Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Microsoft Will Finally Kill Obsolete Cipher That Has Wrecked Decades of Havoc
  2. Lidar-Maker Luminar Files For Bankruptcy
  3. Google Search Homepage Adds a ‘Plus’ Menu
  4. China, Iran Are Having a Field Day With React2Shell, Google Warns
  5. JPMorgan Steps Further Into Crypto With Tokenized Money Fund
  6. Merriam-Webster’s 2025 Word of the Year Is ‘Slop’
  7. Ford Ends F-150 Lightning Production, Starts Battery Storage Business
  8. Russian Ban On Roblox Gaming Platform Sparks Rare Protest
  9. Verizon Refused To Unlock Man’s iPhone, So He Sued the Carrier and Won
  10. Why Floods Threaten One of the Driest Places in the World
  11. Cloudflare Reveals How Bots and Governments Reshaped the Internet in 2025
  12. Google To Retire ‘Dark Web Report’ Tool That Scanned for Leaked User Data
  13. US Tech Force Aims To Recruit 1,000 Technologists
  14. Scientists Thought Parkinson’s Was in Our Genes. It Might Be in the Water
  15. How Did the CIA Lose a Nuclear Device?

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.

Microsoft Will Finally Kill Obsolete Cipher That Has Wrecked Decades of Havoc

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Microsoft is killing off an obsolete and vulnerable encryption cipher that Windows has supported by default for 26 years following more than a decade of devastating hacks that exploited it and recently faced blistering criticism from a prominent US senator. When the software maker rolled out Active Directory in 2000, it made RC4 a sole means of securing the Windows component, which administrators use to configure and provision fellow administrator and user accounts inside large organizations. RC4, short for Rivist Cipher 4, is a nod to mathematician and cryptographer Ron Rivest of RSA Security, who developed the stream cipher in 1987. Within days of the trade-secret-protected algorithm being leaked in 1994, a researcher demonstrated a cryptographic attack that significantly weakened the security it had been believed to provide. Despite the known susceptibility, RC4 remained a staple in encryption protocols, including SSL and its successor TLS, until about a decade ago. […]

Last week, Microsoft said it was finally deprecating RC4 and cited its susceptibility to Kerberoasting, the form of attack, known since 2014, that was the root cause of the initial intrusion into Ascension’s network. “By mid-2026, we will be updating domain controller defaults for the Kerberos Key Distribution Center (KDC) on Windows Server 2008 and later to only allow AES-SHA1 encryption,” Matthew Palko, a Microsoft principal program manager, wrote. “RC4 will be disabled by default and only used if a domain administrator explicitly configures an account or the KDC to use it.” […] Following next year’s change, RC4 authentication will no longer function unless administrators perform the extra work to allow it. In the meantime, Palko said, it’s crucial that admins identify any systems inside their networks that rely on the cipher. Despite the known vulnerabilities, RC4 remains the sole means of some third-party legacy systems for authenticating to Windows networks. These systems can often go overlooked in networks even though they are required for crucial functions.

To streamline the identification of such systems, Microsoft is making several tools available. One is an update to KDC logs that will track both requests and responses that systems make using RC4 when performing requests through Kerberos. Kerberos is an industry-wide authentication protocol for verifying the identities of users and services over a non-secure network. It’s the sole means for mutual authentication to Active Directory, which hackers attacking Windows networks widely consider a Holy Grail because of the control they gain once it has been compromised. Microsoft is also introducing new PowerShell scripts to sift through security event logs to more easily pinpoint problematic RC4 usage. Microsoft said it has steadily worked over the past decade to deprecate RC4, but that the task wasn’t easy.
“The problem though is that it’s hard to kill off a cryptographic algorithm that is present in every OS that’s shipped for the last 25 years and was the default algorithm for so long, Steve Syfuhs, who runs Microsoft’s Windows Authentication team, wrote on Bluesky. “See,” he continued, “the problem is not that the algorithm exists. The problem is how the algorithm is chosen, and the rules governing that spanned 20 years of code changes.”

Ah, microsoft…

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Is “retiring” the RC4 a decision of Microsoft that was good if desperately late? Nope, it is a response to someone asking the FTC to investigate why a source of many problems is still in use after so many decades:

https://www.schneier.com/blog/…

“the problem is not that the algorithm exists. The problem is how the algorithm is chosen, and the rules governing that spanned 20 years of code changes.”

LOL, the algorithm was chosen because it made moving people off NT4 domains to AD back 25 years ago “easy”. And that time was the time when Microsoft was desperate to block the massive Linux inroads into the server business, so anything was good.

In short, this is microsoft being the bad ole microsoft and nothing else.

Havoc == rekt

By Kunedog • Score: 4, Informative Thread
You mean "wreaked havoc.”

Re:Havoc == rekt

By battingly • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Irregardless, I could care less.

Lidar-Maker Luminar Files For Bankruptcy

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Once a star of the self-driving hype cycle, lidar maker Luminar has filed for bankruptcy amid legal turmoil, layoffs, and a cooling autonomous-vehicle market. It plans to sell off its assets before shutting down entirely. The Verge reports:
As part of its bankruptcy, Luminar is seeking permission to sell both its lidar and semiconductor businesses, the latter of which it has already agreed to sell to Quantum Computing for $110 million. The company plans to continue to operate during the bankruptcy proceedings “to minimize disruptions and maintain delivery of its LiDAR hardware and software.” That said, Luminar will cease to exist once the process is complete. “As we navigate this process, our top priority is to continue delivering the same quality, reliability and service our customers have come to expect from us,” CEO Paul Ricci said in a statement.

After launching in 2017, Luminar muscled its way to the front of the autonomous vehicle industry as a top maker of lidar systems, a key technology that driverless cars use to sense the shapes and distances of objects around them. Luminar has sold sensors to Mercedes-Benz, Volvo, Audi, Toyota Research Institute, Caterpillar, and even Tesla, which has dismissed lidar sensors in favor of traditional cameras. The company was valued at nearly $3 billion when it went public through a reverse merger with a SPAC in 2020.

Hmmm

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I guess they didn’t see that coming.

I bet Elon is smirking over this bit of news and..

By haruchai • Score: 3 Thread

$TSLA rose 3.5% today

Google Search Homepage Adds a ‘Plus’ Menu

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
After introducing an AI Mode shortcut earlier this year, Google has now added a new “plus” menu to its Search homepage, highlighting options for image and file uploads. 9to5Google reports:
On google.com, the Search bar now has a plus icon at the far left that replaces the magnifying glass. Clicking lets you “Upload image” or “Upload file.” It very much matches the AI Mode experience. Those two capabilities aren’t new, but this plus menu does help emphasize that you can use Google to accomplish tasks, and not just find information. Additionally, it helps indicate that they can be used with AI Mode and AI Overviews. This is just available on desktop web (not mobile) and is live on all the devices we checked today, including across signed-out Incognito sessions.

Google helps me find information??

By ZERO1ZERO • Score: 3 Thread
Since when? Google has been actively hiding information for years now. Ignoring big tech bros, the cynic says it beneficial for google for me not to be able to quickly find what i need. They rather i get âstuck’ on their page either re-searching or clicking through (the first page of results is mostly horsehit anyway) such as ads and ai and shopping etc. some might even say thats not even cynical, its just fact.

Meh

By liqu1d • Score: 3 Thread
Google doesn’t really help you find information anymore unless you’re looking to buy something…

Less is a plus?

By Revek • Score: 3 Thread
Plus more unrelated search results which is less.

I saw Google and Plus…

By dgatwood • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I saw Google and Plus together and got momentarily excited. :-D

So in a few years…

By Quinn_Inuit • Score: 3 Thread
…When Google kills this project, too, it will have killed off Google Plus twice.

China, Iran Are Having a Field Day With React2Shell, Google Warns

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A critical React vulnerability (CVE-2025-55182) is being actively exploited at scale by Chinese, Iranian, North Korean, and criminal groups to gain remote code execution, deploy backdoors, and mine crypto. The Register reports:
React maintainers disclosed the critical bug on December 3, and exploitation began almost immediately. According to Amazon’s threat intel team, Chinese government crews, including Earth Lamia and Jackpot Panda, started battering the security hole within hours of its disclosure. Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42 responders have put the victim count at more than 50 organizations across multiple sectors, with attackers from North Korea also abusing the flaw.

Google, in a late Friday report, said at least five other suspected PRC spy groups also exploited React2Shell, along with criminals who deployed XMRig for illicit cryptocurrency mining, and “Iran-nexus actors,” although the report doesn’t provide any additional details about who the Iran-linked groups are and what they are doing after exploitation. “GTIG has also observed numerous discussions regarding CVE-2025-55182 in underground forums, including threads in which threat actors have shared links to scanning tools, proof-of-concept (PoC) code, and their experiences using these tools,” the researchers wrote.

what is React2Shell?

By evanh • Score: 3 Thread

I just did a search, on both DuckDuckGO and Google, to find what it is and got pages of results only on this bloody exploit!

it’s the complexity, stupid

By kisrael • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Speaking as an old graybeard UI guy.... we have just come up with more and more complex solutions to the same old internet “one weird trick” of putting your information on someone else’s computer.

Yeah, I remember “Server Side Rendering”… we called Java Servlets or JSPs or PHP or ASP. There were clear divisions of labors and boundaries were respected.

Even when we had to go to make everything feel like an app, at least RESTful stuff still had those boundaries.

Now that everyone needs the same code running front and back, and JS (I’m not a hater of JS by any means but still) stuff like this is bound to have happened.

JPMorgan Steps Further Into Crypto With Tokenized Money Fund

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal:
JPMorgan Chase is joining the list of traditional financial firms seeking to bring blockchain technology to an investing staple: the money-market fund. The banking giant’s $4 trillion asset-management arm is rolling out its first tokenized money-market fund on the Ethereum blockchain. JPMorgan will seed the fund with $100 million of its own capital, and then open it to outside investors on Tuesday. Called My OnChain Net Yield Fund, or “MONY,” the private fund is supported by JPMorgan’s tokenization platform, Kinexys Digital Assets, and will be open to qualified investors, or individuals with at least $5 million in investments and institutions with a minimum of $25 million. The fund has a $1 million investment minimum.

Wall Street has waded deeper into tokenization since the passage of the Genius Act earlier this year. The landmark measure, which establishes a regulatory framework for tokenized dollars known as stablecoins, has unleashed a wave of efforts to tokenize everything from stocks and bonds to funds and real assets. “There is a massive amount of interest from clients around tokenization,” said John Donohue, head of global liquidity at J.P. Morgan Asset Management. “And we expect to be a leader in this space and work with clients to make sure that we have a product lineup that allows them to have the choices that we have in traditional money-market funds on blockchain.”

This ain’t Jetsons’ future, I want off!

By Tablizer • Score: 4, Funny Thread

If AI and crypto pop at the same time, the universe divides by zero and we all get sucked into a black hole with no internet access.

Merriam-Webster’s 2025 Word of the Year Is ‘Slop’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Merriam-Webster crowned “slop” its 2025 Word of the Year, reflecting growing public awareness and and fatigue around low-quality, AI-generated content flooding the internet. “It’s such an illustrative word,” said Greg Barlow, Merriam-Webster’s president. “It’s part of a transformative technology, AI, and it’s something that people have found fascinating, annoying and a little bit ridiculous.” The Associated Press reports:
“Slop” was first used in the 1700s to mean soft mud, but it evolved more generally to mean something of little value. The definition has since expanded to mean “digital content of low quality that is produced usually in quantity by means of artificial intelligence.” In other words, “you know, absurd videos, weird advertising images, cheesy propaganda, fake news that looks real, junky AI-written digital books,” Barlow said.
“Words like ‘ubiquitous,’ ‘paradigm,’ ‘albeit,’ ‘irregardless,’ these are always top lookups because they’re words that are on the edge of our lexicon,” Barlow said. "‘Irregardless’ is a word in the dictionary for one reason: It’s used. It’s been used for decades to mean ‘regardless.’"
The announcement can be found here.

So if your job requires precision and quality

By Tony Isaac • Score: 3 Thread

You might not be replaced by AI just yet.

In related news …

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

Merriam-Webster’s 2025 Word of the Year Is ‘Slop’

Linguists happier than a pig in dictionaries.

Ford Ends F-150 Lightning Production, Starts Battery Storage Business

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Ford has effectively pulled the plug on the all-electric F-150 Lightning, pivoting away from full-size BEV pickups toward hybrids, range-extended EVs (EREVs), and even data-center battery storage. Ars Technica reports:
Ford’s announcements today can’t be said to have come out of the blue. Rumors of the F-150’s demise have been circulating for more than a month, and last week SK On ended its joint venture with Ford that was building a pair of EV battery plants in Kentucky and Tennessee. We learned then that Ford would keep the Kentucky plant and SK On gets the one in Tennessee, which would focus on the energy storage business instead. Now, we know that something similar will happen at the Kentucky plant — Ford says it’s spending $2 billion to convert the factory to make prismatic lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cells.

Those aren’t destined for EVs, but they are the preferred cell format for data centers, Ford says. The company says that it will bring the factory online in the next 18 months, reaching an annual output of 20 GWh. Other Ford plants are also being repurposed. With no full-size BEV pickup in the product plans, the assembly plant in Tennessee that was to produce it — the one near the battery factory that SK On is keeping — will instead build new gas-powered trucks, although not for another four years. Around that same time, its Ohio assembly plant will begin building new commercial vehicles.

All of this will impact Ford’s bottom line, to the tune of $19.5 billion over the next few years, $5.5 billion of which will be in cash. Most of that will hit in the final quarter of 2025, but will extend until 2027, Ford said.

Will Ford even exist in 5 years?

By millst • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
At this point, Ford is so behind Tesla, Rivian and the Chinese, I doubt it will even exist in its current form in 5 years. We are at the bottom of two S curves, one is EV’s and the other is self driving cars and Ford is nowhere to be seen in either of those markets. For people that think I’m wrong, ask yourself if you were one of those people who said… Nobody wants a phone that doesn’t have keys when the iPhone came out and everyone had Blackberrys.

Re: Wrong approach

By drinkypoo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

The cybertruck is pure shit. It is the least reliable Tesla by a wide margin, and Tesla was recently named the least reliable vehicle in America.

The lightning might be a vehicle without a business case, but it’s a major revision from the normal f-series, down to having independent rear suspension. The f150 is also the most popular vehicle on the planet. While Ford has had some massive failures in it like the 3 valve 5.4, you’re still barking up the wrong tree here

Re:Wrong approach

By serviscope_minor • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Funnily enough though Ford managed to adapt the Transit to the e-transit and by all account it’s a very good van.

Vans unfortunately don’t have the lifestyle connotations of trucks, however.

Following the fad of the day

By MpVpRb • Score: 4, Informative Thread

It seems that they were never serious about being an EV company, they just followed the fad of the day.
This does not inspire customer confidence or trust.
I drive a Tesla. They are committed to EVs

Misleading Title

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

The misleading title wold have you believe that Ford is discontinuing production of electric F-150s.

The reality is that they are changing the F-150 lightning to a Extended Range Electric Vehicle(EREV). An EREV is a hybrid electric. It is an electric vehicle that uses an engine to run a generator when the battery gets too low.

Ford’s current plan is to continue producing an electric F-150, but add an engine to extend its range. Range that has been laughable from the start. Most especially laughable when towing anything. Apparently they didn’t anticipate the need for a pickup to tow stuff very far.

Russian Ban On Roblox Gaming Platform Sparks Rare Protest

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Several dozen people protested on Sunday in the Siberian city of Tomsk against Russia’s ban on U.S. children’s gaming platform Roblox, a rare show of public dissent as popular irritation over the ban gains some momentum. In wartime Russia, censorship is extensive: Moscow blocks or restricts social media platforms such as Snapchat, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and YouTube while distributing its own narrative through a network of social media and Russian media. Russia’s communications watchdog Roskomnadzor said on December 3 it had blocked Roblox because it was “rife with inappropriate content that can negatively impact the spiritual and moral development of children.”

In Tomsk, 2,900 km (1,800 miles) east of Moscow, several dozen people braved the snow to hold up hand-drawn placards reading “Hands off Roblox” and “Roblox is the victim of the digital Iron Curtain” in Vladimir Vysotsky Park, according to photographs provided by an organizer of the protest. “Bans and blocks are all you are able to do,” read one placard. The photographs showed about 25 people standing in a circle in the snow, holding up placards. In Russia, the ban on Roblox has triggered a debate over censorship, child safety in relation to technology and even the effectiveness of censorship in a digitalized world where children can bypass many bans in a few clicks.

Convincing us all the worst about Russia now?

By JoshuaZ • Score: 3 Thread
This almost seems to be convincing us that the absolute worst statements about Russian culture today are accurate. Invade another country, continue that invasion with warcrimes and drafting of young men to be sent as cannon fodder, barely a whimper. But interfere with a videogame platform, and now we have a protest. Pretty despicable priorities. On the other hand, this may be overly negative; this protest itself seems small, and it may be that people expect less pushback or jailing of protesters about this sort of thing than those protesting the invasion of Ukraine.

Re:Recognizing addiction.

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Russia’s ban on Roblox has nothing to do with children, aside from being a convenient scapegoat. It is banned because it allows uncensored speech, and totalitarian dictatorships can’t have that.

Verizon Refused To Unlock Man’s iPhone, So He Sued the Carrier and Won

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
A Kansas man who sued Verizon in small claims court after the carrier refused to unlock his iPhone has won his case, scoring a small but meaningful victory against a company that retroactively applied a policy change to deny his unlock request.

Patrick Roach bought a discounted iPhone 16e from Verizon’s Straight Talk brand in February 2025, intending to pay for one month of service before switching the device to US Mobile. Under FCC rules dating back to a 2019 waiver, Verizon must unlock phones 60 days after activation on its network. Verizon refused to unlock the phone, citing a new policy implemented on April 1, 2025 requiring “60 days of paid active service.”

Roach had purchased his device over a month before that policy took effect. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Henry ruled in October 2025 that applying the changed terms to Roach’s earlier purchase violated the Kansas Consumer Protection Act. The court ordered Verizon to refund Roach’s $410.40 purchase price plus court costs. Roach had previously rejected a $600 settlement offer because it would have required him to sign a non-disclosure agreement. He estimated spending about 20 hours on the lawsuit but said “it wasn’t about” the money.

Re:Verizon was dumb

By sinij • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Now everyone can enjoy this precedent. Thank you Kansas man.

Even simpler solution

By fred6666 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

SIM-locking should be banned, period. Works well in many other countries. There is no valid reason to SIM-lock a phone, even for 60 days or 60 days of active paid service. It’s a net loss to society as a whole. Even though I understand it can benefit Verizon in one case, it also prevented someone else to switch to Verizon from a competitor.

Not much of a victory

By GlennC • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

According to the story, he still had to pay for a second month of service before the phone was unlocked.

Still, keeping people informed about the sleazy tactics used by just about every large corporation out there is a good thing, so kudos to Mr. Roach.

I’m altering the deal.

By hwstar • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Pray I don’t alter it futher

“But 60 days after Roach activated his phone, Verizon refused to unlock it. Verizon claimed it didn’t have to because of a recent policy change in which Verizon decided to only unlock devices after “60 days of paid active service.” Roach had only paid for one month of service on the phone.”

This is the problem with “Contracts of adhesion”. They’re contracts written on flypaper, and one side gets to make changes and the other side is told to “take it or leave it”

Re:Even simpler solution

By hjf • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I guess it depends. Is the phone “discounted” if you do this? For a while, committing to a yearly plan meant that you got a phone for the price of a phone plan. The alternative is paying for your phone, and just change service anytime.

This sucks however when you are traveling abroad. If your plan doesn’t have roaming at your destination, you can’t use a local or travel SIM/eSIM. For some people this seems to work fine.

I never owned a sim-locked phone and never will.

Funfact: sim-locking is the standard in Japan. And if you think you have it bad in america, you really need to take a look at the things they do in Japan. They have two-way SIM locking: you can’t even use your current SIM on an unlocked phone!!! You HAVE to buy the phone FROM the phone company or else it won’t work. Or you can get a SIM that will work with unlocked phones, but they won’t sell you a phone (not even sim-locked) if you do this. Are you a foreigner? no sorry, we won’t sell you service because you’re a flight risk. “We have been having cases of foreigners leaving the country with unpaid bills. yes, we know you are a legan resident and you need a phone to function in society nowadays but you know, the risk of you not paying us 1 month of is far greater than whatever money we can make off you”.

Why Floods Threaten One of the Driest Places in the World

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
One of the most water-scarce regions on Earth is now experiencing a dramatic atmospheric shift that’s pushing moisture onto Oman’s northern coast at rates more than 1.5 times the global average, according to a Washington Post investigation of global atmospheric data [non-paywalled source]. The change has turned extreme rainfall into a recurrent source of catastrophe across the Arabian Peninsula. In the 126 years between 1881 and 2007, just six hurricane-strength storms hit Oman or came within 60 miles of the country. At least four more have made landfall in the past 15 years alone.

Research from Sultan Qaboos University analyzing 8,000 storms across 69 rainfall stations found that half of all rain in Oman falls within the first 90 minutes of a 24-hour storm. These intense bursts quickly overwhelm the desert’s ability to absorb water and send flash floods racing through wadis — normally dry riverbeds where many communities are built. In response, Dubai is constructing an $8 billion underground stormwater network spanning more than 120 miles. Oman has agreements to build 58 new dams and is studying 14 major wadis that funnel to its al-Batinah coastline.

What a strange set of coincidences.

By Tschaine • Score: 3 Thread

As the planet rotates, the sunny side absorbs energy from the sun, mostly in the visible-light range, and the dark side radiates that energy, mostly in the infrared range.

Air with more CO2 in it transmits less infrared radiation than air with less CO2 in it.

Manmade CO2 emissions have skyrocketed over the last few decades.

Warmer air absorbs more water than colder air.

Oman saw hurricanes 6 times in 126 years, and then 4 times in 15 years.

It almost makes one wonder whether these are all connected somehow.

Cloudflare Reveals How Bots and Governments Reshaped the Internet in 2025

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Cloudflare’s sixth annual Year in Review report describes an internet increasingly shaped by two forces: automated traffic and government intervention, as global connectivity grew 19% year over year in 2025.

Google’s web crawler now dominates automated traffic, dwarfing other AI and indexing bots to become the single largest source of bot activity on the web. Nearly half of all major internet disruptions globally were linked to government actions, and civil society and non-profit organizations became the most attacked sector for the first time.

Post-quantum encryption crossed a significant threshold, now protecting 52% of human internet traffic observed by Cloudflare. The company also recorded more than 25 record-breaking DDoS attacks throughout the year.

For me it’s what we learned about Twitter

By rsilvergun • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
For a brief period of time Twitter was revealing the IP address locations of users and virtually every right wing influencer was located in Russia or Pakistan with a smattering of them in India.

Surprisingly I don’t think they were very many out of China.

These were accounts pretending to be Americans to incite Americans into right-wing politics.

And there were a *lot* of them.

I don’t think I would give up internet anonymity for the sake of shutting down those accounts. And besides it would only be a matter of time before they fired up vpns. And I don’t think I would give up free access to vpns for the same reason.

But I understand why countries outside of America are looking at doing just that. They see what’s happening over here and they don’t know what to do about it.

I would rather see more education and teaching critical thinking but especially in America we can’t have that. If you start teaching kids how to think critically they are going to point the skills at whatever sacred cows their parents have and that gets really unpopular really fast especially with religious texts.

Hahahahahahaha

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4 Thread

Nearly half of all major internet disruptions globally were linked to government actions

LOL! Good one.

I guess that they discarded all the “incidental” outages directly caused by Cloudflare themselves.

Re:For me it’s what we learned about Twitter

By sinij • Score: 4 Thread
No, you just want to create a fake narrative that conservative influencers are inorganic. When I point out that X showing country of origin also exposed leftist fakery, which is counter-narrative to the point you were trying to make, you got upset and started spewing nonsense. Do better next time.

Google To Retire ‘Dark Web Report’ Tool That Scanned for Leaked User Data

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Google has decided to retire its free dark web monitoring tool, saying it wasn’t as helpful as the company hoped. From a report:
In a support page, Google announced the discontinuation of the “dark web report” tool, two years after offering it as a free perk to Gmail users before expanding it more broadly. The feature worked by scanning for your email addresses to determine whether they had appeared in data breaches, which often circulate on Dark Web marketplaces. The tool could then alert you about where the data was exposed, including any accompanying details such as dates of birth, addresses, and phone numbers.

Typical Google

By Vlad_the_Inhaler • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Another tool retired because they couldn’t see a way to monetise it, obligatory xkcd reference.

Re:It never made sense anyway

By leonbev • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

For me, that “Dark Web” scan was giving me a ton of false positives. People were signing up for random shit using my e-mail address, and THOSE accounts were the ones being flagged as being breached.

Sorry, but I don’t care if some random Romanian dating or eastern European crypto site has a weak password. I never signed up for it to begin with.

Re:Typical Google

By swillden • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Another tool retired because they couldn’t see a way to monetise it, obligatory xkcd reference.

Nah. I had some conversations with a guy who had worked on it and it really just didn’t turn out to be very useful. It didn’t find a lot of stuff that wasn’t already in public leaked data databases, and when it did send information to users they were often confused about what to do. Worse, fake alert emails were being used for phishing. Shutting the program down probably won’t impede that abuse much, but maybe a few people who get a phishing email who would have trusted it because they knew about and had signed up for the program will now not trust it because they know the program has been shut down.

US Tech Force Aims To Recruit 1,000 Technologists

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Trump administration announced Monday the United States Tech Force, a new program to recruit around 1,000 technologists for two-year government stints starting as soon as March — less than a year after dismantling several federal technology teams and driving thousands of tech workers out of their jobs.

The program will primarily recruit early-career software engineers and data scientists, paying between $150,000 and $200,000 annually. About 20 companies have signed on to participate, including Palantir, Meta, Oracle and Elon Musk’s xAI. Some engineering managers will be allowed to take leaves of absence from their private-sector employers to join the program without divesting their stock holdings.

The initiative follows the March closure of 18F, General Services Administration’s internal tech consultancy, and the shuttering of the Social Security Administration’s Office of Transformation in February. The IRS had lost over 2,000 tech workers by June.

Re:And if you ever fail any subsequent loyalty tes

By jhoegl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This was the goal of the firings… to rehire and require these illegal questions.

Re:And if you ever fail any subsequent loyalty tes

By cellocgw • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

For sure. Plus none of the new hires will be part of that pesky group consisting of Democrats, females, blacks, ......

Fascism March Continues

By gtall • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Notice that the companies listed are run by right wingnuts. This is Project 2025 attempting to steal another piece of America for themselves. Naturally, the useful idiot is all for it. As usual when el Bunko is involved, look for the trail of McNuggets back to his pockets.

Unholy Financial Conflict of Interest

By EndlessNameless • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So, to be clear, some of the managers will have:

  1. Ongoing employment with government contractors and service providers
  2. Financial ties to current and potential contract recipients
  3. Close personal ties to contractors relevant to their field of employment

In normal circumstances, they would be precluded from long-term strategic planning, the creation of RFPs, and the evaluation or selection processes of contracts.

Are these guard rails in place? Color me skeptical.

Re:And if you ever fail any subsequent loyalty tes

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

He said as much 5 years ago https://www.govexec.com/workfo…

Scientists Thought Parkinson’s Was in Our Genes. It Might Be in the Water

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
For decades, Parkinson’s disease research has overwhelmingly focused on genetics — more than half of all research dollars in the past two decades flowed toward genomic studies — but a growing body of evidence now points to something far more mundane as a primary culprit: contaminated drinking water.

A landmark study by epidemiologist Sam Goldman compared Marines stationed at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, where trichloroethylene (TCE) had contaminated the water supply for approximately 35 years, against those at Camp Pendleton in California, which has clean water. Marines exposed to TCE at Lejeune were 70% more likely to develop Parkinson’s.

The latest research suggests only 10 to 15 percent of Parkinson’s cases can be fully explained by genetics. Parkinson’s rates in the US have doubled in the past 30 years — a pattern inconsistent with an inherited genetic disease. The EPA moved to ban TCE in December 2024. The Trump administration moved to undo the ban in January.

Re:Story checks out.

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The fact RFK is taken seriously by anyone is a stain on our collective intelligence. I mean come the fuck on, they think we’re stupid rubes and we are proving them right

Never forget Michelle Obama wanted to get your kids access to more vegetables and Republicans practically went into open revolt about it.

Or Herbicides

By CubicleZombie • Score: 3 Thread

I read this article about Paraquat, a weed killer widely used in the U.S., but banned in many other countries, that has a link to Parkinson’s. Sounds like some seriously nasty stuff. So if you farm, live near a farm, or… eat, you’re exposed to this.

I lived in a neighborhood built on abandoned military base and my taps were hooked up to the old base wells, which were contaminated with TCE from the army firefighters practicing putting out fires. My family drank that stuff for a decade and I found out after we moved away. Municipal water systems are required to publish water analysis. It’s worth looking up.

Trump didn’t unban it

By hdyoung • Score: 4, Informative Thread
He delayed the ban, as part of his “all regulations are CanCeLEd MMAAGAAA FFRREEEDduuuuUUMMM” act.

But, this is more theatre than anything else. TCE is toxic as f&%k. In the US, companies have been trying to stop using it since the 1980s and avoid it like the plague. Hardly anyone uses or stores much of it anymore. Dealing with it safely is a nightmare, and ignoring safety protocols means that their workers actively get cancer while on the job. As in, productive workers who get regular exposure to TCE tend to start feeling bad, go see a doctor, get an x-ray, and go home to die because of the metastatic cancer. Even if the CEOs completely dgaf, killing their workers is tough on insurance claims and bad for the bottom line.

No, TCE isnt coming back, no matter what Trump says.

Got an idea

By Tablizer • Score: 3 Thread

Let’s redefine Parkinson’s as a sub-symptom of autism, then Dr. Brainworm will finally do something about the chems.

How Did the CIA Lose a Nuclear Device?

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Sixty years after a team of American and Indian climbers abandoned a plutonium-powered generator on the slopes of Nanda Devi, one of the world’s most forbidding Himalayan peaks, the U.S. government still refuses to acknowledge that the mission ever happened. The device, a SNAP-19C portable generator containing plutonium isotopes including Pu-239 — the same material used in the Nagasaki bomb — was left behind in October 1965 when a sudden blizzard forced climbers to retreat from Camp Four, just below the summit.

The mission originated from a cocktail party conversation between General Curtis LeMay and National Geographic photographer Barry Bishop, who had summited Everest in 1963. China had just detonated its first atomic bomb in October 1964, and the CIA wanted to intercept radio signals from Chinese missile tests by placing an unmanned listening station atop the Himalayas. Barry Bishop recruited elite American climbers and coordinated with Indian intelligence to haul surveillance equipment up the mountain.

Captain M.S. Kohli, the Indian naval officer commanding the mission, ordered climbers to secure the equipment and descend when the blizzard struck. Jim McCarthy, the last surviving American climber, recalled warning Kohli he was making a mistake. “You can’t leave plutonium by a glacier feeding into the Ganges!” he recalled. “Do you know how many people depend on the Ganges?” When teams returned in spring 1966, the entire ice ledge where the gear had been stashed was gone — sheared off by an avalanche. Search missions in 1967 and 1968 found nothing.

The device remains buried somewhere in the glaciers that feed tributaries of the Ganges River.

SNAP

By JBMcB • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Since the article is somewhat vague about it, a SNAP generator is a thermal generator mostly used to power satellites. It uses the heat from nuclear decay to generate power. It’s not a nuclear reactor. If you’ve seen The Martian, that tube with fins that Watney digs out of the ground is what a SNAP generator looks like. They used to be top-secret classified, but just about everyone knows how to make one nowadays. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Pretty sure the article is wrong

By Kobun • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Radiothermal generators use plutonium 238. This is a strong alpha emitter, it is highly active with a half-life of 87 years and heats itself red hot. Plutonium 238 is not used in nuclear weapons, it seems that perhaps the author mixed up their isotopes in their rush to put a hysterical spin on the story. Plutonium 239 has a 24,000 year half-life and would be worthless in a RTG.

Re:Related tidbit

By Zocalo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Which would mean its casing is currently being (or already has been) abraded by the bedrock and all the bits and pieces of gravel and larger detritus that typically lies at the bottom of a glacier and get churned around as the glacier slowly flows downslope. From there, it’ll be seeping into the glacial runoff water and, as TFS notes, eventually make its way into the River Ganges.

Of course, if you’ve actually seen (or smelled) the Ganges once it gets deeper into India, combined with what other purposes the locals use it for, including raw sewage and cremation residue disposal, you’ll be well aware that it’s far from the most pristine water in the world to start with. Adding a little Pu-239 over a number of years into that soup probably isn’t going to make all that much of a difference in the larger scheme of things.

Re:Add to list of odd units of measure

By necro81 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

…beach-ball-size nuclear device

A soccer ball, basketball, volleyball, rugby, at least these have some standards unto themselves. But I honestly have no idea the diameter of your average beach ball.

Do NOT try to play games with the beach-ball-sized nuclear device.

Getting Ready To Rupture

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Most of the other comments already pointed out that this is a non-issue/nothing-burger.

But if my math is right, the generator, currently 60 years old, has been building up helium pressure inside the vessel. That pressure should be around 12,000 to 13,000 PSI right now. That means that sometime between now and the next 40 years, probably 15 years, the vessel should rupture under the pressure. This will leak an explosive fart of helium and perhaps some ungoodness.

But it will still almost certainly be a nothing-burger.