Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. OpenAI Launches Aardvark To Detect and Patch Hidden Bugs In Code
  2. FCC To Rescind Ruling That Said ISPs Are Required To Secure Their Networks
  3. Bluesky Hits 40 Million Users, Introduces ‘Dislikes’ Beta
  4. Austria’s Ministry of Economy Has Migrated To a Nextcloud Platform In Shift Away From US Tech
  5. YouTube TV Loses ESPN, ABC and Other Disney Channels
  6. Amazon To Block Piracy Apps On Fire TV
  7. Denmark Reportedly Withdraws ‘Chat Control’ Proposal Following Controversy
  8. YouTube’s AI Moderator Pulls Windows 11 Workaround Videos, Calls Them Dangerous
  9. Windows 11 Tests Bluetooth Audio Sharing That Connects Two Headsets at Once
  10. Coinbase CEO Stunt Exposes Prediction Market Vulnerability
  11. A TikTok Interview Triggered a Securities Filing
  12. 10M People Watched a YouTuber Shim a Lock; the Lock Company Sued Him. Bad Idea.
  13. The World’s Secret Electricity Superusers Revealed
  14. FDA Clears Way For Faster Personalized Gene Editing Therapy
  15. Google Working on Bare-Bones Maps That Removes Almost All Interface Elements and Labels

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.

OpenAI Launches Aardvark To Detect and Patch Hidden Bugs In Code

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI has introduced Aardvark, a GPT-5-powered autonomous agent that scans, reasons about, and patches code like a human security researcher. “By embedding itself directly into the development pipeline, Aardvark aims to turn security from a post-development concern into a continuous safeguard that evolves with the software itself,” reports InfoWorld. From the report:
What makes Aardvark unique, OpenAI noted, is its combination of reasoning, automation, and verification. Rather than simply highlighting potential vulnerabilities, the agent promises multi-stage analysis — starting by mapping an entire repository and building a contextual threat model around it. From there, it continuously monitors new commits, checking whether each change introduces risk or violates existing security patterns.

Additionally, upon identifying a potential issue, Aardvark attempts to validate the exploitability of the finding in a sandboxed environment before flagging it. This validation step could prove transformative. Traditional static analysis tools often overwhelm developers with false alarms — issues that may look risky but aren’t truly exploitable. “The biggest advantage is that it will reduce false positives significantly,” noted Jain. “It’s helpful in open source codes and as part of the development pipeline.”

Once a vulnerability is confirmed, Aardvark integrates with Codex to propose a patch, then re-analyzes the fix to ensure it doesn’t introduce new problems. OpenAI claims that in benchmark tests, the system identified 92 percent of known and synthetically introduced vulnerabilities across test repositories, a promising indication that AI may soon shoulder part of the burden of modern code auditing.

FCC To Rescind Ruling That Said ISPs Are Required To Secure Their Networks

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The FCC plans to repeal a Biden-era ruling that required ISPs to secure their networks under the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, instead relying on voluntary cybersecurity commitments from telecom providers. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr said the ruling “exceeded the agency’s authority and did not present an effective or agile response to the relevant cybersecurity threats.” Carr said the vote scheduled for November 20 comes after “extensive FCC engagement with carriers” who have taken “substantial steps… to strengthen their cybersecurity defenses.” Ars Technica reports:
The FCC’s January 2025 declaratory ruling came in response to attacks by China, including the Salt Typhoon infiltration of major telecom providers such as Verizon and AT&T. The Biden-era FCC found that the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), a 1994 law, “affirmatively requires telecommunications carriers to secure their networks from unlawful access or interception of communications.”

“The Commission has previously found that section 105 of CALEA creates an affirmative obligation for a telecommunications carrier to avoid the risk that suppliers of untrusted equipment will “illegally activate interceptions or other forms of surveillance within the carrier’s switching premises without its knowledge,’" the January order said. “With this Declaratory Ruling, we clarify that telecommunications carriers’ duties under section 105 of CALEA extend not only to the equipment they choose to use in their networks, but also to how they manage their networks.”
A draft of the order that will be voted on in November can be found here (PDF).

Re:This is insane!

By rta • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Quite plainly, this is a national security issue. It’s not a far-fetched hypothetical to see networks infiltrated to compromise security in order to steal sensitive information about people, businesses, etc. Yes, “national security” is the common claim of the oppressor but that doesn’t mean it’s always illegitimate.

WHO THE FUCK WOULD BE AGAINST ACTUAL NATIONAL SECURITY?!

Our government is generally rules based. That is a specific system of laws vs of people or of “reasonable behavior”.

The specific question is whether the regulation was allowed under the specific law that they used.

As TFA points out the argument is that the rule the FCC made was beyond what the law they quoted allowed. I’m so so on whether it is or not, but that’s the point in question, NOT whether someone hates national security.

Bluesky Hits 40 Million Users, Introduces ‘Dislikes’ Beta

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Bluesky has surpassed 40 million users and is launching a “dislikes” beta to improve its personalization algorithms and reduce toxic content. TechCrunch reports:
With the “dislikes” beta rolling out soon, Bluesky will take into account the new signal to improve user personalization. As users “dislike” posts, the system will learn what sort of content they want to see less of. This will help to inform more than just how content is ranked in feeds, but also reply rankings.

The company explained the changes are designed to make Bluesky a place for more “fun, genuine, and respectful exchanges” — an edict that follows a month of unrest on the platform as some users again criticized the platform over its moderation decisions. While Bluesky is designed as a decentralized network where users run their own moderation, some subset of Bluesky users want the platform itself to ban bad actors and controversial figures instead of leaving it up to the users to block them. Bluesky, however, wants to focus more on the tools it provides users to control their own experience.

Why is this site so obsessed with Twitter clones?

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

https://www.socialmediatoday.c…

Lying with the truth

By backslashdot • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

We need automatic AI fact checking and context providing of every post. Why? Because humans are dumb, therefore lies can be used to mislead them. Here’s an example: Homicides in Ireland, Italy, Germany and even some US cities like San Francisco are at historic lows. However if you were on X you would think the opposite. Why? Because every time there’s a murder they spread it around with various narratives and memes. For example, a woman was horrifically murdered by a black person on a train. Obviously the right wing used it as a excuse to say “we should’t live around blacks” .. However it’s not like whites don’t do the same. One second of googling can find instances of a white person murdering a woman on a subway (for example the incident in 2019). And also forget the fact that millions of blacks and whites ride the train every day with zero incidents .. so I mean the probability of any specific person being in such danger is nearly zero. You’re much more likely to be hit by lightning. And when there isn’t a recent one they rehash old ones. Or they find a video of a migrant stealing flowers from a cemetery to state how depraved migrants are. However if you google or check YouTube you can see many instances of non-migrants doing the same. End result: you fear every migrant even though many pose no danger. It’s like people are afraid of flying, even though plane crashes are super rare .. meanwhile there are hundreds of thousands of serious car accidents every year with 40,000 fatalities. Meanwhile people are afraid to step on an airplane thinking it might crash. I was on an airplane next to me and there was turbulence and the passenger next to was so scared she dug into my arm and nearly drew blood. I guess in that sense flying can be dangerous if you’re next to someone so misinformed when there’s turbulence. Anyway, what was I talking about .. oh yeah lying with the truth .. you can be successful at advancing any agenda if you repeatedly cherry-pick some facts that suit your narrative and there are enough people who have an innate lack of fact-checking ability or the sense to understand things within context.

Re:Lying with the truth

By SeaFox • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

We need automatic AI fact checking and context providing of every post. Why? Because humans are dumb, therefore lies can be used to mislead them.

Fact-checking from a technology that’s only slightly more accurate than a coin toss. That’s a good one! I guess you forgot most AI “smarts” are based on the media is consumes indiscriminately from the Internet. So if it reads lies often enough, like a human it will believe them, too.

Cue the echo chamber!

By ihadafivedigituid • Score: 3 Thread
Another place for people to curate their warm, soft bubbles of bias reinforcement.

Austria’s Ministry of Economy Has Migrated To a Nextcloud Platform In Shift Away From US Tech

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet:
Even before Azure had a global failure this week, Austria’s Ministry of Economy had taken a decisive step toward digital sovereignty. The Ministry achieved this status by migrating 1,200 employees to a Nextcloud-based cloud and collaboration platform hosted on Austrian-based infrastructure. This shift away from proprietary, foreign-owned cloud services, such as Microsoft 365, to an open-source, European-based cloud service aligns with a growing trend among European governments and agencies. They want control over sensitive data and to declare their independence from US-based tech providers.

European companies are encouraging this trend. Many of them have joined forces in the newly created non-profit foundation, the EuroStack Initiative. This foundation’s goal is " to organize action, not just talk, around the pillars of the initiative: Buy European, Sell European, Fund European.” What’s the motive behind these moves away from proprietary tech? Well, in Austria’s case, Florian Zinnagl, CISO of the Ministry of Economy, Energy, and Tourism (BMWET), explained, “We carry responsibility for a large amount of sensitive data — from employees, companies, and citizens. As a public institution, we take this responsibility very seriously. That’s why we view it critically to rely on cloud solutions from non-European corporations for processing this information.”

Austria’s move and motivation echo similar efforts in Germany, Denmark, and other EU states and agencies. The organizations include the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, which abandoned Exchange and Outlook for open-source programs. Other agencies that have taken the same path away from Microsoft include the Austrian military, Danish government organizations, and the French city of Lyon. All of these organizations aim to keep data storage and processing within national or European borders to enhance security, comply with privacy laws such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and mitigate risks from potential commercial and foreign government surveillance.

YouTube TV Loses ESPN, ABC and Other Disney Channels

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Disney’s channels, including ESPN, ABC, FX, and NatGeo, have gone dark on YouTube TV after Google and Disney failed to renew their carriage agreement before the October 30 deadline, with each side blaming the other for using unfair negotiating tactics and price hikes. YouTube TV says it will issue a $20 credit to subscribers if the blackout continues while negotiations proceed. Engadget reports:
“Last week Disney used the threat of a blackout on YouTube TV as a negotiating tactic to force deal terms that would raise prices on our customers,” YouTube said in an announcement on its blog. “They’re now following through on that threat, suspending their content on YouTube TV.” YouTube added that Disney’s decision harms its subscribers while benefiting its own live TV products, such as Hulu+Live TV and Fubo.

In a statement sent to the Los Angeles Times, however, Disney accused Google’s YouTube TV of choosing to deny “subscribers the content they value most by refusing to pay fair rates for [its] channels, including ESPN and ABC.” Disney also accused Google of using its market dominance to “eliminate competition and undercut the industry-standard terms” that other pay-TV distributors have agreed to pay for its content.

Re:and the real loser is…

By RitchCraft • Score: 4, Informative Thread

And once again, the pirates win. These companies will never learn.

Sodomize YouTube

By alternative_right • Score: 3 Thread

They censored and deplatformed me for years… so I hope they burn.

Free speech is not political, it is common sense! I want to hear from everyone.

Re:why is ESPN forced into the basic package when

By dgatwood • Score: 4, Informative Thread

So that ESPN is ensure massive revenues, just like Fox News. There are agreements that bundles are mandatory so you can’t cut the vampires out.

It’s worse than that. ESPN has massive revenue, but also massive costs. Contrast with Disney, where the cost of production is dirt cheap by comparison, and what you conclude is that Disney/ABC is basically taking advantage of knowing that a lot of folks want sports to force mandated bundling so that all those people who don’t watch ESPN end up helping pay for the ones who do, both by paying for the ESPN part and the Disney part, which ends up subsidizing the ESPN part.

The worst thing that can happen to a streaming service is getting sports. We need to keep streaming sports on their own a la carte services. As soon as you start bundling it in, the cost of the service skyrockets while the quality of the content plummets, because sports is such a huge fiscal black hole.

Amazon To Block Piracy Apps On Fire TV

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Amazon will begin blocking sideloaded piracy apps on Fire TV devices by cross-checking them against a blacklist maintained by the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment. The company will, however, continue to allow legitimate sideloading for developers. Heise reports:
In response to an inquiry, Amazon explained that it has always worked to ban piracy from its app store. As part of an expanded program led by the ACE, it is now blocking apps that demonstrably provide access to pirated content, including those downloaded outside the app store. This builds on Amazon’s ongoing efforts to support creators and protect customers, as piracy can also expose users to malware, viruses, and fraud.

[…] The sideloading option will remain available on Fire TV devices running Amazon’s new operating system, Vega OS. However, it is generally limited to developers here. In this context, the company emphasized that, contrary to rumors, there are no plans to upgrade existing Fire TV devices with Fire OS as the operating system to Vega OS.

Once again proving you don’t own the device…

By MikeDataLink • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

You paid them for the right to hold it in your possession until which time they decide to brick it.

Fire TV?

By RitchCraft • Score: 3 Thread

If you’re using a Fire TV you’re doing it all wrong. Build yourself an HTPC, get a decent NAS, install Kodi on your HTPC. Use a TV that doesn’t require an Internet connection (i.e. use it as a simple monitor). Pop some corn, sit back, win. There are even simpler ways of doing this with a RasPI, but I find having a full blown PC at my disposal to be quite convenient as well.

Denmark Reportedly Withdraws ‘Chat Control’ Proposal Following Controversy

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Record:
Denmark’s justice minister on Thursday said he will no longer push for an EU law requiring the mandatory scanning of electronic messages, including on end-to-end encrypted platforms. Earlier in its European Council presidency, Denmark had brought back a draft law which would have required the scanning, sparking an intense backlash. Known as Chat Control, the measure was intended to crack down on the trafficking of child sex abuse materials (CSAM). After days of silence, the German government on October 8 announced it would not support the proposal, tanking the Danish effort.

Danish Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard told reporters on Thursday that his office will support voluntary CSAM detections. “This will mean that the search warrant will not be part of the EU presidency’s new compromise proposal, and that it will continue to be voluntary for the tech giants to search for child sexual abuse material,” Hummelgaard said, according to local news reports. The current model allowing for voluntary scanning expires in April, Hummelgaard said. “Right now we are in a situation where we risk completely losing a central tool in the fight against sexual abuse of children,” he said. “That’s why we have to act no matter what. We owe it to all the children who are subjected to monstrous abuse.”

This is horrible.

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

Very hard to face the reality that the EU is still trying to do this, salami-tactic and boiling the frog for years and years now. This is definitely not over and will keep popping up until they succeed.
Even worse that Denmark, of all places, was pushing for this.
I have no idea what led them to this madness.

YouTube’s AI Moderator Pulls Windows 11 Workaround Videos, Calls Them Dangerous

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Is installing Windows 11 with a local account or on unsupported hardware harmful or dangerous? YouTube’s AI moderation system seems to think so, as it has started pulling videos that show users how to sidestep Microsoft’s setup restrictions.

Tech YouTuber Rich White, aka CyberCPU Tech, was the first to go public about the issue on October 26, when he posted a video reporting the removal of a how-to he published on installing Windows 11 25H2 with a local account instead of a Microsoft account. In the video, White expressed concern that YouTube’s automated flagging process may be the root of the problem, as he found it hard to believe that “creating a local account in Windows 11 could lead to serious harm or even death,” as YouTube reportedly alleged when it removed the video.

When he appealed, White said that YouTube denied the request within 10 to 20 minutes, early on a Sunday morning, which led him to speculate that there wasn’t a human in the loop when the request was shut down. That wasn’t his only video removed, either. The next day, White uploaded his video for this week on installing Windows 11 25H2 on unsupported hardware, which was removed hours after being posted. YouTube justified the removal on similar grounds. […] At least two other YouTubers - Britec09 and Hrutkay Mods - have released videos alleging much of the same.

Google has a vested interest

By xack • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
They want Android accounts and ChromeOS Accounts too, so they are making the idea of using a local account dangerous in general. We already had Amazon remote disabling apps for piracy as well.

Everything is coming together, you will only be able to run approved apps on approved hardware, and your account will be linked to your ID as well. No piracy, No ad blocking, No Disobeying the AI.

Slashdot is in on the act after getting rid of true AC posting too.

Typical.

By newcastlejon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Innocuous tech videos get pulled immediately but it takes a complaint to Ofcom to get ads taken down that are explicitly illegal.
Stay classy, Google.

Hooray for AI moderators

By DrMrLordX • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Meanwhile YouTube is offering buyouts to their entire staff. Haven’t seen it reported here, but:

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/10/2…

(maybe I just missed an earlier post about it, regardless the phenomena are likely related and a sign of what’s to come for YouTube)

Re:Doesn’t go far enough.

By Z00L00K • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

To me it seems like this is an action by multiple M$ bots doing mass-reporting of the videos with similar rule violations causing the videos to be taken down. Microsoft has the capacity for such things and since the AIs that Google uses to run YouTube are dumb as a brick and trusts statistical evidence even though it’s false they take down the videos.

Re: Google has a vested interest

By Big Hairy Gorilla • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I’m too lazy to lift the lid of my laptop to shitpost you, cause I’m on the couch with my phone. No matter. There is a certain culture here, anon posting is part of it and baked into the mod point system, for reasons. Notwithstanding the dumb repetitive Nazi posts of a few years ago, and the jackass who always posts the same pseudo manifesto about the meaning of craptocoins (silvergun being the prime suspect, imho).... for the most part I would say the anon posting isn’t overly abused. For the most part I would say, it isn’t. In this context, I would even go so far to say I allows nerds to express opinions on touchy subjects … Palestinians vs Israelis, drug use, sex topics… things you are basically embarrassed to say out loud.

I just made a post on the Washington Post the other day and said something unflattering about Trump. Pretty tame really, and it was censored. I had to put wierd punctuation and spaces into it to get by their now extremely authoritarian AI filter. The state doesn’t want free speech, an WaPo is implementing the policy. I cancelled my account immediately. Fuck Bezoz and Trump violently up the ass.

I much prefer this.

Windows 11 Tests Bluetooth Audio Sharing That Connects Two Headsets at Once

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft is bringing shared audio to Windows 11, allowing you to stream audio across two pairs of wireless headphones, speakers, earbuds, or hearing aids. From a report:
The feature is built using the Bluetooth Low Energy (LE) audio codec, and it’s rolling out in preview to Windows 11 Insiders in the Dev and Beta channels. Shared audio comes in handy if you’re watching a movie on a laptop with your friend or family member, or just want to show them new music that you can both stream inside your own wireless headsets. You can use shared audio by connecting Bluetooth LE-supported devices to your Windows 11 PC and then selecting the Shared audio (preview) button in your quick settings menu. Microsoft introduced an LE Audio feature on Windows 11 in August, enabling higher audio quality while using a wireless headset in a game or call.

Late to the party again ?

By polyp2000 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Copying features already available in other operating systems .... tut tut.

They’re just doing this to be jerks

By Oh really now • Score: 3 Thread
Literally double the number of accidental porn over the bluetooth incidents.

Coinbase CEO Stunt Exposes Prediction Market Vulnerability

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
When Coinbase’s quarterly earnings call wrapped up Thursday, its chief executive, Brian Armstrong, didn’t finish with profit guidance or statements of confidence. He closed it out with a list: “Bitcoin, Ethereum, blockchain, staking and Web3.” Those weren’t random buzzwords. They were part of an $84,000 betting market [non-paywalled source].

Across prediction market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket, users had wagered on which words would be spoken during the call — part of a niche category known as mention markets, where the outcome isn’t tied to earnings, price moves or sports games, but to what people say in some public forum. With the final analyst question complete, several terms listed in contracts were still unsaid. Armstrong ticked them off one by one.

“I was a little distracted because I was tracking the prediction market about what Coinbase will say on their next earnings call,” he said in his parting remarks. “I just want to add here the words Bitcoin, Ethereum, blockchain, staking, and Web3 — to make sure we get those in before the end of the call.” The exchange’s CEO had just moved a market — even if only a small one.

Mention markets are one of the more curious byproducts of the broader prediction market boom, but also one of the more controversial. Platforms like Kalshi, which is regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and Polymarket, which is in the process of returning to the US market, let users wager on the outcomes of real-world events. That can mean elections, policy decisions, or sports — but also, increasingly, corporate rituals and even common jargon.

My prediction

By registrations_suck • Score: 3 Thread

my prediction is that all this crypto coin business is a scam.

Great way to call BS and put a stop to it

By spazmonkey • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Australian Laurie Oakes did the same thing when betting houses took bets on what color tie he would wear during a television appearance.
    Brilliant SOB stuffed his pockets full of clip-on ties of each of the colors and swapped them whenever the camera panned away from him.
    Result? 1) the sportsbooks paid out on all colors that night 2) The bookies are not ever going to try that again

A TikTok Interview Triggered a Securities Filing

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Snowflake filed an 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission earlier this week after its chief revenue officer gave financial projections in a TikTok video. Mike Gannon told an influencer outside the New York Stock Exchange that the data-storage company would exit the year with just over $4.5 billion in revenue and reach $10 billion in a couple of years.

The filing stated that Gannon is not authorized to disclose financial information on behalf of the company and that investors should not rely on his statements. Snowflake reaffirmed its August guidance of $.395 billion for fiscal year 2026. The video appeared on an account called theschoolofhardknockz and drew more than 555,000 views on TikTok. Gannon told the interviewer he watches the videos all the time.

10M People Watched a YouTuber Shim a Lock; the Lock Company Sued Him. Bad Idea.

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Trevor McNally posts videos of himself opening locks. The former Marine has 7 million followers and nearly 10 million people watched him open a Proven Industries trailer hitch lock in April using a shim cut from an aluminum can. The Florida company responded by filing a federal lawsuit in May charging McNally with eight offenses. Judge Mary Scriven denied the preliminary injunction request in June and found the video was fair use.

McNally’s followers then flooded the company with harassment. Proven dismissed the case in July and asked the court to seal the records. The company had initiated litigation over a video that all parties acknowledged was accurate. ArsTechnica adds:
Judging from the number of times the lawsuit talks about 1) ridicule and 2) harassment, it seems like the case quickly became a personal one for Proven’s owner and employees, who felt either mocked or threatened. That’s understandable, but being mocked is not illegal and should never have led to a lawsuit or a copyright claim. As for online harassment, it remains a serious and unresolved issue, but launching a personal vendetta — and on pretty flimsy legal grounds — against McNally himself was patently unwise. (Doubly so given that McNally had a huge following and had already responded to DMCA takedowns by creating further videos on the subject; this wasn’t someone who would simply be intimidated by a lawsuit.)

In the end, Proven’s lawsuit likely cost the company serious time and cash — and generated little but bad publicity.

Before anyone asks:

By newcastlejon • Score: 5, Informative Thread
McNally does work with the Lock Picking Lawyer.

Another victim of the Streisand effect

By Bruce66423 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It appears it’s not well enough known in corporate circles. Proven Industries should not be selling any locks ever more…

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Sometimes silence is the best answer

By UnknowingFool • Score: 5, Informative Thread
This all started when McNally’s viewers linked to one Proven’s videos where they made many claims about how secure their locks were. McNally quickly opened the lock using a shim from an aluminum can he cut on camera. Proven’s response to that video was to claim the video was faked using edits and suing McNally. McNally’s response was to film himself getting a brand new Proven lock from an Amazon drop box shipment and opening the lock without any video edits again using an aluminum can. Then Proven tried to call McNally’s wife on her private number. So the next several videos from McNally is where he orders, opens, and picks many, many different models of Proven locks one after the other in a row.

Old news

By YuppieScum • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Runkle did several videos on this case a few months ago, the first of which is here.

Re:Another victim of the Streisand effect

By PPH • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

there are no unpickable locks you can buy at a store

There are no unpickable locks. There. FTFY.

You can overcome some of the simplest attacks on locks. If you know what to buy and where to buy them. But not at consumer stores.

The shimming attack can be overcome with “captive key” locks. You insert and turn the key to withdraw a bolt or hasp. But you cannot remove the key until the door/hasp is closed. Then the key is rotated back to the lock position and the key may be removed. There are no spring operated bolts or pins that can be depressed with anything like a shim.

We have these at a (government) facility. And they are provided by a local locksmith. But if you walk in as a private citizen and describe what you want, or even provide them with their own part number, they just stare at you as if you are speaking Bantu.

The World’s Secret Electricity Superusers Revealed

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The rush to secure electricity has intensified as tech companies look to spend trillions of dollars building data centers. There’s an industry that consumes even more power than many tech giants, and it has largely escaped the same scrutiny: suppliers of industrial gases.

Everyday items like toothpaste and life-saving treatments like MRIs are among the countless parts of modern life that hinge on access to gases such as nitrogen, oxygen and helium. Producing and transporting these gases to industrial facilities and hospitals is a highly energy-intensive process. Three companies — Linde, Air Liquide and Air Products and Chemicals — control 70% of the $120 billion global market for industrial gases. Their initiatives to rein in electricity use or switch to renewables aren’t enough to rapidly cut carbon emissions, according to a new report from the campaign group Action Speaks Louder.

“The scale of the sector’s greenhouse gas emissions and electricity use is staggering,” said George Harding-Rolls, the group’s head of campaigns and one of the authors of the report. Linde’s electricity use in 2024 exceeded that of Alphabet’s Google and Samsung Electronics as well as oil giant TotalEnergies, while the power use of Air Liquide and Air Products was comparable to that of Shell and Microsoft. Yet unlike fossil fuel and tech companies, these industrial gas companies are far from household names because their customers are the world’s largest chemicals, steel and oil companies rather than average consumers.

The industry relies on air-separation units, which use giant compressors to turn air into liquid and then distill it into its many components. These machines are responsible for much of the industry’s electricity demand, and their use alone is responsible for 2% of carbon dioxide emissions in China and the US, the world’s two largest polluters.

Re:Article demonizes these companies

By alvinrod • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If they had a viable alternative they would be in business selling it to all of those companies who would love to cut their costs. Instead they puff their chests out and demand that someone else solve the problem while feeling very satisfied at themselves for being a better person than the rest of us. The name of the group is rather comical in this respect.

The difference

By RitchCraft • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The difference here is that these liquefied gases are mostly used to service humanity … LLMs … well not so much. I wonder who would benefit from a piece pointing out that an LLM doesn’t use the most electricity. Hmmm…

As a guy with a recent shoulder surgery…

By williamyf • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I derive a lot of utility from the helium used for MRI machines. As a guy who likes to eat potato chips, I derive much utility from nitrogen gas. As a scuba diver I derive much utility from Pure oxigen for my 32% and 50% stages. As a guy who had two ventral laparoscopic surgeries, I derive utility from pure CO2.

Crypto? AI? AWS and AZURE falling over their own shoelaces? .... not so much utility there.

JM2C
YMMV

Wrong

By YuppieScum • Score: 5, Informative Thread

But increasing efficiency doesn’t increase quarterly profits.

Er… yes, it does. That’s exactly what it means.

Increasing efficiency in this context means making the same amount of product for less cost, making more product for the same cost, or even more product for less cost.

All these mean increased profits.

Re:Using liquid air for grid-scale energy storage

By votsalo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Easy1st step: have these guys liquify air only at energy peaks. 2nd step: liquify more than they use and send energy back on the grid during high demand.

It is more economical for them to produce liquid air non-stop. Many industries could theoretically consume electricity only when it is abundant (during the day), but then they under-utilize their facilities. Redundant data centers could be spread around the world so that each data center operates only when the sun shines nearby and it has abundant electricity. But then they would operate only about 20% of the time, and therefore require 5x higher capital costs (computers, cooling, buildings, land, etc).

The 2nd step is intriguing, but it is not obvious that it is economically viable. If they generate more liquid air than they need and use it to generate electricity, then they need extra compressors. What advantage would they have over a separate plant which uses those extra compressors to store electricity without selling liquid air?

FDA Clears Way For Faster Personalized Gene Editing Therapy

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A top United States regulator plans to unveil a faster approach to approving custom gene-editing treatments, a move designed to unleash a wave of industry investment that will yield cures for patients with rare diseases. From a report:
Vinay Prasad, who oversees gene therapies at the Food and Drug Administration, said scientific advances, like Crispr, have forced the agency to relax some of its strict rules. As an example, he cited the case of 10-month-old KJ Muldoon, who this year became the first person in history to have his genes custom edited to cure an inherited disease.

“Regulation has to evolve as fast as science evolves,” Prasad said in an interview with Bloomberg News. The agency is “going to be extremely flexible and work very fast with the scientists who want to bring these therapies to kids who need it.” Prasad plans to publish a paper in early November outlining the FDA’s new approach. He predicted it will spark interest in developing treatments for conditions that may affect only a handful of people.

Google Working on Bare-Bones Maps That Removes Almost All Interface Elements and Labels

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Google Maps is testing a power saving mode in its latest Android beta release that strips the navigation interface to its bare essentials. The feature transforms the screen into a monochrome display and removes nearly all UI elements during navigation, according to AndroidAuthority.

Users discovered code strings in version 25.44.03.824313610 indicating the mode activates through the phone’s physical power button rather than through any in-app menu. The stripped-down interface eliminates standard map labels and appears to omit even the name of the upcoming street where drivers need to turn. The mode supports walking, driving, and two-wheeler directions but currently cannot be used in landscape orientation.

No street names is the norm

By Dayze!Confused • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Since digital maps came out there has been one thing they cannot seem to get right, labeling roads, especially when zoomed in. We’ve all been there, desperately needing to know what the name of the street is that we are on, pinching to zoom in further only to have the name we could barely read before, now completely disappear.

Want to save power?

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 3 Thread

Shut down all sensors that have nothing to do with navigation, that Google uses to put people under surveillance, stop the data collection and stop sending data to the mothership all the damn time. I guarantee you power usage will go down significantly.

How do I know that? because my Fairphone 4 running CalyxOS gets a few more hours of battery life than the same Fairphone 4 running vanilla Android, and my Fairphone 5 running Ubuntu Touch also does better battery-wise than the same phone running Google’s surveillance platform.