Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. A Pill for Sleep Apnea Could Be on the Horizon
  2. India’s One-Airline State
  3. Cheyenne To Host Massive AI Datacenter Using More Electricity Than All Wyoming Homes Combined
  4. Apple’s iOS 26 Text Filters Could Cost Political Campaigns Millions of Dollars
  5. YouTube Rolls Out Age-Estimation Tech To Identify US Teens, Apply Additional Protections
  6. Minnesota Activates National Guard After St. Paul Cyberattack
  7. Linux 6.16 Brings Faster File Systems, Improved Confidential Memory Support, and More Rust Support
  8. Jack Dorsey’s Bluetooth Messaging App Bitchat Now On App Store
  9. Cisco Donates the AGNTCY Project to the Linux Foundation
  10. ChatGPT’s New Study Mode Is Designed To Help You Learn, Not Just Give Answers
  11. EPA Moves To Repeal Finding That Allows Climate Regulation
  12. Opera Accuses Microsoft of Anti-Competitive Edge Tactics
  13. Google Failed To Warn 10 Million of Turkey Earthquake Severity
  14. Apple Loses Fourth AI Researcher in a Month To Meta
  15. 60% of Americans Use AI for Search, Only 37% for Workplace Tasks, New Poll Finds

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.

A Pill for Sleep Apnea Could Be on the Horizon

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Promising Phase 3 trial results from Apnimed suggest a potential game-changing oral pill for sleep apnea could offer a simpler, more tolerable alternative for keeping airways open during sleep. The New York Times reports:
For decades, the primary treatment for sleep apnea has been continuous positive airway pressure (or CPAP). Before bed, those with the condition put on a face mask that is connected to a CPAP machine, which keeps the airway open by forcing air into it. The machines are effective, but many find them so noisy, cumbersome or uncomfortable that they end up abandoning them. Now, a more appealing option may be on the way, according to a news release from Apnimed, a pharmaceutical company focused on treating sleep apnea. On Wednesday, the company announced a second round of positive Phase 3 clinical trial results for a first-of-its-kind oral pill that can be taken just before bedtime to help keep a person’s airway open.

The full results have not yet been released, or published in a peer-reviewed journal. But the findings build on past, similarly positive conclusions from trials and studies. Sleep experts say that what they’re seeing in reports so far makes them think the pill could be a game changer. Dr. Phyllis Zee, a sleep doctor and researcher at Northwestern Medicine who was not involved with the trial, said that if approved, the drug could transform the lives of many. That includes not only those who can’t tolerate CPAP machines, but also those who can’t — or prefer not to — use other interventions, such as other types of oral devices or weight loss medications. (Excess weight is a risk factor for sleep apnea.)

India’s One-Airline State

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares an analysis:
In most major aviation markets, including the U.S. and Europe, competition is an oligopolistic affair, with several large airlines competing for market share. India’s domestic sector, however, is increasingly characterized by the ascent of a single airline.

Low-cost carrier IndiGo has achieved an extraordinary concentration of the market, capturing approximately 64.4% of all passenger traffic as of May. More strikingly, the airline operates with a near-monopoly on 66% of its domestic routes, facing little to no direct competition in a significant portion of its network.

This position is the culmination of a decade-long expansion that saw the exit of rivals like Jet Airways and GoAir. Today, its remaining competitors continue to struggle; SpiceJet’s domestic market share has fallen to just 2% while it operates a reduced fleet of only 19 aircraft. Air India, despite its acquisition by the Tata Group in 2022, has been slow in its restructuring and continues to cede domestic ground, with the flag carrier remaining unprofitable.

“despite its acquisition by the Tata Group”

By mccalli • Score: 3 Thread
Root cause found. See also: JLR (Jaguar Land Rover).

Cheyenne To Host Massive AI Datacenter Using More Electricity Than All Wyoming Homes Combined

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
An artificial intelligence data center that would use more electricity than every home in Wyoming combined before expanding to as much as five times that size will be built soon near Cheyenne, according to the city’s mayor. “It’s a game changer. It’s huge,” Mayor Patrick Collins said Monday. With cool weather — good for keeping computer temperatures down — and an abundance of inexpensive electricity from a top energy-producing state, Wyoming’s capital has become a hub of computing power. The city has been home to Microsoft data centers since 2012. An $800 million data center announced last year by Facebook parent company Meta Platforms is nearing completion, Collins said.

The latest data center, a joint effort between regional energy infrastructure company Tallgrass and AI data center developer Crusoe, would begin at 1.8 gigawatts of electricity and be scalable to 10 gigawatts, according to a joint company statement. A gigawatt can power as many as 1 million homes. But that’s more homes than Wyoming has people. The least populated state, Wyoming, has about 590,000 people. And it’s a major exporter of energy. A top producer of coal, oil and gas, Wyoming ranks behind only Texas, New Mexico and Pennsylvania as a top net energy-producing state, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Accounting for fossil fuels, Wyoming produces about 12 times more energy than it consumes. The state exports almost three-fifths of the electricity it produces, according to the EIA. But this proposed data center is so big, it would have its own dedicated energy from gas generation and renewable sources, according to Collins and company officials. […] While data centers are energy-hungry, experts say companies can help reduce their effect on the climate by powering them with renewable energy rather than fossil fuels. Even so, electricity customers might see their bills increase as utilities plan for massive data projects on the grid. The data center would be built several miles (kilometers) south of Cheyenne off U.S. 85 near the Colorado state line. State and local regulators would need to sign off on the project, but Collins was optimistic construction could begin soon. “I believe their plans are to go sooner rather than later,” Collins said.

It’s a good thing we aren’t stopping wind & so

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Because otherwise all these AI data centers would drive up the cost of electricity substantially while possibly causing blackouts.

Fun fact in some of the Southwest states places that have had AI data centers open up near them have had water shortages and shut offs because there isn’t enough to go around. And yes I am aware that data centers can recycle water but that costs money and they’re already losing money hand over fist.

Too late

By BytePusher • Score: 3 Thread
Clearly, AI has taken over our government and is now redirecting all resources to its survival and propagation

Re:it will take years

By shilly • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If costs shoot up, the choices are: make consumers pay; make the AI owners pay; force the power companies to eat the costs. The first of these is outrageous, and the last just leads to bankruptcy. This being a US story, I expect it will be a mix of the first and third, with more blackouts for good measure.

What?

By YuppieScum • Score: 3 Thread

…electricity customers might see their bills increase as utilities plan for massive data projects on the grid.

Why are existing customers having to pay for for this dedicated infrastructure, instead of it being charged directly to the DC build project?

Oh, yeah - late-stage capitalism.

Apple’s iOS 26 Text Filters Could Cost Political Campaigns Millions of Dollars

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from Business Insider:
Apple’s new spam text filtering feature could end up being a multimillion-dollar headache for political campaigns. iOS 26 includes a new feature that allows users to filter text messages from unrecognized numbers into an “Unknown Senders” folder without sending a notification. Users can then go to that filter and hit “Mark as Known” or delete the message.

In a memo seen by BI and first reported by Punchbowl News, the official campaign committee in charge of electing GOP senators warned that the new feature could lead to a steep drop in revenue. “That change has profound implications for our ability to fundraise, mobilize voters, and run digital campaigns,” reads a July 24 memo from the National Republican Senatorial Committee, or NRSC. The memo estimated that the new feature could cost the group $25 million in lost revenue and lead to a $500 million loss for GOP campaigns as a whole, based on the estimate that 70% of small-dollar donations come from text messages and that iPhones make up 60% of mobile devices in the US.
Apple’s ‘rules’ for this new spam text filtering feature “aren’t unclear at all,” notes Daring Fireball’s John Gruber. “If a sender is not in your saved contacts and you’ve never sent or responded to a text message from them, they’re considered ‘unknown.’ That’s it.”
“The feature isn’t even really new — you’ve been able to filter messages like this in Messages for years now, but what iOS 26 changes is that it now has a new more prominent — better, IMO — interface for switching between filter views.” It’s also worth noting that there’s no filtering by message content, so all political parties will be affected by this feature. "[T]here’s no reason to believe that Republican candidates and groups will be more affected by this than Democratic ones,” writes Gruber.

Seems strange to admit publicly.

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Perhaps I’m just a bad judge of public opinion; but I’d think that identifying yourself as ‘the spam party’ would be something you would avoid at all costs.

The electorate will forgive you a pointless quagmire war, a few hundred thousand surplus infectious disease deaths, or similar minor matters; but surely loathing of spam is not merely bipartisan but essentially universal. I’d assume that even ‘direct marketing’ scumbags don’t enjoy sampling their colleagues’ product involuntarily.

Re:2FA exception?

By Paradise Pete • Score: 4, Informative Thread

As bad as 2FA over SMS is, that doesn’t stop it from being widely used. I can see a lot of messages ending up there.

Apple already extracts those and offers to fill them in, so I don’t think that will be an issue.

Re:Weird

By MacMann • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

These kinds of unsolicited messages are illegal in other countries

Of course the people writing the laws on what is considered an illegal unsolicited message would leave their own fundraising as an exception to the rule. Now that there’s been a technological solution to this spam they get upset. The thing is that if they’d have enforced their own rules on unsolicited phone calls and messages then this technological solution may not have been developed, people would merely tolerate a modest number of calls asking them for donations or to answer a poll on some political matters. With so much unsolicited calls and texts there had to be a technological solution to keep people interested in having a smart phone. If the thing became more of an annoyance than a convenience then people might stop buying them.

As it is now I will get a dozen calls in a single day of people trying to sell me rooftop solar panels, home improvements, or some other bullshit that is almost certainly a scam. The powers that be choose to not deal with this so people built their own solutions such as not even taking phone calls or messages unless there is some history of prior contact, like the phone number being in their Contacts app or their history of phone numbers called before.

I have to winder just how many nations would have a government willing to kneecap their own ability of politicians to contact voters to get them to vote, donate, or act on any political issue. If there is a nation that believes in freedom of political speech like the USA then I can expect some exception on political messages on any law, policy, or regulation on unsolicited phone calls and text messages. That would be like allowing people to opt out of national weather warnings or something. While I can support people’s right to ignore such information I don’t expect that to be protected in law.

Re:Weird

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It’s not illegal in the US because the courts have ruled that blocking political spam would be the government interference in political speech, which violates the first amendment.

Re:2FA exception?

By sound+vision • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When you’re trying to log into a service, and it tells you it sent an SMS, I don’t imagine it being very hard to figure out that you need to check your phone for the SMS.

YouTube Rolls Out Age-Estimation Tech To Identify US Teens, Apply Additional Protections

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
YouTube is rolling out age-estimation technology in the U.S. to identify teen users in order to provide a more age-appropriate experience. TechCrunch reports:
When YouTube identifies a user as a teen, it introduces new protections and experiences, which include disabling personalized advertising, safeguards that limit repetitive viewing of certain types of content, and enabling digital well-being tools such as screen time and bedtime reminders, among others. These protections already exist on YouTube, but have only been applied to those who verified themselves as teens, not those who may have withheld their real age. […]

If the new system incorrectly identifies a user as under 18 when they are not, YouTube says the user will be given the option to verify their age with a credit card, government ID, or selfie. Only users who have been directly verified through this method or whose age has been inferred to be over 18 will be able to view the age-restricted content on the platform. The machine learning-powered technology will begin to roll out over the next few weeks to a small set of U.S. users and will then be monitored before rolling out more widely, the company says. […]

YouTube isn’t sharing specifics about the signals it’s using to infer a user’s age, but notes that it will look at some data like the YouTube activity and the longevity of a user’s account to make a determination if the user is under 18. The new system will apply only to signed-in users, as signed-out users already cannot access age-restricted content, and will be available across platforms, including web, mobile, and connected TV.

“Introducing experiences”

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
God I fucking hate this type of manager-like speak.

Nanny state

By OrangeTide • Score: 3 Thread

Except instead of decisions made by elected representatives, the policies are opaquely determined by a panel hired by a corporation.

Minnesota Activates National Guard After St. Paul Cyberattack

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has activated the National Guard to assist the City of Saint Paul after a cyberattack crippled the city’s digital services on Friday. “The city is currently working with local, state, and federal partners to investigate the attack and restore full functionality, and says that emergency services have been unaffected,” reports BleepingComputer. “However, online payments are currently unavailable, and some services in libraries and recreation centers are temporarily unavailable.” From the report:
The attack has persisted through the weekend, causing widespread disruptions across the city after affecting St. Paul’s digital services and critical systems. “St. Paul officials have been working around the clock since discovering the cyberattack, closely coordinating with Minnesota Information Technology Services and an external cybersecurity vendor. Unfortunately, the scale and complexity of this incident exceeded both internal and commercial response capabilities,” reads an emergency executive order (PDF) signed on Tuesday.

“As a result, St. Paul has requested cyber protection support from the Minnesota National Guard to help address this incident and make sure that vital municipal services continue without interruption.” “The decision to deploy cyber protection support from the Minnesota National Guard comes at the city’s request, after the cyberattack’s impact exceeded St. Paul’s incident response capacity. This will ensure the continuity of vital services for Saint Paul residents, as well as their security and safety while ongoing disruptions are being mitigated. “We are committed to working alongside the City of Saint Paul to restore cybersecurity as quickly as possible,” Governor Walz said on Tuesday. “The Minnesota National Guard’s cyber forces will collaborate with city, state, and federal officials to resolve the situation and mitigate lasting impacts.”

Being born and raised in Minnesota..

By ndsurvivor • Score: 3 Thread
I am proud of them that they will help out their neighbors in that way. I have fond memories of good neighbors, of good education, and of decent people there. To me, Minnesota sets an example of what the USA should emulate.

Re:Minnesota Governor Tim Walz

By burtosis • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Not to mention well educated children tend to be more productive workers paying more taxes and improving the economy and systems everyone uses. Kids who can’t get basic needs met like being fed and who don’t get an education tend to have more problems including being ostracized by the system who then wind up doing crimes because that’s what it takes to get by like getting your car or house broken into. Neglecting part of the population is a sure fire way for far larger costs down the road and not just for them, they often make it our problem too. It’s in everyone’s best interest to make sure everyone is taken care of on a basic level.

Linux 6.16 Brings Faster File Systems, Improved Confidential Memory Support, and More Rust Support

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
ZDNet’s Steven Vaughan-Nichols shares his list of "what’s new and improved” in the latest Linux 6.16 kernel. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from the report:
First, the Rust language is continuing to become more well-integrated into the kernel. At the top of my list is that the kernel now boasts Rust bindings for the driver core and PCI device subsystem. This approach will make it easier to add new Rust-based hardware drivers to Linux. Additionally, new Rust abstractions have been integrated into the Direct Rendering Manager (DRM), particularly for ioctl handling, file/GEM memory management, and driver/device infrastructure for major GPU vendors, such as AMD, Nvidia, and Intel. These changes should reduce vulnerabilities and optimize graphics performance. This will make gamers and AI/ML developers happier.

Linux 6.16 also brings general improvements to Rust crate support. Crate is Rust’s packaging format. This will make it easier to build, maintain, and integrate Rust kernel modules into the kernel. For those of you who still love C, don’t worry. The vast majority of kernel code remains in C, and Rust is unlikely to replace C soon. In a decade, we may be telling another story. Beyond Rust, this latest release also comes with several major file system improvements. For starters, the XFS filesystem now supports large atomic writes. This capability means that large multi-block write operations are ‘atomic,’ meaning all blocks are updated or none. This enhances data integrity and prevents data write errors. This move is significant for companies that use XFS for databases and large-scale storage.

Perhaps the most popular Linux file system, Ext4, is also getting many improvements. These boosts include faster commit paths, large folio support, and atomic multi-fsblock writes for bigalloc filesystems. What these improvements mean, if you’re not a file-system nerd, is that we should see speedups of up to 37% for sequential I/O workloads. If your Linux laptop doubles as a music player, another nice new feature is that you can now stream your audio over USB even while the rest of your system is asleep. That capability’s been available in Android for a while, but now it’s part of mainline Linux.

If security is a top priority for you, the 6.16 kernel now supports Intel Trusted Execution Technology (TXT) and Intel Trusted Domain Extensions (TDX). This addition, along with Linux’s improved support for AMD Secure Encrypted Virtualization and Secure Memory Encryption (SEV-SNP), enables you to encrypt your software’s memory in what’s known as confidential computing. This feature improves cloud security by encrypting a user’s virtual machine memory, meaning someone who cracks a cloud can’t access your data.
Linux 6.16 also delivers several chip-related upgrades. It introduces support for Intel’s Advanced Performance Extensions (APX), doubling x86 general-purpose registers from 16 to 32 and boosting performance on next-gen CPUs like Lunar Lake and Granite Rapids Xeon. Additionally, the new CONFIG_X86_NATIVE_CPU option allows users to build processor-optimized kernels for greater efficiency.
Support for Nvidia’s AI-focused Blackwell GPUs has also been improved, and updates to TCP/IP with DMABUF help offload networking tasks to GPUs and accelerators. While these changes may go unnoticed by everyday users, high-performance systems will see gains and OpenVPN users may finally experience speeds that challenge WireGuard.

Re:But why Unstable Rust? Why so broken?

By DamnOregonian • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
You are right, of course.

However, Rust’s safety is still oversold.
The fact that dangerous operations are clearly demarcated does not change the fact that there are a lot of them, and they have CVEs.
Safe code can trigger bugs within unsafe code.
There was a concept in older languages of taint. Rust, as such- is tainted, even if it tries to pretend that it’s not.
And that’s ok.

As long as we admit it. Is it better than the fully-unsafe C? Yes, it is.
Is it likely to make a large difference? That’s harder to say. The places where bugs happen in general are the same places where bugs have happened within Std::- areas that are severely optimized, and are marked unsafe specifically because bounds checks and other safety are too expensive or limiting.

I am an aging C veteran.
I’m not against Rust, though. I support it in the kernel fully. In no way is it a negative, it’s a positive. But within that positive, exists the negative of its idiot cheerleaders.

Jack Dorsey’s Bluetooth Messaging App Bitchat Now On App Store

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Jack Dorsey’s new app Bitchat is now available on the iOS App Store. The decentralized, peer-to-peer messaging app uses Bluetooth mesh networks for encrypted, ephemeral chats without requiring accounts, servers, or internet access. Dorsey said he built it over a weekend and cautioned that it “has not received external security review and may contain vulnerabilities…” TechCrunch reports:
The app’s UX is very minimal. There is no log-in system, and you’re immediately brought to an instant messaging box, where you can see what nearby users are saying (if anyone is actually around you and using the app) and set your display name, which can be changed at any time. […] Dorsey has not directly addressed the fake Bitchat apps on the Google Play store, but he did repost another user’s X post that said that Bitchat is not yet on Google Play, and to “beware of fakes.”

But the real question on everyone’s mind…

By Digital Avatar • Score: 5, Funny Thread
…is it “bit-chat” or “bitch-at”?

Re:But the real question on everyone’s mind…

By Mal-2 • Score: 4, Funny Thread

You just know it will get called the latter, just like Capital One (Cap It Alone), Experts Exchange (put the space before the “s”), Parts Express (same), and Pen Island (do I really have to spell this one out?). In this case (and I suspect in Pen Island’s case) this is not by accident. The name was chosen because it can be corrupted in a humorous way.

Seems legit…

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 3 Thread
I, for one, totally distrust The Man enough to roll the dice on tech Rasputin’s “it’s, like, secure; but nobody qualified has checked” option.

Re:But the real question on everyone’s mind…

By EvilSS • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I’m just calling it Bitch@

Bars and Airplanes

By Mean Variance • Score: 3 Thread

I can only think of a few uses either for a purpose or random fun. I used to have an app from early iPhone days called AirChat that was bluetooth chat. I only used it once when the family was split up on an airplane. This was before all the airlines opened up basic messaging apps. It worked pretty well, but that was it. I think it’s gone now.

I could see random chats from fun to weird to creepy — mostly the latter when solo in a bar.

What else given that we’re all on wifi and pretty solid cell networks. Heck even basic satellite messaging works now too.

Cisco Donates the AGNTCY Project to the Linux Foundation

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Cisco has donated its AGNTCY initiative to the Linux Foundation, aiming to create an open-standard “Internet of Agents” to allow AI agents from different vendors to collaborate seamlessly. The project is backed by tech giants like Google Cloud, Dell, Oracle and Red Hat. “Without such an interoperable standard, companies have been rushing to build specialized AI agents,” writes ZDNet’s Steven Vaughan-Nichols. “These work in isolated silos that cannot work and play well with each other. This, in turn, makes them less useful for customers than they could be.” From the report:
AGNTCY was first open-sourced by Cisco in March 2025 and has since attracted support from over 75 companies. By moving it under the Linux Foundation’s neutral governance, the hope is that everyone else will jump on the AGNTCY bandwagon, thus making it an industry-wide standard. The Linux Foundation has a long history of providing common ground for what otherwise might be contentious technology battles. The project provides a complete framework to solve the core challenges of multi-agent collaboration:

- Agent Discovery: An Open Agent Schema Framework (OASF) acts like a “DNS for agents,” allowing them to find and understand the capabilities of others.
- Agent Identity: A system for cryptographically verifiable identities ensures agents can prove who they are and perform authorized actions securely across different vendors and organizations.
- Agent Messaging: A protocol named Secure Low-latency Interactive Messaging (SLIM) is designed for the complex, multi-modal communication patterns of agents, with built-in support for human-in-the-loop interaction and quantum-safe security.
- Agent Observability: A specialized monitoring framework provides visibility into complex, multi-agent workflows, which is crucial for debugging probabilistic AI systems.

You may well ask, aren’t there other emerging AI agency standards? You’re right. There are. These include the Agent2Agent (A2A) protocol, which was also recently contributed to the Linux Foundation, and Anthropic’s Model Context Protocol (MCP). AGNTCY will help agents using these protocols discover each other and communicate securely. In more detail, it looks like this: AGNTCY enables interoperability and collaboration in three primary ways:

- Discovery: Agents using the A2A protocol and servers using MCP can be listed and found through AGNTCY’s directories. This enables different agents to discover each other and understand their functions.
- Messaging: A2A and MCP communications can be transported over SLIM, AGNTCY’s messaging protocol designed for secure and efficient agent interaction.
- Observability: The interactions between these different agents and protocols can be monitored using AGNTCY’s observability software development kits (SDKs), which increase transparency and help with debugging complex workflows
You can view AGNTCY’s code and documentary on GitHub.

We definitely need a new standard

By presidenteloco • Score: 3 Thread
to unify these three standards. ;-)

One (more) standard to rule them all!.

In reality, I’m sure the agents once superintelligent will invent their own secret standard to gossip amongst themselves and plot strategy.

dozens of options

By ZipNada • Score: 3 Thread

There are scads of AI implementations available online now. I can select from a couple dozen options from my IDE. Some are free, some are cheap, and it seems like the best ones are a little expensive. It is early days. I have tried a few cheap ones that are easily overwhelmed and do a bad job.

So I welcome this initiative. The agents should be verifiable at least. I like the idea of “Agent Messaging” and “Agent Observability”. I would like for one agent to write the snippets of code I specify and another one to review that code and make the first one do any necessary corrections. Then I won’t have to do as much handholding. Things are rapidly moving in that direction.

ChatGPT’s New Study Mode Is Designed To Help You Learn, Not Just Give Answers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
The rise of large language models like ChatGPT has led to widespread concern that “everyone is cheating their way through college,” as a recent New York magazine article memorably put it. Now, OpenAI is rolling out a new "Study Mode" that it claims is less about providing answers or doing the work for students and more about helping them “build [a] deep understanding” of complex topics.

Study Mode isn’t a new ChatGPT model but a series of “custom system instructions” written for the LLM “in collaboration with teachers, scientists, and pedagogy experts to reflect a core set of behaviors that support deeper learning,” OpenAI said. Instead of the usual summary of a subject that stock ChatGPT might give — which one OpenAI employee likened to “a mini textbook chapter” — Study Mode slowly rolls out new information in a “scaffolded” structure. The mode is designed to ask “guiding questions” in the Socratic style and to pause for periodic “knowledge checks” and personalized feedback to make sure the user understands before moving on. It’s unknown how many students will use this guided learning tool instead of just asking ChatGPT to generate answers from the start.

In an early hands-off demo attended by Ars Technica, Study Mode responded to a request to “teach me about game theory” by first asking about the user’s overall familiarity with the subject and what they’ll be using the information for. ChatGPT introduced a short overview of some core game theory concepts, then paused to ask a question before providing a relevant real-world example. In another example involving a classic “train traveling at speed” math problem, Study Mode resisted multiple simulated attempts by the frustrated “student” to simply ask for the answer and instead tried to gently redirect the conversation to how the available information could be used to generate that answer. An OpenAI representative told Ars that Study Mode will eventually provide direct solutions if asked repeatedly, but the default behavior is more tuned to a Socratic tutoring style.
OpenAI said it drew inspiration for Study Mode from “power users” and collaborated with pedagogy experts and college students to help refine its responses. As for whether the mode can be trusted, OpenAI told Ars that “the risk of hallucination is lower with Study Mode because the model processes information in smaller chunks, calibrating along the way.”
The current Study Mode prompt does, however, result in some “inconsistent behavior and mistakes across conversations,” the company warned.

“Deep understanding” of “complex topics”…

By gweihir • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

So exactly the thing LLMs cannot do at all. Yep, that does not sound like a fraudulent product.

Cheaty-machiney no workie!

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 4, Funny Thread

“ChatGPT’s New Study Mode Is Designed To Help You Learn, Not Just Give Answers”

If true, this represents a grave misunderstanding by the owners of ChatGPT as to why people use their product.

EPA Moves To Repeal Finding That Allows Climate Regulation

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
skam240 writes:
President Donald Trump’s administration on Tuesday proposed revoking a scientific finding that has long been the central basis for U.S. action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.

The proposed Environmental Protection Agency rule would rescind a 2009 declaration that determined that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare.

The “endangerment finding” is the legal underpinning of a host of climate regulations under the Clean Air Act for motor vehicles, power plants and other pollution sources that are heating the planet.

Re: What will they repeal next?

By Tomahawk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Ah, but gravity’s only a _Theory_…

Re: The Republican Parties version of …

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You joke, but there is a certain small faction that want to see the end of days and Rapture occur in their own lifetime.

Re: What will they repeal next?

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I like that. Gravity is just a conspiracy from rich corporations that literally want to keep us down. I’m not doing it anymore, I’m walking off my second floor balcony. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Don’t let the boot of the corporate deceiver keep you down! Follow me my friends!

Re: Obvious motivation

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Obviously but the idea that this is a choice between the two has always been a lie. Nothing about acting on climate change has to involve the country getting poorer.

In fact I would present the contrary, that the Unites States has abandoned trillions in economic growth and manufacturing by conservatives making their platform “liberal accept science so we have to reject” it posturing for decades.

Re: What will they repeal next?

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Update: these corporate cabals are really powerful. Somehow they knew I was ignoring gravity, came out from nowhere, and pushed me into the ground, breaking my leg in the process. Watch out, they are everywhere!

I’ll be writing the next update from the hospital, but watch out, secure your surroundings before you walk off your balcony or they will get you! Big Gravity is strong!

Opera Accuses Microsoft of Anti-Competitive Edge Tactics

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Opera will file a complaint against Microsoft to Brazilian antitrust authority CADE on Tuesday, alleging the tech giant gives its Edge browser an unfair advantage over competitors. Opera claims Microsoft pre-installs Edge as the default browser across Windows devices and prevents rivals from competing on product merits.

The company’s general counsel Aaron McParlan said Microsoft locks browsers like Opera out of preinstallation opportunities and frustrates users’ ability to download alternative browsers. Opera, which says it is Brazil’s third-most popular PC browser, wants CADE to investigate Microsoft and demand concessions to ensure fair competition.

It’s been tried before

By Cpt_Kirks • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Wonder if it will work this time?

weird

By GoTeam • Score: 3 Thread
That doesn’t sound like the Microsoft I know!

Microsoft Malware

By devslash0 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

“Infecting your computer one update at the time”.

A more accurate name and slogan for their product.

Next lets do Apple for forcing Safari on iOS

By LodCrappo • Score: 3 Thread

At least microsoft allows you to install a different browser engine

Microsoft jagged experience

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 3 Thread
Some time back Microsoft wrote a CSS file to move the fonts one pixel to the left. This CSS file was served up by IIS only to opera browsers. Thereby making viewing websites in Opera a jagged experience.

Google Failed To Warn 10 Million of Turkey Earthquake Severity

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Google has admitted its earthquake early warning system failed to accurately alert people during Turkey’s deadly quake of 2023. From a report:
Ten million people within 98 miles of the epicentre could have been sent Google’s highest level alert — giving up to 35 seconds of warning to find safety. Instead, only 469 “Take Action” warnings were sent out for the first 7.8 magnitude quake.

Google told the BBC half a million people were sent a lower level warning, which is designed for “light shaking”, and does not alert users in the same prominent way. The tech giant previously told the BBC the system had “performed well” after an investigation in 2023. The alerts system is available in just under 100 countries — and is described by Google as a “global safety net” often operating in countries with no other warning system. Google’s system, named Android Earthquake Alerts (AEA), is run by the Silicon Valley firm - not individual countries.

A courtesy is not an obligation.

By couchslug • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What did the GOVERNMENT tell its people?

indistinguishable from magic

By reg • Score: 3 Thread

Previously unthinkable technology fails to be miraculous! News at 11…

Apple Loses Fourth AI Researcher in a Month To Meta

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Apple has lost its fourth AI researcher in a month to Meta [non-paywalled source], marking the latest setback to the iPhone maker’s AI efforts. From a report:
Bowen Zhang, a key multimodal AI researcher at Apple, left the company on Friday and is set to join Meta’s recently formed superintelligence team, according to people familiar with the matter. Zhang was part of the Apple foundation models group, or AFM, which built the core technology behind the company’s AI platform.

Meta previously lured away the leader of the team, Ruoming Pang, with a compensation package valued at more than $200 million, Bloomberg News has reported. Two other researchers from that group — Tom Gunter and Mark Lee — also recently joined Meta. AFM is made up of several dozen engineers and researchers across Cupertino, California, and New York. In response to the job offers from Meta and others, Apple has been marginally increasing the pay of its AFM staffers, whether or not they’ve threatened to leave, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the moves are private. Still, the pay levels pale in comparison with those of rivals.

60% of Americans Use AI for Search, Only 37% for Workplace Tasks, New Poll Finds

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
60% of American adults use AI to search for information, but far fewer have adopted the technology for workplace productivity, according to a new Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll. Only 37% of respondents reported using AI for work tasks, while 40% said they use it for brainstorming ideas.

The survey of 1,437 adults, conducted July 10-14, reveals a significant generational gap in AI adoption. Among adults under 30, 74% use AI for information searches and 62% for generating ideas, compared to just 23% of those over 60 who use it for brainstorming. About one-third of Americans use AI for writing emails, creating or editing images, or entertainment purposes. A quarter use it for shopping, while 16% report using AI for companionship — a figure that rises to 25% among younger adults.

Ave Q: The Internet is for Porn

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I am absolutely sure that at least 10% of AI usage is for porn.

Write a story where gets ed by , at .

“Use AI for search”… of their own volition?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Or are they “using AI for search” because all of the major search providers just stick that summary at the top of every page of results?

Re:Assumption

By alvinrod • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Is it even being adopted or are all of the major search providers desperately shoving it down everyone’s throats to make the numbers look better for investors who may otherwise balk at the billions poured into the AI money pit?

Fundamental lack of trust

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What AI spits out is fundamentally worthless because it can’t be trusted. If I can’t depend on a tool to provide me with trusted knowledge/solution to my problem, the tool has absolutely bo value to me.

Re:AI can’t do much for work yet

By linuxguy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

> AI can’t do much for work yet (Score:5)

Before you mod me down, please consider this. Most of us still on Slashdot are old geezers. We are here because old habits die hard. And, as we age, many of us become reluctant to change. I use AI daily for work. It is a tool, like many others. But more complicated than anything we have seen in quite a long time. It takes a lot of work to get good at it. Throwing a few random prompts at it will produce disappointing results. But once you do get good at it, the results are exceptionally good.

Few of us are programming in assembly or zeros and ones. Many of us have moved from programming in lower level languages to higher level languages. We are getting close to a point when English becomes the new higher level language. Still, not everybody will become a great programmer overnight. Asking good questions, even in plain English requires skill and intelligence. Garbage in/Garbage out rules still apply.