Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Wikipedia Bans Use of Generative AI
  2. Tracy Kidder, Author of ‘The Soul of a New Machine’, Dies At 80
  3. China Reviews $2 Billion Manus Sale To Meta As Founders Barred From Leaving Country
  4. Researchers At CERN Transport Antiprotons By Truck In World-First Experiment
  5. Reddit Takes On Bots With ‘Human Verification’ Requirements
  6. Melania Trump Welcomes Humanoid Robot At White House Summit
  7. Brazil’s UFO Capital Marks 30 Years Since ‘Alien Encounter’
  8. Postal Service to Impose Its First-Ever Fuel Surcharge on Packages
  9. Canada’s Immigration Rejected Applicant Based On AI-Invented Job Duties
  10. Apple Can Create Smaller On-Device AI Models From Google’s Gemini
  11. Supreme Court Sides With Internet Provider In Copyright Fight Over Pirated Music
  12. Stephen Colbert To Write Next ‘Lord of the Rings’ Movie
  13. Meta and YouTube Found Negligent in Landmark Social Media Addiction Case
  14. Meta Loses Trial After Arguing Child Exploitation Was ‘Inevitable’
  15. AI Economy Is a ‘Ponzi Scheme,’ Says AI Doc Director

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.

Wikipedia Bans Use of Generative AI

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Wikipedia has banned the use of generative AI to write or rewrite articles, saying it “often violates several of Wikipedia’s core content policies.” That said, editors may still use it for translation or light refinements as long as a human carefully checks the copy for accuracy. Engadget reports:
Editors can use large language models (LLMs) to refine their own writing, but only if the copy is checked for accuracy. The policy states that this is because LLMs “can go beyond what you ask of them and change the meaning of the text such that it is not supported by the sources cited.” Editors can also use LLMs to assist with language translation. However, they must be fluent enough in both languages to catch errors. Once again, the information must be checked for inaccuracies.

“My genuine hope is that this can spark a broader change. Empower communities on other platforms, and see this become a grassroots movement of users deciding whether AI should be welcome in their communities, and to what extent,” Wikipedia administrator Chaotic Enby wrote. The administrator also called the policy a “pushback against enshittification and the forceful push of AI by so many companies in these last few years.”

Well, the hard job is done, then.

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 3 Thread

What remains is the trivial matter of enforcement. I guess then can use LLMs to evaluate submissions for the presence of a human factor.

Tracy Kidder, Author of ‘The Soul of a New Machine’, Dies At 80

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Ancient Slashdot reader wiredog writes:
Tracy Kidder, author of "The Soul of a New Machine,” has died at the age of 80. “The Soul of a New Machine” is about the people who designed and built the Data General Nova, one of the 32 bit superminis that were released in the 1980’s just before the PC destroyed that industry. It was excerpted in The Atlantic.

“I’m going to a commune in Vermont and will deal with no unit of time shorter than a season.”

Great book, partially why I am a programmer

By greytree • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I loved that book! It romanticized computers and programming and partially inspired my career.

RIP, Mr Kidder.

I thought it was the DG Eclipse

By Z00L00K • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I thought it was the development of the DG Eclipse that the book was about.

In any case it was a great story, with the machines named Coke and Gollum. Originally the idea was Coke and Pepsi, but one of the machines was temperemental so it got renamed.

China Reviews $2 Billion Manus Sale To Meta As Founders Barred From Leaving Country

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Chinese authorities have barred two Manus executives from leaving the country while investigating whether Meta’s reported $2 billion acquisition of the Singapore-based AI startup violated foreign investment reporting rules. “Manus was founded in China but last year relocated its headquarters and core team to Singapore,” notes the Financial Times. “Meta acquired it for $2 billion at the end of last year.” The Financial Times reports:
Manus’s chief executive Xiao Hong and chief scientist Ji Yichao were summoned to a meeting in Beijing with the National Development and Reform Commission this month, according to three people with knowledge of the matter. They said Xiao and Ji were questioned on potential violations of foreign direct investment rules related to its onshore Chinese entities.

After the meeting, the Singapore-based executives were told they were not allowed to leave China because of a regulatory review, while they remain free to travel within the country, two of the people said. No formal investigation has been opened and no charges have been brought. Manus is actively seeking law firms and consultancies to help resolve the matter, said a person with knowledge of the move.

Researchers At CERN Transport Antiprotons By Truck In World-First Experiment

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Physics World:
Researchers at the CERN particle-physics lab have successfully transported antiprotons in a lorry across the lab’s main site. The feat, the first of its kind, follows a similar test with protons in 2024. CERN says the achievement is “a huge leap” towards being able to transport antimatter between labs across Europe. […] To do so, in 2020 the BASE team began developing a device, known as BASE-STEP (for Baryon-Antibaryon Symmetry Experiment-Symmetry Tests in Experiments with Portable Antiprotons), to store and transport antiprotons. It works by trapping particles in a Penning trap composed of gold-plated cylindrical electrode stacks made from oxygen-free copper that is surrounded by a superconducting magnet bore operated at cryogenic temperatures.

The device, which also contains a carbon-steel vacuum chamber to shield the particles from stray magnetic fields, is then mounted on an aluminium frame. This allows it to be transported using standard forklifts and cranes and withstand the bumps and vibrations of transport. In 2024, BASE researchers used the device to transport a cloud of about 105 trapped protons across CERN’s Meyrin campus for four hours. After that feat, the researchers began to adjust BASE-STEP to handle antiprotons and yesterday the team successfully transported a trap containing a cloud of 92 antiprotons around the campus for 30 minutes, traveling up to 42 km/h.

With further improvements and tests, the team now hope to transport the antiprotons further afield. The first destination on the team’s list is the Heinrich Heine University (HHU) in Dusseldorf, Germany, which would take about eight hours. “This means we’d have to keep the trap’s superconducting magnet at a temperature below 8.2 K for that long,” says BASE-STEP’s leader Christian Smorra. “So, in addition to the liquid helium , we’d need to have a generator to power a cryocooler on the truck. We are currently investigating this possibility.” If possible to transport to HHU, physicists would then use the particles to search for charge-parity-time violations in protons and antiprotons with a precision at least 100 times higher than currently possible at CERN.

Re: Failed test?

By LindleyF • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Around 2e-8 Joules.

Next

By whitroth • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Can we create some science-based anti-morons, and transport them to DC?

Re:Frankfurt Total Conversion Zone

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

the punchline will wipe one-and-a-half European cities off the map.

It’ll be a while before that has a chance of happening. Per TFA, the team at CERN transported 92 anti-protons. Ninety-two. If that many antiprotons annihilated with protons, they would produce an energy of 2.8 x 10^-8 J. Not enough energy to tickle a gnat.

Re:All copper is “oxygen-free”

By stabiesoft • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Oxygen free copper has been a thing for quite awhile. I’ve known about it for at least 20 years. Here is one definition, “Copper is widely used where high electrical or thermal conductivity is required. Pure copper is defined as having a minimum copper content of 99.3%. Copper with oxygen content below 10 ppm is called ‘oxygen-free.’

Reddit Takes On Bots With ‘Human Verification’ Requirements

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Reddit is rolling out human-verification checks for accounts that show signs of bot-like behavior, while also labeling approved automated accounts that provide useful services. The social media company stressed that these checks will only happen if something appears “fishy,” and that it is “not conducting sitewide human verification.” TechCrunch reports:
To identify potential bots, Reddit is using specialized tooling that looks at account-level signals and other factors — like how quickly the account is attempting to write or post content. Using AI to write posts or comments, however, is not against its policies (though community moderators may set their own rules).

To verify an account is human, Reddit will leverage third-party tools like passkeys from Apple, Google, YubiKey, and other third-party biometric services, like Face ID or even Sam Altman’s World ID — or, in some countries, the use of government IDs. Reddit notes this last category may be required in some countries like the U.K. and Australia and some U.S. states, because of local regulations on age verification, but it’s not the company’s preferred method.
“If we need to verify an account is human, we’ll do it in a privacy-first way,” Reddit co-founder and CEO Steve Huffman wrote in the announcement Wednesday. “Our aim is to confirm there is a person behind the account, not who that person is. The goal is to increase transparency of what is what on Reddit while preserving the anonymity that makes Reddit unique. You shouldn’t have to sacrifice one for the other.”

Slowly boiling the frog?

By Deal In One • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Lets see how long this lasts before everyone has to submit to “human verification”.

And wonder how long reddit will last when people start moving away cos of this.

First they came for…

By BrightCandle • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
First they came for the new accounts but I did not speak up because mine is an old account. Then they came from the edgy accounts but mine was not an edgy account. Then they came for the frequent posters but again I did not speak out because I posted just the right amount. Now they have asked me to prove I am human and provide government issued ID and there is not one left to speak for me.

Corrected headline - reddit will sell user data

By sinij • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
There is absolutely nobody that should trust reeeedit with their identity data, because they already sold all user posts to train LLMs. They will do exactly the same with your bio/identity data.

Re:How about we verify the moderators here?

By drinkypoo • Score: 4, Funny Thread

We have verified that the moderators here are less competent than a low-end LLM

sample test

By Provocateur • Score: 3 Thread

You’re walking in the desert, and you spot a tortoise upside down …

Human responses would be
a) what’s a tortoise?
b) which desert?
c) Did I bring sunblock? — if you’re from the Valley
d) Did I tell you about my mother?

Melania Trump Welcomes Humanoid Robot At White House Summit

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader theodp writes:
In Melania and the Robot, the New York Times reports on First Lady Melania Trump’s inaugural Fostering the Future Together Coalition Summit, which brought together international leaders, First Spouses from around the world, tech leaders, educators, and nonprofits to collaborate on practical solutions that expand access to educational tools while strengthening protections for children in digital environments (Day 2 WH summary). The Times begins:

“On Wednesday, Mrs. Trump appeared at the White House alongside Figure 3, a humanoid, A.I.-powered robot whose uses, according to the company that makes it, include fetching towels, carrying groceries and serving champagne. But Mrs. Trump joins tech executives and some researchers in envisioning a world beyond robot butlery. She is interested in how these robots could cut it as educators. Both clad in shades of white, the first lady and the visiting robot walked into a gathering of first spouses from around the world, a group that included Sara Netanyahu of Israel, Olena Zelenska of Ukraine, and Brigitte Macron of France. The dulcet tones from a (presumably human) military orchestra played as the first lady and her guest entered the event. Both lady and robot extolled the virtues of further integrating robots into the educational and social lives of children. In the history of modern first-lady initiatives, which have included building a national book festival (Laura Bush), reshuffling the food pyramid (Michelle Obama) and advocating for free community college (Jill Biden), Mrs. Trump’s involvement of a humanoid robot in education policy was a first.”

“Figure 3 delivered brief remarks and delivered salutations in several languages. With its sleek black-and-white appearance, Figure 3 would fit right in with the first lady’s branding aesthetic, which includes a self-titled coffee table book and movie, not least because the name “MELANIA” was emblazoned on the side of its glossy plastic head. After Figure 3 teetered gingerly away, Mrs. Trump looked around the room and told them that the future looked a lot like what they had just witnessed. ‘The future of A.I. is personified,’ she told her audience. ‘It will be formed in the shape of humans. Very soon artificial intelligence will move from our mobile phones to humanoids that deliver utility.’ She invited her guests to envision a future in which a robot philosopher educated children.”

So, like

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

A sex bot and a serving champagne bot enter the Whitehouse…

Logic

By Teun • Score: 5, Funny Thread
So for the first time in a good year there was some logic in the house :)

Re:So, like

By fluffernutter • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Which one is Melania?

Was that a spot the difference competition ?

By butt0nm4n • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

She is a bit robotic, like a woman who has retreated deep inside to get away from an abusive husband. Stepford wife.

Re:Robot philosopher?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Children raised by robot educators/philosophers actually worked out well in the fictional sci-fi novel by James P. Hogan “Voyage from Yesteryear”:

The word “actually” is doing a lot of heavy lifting it’s not qualified for there.

Brazil’s UFO Capital Marks 30 Years Since ‘Alien Encounter’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Thirty years after the alleged 1996 "ET of Varginha" encounter, debate continues to rage over the events that happened in Brazil’s self-styled UFO capital. An anonymous reader quotes an excerpt from the Guardian:
The skies over this far-flung coffee-growing hub went charcoal black, the heavens opened and one of Brazil’s greatest mysteries was born. “It really was something unique,” recalls Marco Antonio Reis, a zoo director, who was at his ranch outside Varginha one stormy day in January 1996 when, he says, an otherworldly creature came to town. Reis and other locals claim the unusually ferocious downpour heralded a series of disturbing and seemingly paranormal events. At least six of the zoo’s animals, including a spider monkey, a tapir and a raccoon, died mysteriously after a horned interloper with bulging red eyes was spotted in the vicinity by a woman who had gone out for a smoke. When a vet examined their corpses, “they were all black inside,” Reis claims.

On a nearby wasteland, three young women spotted a peculiar and malodorous being with a heart-shaped face and three lumps on its head cowering beside a wall. “I’ve seen the devil,” one of those witnesses would later tell her mum. Soon afterwards, an unexplained infection was rumored to have killed a strapping police intelligence officer who was said to have grappled with the oleaginous unidentified being. Three decades later, Reis says he is convinced Varginha received a non-human visit. His only doubt was from where it came.

“We don’t know if it was extraterrestrial or intraterrestrial,” the 71-year-old says as he climbs a staircase to the veranda where the smoker claims to have seen what, in reference to Steven Spielberg’s 1982 film, became known as the “ET of Varginha”. A 2ft statue of a two-toed alien now marks the spot. “It’s possible it was an intraterrestrial, from inside the Earth They don’t just come from space,” Reis says. “It might have come from the depths of the Earth, too. We don’t even know what it’s like at the bottom of the sea, do we?”

The Varginha mass hysteria incident

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Brazil’s Roswell: The Varginha UFO

“This story of alien visitation in Brazil from 1996 claims to be the most convincing proof we have .. the Varginha UFO story .. is the most compelling example of a case where literally nothing at all happened that was remotely unusual, and was magnified into a case considered unassailable proof of alien visitation by many. To those believers, I would suggest recalibrating where you set the bar for quality of evidence.”

Postal Service to Impose Its First-Ever Fuel Surcharge on Packages

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The U.S. Postal Service plans to impose its first-ever fuel surcharge on packages (source paywalled; alternative source), adding an 8% fee starting in April as it struggles with rising fuel costs and ongoing financial pressure. The surcharge will not apply to letter mail and is currently expected to remain in place until January 2027. The Wall Street Journal reports:
Other parcel carriers, including FedEx and United Parcel Service, have imposed fuel surcharges, as well as a basket of other surcharges and fees, for years. Both FedEx and UPS have dramatically raised their fuel surcharges in recent weeks as the price of oil has increased amid the turmoil in the Middle East. […] The post office has been trying to increase the volume of packages it delivers. It previously differentiated itself from commercial carriers by saying that it doesn’t apply residential, Saturday delivery or fuel or remote-delivery surcharges.

Re:Is packet delivery really a good idea?

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Packet delivery is really important. That is why we use TCP. Lost or delayed packets are resent to insure data integrity.

“ongoing financial pressure”

By Nicholas Grayhame • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Do you know about the USPS 75-year pre-funding mandate?

In 2006, Congress passed a law that imposed extraordinary costs on the U.S. Postal Service. The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA) required the USPS to create a $72 billion fund to pay for the cost of its post-retirement health care costs, 75 years into the future. This burden applies to no other federal agency or private corporation.

If the costs of this retiree health care mandate were removed from the USPS financial statements, the Post Office would have reported operating profits in each of the last six years. This extraordinary mandate created a financial “crisis” that has been used to justify harmful service cuts and even calls for postal privatization. Additional cuts in service and privatization would be devastating for millions of postal workers and customers.

https://ips-dc.org/how-congres…

No other government agency or any corporation has to deal with such a mandate, but now the USPS can make money but republicans can claim the lazy bureaucrats are wasting the taxpayers money.

Re:Is packet delivery really a good idea?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I tried to save money once by having a laptop delivered via UDP… let’s just say it didn’t end well.

Re:there are many points

By MachineShedFred • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

So you’re just a “regime change” warmonger chickenhawk.

And please tell me how I ever “portray[ed] Iran as the good guys here” because that’s a straw man you piled up with your pathetic binary understanding of global affairs.

Hint: there is way more nuance to international relations than “good” and “bad” and you’re a fucking idiot to try to reduce it to such triviality.

I never said that Iran didn’t have it coming. My problem is that our President violated US law to deliver it.

He couldn’t do it the right way and have the Republican Congress give him the proper authority to do what he’s doing? Even Shrub was able to get that done for Afghanistan / Iraq with his WMD lies - are you saying that GWB was a better negotiator and legislator than Trump? Because it sounds like that’s what you’re saying.

Re:there are many points

By bussdriver • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

No he is not. He has no power to start wars. or kidnap people. he can make emergency defensive moves. that is why they are bending over backwards to make up imminent threat emergency excuses to give them legal cover that itself is pathetic. even bush had to work at it to do his war; this idiot just picks the worst option people give him — just as John Bolton said he did previously.

Canada’s Immigration Rejected Applicant Based On AI-Invented Job Duties

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
New submitter haroldbasset writes:
Canada’s Immigration Department rejected an applicant because the duties of her current job did not match the Canadian work experience she had claimed, but the Department’s AI assistant had invented that work experience. She has been working in Canada as a health scientist — she has a Ph.D. in the immunology of aging — but the AI genius instead described her as “wiring and assembling control circuits, building control and robot panels, programming and troubleshooting.”
“It’s believed to be the first time that the department explicitly referred to the use of generative AI to support application processing in immigration refusals,” reports the Toronto Star. “The disclaimer also noted that all generated content was verified by an officer and that generative AI was not used to make or recommend a decision.”
The applicant’s lawyer was shocked “how any human being could make this decision.” “Somehow, it hallucinated my client’s job description,” he said. “I would love to see what the officer saw. Something seriously went wrong here.”

The applicant’s refusal came just as Canada’s Immigration Department released its first AI strategy, which frames artificial intelligence as a way to improve efficiency, service delivery, and program integrity. The department says it has long used digital tools like analytics and automation to flag fraud risks and triage applications, and is now also experimenting with generative AI for tasks such as research, summarizing, and analysis. In this case, however, the department insisted the decision was made by a human officer and that generative AI was not involved in the final decision.

Human Nature vs Policy

By Brain-Fu • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This business of having an AI do the legwork and then having a human review it and make a final decision keeps going badly. Humans are intrinsically lazy and the moment they get a few good results from the AI they are going to stop doing the validation and start rubber-stamping. It doesn’t matter if policy disallows this, they will do it anyway. It doesn’t matter if the human really cares; they won’t be able to help themselves. Human laziness is too deep an instinct.

It’s the same with the self-driving cars where a human is required to stay at the wheel and alert so they can manually override the instant the AI starts doing something wrong. Humans CAN’T keep that up. It’s not possible. The brain just doesn’t work that way. The mind knows that it isn’t doing the work, and it will get bored and lose focus or just nod off.

Everyone is SO eager to have it both ways: “an AI does all the work but a human verifies it so we know its good.” We just can’t have it both ways. Once the AI does the work, the human stops verifying. That is how and why things went wrong here, it is how and why things have gone wrong for several law firms that submitted hallucinated historical court rulings, and it is how and why things will continue to go badly across all industries that adopt AI in such a role.

“Human in the loop” is really easy to say. Much harder to actually do reliably.

Main problem with AI

By Luckyo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Main problem with AI in these cases is that it is so good, that people stop checking it.

Even when they’re explicitly employed to do so as is the case here. “It’s been great last ten thousand cases I checked, it’s right here too”.

Re:Good for Canada!

By dskoll • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I suggest you visit Toronto some time if you think Canada is homogeneous…

Image recognition also not great

By Firethorn • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I was just reading a story where a woman ended up in jail six months, extradited to North Dakota from Tennessee.
The only evidence it was her was an AI facial recognition match between her social media/driver’s license and the video of the actual suspect.
It wasn’t until the first court date that the public defender got her financial records showing she was in Tennessee when the crime actually happened.
Then they kicked a southern state person out into ND winter without proper clothing, not even bothering to get her a ride back home.

She lost her house and car due to non-payment because she couldn’t pay bills while in jail.

Looking, she’ll probably end up with a $2-3M settlement.

https://www.theguardian.com/us…

Re: Human Nature vs Policy

By simlox • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I can verify that from AI coding: I get the AI agent to write a commit for me, looks good and tests parse. But much later I discover a lot of issues, I simply was too lazy to find in my own review.

Apple Can Create Smaller On-Device AI Models From Google’s Gemini

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Apple reportedly has full access to customize Google’s Gemini model, allowing it to distill smaller on-device AI models for Siri and other features that can run locally without an internet connection. MacRumors reports:
The Information explains that Apple can ask the main Gemini model to perform a series of tasks that provide high-quality results, with a rundown of the reasoning process. Apple can feed the answers and reasoning information that it gets from Gemini to train smaller, cheaper models. With this process, the smaller models are able to learn the internal computations used by Gemini, producing efficient models that have Gemini-like performance but require less computing power.

Apple is also able to edit Gemini as needed to make sure that it responds to queries in a way that Apple wants, but Apple has been running into some issues because Gemini has been tuned for chatbot and coding applications, which doesn’t always meet Apple’s needs.

Supreme Court Sides With Internet Provider In Copyright Fight Over Pirated Music

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader JackSpratts writes:
The Supreme Court unanimously said on Wednesday that a major internet provider could not be held liable for the piracy of thousands of songs online in a closely watched copyright clash. Music labels and publishers sued Cox Communications in 2018, saying the company had failed to cut off the internet connections of subscribers who had been repeatedly flagged for illegally downloading and distributing copyrighted music. At issue for the justices was whether providers like Cox could be held legally responsible and required to pay steep damages — a billion dollars or more in Cox’s case — if they knew that customers were pirating music but did not take sufficient steps to terminate their internet access.

In its opinion released (PDF) on Wednesday, the court said a company was not liable for “merely providing a service to the general public with knowledge that it will be used by some to infringe copyrights.” Writing for the court, Justice Clarence Thomas said a provider like Cox was liable “only if it intended that the provided service be used for infringement” and if it, for instance, “actively encourages infringement.” Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, wrote separately to say that she agreed with the outcome but for different reasons. […]
Cox called the court’s unanimous decision a “decisive victory” for the industry and for Americans who “depend on reliable internet service.”
“This opinion affirms that internet service providers are not copyright police and should not be held liable for the actions of their customers,” the company said.

This is the right decision

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If I used my city’s water or sewer to operate a meth lab, are they responsible for my actions?

Re:This is the correct decision

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Meanwhile, the big artists are selling their entire catalogs for hundreds of millions of dollars, right before those copyrights become unenforceable.

Re:Good

By Registered Coward v2 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

more free movies & music for the poor I encourage the piracy of movies & music & software, the only people that will bother to pirate that stuff is poor because people with disposable income will just buy it and the poor should not be making the rich richer

I can agree with it. If someone can’t afford what I’ve created and it helps them have a better life, I’m all for it. What does piss me off is where I see people steal my work and make a profit off of it. I’d happily license it for very small fee, but they figure why bother if they can just take it for free? It’s not worth going to court over it because the cost likely far outweighs any verdict, and then I’d have to collect.

Good. Now copyright terms

By greytree • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
95 year copyrights are an abomination.

It’s time to make the copyright PRIVILEGE work for *US* again.

We give creators copyright for a reasonable 5 years to allow them to make a profit (almost nothing makes money after that) and in return we get the creation for other creators to create with.

THAT’S HOW COPYRIGHT IS MEANT TO WORK !

Re:I think SCOTUS were concerned about a trap

By dpidcoe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Are gun makers responsible for what people do with guns? No, because congress specifically excluded gun manufacturers from product liability.

That’s a wild take on what the law actually is. Ford isn’t liable if somebody runs their F-150 through a crowd, bed bath and beyond isn’t liable because somebody filled their pressure cooker with black powder, and SC Johnson and Clorox aren’t responsible if somebody mixes some household cleaners and gasses their building.

Firearm manufacturers have a specific protection against bullshit civil suits like that because there’s a lot of people with a political agenda suckering victims of crime into hopeless lawfare against gun manufacturers (and then sticking those crime victims with the bill). If your gun causes injury due to an actual manufacturer defect, the manufacturer is just as liable as Ford is if their truck engine explodes and takes your foot off, or Clorox is if they accidentally sell you a bottle of ammonia labeled as bleach.

Stephen Colbert To Write Next ‘Lord of the Rings’ Movie

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN:
Stephen Colbert already has a new job lined up for when he ends his 11-year run as host of “The Late Show” in May — the comedian and well-known J.R.R. Tolkien superfan announced he will co-write and develop a new film in the blockbuster “Lord of the Rings” franchise. Colbert joined “LOTR” director Peter Jackson to reveal the news in a video announcement.

“I’m pretty happy about it. You know what the books mean to me and what your films mean to me,” the late-night host told Jackson, who led the Oscar-winning team behind the nearly $6 billion original “Lord of the Rings” and “The Hobbit” trilogies. […] Colbert said the next installment will be based on parts of Tolkien’s “The Fellowship of the Ring” book that didn’t make it into the original movies. “The thing I found myself reading over and over again were the six chapters early on in (The Fellowship of the Ring) that y’all never developed into the first movie back in the day … and I thought, ‘Oh, wait, maybe that could be its own story that could fit into the larger story.’" he said.

Colbert said he discussed the idea with his son, screenwriter Peter McGee, to work out the framing of the story. “It took me a few years to scrape my courage into a pile and give you a call, but about two years ago, I did. You liked it enough to talk to me about it,” Colbert told Jackson. Colbert said he, McGee and Jackson have been working alongside screenwriter Philippa Boyens on the development of the story. “I could not be happier to say that they loved it, and so that’s what we’re going to be working on,” Colbert said.
Colbert’s LOTR movie, tentatively titled "Shadow of the Past,” will be the second of two new upcoming films in the franchise from Warner Bros. Discovery. The first of which is called "The Hunt for Gollum" due to be released in 2027.

Re:wHY?

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Oh, honey, we ALL need a hug right now!

Re:because

By UnknowingFool • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The real question is how much studio interference will there be? A reason The Hobbit trilogy was terrible was it was a trilogy. But the trilogy was mandated by the studio. There was simply not enough material to make 3 movies only 2. Another reason was the studio interference drove away Guillermo Del Toro who was originally supposed to direct the trilogy. Peter Jackson had to step in as he was the head of the production company. Instead of years he had to plan for The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Jackson had weeks to prepare for The Hobbit.

Re:Sauron . . .

By sarren1901 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Shame the movie totally left out that Sam was employed by Frodo. It literally got one line in the second movie when Faramie says"Are you his body guard?” Sam replies “I’m his gardener.” The original LOTR had a lot more of the worker class and capital class conflicts in it.

Oh, and Bert and Ernie were gay too, right? Of course, from a kids perspective, they were kids themselves and kids have sleep overs and *gasps* share the same bed. Guess they are all gay. It’s just hogwash.

I love LOTR but…

By Nicholas Grayhame • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Colbert’s LOTR movie, tentatively titled “Shadow of the Past,” will be the second of two new upcoming films in the franchise from Warner Bros. Discovery.

…I’m not giving Ellison and his cronies even a single penny

Re:because

By chefren • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I remember Slashdot before all the whining about American politics in the comments..

Meta and YouTube Found Negligent in Landmark Social Media Addiction Case

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A jury found Meta and YouTube negligent in a landmark social media addiction case, ruling that addictive design features such as infinite scroll and algorithmic recommendations harmed a young user and contributed to her mental health distress. The verdict awards $3 million in compensatory damages so far and could pave the way for more lawsuits seeking financial penalties and product changes across the social media industry. “Meta is responsible for 70 percent of that cost and YouTube for the remainder,” notes The New York Times. “TikTok and Snap both settled with the plaintiff for undisclosed terms before the trial started.” From the report:
The bellwether case, which was brought by a now 20-year-old woman identified as K.G.M., had accused social media companies of creating products as addictive as cigarettes or digital casinos. K.G.M. sued Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook, and Google’s YouTube over features like infinite scroll and algorithmic recommendations that she claimed led to anxiety and depression.

The jury of seven women and five men will deliberate further to decide what further punitive damages the companies should pay for malice or fraud. The verdict in K.G.M.‘s case — one of thousands of lawsuits filed by teenagers, school districts and state attorneys general against Meta, YouTube, TikTok and Snap, which owns Snapchat — was a major win for the plaintiffs. The finding validates a novel legal theory that social media sites or apps can cause personal injury. It is likely to factor into similar cases expected to go to trial this year, which could expose the internet giants to further financial damages and force changes to their products.
The verdict also comes on the heels of a New Mexico jury ruling that found Meta liable for violating state law by failing to protect users of its apps from child predators.

Re:Coming soon off the back of this

By fropenn • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

privacy-destroying age

“But what about my privacy!” yells person who then turns over the names of all their friends, pictures of their cat, details of what they ate for breakfast, their favorite books, movies, songs, and concerts, their location, their birthday, anniversary date, family members’ names, and every website they’ve ever visited.

“Asking me to prove I’m an adult violates my privacy!” they yell.

So, basically television

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You could watch linear format TV until your eyeballs fell out, too. It is an unending stream of content, curated for maximum viewer engagement. The difference was, TVs generally weren’t something you’d have in your pocket (and when TVs that did fit in your pocket became available, they were limited to only receiving OTA broadcasts while you were out and about, and they went through batteries like nobody’s business). So, if you were a kid who tried to watch too much TV, your parents would tell you to cut it out - and then take away the TV if you didn’t get the message.

It seems like sometime between then and the smartphone era, parents forgot they’re supposed to be the ones making sure their kids aren’t getting “addicted” to things.

Re:Coming soon off the back of this

By jd • Score: 5, Funny Thread

A six digit UID is not one that could be remotely considered “old”.

*goes off grumbling and looks for anyone he can shout at to get off his lawn.

I’m addicted to slashdot…

By Hey_Jude_Jesus • Score: 4, Funny Thread
it makes me want to read the WWW all day. I’m gonna sue them! ;-) Let’s see http:///\.org

Re:Dumb precedent. Addiction is on the user.

By jd • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

And those come with warnings, legal penalties on vendors who sell to known addicts or children, legal penalties for abusers, financial penalties to abusers, etc. There are cars which have their own breathalisers.

So, no, society has said that the responsibility is distributed. Which is correct.

Meta Loses Trial After Arguing Child Exploitation Was ‘Inevitable’

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Meta lost a child safety trial in New Mexico after a court found that its platforms failed to adequately protect children from exploitation and misled parents about app safety. According to Ars Technica, the jury on Tuesday “deliberated for only one day before agreeing that Meta should pay $375 million in civil damages…” While the jury declined to impose the maximum penalty New Mexico sought, which could have cost the company $2.2 billion, Meta may still face additional financial penalties and could be forced to make changes to its apps. From the report:
The trial followed a 2023 lawsuit filed by New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez after The Guardian published a two-year investigation exposing child sex trafficking markets on Facebook and Instagram. Torrez’s office then conducted an undercover investigation codenamed “Operation MetaPhile,” in which officers posed as children on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. The jury heard that these fake profiles were “simply inundated with images and targeted solicitations” from child abusers, Torrez told CNBC in 2024. Ultimately, three men were arrested amid the sting for attempting to use Meta’s social networks to prey on children. At trial, Mark Zuckerberg and Instagram chief Adam Mosseri testified that “harms to children, such as sexual exploitation and detriments to mental health, were inevitable on the company’s platforms due to their vast user bases,” The Guardian reported. Internal messages and documents, as well as testimony from child safety experts within and outside the company, showed that Meta repeatedly ignored warnings and failed to fix platforms to protect kids, New Mexico’s AG successfully argued.

Perhaps most troubling to the jury, law enforcement and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children also testified that Meta’s reporting of crimes to children on its apps — including child sexual abuse materials (CSAM) — was “deficient,” The Guardian reported. Rather than make it easy to trace harms on its platforms, the jury learned from frustrated cops that Meta “generated high volumes of ‘junk’ reports by overly relying on AI to moderate its platforms.” This made its reporting “useless” and “meant crimes could not be investigated,” The Guardian reported.

Celebrating the win as a “historic victory,” Torrez told CNBC that families had previously paid the price for “Meta’s choice to put profits over kids’ safety.” “Meta executives knew their products harmed children, disregarded warnings from their own employees, and lied to the public about what they knew,” Torrez said. “Today the jury joined families, educators, and child safety experts in saying enough is enough.”
Meta said the company plans to appeal the verdict. “We respectfully disagree with the verdict and will appeal,” Meta’s spokesperson said. “We work hard to keep people safe on our platforms and are clear about the challenges of identifying and removing bad actors or harmful content. We will continue to defend ourselves vigorously, and we remain confident in our record of protecting teens online.”

Exploitation of children is inevitable???

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Darn, why didn’t Epstein’s lawyers use that excuse?

Meta?

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The same company that demanded a copy of my driver’s license, and then changed my account name to because their support monkey was too stupid to realize that Oregon driver’s license print the last name first? I can’t believe THAT company would shirk their responsibility to protect children! My daughter, like all her peers, originally created her Facebook account by simply lying about her age, after Facebook decided they would comply with COPA by simply barring anyone admitting to being under age 13 from creating an account.

Re:Exploitation of children is inevitable???

By Calydor • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The difference is that if they really did their best to prevent it and someone slipped through the cracks anyway they could honestly say that they did their best.

They didn’t do their best, though. They just didn’t care. Or worse, they deemed it not worth the expense to even try to protect kids. That’s different.

What about parenting?

By hambone142 • Score: 3 Thread

I’m no fan of Zuck and Meta. However, the parent allowed their child to have the phone and allowed them to become obsessed with social media most of her awake hours. Where is the accountability with the parent?

AI Economy Is a ‘Ponzi Scheme,’ Says AI Doc Director

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Vanity Fair:
Focus Features is releasing The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist in theaters on March 27. If you’re even slightly interested in what’s going on with AI, it’s required viewing: The film touches on all aspects of the technology, from how it’s currently being used to how it will be used in the near future, when we potentially reach the age of artificial general intelligence, or AGI. AGI is a theoretical form of AI that supposedly would be able to perform complex tasks without each step being prompted by a human user — the point at which machines become autonomous, like Skynet in the Terminator franchise. […]

[Director Daniel Roher] interviews nearly all the major players in the AI space: Sam Altman of OpenAI; the Amodei siblings of Anthropic; Demis Hassabis of DeepMind (Google’s AI arm); theorists and reporters covering the subject. Notably absent are Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg. “Have you seen that guy speak? He’s like a lizard man,” Roher says regarding Zuckerberg. “Musk said yes initially, but it was right when he was doing all the stuff with Trump, and we just got ghosted after a while,” adds [codirector Charlie Tyrell]. Altman, arguably AI’s greatest mascot, is prominently featured in the documentary. But Roher wasn’t buying it. “That guy doesn’t know what genuine means,” he says. “Every single thing he says and does is calculated. He is a machine. He’s like AI, and it’s in the service of growth, growth, growth. You can be disingenuous and media savvy.” […]

How, exactly, is Roher an apocaloptimist? “We are preaching a worldview,” he says, “in a world that’s asking you to either see this as the apocalypse or embrace it with this unbridled optimism.” He and his film are taking a stance that rests between those two poles. “It’s both at the same time. We have to try and embrace a middle ground so this technology doesn’t consume us, so we can stay in the driver’s seat,” says Roher — meaning, it’s up to all of us to chart the course. “You have to speak up,” says Tyrell. “Things like AI should disclose themselves. If your doctor’s office is using an AI bot, you have to say, I don’t like that.” The driving message behind the film is that resistance starts with the people. That position is shared by The AI Doc producer Daniel Kwan, who won an Oscar for directing Everything Everywhere All at Once and has been at the forefront of discussions about AI in the entertainment industry. […]

Roher and Tyrell both use AI in their everyday lives and openly admit to it being a helpful tool. They also agree that this technology can make daily tasks easier for the average consumer. But at the end of our conversation, we get into the economics of AI and how Wall Street is propping up the industry through huge evaluations of these companies — and Roher gets going yet again. “This is all smoke and mirrors. The entire economy of AI is being propped up by a Ponzi scheme. The hype of this technology is unlike any hype we’ve seen,” he says. “I feel like I could announce in a press release that Academy Award winner Daniel Roher is starting an AI film company, and I could sell it the next day for $20 million. It’s fucking crazy.” […] “These people are prospectors, and they are going up to the Yukon because it’s the gold rush.”

Not that different than previous tech bubbles

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This is pretty similar to the “dot com” bubble of the late 1990s, or the railroad boom of the late 1860s early 1870s. Both bubbles had people investing with minimal justification. Businesses which were “Normal thing X but on the internet” got insane amounts of money. And both bubbles popped in ways which were very harmful to the economy. However, at the same time the underlying techs stuck around and became far more common than they were at the height of the bubble. The 1873 collapse took the US about a decade to recover from, but by multiple metrics, such as number of train engines being used, number of passenger miles traveled per a year, tons of freight moved, rail continued to grow with just a small set of blips. Similarly, the internet now is far more extensive and used than even many starry-eyed optimists or hype-obsessed would have predicted in 1998. A tech can be part of an irrational bubble and still be a game-changing technology.

It’s not a ponzi scheme

By nedlohs • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

No investor is being paid profits from new investments. There are no profits being paid pretend or or real, it’s just a giant money vacuum.

Re:Not that different than previous tech bubbles

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Pump and Dump both rhyme with Trump. Coincidence?

Re:Well, thanks, capt. obvious,

By njvack • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Beside your argument from authority, do you have any argument on how a nausea-inducing and boring piece of garbage helps the promotion of a completely different type of film?

Wait; you’re criticizing someone’s argument from authority and your rebuttal is effectively that you thought the movie was boring?

I am not saying the Oscar committee is incredible or anything but I don’t see how your opinion is any more valid. You can’t just beat argument from authority with argument from non-authority

Re:…on the other hand,

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Previous tech bubbles have ratched up prices and caused all sorts of issues. The rail boom outcompeted other transport types, increased the cost of coal and iron( vital resources), and completely took away a lot of sources of wood. In parts of the American West, rails took up needed limited water for the steam engines, probably in a way far more serious than that of data centers (which does take up water but is largely exaggerated). The rail boom also prompted tens of thousands of Native Americans to be kicked off their land to make way for rail infrastructure. In the American South, freed slaves were functionally reenslaved and forced to build rail lines. A lot of this is discussed in for example, Wolmar’s excellent book “The Great Railroad Revolution.” The internet bubble of the late 1990s was in comparison pretty mild in terms of its negative knock-on effects.