake of Trump’s election to the South, though Trump talking about taking over Canada and our largish Ukrainian population might stiffen our resolve for what that’s worth. Hopefully with the US trying to undermine NATO the EU will grow a pair and start a NO-USA defense club. It’ll cost, but it’ll cost less than depending on Trump or his successors.

Every Ukrainian who dies because of the invasion is a tragedy, every Russian who dies because of it is a victory. I hope for Ukraine’s survival, and Russia’s ultimately weak enough Putin’s probably doomed it to be a meal for China no matter what happens from this point forward.

Re: Good

By tlhIngan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Or almost all of the former Soviet states. Even during those days they hated Russians, they just couldn’t be open about it lest they quietly disappear one day.

One of the largest bumps to NATO’s memberships happened shortly after the breakup of the USSR. Basically all former Soviet states (save Ukraine) immediately asked to join NATO, and those that didn’t, asked to join later.

You have to be a pretty terrible neighbor if everyone immediately starts going to the other side when they can.

Comics Distributor Diamond Is Filing For Bankruptcy

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Diamond Comic Distributors, the world’s biggest English language comic book distributor, is filing for bankruptcy and scaling its business back in order to survive. The Verge reports:
In a letter sent to comics retailers and publishers today, Diamond president Chuck Parker announced that the company has filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy and plans to sell off its Alliance Game Distributors arm to Universal in order to “protect the most vital aspects of our business.”

Founded in 1982 by Stephen A. Geppi (who still serves as CEO), Diamond became a heavyweight in the comics business by securing a number of exclusive distribution agreements with various publishing houses like DC, Marvel, and Image. For decades, Diamond — which also publishes its Previews magazine showcasing upcoming titles — was instrumental in bringing comics to market and played a huge role in determining a book’s success because of how Previews influenced retailer orders.
“This decision was not made lightly, and I understand that this news may be as difficult to hear as it is for me to share,” Parker said. “The Diamond leadership team and I have worked tirelessly to avoid this outcome but the financial challenges we face have left us with no other viable option.”

Re:Know your audience.

By Narcocide • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

To be honest I don’t think it’s the content they’re souring on, it’s the “dead-trees” distribution method. Kids would much rather have DRM-free PDF files or something like that, something they can read on their phone… but then that puts the whole entertainment format directly in the line of fire of much more addictive offerings, like motherfucking Candy Crush Saga or whatever they’re punching like a monkey punching a pleasure button for a treat these days.

CEO Not Known for his Business Acumen

By laughingskeptic • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Sounds like he bankrupted himself first: https://www.comicsbeat.com/cou…

Re:Know your audience.

By geekmux • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Comic book consumers aren’t interested in political indoctrination.

Yeah, they hated X-Men, Superman, Captain America, etc.

The difference between a writer/director using politics to enhance a story vs. a writer/director abusing politics to try and indoctrinate the audience, is the difference between a chef seasoning your prime steak with a touch of salt vs. the chef who hits you over the head with a salt block wondering why you’re not asking for nacho cheese sauce.

Not everyone’s taste is the same. Hollywood is paying the price trying to figure that out.

Comic Bags and Boards

By POWRSURG • Score: 3 Thread

So the original article overstates what Diamond means for the comic industry. Marvel, DC, Image, Boom, and more have moved from Diamond to either Lunar or Penguin Random House for their primary distribution and Diamond a secondary distributor, with DC going as far as not even being possible as a back-up.

I am more worried about bags and boards as Diamond was the best quality/price for bags and boards. Competition does exist for that as well but that is the part that will hurt fandom the most.

Re:Know your audience.

By NotRobot • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I think the underlying issue is that comics are very much a generational thing. Kids in the 1960s and 1970s weren’t spoiled for choice with home entertainment options. You didn’t have game consoles or home computers until mid/late 1970s and the first ones weren’t really that great, and you didn’t even have VHS at home.

So what did they do? Yep. Read comic books, bought, traded, and collected them. They discussed them and produced their own fanzines. It was a common thing to do. For example, you might be able to find some fan art by a promising lad called George R. R. Martin.

In the 1980s and the 1990s the dynamics were already shifting. Home entertainment in the form of game consoles, home computers, VHS, and, in the 1990s, the Internet was forming an ever increasing competition for the kids’ time, interest and wallet. Comics were still an established part of the equation but no longer a given. It didn’t help that companies like Marvel were flooding the market with more and more titles of questionable quality in the 1990s. It was a shock but not a total surprise when Marvel eventually filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in the late 1990s.

The emergence of superhero movies was hailed as something that could connect a new generation with comic books and save the industry. Books were rebooted and new story continuities were launched to reel in new readers. (A long-standing creed in the industry is, a "#1” issue will always be a huge seller. Which is why they now reboot/relaunch the books every now and then.)

For a while, that seemed to work. But there was already a generational divide forming. The older, now adult readers, were disappointed that the newer books were no longer directly connected to the story continuity of their youth, and the younger readers were not interested in reading or buying the older grandpa stuff.

Today, it is hard to imagine who even wants to buy new ‘floppies’ (single printed issues) anymore. Kids? Definitely not. Floppies are too expensive and kids don’t want paper issues, they want digital versions if anything. The older readers find today’s books too different from the ones they loved as kids. They will probably rather wait for the ad-free premium hardcover collected editions anyway. Plus, they are a dying breed - when they go, the whole industry will be in deep trouble.

One distinct difficulty has been how to attract female readers. There are some but the majority of them seem to prefer Manga over testosterone-filled DC/Marvel superhero books. This may explain Marvel especially recently reimagined many of the core heroes as female versions. I doubt that had the desired effect - it may rather have alienated the long-time readership. But at least I’ve seen a lot of Spider-Gwen cosplayers.

The world is very different from last century. Comic books will inevitably maybe not die out but become marginalized. Something of a curiosity and museum stuff. When the readers born in the 1980s and earlier die, there will not be much market left.

Diamond bankruptcy was not exactly a huge shock or surprise either, it just came maybe a few years earlier than I would have expected.

Dead Google Apps Domains Can Be Compromised By New Owners

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Lots of startups use Google’s productivity suite, known as Workspace, to handle email, documents, and other back-office matters. Relatedly, lots of business-minded webapps use Google’s OAuth, i.e. “Sign in with Google.” It’s a low-friction feedback loop — up until the startup fails, the domain goes up for sale, and somebody forgot to close down all the Google stuff. Dylan Ayrey, of Truffle Security Co., suggests in a report that this problem is more serious than anyone, especially Google, is acknowledging. Many startups make the critical mistake of not properly closing their accounts — on both Google and other web-based apps — before letting their domains expire.

Given the number of people working for tech startups (6 million), the failure rate of said startups (90 percent), their usage of Google Workspaces (50 percent, all by Ayrey’s numbers), and the speed at which startups tend to fall apart, there are a lot of Google-auth-connected domains up for sale at any time. That would not be an inherent problem, except that, as Ayrey shows, buying a domain allows you to re-activate the Google accounts for former employees if the site’s Google account still exists.

With admin access to those accounts, you can get into many of the services they used Google’s OAuth to log into, like Slack, ChatGPT, Zoom, and HR systems. Ayrey writes that he bought a defunct startup domain and got access to each of those through Google account sign-ins. He ended up with tax documents, job interview details, and direct messages, among other sensitive materials.
A Google spokesperson said in a statement: “We appreciate Dylan Ayrey’s help identifying the risks stemming from customers forgetting to delete third-party SaaS services as part of turning down their operation. As a best practice, we recommend customers properly close out domains following these instructions to make this type of issue impossible. Additionally, we encourage third-party apps to follow best-practices by using the unique account identifiers (sub) to mitigate this risk.”

How do I get them to stop

By fropenn • Score: 4 Thread
asking me to “sign in with Google”? I do not want to sign in with Google. Ever. Go away annoying pop-up!!!

Duh

By Revek • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I bought my old dial up ISP domain several years ago when the company that bought the ISP sold it. I’ve kept it and lately I put it on a mx host. They almost immediately emailed me and asked me what had happened to it. I put a catch all bucket in place for a week and after more than a decade it still receives huge amounts of spam. It also receives tons of legitimate email. mobile accounts and such. How anyone could go over decade without updating their account information is beyond me. If I hadn’t bought it some lowlife would have exploited those fools a long time ago.

Maybe Workspace accounts need a different p key?

By ctilsie242 • Score: 3 Thread

Time for Google to consider accounts and workspaces to have a different primary key than domains?

Perhaps Workspace accounts need to be keyed to something like a unique ID, so if foo.com has one Google Workspace account, then for some reason, validation checks and another Google Workspace account is created, there is some way to ensure that the accounts can’t be accessed from the wrong parties?

Maybe Google needs to look at locking old Workspace instances, where if the new owner of a domain proves ownership (via a CNAME, TXT record, etc.) the old Google Workspace account is flagged as a read only archive, and needs to be moved to a new domain for it to be used, perhaps even some subdomain for anything but Google Takeout.

This way, someone’s old Workspace setup will still be available, but never can be access by the new setup.

GOG Joins European Federation of Game Archives, Museums and Preservation Projects

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
GOG.com, a European digital distribution platform known for offering DRM-free video games, announced they’ve joined the European Federation of Game Archives, Museums and Preservation Projects (EFGAMP). From the release:
“GOG was created with video game preservation in mind,” said Maciej Golebiewski, Managing Director at GOG. “Classic games and the mission to safeguard them for future generations have always been at the core of our work. Over the past decade, we’ve honed our expertise in this area. The GOG Preservation Program, which ensures compatibility for over 100 games and delivers hundreds of enhancements, is just one example of this commitment. We were thrilled to see the Program warmly received not only by our players but also by our partners and the gaming industry as a whole.”

Golebiewski further explained that GOG’s role in preservation extends beyond its platform. He highlighted, “As a European company, we feel a responsibility to lead in preserving gaming heritage. Joining EFGAMP reinforces this commitment. Our next step is to expand institutional collaboration with museums and governmental and non-governmental organizations worldwide. We hope our experience will contribute meaningfully to their efforts. We are also discussing exciting new game preservation projects, which we look forward to sharing soon.”

Bluesky Is Getting Its Own Photo-Sharing App, Flashes

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Independent developer Sebastian Vogelsang is building a photo-sharing app for the decentralized social network Bluesky, leveraging its AT Protocol and his earlier app, Skeets. The app, called Flashes, will offer features like photo and short video posts while integrating seamlessly with Bluesky. TechCrunch reports:
When launched, Flashes could tap into growing consumer demand for alternatives to Big Tech’s social media monopoly. […] To make this work, Flashes simply filters Bluesky’s existing timeline for posts with photos and video posts. (In the future, Vogelsang also plans to add metadata to Flashes’ posts so Bluesky users would have a way to keep their feeds on Bluesky’s main app from being flooded with photo posts if that became a problem.) Flashes didn’t take too long to build because it was able to reuse Skeets’ existing code. The app will also be able to market to Skeets’ existing user base, who have now downloaded the app some 30,500 times to date.

Vogelsang says he’s now working to integrate subscription-based features from both his apps so users don’t have to pay twice for the premium features, like Skeets’ bookmarks, drafts, muting, rich push notifications, and others specific to Flashes. (Both apps are free to use without a subscription, we should note.) Later, Vogelsang says he wants to launch a video-only app, too, called Blue Screen.

At launch, Flashes will support photo posts of up to four images and videos of up to 1 minute in length, just like Bluesky. Users who post to Flashes will also have their posts appear on Bluesky and comments on those posts will also feed back into the app as if it were just another Bluesky client. It will also support Bluesky’s direct messages. The developer expects to be able to launch Flashes to the public in a matter of weeks with a TestFlight beta arriving ahead of that. Interested users can follow Flashes’ account on Bluesky for further updates.
Flashes could satiate the growing demand for alternatives to Big Tech’s social media monopoly, especially after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that he will end fact-checking on its platforms.

Are they set on that name?

By newcastlejon • Score: 4, Funny Thread
They should probably look up what “flashing” is.

Re:Everyone should ban more apps-

By timeOday • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I don’t think there’s anything on the horizon that might be as widely popular as Twitter was. Maybe it’s because it was more of a fresh idea at the time, or maybe because partisanship has grown. But I don’t see left and right sharing a social media platform any more, the lines are drawn. Whereas Twitter was once universal.

Re:Are they set on that name?

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

We have Youtubers, Redditors, and TikTokers so it’s gotta be clear that these will be called Flashers.

Which isn’t helping Blusky’s reputation for being a safe haven for marxist deviants.

I sure hope the At protocol moves beyond this current management nightmare. So disappointing.

And apparently they’re all leaving for Little Red Book, so maybe it’ll swing back.

Re:Everyone should ban more apps-

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Mastodon is exactly that. Not owned by anyone. Minimal efforts to promote engagement (in fact, some intentional decisions to avoid pushing content lest it attract the wrong type of engagement), the only “algorithm” is “chronological by time delivered to the serve”.

I like it but for whatever reason most people want something corporate and exploitative and get scared the moment they hear about it being “not owned by anyone”, and find the first excuse (usually absurd) to avoid it or claim it’s “too hard”.

Telegram Shuts Down Z-Library, Anna’s Archive Channels Over Copyright Infringement

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak:
In ‘piracy’ associated circles, Z-Library has one of the most followed Telegram channels of all. The shadow library’s official channel amassed over 630,000 subscribers over the years, who were among the first to read site announcements and other key updates. Z-Library previously had some of its messages removed due to copyright infringement. While it didn’t upload or directly link to infringing material on Telegram, rightsholders allegedly complained about the links that were posted to the Z-Library website. In response, Z-Library chose to no longer include links to its own homepage on Telegram. Instead, it referred users to Wikipedia and Reddit, where the links were still available. The same copyright awareness was visible at Anna’s Archive, a popular shadow library search engine. This channel was also careful not to post direct links to infringing material. After all, sharing or uploading copyrighted books would undoubtedly lead to trouble.

Despite the reported caution, the channels of both Z-Library and Anna’s Archive are no longer accessible today. Messages posted by these accounts were purged “due to copyright infringement”, as shown below. Telegram didn’t limit its action to removing posts; the channels are now entirely inaccessible. Those trying to access the channels in the Telegram app receive a pop-up message stating they are “unavailable due to copyright infringement.” The simultaneous removal of both channels suggests they are linked to the same complaint or decision. The specific complaint and alleged copyright infringements remain unclear.

Re:UDHR is clear free digital libraries are our ri

By ozzymodus12 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I’m glad that someone remembers our ancient and forgotten creed. The world gets darker by the day. People forgot about our liberty and rights. They want to control knowledge, data, and ideas. Our personal information is for sell. Today, I received a call from a person in Spain. I could hear the background noise. It was a data center. It was weird how the background sound was actually repeating in a long loop. They said they detected an odd purchase on my Amazon account and needed my help in resolving the issue. It’s weird how criminals can call you and have all of this information about you. It was a fantastic con I might add. You don’t have a say in how they sell and trade your personal info. But if you scan a book and transfer it to a friend, you’re a terrorist or something. Copyright was a right. Now, it’s a crime to invoke that right. Now, we’re just pigs on a farm to them. A product to be sold.

What? Use Telegram?

By davecb • Score: 3 Thread
Its security is deliberately hard to engage. Instead, it’s an “attractive nuisance”, a fine way to communicate your complaints about a certain government to your friends, and be sure they are brought to the attention of that country’s security service (:-))

UnitedHealth Hid Its Change Healthcare Data Breach Notice For Months

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Change Healthcare has hidden its data breach notification webpage from search engines using “noindex” code, TechCrunch found, making it difficult for affected individuals to find information about the massive healthcare data breach that compromised over 100 million people’s medical records last year.

The UnitedHealth subsidiary said Tuesday it had “substantially” completed notifying victims of the February 2024 ransomware attack. The cyberattack caused months of healthcare disruptions and marked the largest known U.S. medical data theft.

jury nullification

By Joe_Dragon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

jury nullification

UHC / very petty / and all their adjusters cheap

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
This will change nothing. If there were real competition in this sector, nobody would be using UHC in the first place.

Re:Free Luigi

By geekmux • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Enough said.

Dammit. Is Luigi saying he got locked in the tower with her again?

C’mon, Mario. She ain’t no princess if ya know what I’m sayin’..

And not one…

By Virtucon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Not one individual who was a victim of this breach will receive any compensation or direct help to reclaim their identity. Until we stiffen the penalties for security breaches all they’ll get is third-rate “consumer monitoring” for a year. If you’ve never been a victim of ID theft, just give it time because you’ll be one soon enough.

Case in point. A year ago I was driving and a phone call came in, “Hello this is so and so from your bank. I wanted to let you know that we’ll have those new accounts for your grandchildren setup so they can get access in 4 days. In the meantime…” I stopped the lady on the phone. I asked again where she was from and she told me one of the suburbs of Chicago. I told her I was in Texas, didn’t know who she was talking about and both of my grandkids are under the age of five. What transpired over three days were more phone calls with my bank, and banks in the Chicago area. Not to mention changing bank accounts, debit cards, credit cards etc. Not to mention, these morons were going from city to city trying to pull the same scam. Eventually, they got caught. I had to fly to Chicago on my dime, file the report with Skokie PD, and swear that I didn’t know either of the individuals claiming to be my grandkids. The idiots plea dealed and were supposed to make restitution; I haven’t grossed dollar one.

Yes, I also had that notorious product now owned by Norton that promises up to $1M in coverage to restore my identity. They only locked my credit. Don’t use them.

LinkedIn Wants You To Apply For Fewer Jobs

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
LinkedIn has unveiled an AI-powered “Job Match” feature to discourage users from applying to positions they aren’t qualified for, aiming to address recruitment inefficiencies in a tight job market. The tool, the Microsoft-owned firm said, analyzes users’ experience against job requirements to provide detailed qualification summaries, going beyond basic keyword matching. Premium subscribers will receive more granular match data.

How about a better use

By ukoda • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
How about they use an AI to filter the news feed and emails they send me to stuff I am actually interested in?

Re: How about a better use

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Fuck interests, why don’t they just stop being a fucking sales platform pretending to be a job hunting/professional networking site?

I just found out an hour ago that they’re either selling or otherwise giving out my 2fa phone number to salespeople even though my account is configured to totally opt out of EVERYTHING. Got a cold call from a sales guy who was literally talking about stuff I put only on LinkedIn more or less as a honeypot, and his hands were dripping in it. I did that to the few sites that still have my number for 2fa after getting a few odd vendor sales calls.

I basically got them red handed on this one. Fuck them.

I want better filtering the other direction

By swillden • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I’d love it if LinkedIn would enable recruiters to realize that their position doesn’t fit me before they contact me. I have two fundamental requirements that I will not budge on (location and minimum spendable compensation (pre-IPO stock doesn’t count)) and no matter how I’ve tried to configure the system to let recruiters know that they shouldn’t bother contacting me unless their role fits those requirements, they still insist on contacting me. I politely reiterate my requirements and nine times out of ten they then disappear, having wasted both our time. So far the other one in ten ends when we get down to discussing the details of teams, projects, etc., because I’m picky and not particularly motivated to move, but I don’t think those conversations are a waste of time even if they don’t ultimately result in a job.

But the ones that don’t meet my clearly-stated and very simple requirements piss me off. Don’t tell me you’ll relocate me when I’ve stated that I do not want to relocate, and do not ever offer me a big pay cut and think that you’re doing anything other than wasting time.

Re:Excellent news!

By Local ID10T • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Now job requirements will need to be more realistic or there will be no matches!

Oh no! No Americans matched the job requirements. I guess we will have to bring in more H1Bs!

(…working as intended.)

Re:Why would anybody use it?

By Tony Isaac • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Meh. According to research, LinkedIn profiles tend to be more honest than general resumes. https://socialbarrel.com/linke…

In the past 15 years, I’ve gotten three jobs through LinkedIn. Each was an excellent match.