Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Sperm Whales’ Communication Closely Parallels Human Language, Study Finds
  2. ‘TotalRecall Reloaded’ Tool Finds a Side Entrance To Windows 11 Recall Database
  3. OpenAI’s Big Codex Update Is a Direct Shot At Claude Code
  4. Is Linux Mint In Trouble?
  5. Europe Has ‘Maybe 6 Weeks of Jet Fuel Left’
  6. Google, Pentagon Discuss Classified AI Deal
  7. IPv6 Usage Reaches Historic 50% Across Google Services
  8. Anthropic Rolls Out Claude Opus 4.7, an AI Model That Is Less Risky Than Mythos
  9. EU Age Verification App Announced To Protect Children Online
  10. Researchers Induce Smells With Ultrasound, No Chemical Cartridges Required
  11. Bullet Train Upgrade Brings 5G Windows, Noise-Cancelling Cabins To Japan
  12. UK Households To Be Urged To Use More Power This Summer As Renewables Soar
  13. Nature Is Still Molding Human Genes, Study Finds
  14. Boston Dynamics’ Robot Dog Can Now Read Gauges, Spot Spills, and Reason
  15. US Jobs Too Important To Risk Chinese Car Imports, Says Ford CEO

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.

Sperm Whales’ Communication Closely Parallels Human Language, Study Finds

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian:
We may appear to have little in common with sperm whales – enormous, ocean-dwelling animals that last shared a common ancestor with humans more than 90 million years ago. But the whales’ vocalized communications are remarkably similar to our own, researchers have discovered. Not only do sperm whale have a form of “alphabet” and form vowels within their vocalizations but the structure of these vowels behaves in the same way as human speech, the new study has found.

Sperm whales communicate in a series of short clicks called codas. Analysis of these clicks shows that the whales can differentiate vowels through the short or elongated clicks or through rising or falling tones, using patterns similar to languages such as Mandarin, Latin and Slovenian. The structure of the whales’ communication has “close parallels in the phonetics and phonology of human languages, suggesting independent evolution,” the paper, published in the Proceedings B journal, states. Sperm whale coda vocalizations are “highly complex and represent one of the closest parallels to human phonology of any analyzed animal communication system,” it added.

[…] The new study shows that “sperm whale communication isn’t just about patterns of clicks — it involves multiple interacting layers of structure,” said Mauricio Cantor, a behavioral ecologist at the Marine Mammal Institute who was not involved in the research. “With this study, we’re starting to see that these signals are organized in ways we didn’t fully appreciate before.” The latest discovery around sperm whale speech has inched forward the possibility of someday fully understanding the creatures and even communicating with them. Project CETI has set a goal of being able to comprehend 20 different vocalized expressions, relating to actions such as diving and sleeping, within the next five years.
A future where we’re able to fully understand what the whales are saying and be able to have a conversation with them is “totally within our grasp,” said David Gruber, founder and president of Project CETI. “We’ve already got a lot further than I thought we could. But it will take time, and funding. At the moment we are like a two-year-old, just saying a few words. In a few years’ time, maybe we will be more like a five-year-old.”

‘TotalRecall Reloaded’ Tool Finds a Side Entrance To Windows 11 Recall Database

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Two years ago, Microsoft launched its first wave of “Copilot+" Windows PCs with a handful of exclusive features that could take advantage of the neural processing unit (NPU) hardware being built into newer laptop processors. These NPUs could enable AI and machine learning features that could run locally rather than in someone’s cloud, theoretically enhancing security and privacy. One of the first Copilot+ features was Recall, a feature that promised to track all your PC usage via screenshot to help you remember your past activity. But as originally implemented, Recall was neither private nor secure; the feature stored its screenshots plus a giant database of all user activity in totally unencrypted files on the user’s disk, making it trivial for anyone with remote or local access to grab days, weeks, or even months of sensitive data, depending on the age of the user’s Recall database.

After journalists and security researchers discovered and detailed these flaws, Microsoft delayed the Recall rollout by almost a year and substantially overhauled its security. All locally stored data would now be encrypted and viewable only with Windows Hello authentication; the feature now did a better job detecting and excluding sensitive information, including financial information, from its database; and Recall would be turned off by default, rather than enabled on every PC that supported it. The reconstituted Recall was a big improvement, but having a feature that records the vast majority of your PC usage is still a security and privacy risk. Security researcher Alexander Hagenah was the author of the original “TotalRecall” tool that made it trivially simple to grab the Recall information on any Windows PC, and an updated “TotalRecall Reloaded” version exposes what Hagenah believes are additional vulnerabilities.

The problem, as detailed by Hagenah on the TotalRecall GitHub page, isn’t with the security around the Recall database, which he calls “rock solid.” The problem is that, once the user has authenticated, the system passes Recall data to another system process called AIXHost.exe, and that process doesn’t benefit from the same security protections as the rest of Recall. “The vault is solid,” Hagenah writes. “The delivery truck is not.” The TotalRecall Reloaded tool uses an executable file to inject a DLL file into AIXHost.exe, something that can be done without administrator privileges. It then waits in the background for the user to open Recall and authenticate using Windows Hello. Once this is done, the tool can intercept screenshots, OCR’d text, and other metadata that Recall sends to the AIXHost.exe process, which can continue even after the user closes their Recall session.

“The VBS enclave won’t decrypt anything without Windows Hello,” Hagenah writes. “The tool doesn’t bypass that. It makes the user do it, silently rides along when the user does it, or waits for the user to do it.” A handful of tasks, including grabbing the most recent Recall screenshot, capturing select metadata about the Recall database, and deleting the user’s entire Recall database, can be done with no Windows Hello authentication. Once authenticated, Hagenah says the TotalRecall Reloaded tool can access both new information recorded to the Recall database as well as data Recall has previously recorded.
“We appreciate Alexander Hagenah for identifying and responsibly reporting this issue. After careful investigation, we determined that the access patterns demonstrated are consistent with intended protections and existing controls, and do not represent a bypass of a security boundary or unauthorized access to data,” a Microsoft spokesperson told Ars. “The authorization period has a timeout and anti-hammering protection that limit the impact of malicious queries.”

Since NTSYNC is now implemented in the kernel

By Vomitgod • Score: 3 Thread

I’ve left Windows - and not looking back.....
shit like this....

and Bluehammer - that I don’t think is getting talked about much.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?…

Recall wasn’t there to help the user!

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
Recall is there to vacuum up all the sensitive data “on” the computer and make it available to Microsoft and their partners for their use.
TBH, I don’t see how the Federal Government can use a Microsoft product and meet their government required security rules. CJIS for example and the handling of CHRI(Federal Criminal Records History Information) scanning and recording every background check that was opened and sending/saving/transmitting the info(somewhere Microsoft wants it?) seems like a huge no-no. Is Recall On/Off and it is managed by who?

Why?

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

Recall, a feature that promised to track all your PC usage via screenshot to help you remember your past activity.

Who asked for this?

Well.

By zurkeyon • Score: 3 Thread
0.0 people saw that coming ;-D

Microsoft has managed to extend your threat…

By PubJeezy • Score: 3 Thread
Microsoft has managed to extend your cyber-attack surface into the 4th dimension. Cybersecurity threats are an inside job. Windows is malware and Microsoft is a threat to national security.

OpenAI’s Big Codex Update Is a Direct Shot At Claude Code

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI is updating Codex with more agent-like capabilities, positioning it as a more direct rival to Anthropic’s Claude Code. Some of the new features include the ability to operate macOS desktop apps, browse the web inside the app, generate images, use new workplace plug-ins, and remember useful context from past tasks. The Verge reports:
Codex will now be able to operate desktop apps on your computer, OpenAI says in a blog post announcing the update. It can work in the background, meaning it won’t interfere with your own work in other apps, and multiple agents can work in parallel. For developers, OpenAI says “this is helpful for testing and iterating on frontend changes, testing apps, or working in apps that don’t expose an API.” The feature will start rolling out to Codex desktop app users signed in with ChatGPT today and will initially be limited to macOS. OpenAI did not indicate a timeline for when use will expand to other operating systems. EU users will also have to wait, it said, adding that the update will roll out to users there “soon.”

Codex is also getting the ability to generate and iterate on images with gpt-image-1.5, new plug-ins for tools like GitLab, Atlassian Rovo, and Microsoft Suite, and native web browsing through an in-app browser, “where you can comment directly on pages to provide precise instructions to the agent.” OpenAI also said it will also be easier to automate tasks, with users able to re-use existing conversation threads and Codex now able to schedule future work for itself and wake up automatically to continue on a long-term task. Codex will also be getting a memory feature allowing it to remember useful context from past experience, such as personal preferences, corrections, and information that took time to gather. OpenAI said it hopes the opt-in feature, which will be released as a preview, will help future tasks complete faster and to a quality that previously required detailed custom instructions. The personalization features will roll out to Enterprise, Edu, and EU users “soon.”

Is Linux Mint In Trouble?

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
The developers behind Linux Mint say the project is rethinking its release strategy and moving toward a longer development cycle, with the next version now expected around Christmas 2026. In a monthly update, project lead Clement Lefebvre said the team reached a “crossroads” and needs more flexibility to fix bugs, improve the desktop, and adapt to rapid changes across the Linux ecosystem. The upcoming development build, temporarily called Mint 23 “Alfa,” is currently based on Ubuntu 26.04 LTS and includes Linux kernel 7.0, an unstable build of Cinnamon 6.7, and early Wayland related work.

Mint is also replacing the long used Ubiquity installer with “live-installer,” the same tool used by Linux Mint Debian Edition, allowing the project to unify installation infrastructure across its Ubuntu based and Debian based variants. While the team frames the changes as an opportunity to improve quality and reduce maintenance overhead, the shift has raised questions about the project’s long term direction and whether Linux Mint may eventually lean more heavily on its Debian roots rather than its traditional Ubuntu base.

Is Linux Mint In Trouble?

By Vomitgod • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

so - no - but need some click bait-y stupid headline…

Why would that make them “in trouble?”

By laxr5rs • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
They’ve maintained the debian base for a long time.

Ubuntu … Ugh

By machineghost • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Backstory: I started out with Gentoo and Mandrake Linux in ‘99. They were exciting, but … messy and difficult.

Then, I started using Ubuntu on the job, and it was amazing. It felt like “Linux has finally arrived as a real OS!” It was incredible, and I thought the distro wars were all but over: Ubuntu won.

But then Shuttleworth (the maniac founder of Canonical/Ubuntu) thought the same thing, and started acting like the Bill Gates of the Linux community. Linux is supposed to be a community project, but he kept trying to force bad technical decisions on the rest of the community (eg. Unity).

Ultimately I switched to Linux Mint, which leveraged Ubuntu to offer great Linux … without being constrained by Shuttleworth (eg. I run MATE or Cinnamon, not Unity).

TLDR; But what I care about, and I think what most people care about, is “Linux that works well”. Few people give a damn about Ubuntu and Shuttleworth: if Linux Mint can deliver a great experience without them, it will be a *better* distro for it!

Terrible title

By computer_tot • Score: 3 Thread
The blog post is actually about how Mint is unifying their branches (Ubuntu and Debian) and taking more time to put together releases t allow more development & testing time. Nothing about the announcement, nothing about the ongoing discussions, suggests there is any trouble or any problems.

The title of the post is terrible and in no way reflects the content of the announcement. People who post crap like that should be banned for spreading FUD.

Strange

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Mint a derivative distribution based on Ubuntu, which is a derivative distribution based on Debian. Debian -> Ubuntu -> Mint. OK I guess I get it.

But then they also have a Mint distribution that is a derivative of Debian? Debian -> Mint

Why so many derivatives and so much fracturing?

Europe Has ‘Maybe 6 Weeks of Jet Fuel Left’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The head of the International Energy Agency warned that Europe may have only “six weeks or so” of jet fuel left if oil supplies remain blocked by the Iran war and the Strait of Hormuz stays disrupted. The Associated Press reports:
IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol painted a sobering picture of the global repercussions of what he called “the largest energy crisis we have ever faced,” stemming from the pinch-off of oil, gas and other vital supplies through the Strait of Hormuz. “In the past there was a group called ‘Dire Straits.’ It’s a dire strait now, and it is going to have major implications for the global economy. And the longer it goes, the worse it will be for the economic growth and inflation around the world,” he told The Associated Press. The impact will be “higher petrol (gasoline) prices, higher gas prices, high electricity prices,” said Birol, speaking in his Paris office looking out over the Eiffel Tower.

Economic pain will be felt unevenly and “the countries who will suffer the most will not be those whose voice are heard a lot. It will be mainly the developing countries. Poorer countries in Asia, in Africa and in Latin America,” said the Turkish economist and energy expert who has led the IEA since 2015. But without a settlement of the Iran war that permanently reopens the Strait of Hormuz, “Everybody is going to suffer,” he added. “Some countries may be richer than the others. Some countries may have more energy than the others, but no country, no country is immune to this crisis,” he said.

“Have you said thank you once?”

By abulafia • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Keep Donnie Dipshit in mind every time you fill up, book a flight or spend more on food. And don’t forget his fake hillbilly Thiel-thrall.

This absurd, unnecessary disaster is entirely his.

It’ll be easy to remember to keep thanking him, because you’ll be paying for his emotional problems up through the 2028 elections and beyond.

Re:You mean..

By znrt • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Screwing around with Iran is hardly the entire world.

odds are you are in for a surprise on that.

He’ll be gone in 2.5 years anyway.

you might be in for a surprise on that too.

So… more U.S. oil sales?

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Maybe Trump is just making good on promises to U.S. oil executives/companies — first killing wind farms and subsidies/credits for renewables and now hampering middle-east oil production and shipments. /cynical

Trump pressed oil executives to give $1 billion for his campaign

Re: Let’s see in six weeks…

By greg_robson • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Having six weeks of supplies and knowing a delivery is coming in the next five days is fine.

Having six weeks of supplies and knowing that no tanker is on its way and it might be weeks before one is even on its way - that’s an entirely different situation.

The world has relied on “Just in Time” delivery or maintaining minimal backups to cover brief weather interruptions for many years as globalisation became the norm.

Re: “Have you said thank you once?”

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread

There was a treaty in place that was working fine until Trump ripped it up because Obama negotiated it, you stupid ass. And now we’re in a situation where Iran has every good reason to get nukes, to defend themselves. If Iran actually had nukes, the US wouldn’t have attacked it in the first place.

Google, Pentagon Discuss Classified AI Deal

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Alphabet’s Google is negotiating an agreement with the Department of Defense that would allow the Pentagon to deploy its Gemini AI models in classified settings, the Information reported on Thursday, citing two people with direct knowledge of the discussions. The two parties are discussing an agreement that would allow the Pentagon to use Google’s AI for all lawful uses, according to the report.

During the negotiations, Google has proposed additional language in its contract with the department to prevent its AI from being used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons without appropriate human control, the Information reported. The Pentagon will continue to deploy frontier AI capabilities through strong industry partnerships across all classification levels, a Pentagon official said, without confirming any talks with Google.

Uh oh!

By Local ID10T • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Google has proposed additional language in its contract with the department to prevent its AI from being used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons without appropriate human control

Google is about to be declared a threat to national security! Blocked from doing business with anyone who does business with the US Government! OMG! Supply chain risk! Terrorists! /s (Hey, it happened to Anthropic…)

Re:Uh oh!

By CrankyFool • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Not really. Google proposed these limitations, letting them claim proudly “hey, we proposed this!”

They didn’t require these limitations, so my suspicion is Pentagon will say no, the deal will be classified so nobody will know, and Google will get the credit they want for “trying.”

Re:Uh oh!

By Local ID10T • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

For those that missed it… Anthropic proposed to code the restrictions into the model itself. Other companies have proposed putting these restrictions in their contract -but lack any way of verifying or enforcing them beyond taking the government’s word for it.

IPv6 Usage Reaches Historic 50% Across Google Services

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
IPv6 usage briefly reached 50% across Google services for the first time, marking a major milestone for a protocol created in 1998 to solve IPv4’s address shortage. Tom’s Hardware reports:
[…] IPv6 was dismissed early on as a headache-inducing, hard-to-implement complication that would hardly ever gain any traction — despite offering 2^128 possible numbers, solving all network number assignments in one fell swoop. That changed over time by force of necessity, and Google’s tracking graph shows that for a brief moment in time on March 28, 50% of worldwide users accessed the service over an IPv6 connection, marking a historic first. APNIC’s stats show that the protocol is in use by 43% of the world, with Asia and the Americas inching ever close to those 50%. Cloudflare, meanwhile, shows that 40% of traffic is done in IPv6, an actually impressive figure if you consider it’s measuring actual transferred packets rather than just counting addresses.

The tried-and-true IPv4 and its well-known 123.456.789.123 format from 1980 offers ~4.3 billion addresses in theory, and around 3.7 billion in practice. That always sounded like a lot, but nobody could have predicted just how rapid the explosion of the Internet would be. IANA, the entity controlling the North-American IPv4 space, ran out of IPv4 addresses around 2011, while its European equivalent RIPE NCC could spare no more four-octet addresses nearly seven years ago in 2019. Asian, African, and Latin-American IP registries equally ran out during that timeframe.

You have to be over 16 to use IPv6

By jfdavis668 • Score: 3 Thread
Another good use for age verification.

Re: Always felt they could just add one more set

By DeadBeef • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Yeah sweet, fits great on all those 40 bit architectures or chunks nicely into four 10 bit chunks for all those 10 bit ones.......

What stops IPv6 from being universal

By AlanObject • Score: 3 Thread

Comcast is my ISP and my issues with them aside they implemented IPv6 perfectly. Back when I was running a virtual lab I could bring up any number of endpoints in the cloud and at other sites and could get 100% connectivity anywhere I wanted without dealing with any NAT complications and everything easy to account for and manageable with firewall rules.

And no bot harvester ever found a single system of mine to initiate ssh attacks on. How could they and why should they when there still are so many vulnerable IPv4 endpoints around?

I could understand back when several popular OSes didn’t support IPv6 very well but that stopped being true a decade ago. Yet new deployments every day with IPv4 address only provisions.

What’s it going to take to kill IPv4?

An unintended side effect..

By MpVpRb • Score: 3 Thread

..of the shortage of IPV4 addresses and NAT is that IOT devices need to connect to servers, often with subscriptions, for remote access.
I should be able to connect directly with my IOT devices using IPV6 and the devices should be secure enough to exist on the public internet.

Anthropic Rolls Out Claude Opus 4.7, an AI Model That Is Less Risky Than Mythos

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.7, calling it its strongest generally available model and an improvement over Opus 4.6 in areas like software engineering, instruction-following, tool use, and agentic coding. But the company says it is “less broadly capable” than the restricted Claude Mythos Preview, “which Anthropic rolled out to a select group of companies as part of a new cybersecurity initiative called Project Glasswing earlier this month,” reports CNBC. From the report:
The launch of Claude Opus 4.7 on Thursday comes after Anthropic launched Claude Opus 4.6 in February. Anthropic said the new model outperforms Claude Opus 4.6 across many use cases, including industry benchmarks for agentic coding, multidisciplinary reasoning, scaled tool use and agentic computer use, according to a release. Anthropic said it experimented with efforts to “differentially reduce” Claude Opus 4.7’s cyber capabilities during training.

The company encouraged security professionals who are interested in using the model for “legitimate cybersecurity purposes” to apply through a formal verification program. Claude Opus 4.7 is available across all of Anthropic’s Claude products, its application programming interface and through cloud providers Microsoft, Google and Amazon. The new model is the same price as Claude Opus 4.6, Anthropic said.

Horses v. Buggywhips

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 3 Thread
If only there were a way to hold businesses responsible for the harms caused by the products they sell.

BREAKING: New Version Is The Best Version EVAR

By apparently • Score: 3 Thread

The launch of Claude Opus 4.7 on Thursday comes after Anthropic launched Claude Opus 4.6 in February. Anthropic said the new model outperforms Claude Opus 4.6 across many use cases

I am shocked — SHOCKED — to hear that a company has announced that the latest version of their product is better than the last version. Usually when company’s release new versions, they’re all “Hey guys, we’re excited to announce that Gooch 2.8 just released. Unfortunately, it’s slower than Gooch 2.7, we removed half the features, and the other half simply don’t work anymore.”

Kudos to the ./ editorial team for bringing us this breaking news.

GPT5 found the same issues

By SumDog • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Smaller and older models found the exact same bugs in some projects like OpenBSD, if told specifically where to look. Anthrophic also spent $20k+ on some of those runs to find those bugs. It’s just all smoke, mirrors and bullshit marketing.

https://aisle.com/blog/ai-cybe…

AI Safety = Marketing Campaign

By nealric • Score: 3 Thread

I’m convinced that all of these people talking about AI “safety” and hyping the possibility of AGI and “the Singularity” are just doing gorilla marketing for the AI companies. The subtext is: Wow, this new tech is incredibly powerful! They’ve been talking about how “dangerous” these chatbots are since before the first public Chat GPT release. And then you actually use them…

Maybe “Mythos” is different, but I am highly skeptical.

Re:GPT5 found the same issues

By flink • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I’m not the biggest AI proponent, but a security flaw is a flaw no matter who found it or how obscure. If the LLM agent can come up with an exploit that is demonstrable, then it should get fixed. That is not a scam, that is a real improvement to the security of the software under test. Who cares if nobody found them before? They are found now and so they need to be fixed now.

Like it or not, these tools are out there, and they are in the hands of state actors who are also using them to find exploits. If Anthropic wants to burn some of their money on finding and responsibly disclosing some exploits in software that is an important part of ur infrastructure, then great.

EU Age Verification App Announced To Protect Children Online

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The EU says a new age-verification app is technically ready and could let users prove they are old enough to access restricted online content without revealing their identity or personal data. Deutsche Welle reports:
Once released, users will be able to download the app from an app store and set it up using proof of identity, such as a passport or national ID card. They can then use it to confirm they are above a certain age when accessing restricted content, without revealing their identity. According to the Commission, the system is similar to the digital certificates used during the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed people to prove their vaccination status.

The app is expected to support enforcement of the bloc’s Digital Services Act, which aims to better regulate online platforms. This includes restricting access to content such as pornography, gambling and alcohol-related services. Officials say the app will be “completely anonymous” and built on open-source technology, meaning it could also be adopted outside the EU.

[…] While there is no binding EU-wide law yet, the European Parliament has called for a minimum age of 16 for social media access. For now, enforcement would largely fall to individual member states, but the new app is intended to help platforms comply with future national and EU rules.

Re:Bridge for sale

By Pinky’s Brain • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Believe what?

- That the open source app does what the specs say it does? Likely yes.
- That the functionality of signed store versions corresponds to the open source version? Likely yes.
- Believe in god? No.

Please be more specific.

Re:Profiling and tracking on overdrive!

By Pinky’s Brain • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’m sure some governments will do a verifiable build, so for those you can just check the source code. The white label source code is available if you want a headstart.

https://github.com/eu-digital-…

Re:EU

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It turns out a bit of privacy is not as much of a quality of life issue as free school, free medicare, not living in a place with insane gun crime, or at risk of being deported by ICE.

Now if you have a point to make I suggest you not conflate it with a completely different issue, otherwise it just reflects poorly on you.

Re:Profiling and tracking on overdrive!

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The way it is supposed to work is that it allows the site to do a cryptographic challenge and response. The site can’t tell which device was used, or even if the same device is used each time. There is not communication with the government after the initial confirmation of ID.

That is assuming that all the crypto works properly, of course. Hopefully they have some experts involved.

I’ll still VPN into a country that doesn’t have such laws as a matter of course, but given that most people seem to think this is a good thing, and we live in a democracy, it’s probably the best possible outcome. The current situation in the UK, for example, where you need to prove your age to each site individually, and they all get your real ID and then abuse it and it gets stolen, is close to the worst.

Re:This is pretty well done

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If you think this has anything to do with children or porn, you are a complete fool.

Look, we know governments have ulterior motives, but that doesn’t change the fact that kids actually are accessing things online that they shouldn’t be. It doesn’t cease to be a genuine problem just because the nanny state solutions have thus far all sucked.

The reason there isn’t much pushback against these age gate laws is because most rational people do agree that kids shouldn’t be looking at porn, we just disagree on how that can best be accomplished. Yes, parents should be using the damned parental controls that are present on every modern smart device these days, but many of them are not.

Researchers Induce Smells With Ultrasound, No Chemical Cartridges Required

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from UploadVR:
A group of independent researchers built a device that can artificially induce smell using ultrasound, with no consumable cartridges required. […] The team of four are Lev Chizhov, Albert Yan-Huang, Thomas Ribeiro, Aayush Gupta. Chizhov is a neurotech entrepreneur with a background in math and physics, Yan-Huang is a researcher at Caltech with a background in computation and neural systems, and Ribeiro and Gupta are co-researchers on the project with software engineering and AI expertise.

Instead of targeting your nose at all, the device directly targets the olfactory bulb in your brain with “focused ultrasound through the skull.” The researchers say that as far as they’re aware, no one has ever done this before, even in animals. A challenge in targeting the olfactory bulb is that it’s buried behind the top of your nose, and your nose doesn’t provide a flat surface for an emitter. Ultrasound also doesn’t travel well through air. The solution the researchers came up with was to place the emitter on your forehead instead, with a “solid, jello-like pad for stability and general comfort,” and the ultrasound directed downward towards the olfactory bulb.

To determine the best placement, they say they used an MRI of one of their skulls to “roughly determine where the transducer would point and how the focal region (where ultrasound waves actually concentrate) aligned with the olfactory bulb (the target for stimulation)". […] According to the researchers, they were able to induce the sensation of fresh air “with a lot of oxygen”, the smell of garbage “like few-day-old fruit peels,” an ozone-like sensation “like you’re next to an air ionizer,” and a campfire smell of burning wood. While technically head-mounted, the current device does require being held up with two hands. But as with all such prototypes, it likely could be significantly miniaturized.

Playing with things we dont understand

By AcidFnTonic • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Playing with things we dont understand. I am flooded with visions of foot xray machines being useful, asbestos not catching fire, uranium paint glowing not being any problem, heavy lead making gasoline octane ratings higher....

So many useful things here people. Did you know if you take small electric shocks across your temple your vision flickers! Just touch the metal radiator at the back of the classroom that is ungrounded for some reason, then touch your temple. Everyone tried it. I knew better.

Listen, …

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

… do you smell something?

Re:Playing with things we dont understand

By dontbemad • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Playing with things we dont understand.

Yes, that’s generally how scientific progress and discovery works. All of the things you mentioned were not well-understood in their time, thus the uses were flawed. I noticed that you didn’t include things like MRIs, antibiotics, vaccines, or any other “poorly understood initially” type of technology that has had a resoundingly positive impact on human society. I understand caution, but from my reading (aka skimming) of TFA, it doesn’t seem like this group of researchers is planning to rapidly monetize this discovery. Is it not enough that the discovery itself is fascinating? Who is to say that this research won’t lead to medical therapies that help people REGAIN their sense of smell after it is lost by some other means?

Re:Playing with things we dont understand

By njvack • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I totally get this, and also we have quite a lot of experience with cranial ultrasound; we’ve been using it for imaging in newborns since the 1970s.

So yeah: We are indeed testing a new thing but we do have a tremendous amount of data on the effect of ultrasound, at various intensities, on human tissues.

Also, it was radium that made paint glow, not uranium.

Uranium was used in ceramic glazes (Fiesta’s orange was the most famous example); despite widespread worry about “omg it’s radioactive” the dose you’d receive from using those dishes for your food is less than a background dose, and much lower than you get if your house has radon. In practical terms, it’s very safe.

Yes, still probably don’t eat off them; keeping your dose “as low as reasonably achievable” does entail not getting any dose from a pretty orange bowl if you can just use a different bowl.

Re:Playing with things we dont understand

By tsqr • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Taking a solid blow to the head can often induce a brilliant sensation of a flash in the eyes.

That’s caused by some of tiny threads that attach your retina to the back of your eyeball being torn loose. Then they become “floaters”, providing a permanent reminder of the experience.

My wife had so many floaters in both eyes, her retina specialist at UCLA’s Stein Eye Center performed a procedure that purged her vitreous fluid and replaced it with saline.

Bullet Train Upgrade Brings 5G Windows, Noise-Cancelling Cabins To Japan

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Some Japanese bullet trains will soon support premium private suites this October, featuring windows with embedded 5G antennas for steadier onboard Wi-Fi and NTT noise-cancelling cabin tech to reduce train noise. The 5G window antennas are designed to maintain line-of-sight connections as trains race past base stations at up to 285 km/h. The Register reports:
Rail operator JR Central announced the new tech late last month and will initially deploy a couple of the suites on six trains. The carrier explained that the antennas come from a Japanese company called AGC that weaves microscopic wires through glass to form an antenna. JR Central will connect the windows to an on-train Wi-Fi router.

AGC says rival tech relies on 5G signals reaching a train and then bouncing around inside before reaching the Wi-Fi unit. The company says antennas woven into train windows maintain line of sight to nearby 5G base stations. That matters because JR Central’s Shinkansen can achieve speeds of up to 285 km/h, which means they speed past cellular network base stations so quickly that it’s frequently necessary to reconnect to another radio. AGC says keeping a line of sight connection means its antennas allow increased 5G signal strength, so Wi-Fi service on board trains should be more stable and speedy.

The sound-deadening kit JR Central will deploy is called Personalized Sound Zone (PSZ) and comes from Japan’s tech giant NTT. The tech uses the same principles applied to noise-cancelling headphones — determine the waveform of sound and project an inversion of that waveform that cancels out ambient noise.

I hope 5G Windows is better than Windows 11

By jfdavis668 • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Though they should really upgrade to 5G linux.

Re:Remarkably quite already

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

This is actually tech that is built into the seat headrest, and supposed to be able to block sounds from the same room. So presumably it is not trying to quieten the already very quiet trains, but rather the other passengers.

It’s a plus

By hcs_$reboot • Score: 3 Thread
but it’s worth noting that economy class on Japanese Shinkansen trains is more spacious and comfortable than most business-class train seats in other countries.

Re:It’s a plus

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Worth noting also that it is ludicrously cheap. Tokyo to Hiroshima on a Shinkansen costs around $100 and is 20% further than London to Edenborough which costs $129EUR (30% more expensive), takes 250% as long, and is 1000% more shit.

Re:DeutschBahn

By CrankyFool • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Ugh, yeah. My grandparents lived in Germany in the early 40s and told me stories about having to take the train to some sort of camp. Really terrible experience. Would not recommend.

UK Households To Be Urged To Use More Power This Summer As Renewables Soar

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from the Guardian:
Households will be called on to boost their consumption of Great Britain’s record renewable energy this summer to help balance the power grid and lower energy bills. Under the new plans, people could be encouraged to run dishwashers and washing machines or charge up their electric vehicles when there is more wind and solar power than the electricity grid needs. The plan will be delivered with the help of energy suppliers, which may choose to offer heavily discounted or free electricity to their customers during specific periods when the energy system operator predicts there will be a surplus of electricity.

Many suppliers already offer more than 2 million households the opportunity to pay lower rates for electricity used during off-peak hours but this will be the first time that the system operator will use this tool to help balance the grid. The National Energy System Operator (Neso) hopes that by issuing a market notice to call on energy users to increase their consumption it can avoid making hefty payments to turn wind and solar farms off when demand for electricity is low, which are ultimately paid for through energy bills.

Re:A good problem

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

So years ago I was helping out with a project to build an industrial tablet computer. They had picked Windows CE because the app developers were familiar with Windows. It was supposed to support a Microsoft technology called Silverlight, which was similar to Adobe Flash, for making the UI. Problem is, it just didn’t work. Microsoft weren’t interesting in fixing it either.

So I found Silvermoon, an open source version of Silverlight. It was a bit buggy, but we eventually got it working. While debugging some memory leaks, we found an interesting bit of code.

const int one = 65536;

To avoid using floating point maths, because back then some ARM chips either didn’t have FPUs or they were slow, the code used the old trick of multiplying everything by 65536 (2^16) to create what is effectively fixed floating point maths using only integer instructions.

I just found it amusing that they decided to call the variable “one”. It’s actually a reasonable solution, and it did work.

Re:How?

By pjt33 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The headline appears to be nonsense. It’s not really about encouraging people to use more electricity but to time-shift their usage of appliances which draw a lot of power.

Re:How?

By Sique • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Problem is: It does not get hot in the UK in the summer. The UK is very far to the north, compared with the continuous U.S.. The southernmost point of the U.K. (if we ignore the Channel Islands and oversea territories like the Falkland Islands) is on the 49 meridian, which is the same latitude than the northern border to Canada with the exception to the northern part of Maine. The Shetland Islands in turn are on the same latitude than Anchorage, AK.

If you want to imagine U.K. climate, think of the Pacific coast between Vancouver Island and Anchorage, just with warmer winters thanks to the Gulf stream.

Terrible headline

By Dan East • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This is a terrible headline. Really one of the worst in a while, but it’s actually The Guardian’s fault as that is their headline as well. This is not encouraging people to use more power, but telling them WHEN they should use power. “It’s windy and sunny right now, quick, wash your clothes and charge your car!”

Re:How?

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Belgium here, neighbor of the UK. Summers do get hot here and more and more people are installing bidirectional heatpump units (cool and heat). Also… dishwasher, washing machines are heavy electricity consumers.
Decades ago, it was the cheapest to run these at night, when there was little power consumption. These days you run them around noon, when production is at maximum. With the right energy contract, you actually can get payed to consume electricity during these times, although it does not happen that often.
Met a guy who made this his hobby. He installed solar panels, added some beefed up batteries to his home grid. He actually charged his batteries during this period and sold the electricity back when demand was higher in the evening. He even helped balancing the grid to 50Hz and got payed for that. He made profit with his installation. He did not get rich, but it did pay back all his investments. If enough people do this, GWh capacity is easily achievable… Interesting times we live in.

Nature Is Still Molding Human Genes, Study Finds

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times:
Many scientists have contended that humans have evolved very little over the past 10,000 years. A few hundred generations was just a blink of the evolutionary eye, it seemed. Besides, our cultural evolution — our technology, agriculture and the rest — must have overwhelmed our biological evolution by now. A vast study, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature, suggests the opposite. Examining DNA from 15,836 ancient human remains, scientists found 479 genetic variants that appeared to have been favored by natural selection in just the past 10,000 years.

The researchers also concluded that thousands of additional genetic variants have probably experienced natural selection. Before the new study, scientists had identified only a few dozen variants. “There are so many of them that it’s hard to wrap one’s mind around them,” said David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard Medical School and an author of the new study. He and his colleagues found that a mutation that is a major risk factor for celiac disease, for example, appeared just 4,000 years ago, meaning the condition may be younger than the Egyptian pyramids. The mutation became ever more common. Today, an estimated 80 million people worldwide have celiac disease, in which the immune system attacks gluten and damages the intestines.

The steady rise of the mutation came about through natural selection, the scientists argue. For some reason, people with the mutation had more descendants than people without it — even though it put them at risk of an autoimmune disorder. Other findings are even more puzzling. The researchers found that genetic variants that raise the odds of a smoking habit have been getting steadily rarer in Europe for the past 10,000 years. Something is working against those variants — but it can’t be the harm from smoking. Europeans have been smoking tobacco for only about 460 years. The scientists can’t see from their research so far what forces might be making these variants more or less common. “My short answer is, I don’t know,” said Ali Akbari, a senior staff scientist at Harvard and an author of the study.
The researchers also found that some variants, like the one linked to Type B blood, became much more common in Europe around 6,000 years ago, while others changed direction over time. For example, a TYK2 immune gene variant that may have once been beneficial later became harmful because it increased tuberculosis risk.
The study also found signs of natural selection in 44 out of 563 traits. Variants linked to Type 2 diabetes, wider waists, and higher body fat have become less common, possibly because farming and carbohydrate-heavy diets made once-useful fat-storing traits more harmful. Other findings, such as selection favoring genes linked to more years of schooling, are harder to interpret.

Anyone who reads

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Science or Nature (two well known all-purpose science journals) with any regularity know these things:

1. There is still a LOT we don’t know about the genome and the mechanisms that affect genetics.

2. This we know for sure. Whenever the environment of a species changes, the genome evolves rapidly as well

3. Humans are a subspecies of great ape

4. Human environment has changed at a stupendously fast rate over the past thousand years.

We are evolving. Fast. It’s so cute to listen to people who think we’ve somehow separated ourselves from our animal nature or the effects of evolution.

Re:Anyone who reads

By T34L • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It’s literally spelled out in the summary that the “smoking tendency gene” wouldn’t be on the way out due to impact of smoking specifically because it’s been becoming less common in Europe since well before tobacco, let alone weed, became available in the area. It wouldn’t make sense anyway, because most of the negative effects of smoking don’t manifest until a point in life well after the most children would have been had, especially until life expectancy exploded barely hundred years ago.

It could be any number of things, including people who have the gene being more likely to die of carbon monoxide poisoning in their caves, huts and houses. CO has been killing people of all ages well before first cigarette has ever been rolled.

Re:Even on short time scales

By Gilgaron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Unless typing and mousing affect your reproductive success then you’re describing lamarkism rather than darwinism. But increased fine motor control would affect reproductive success over a longer period of time and be increasingly useful in a more technological society regardless of occupation.

Anthropomorphize

By phantomfive • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
The anthropomorphizing in this headline is irritating. Nature is not a sentient being, and it’s not molding anything.

“Human Genes Are Changing” that’s all you need to say.

I’m surprised (and corrected)

By John Allsup • Score: 3 Thread
I always thought that since we help people survive who would have died out in pre-civilisation conditions, that this effect would blunt the edge of natural selection. (I stand corrected.) But if only we could breed out traits like selfishness and greed.

Boston Dynamics’ Robot Dog Can Now Read Gauges, Spot Spills, and Reason

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Boston Dynamics has integrated Google DeepMind into its robotic dog Spot, giving it more autonomous reasoning for industrial inspections like spotting spills and reading gauges. Spot can also now recognize when to call on other AI tools. IEEE Spectrum reports:
Boston Dynamics is one of the few companies to commercially deploy legged robots at any appreciable scale; there are now several thousand hard at work. Today the company is announcing that its quadruped robot Spot is now equipped with Google DeepMind’s Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6, a high-level embodied reasoning model that brings usability and intelligence to complex tasks.

[T]he focus of this partnership is on one of the very few applications where legged robots have proven themselves to be commercially viable: inspection. That is, wandering around industrial facilities, checking to make sure that nothing is imminently exploding. With the new AI onboard, Spot is now able to autonomously look for dangerous debris or spills, read complex gauges and sight glasses, and call on tools like vision-language-action models when it needs help understanding what’s going on in the environment around it.
“Advances like Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6 mark an important step toward robots that can better understand and operate in the physical world,” Marco da Silva, vice president and general manager of Spot at Boston Dynamics, says in a press release. “Capabilities like instrument reading and more reliable task reasoning will enable Spot to see, understand, and react to real-world challenges completely autonomously.”

You can watch a demo of Spot’s new capabilities on YouTube.

Reason

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I highly fucking doubt that their robot or AI can reason.

It can also lie about its capabilities!

By gweihir • Score: 4, Informative Thread

No, it cannot “reason”. Stop making that claim.

Re:Reason

By backslashdot • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It can. Reasoning according to the dictionary is “the action of thinking about something in a logical, sensible way” .. or by my own definition it’s “identify a situation and make a decision towards a goal based on that situation.”

Either way, an here’s example of reasoning in a self driving car: Recognizing an object on the highway as an immovable road hazard, and making the decision to drive around it instead of hard-breaking due to the fact that there are no cars on the adjacent lane.

The car was taught, via simulator or training data, that if you don’t check for hazards before switching lanes an accident will occur. It was also taught that hitting an object = bad. It knows the goal is to get to a destination and had to weigh the fact that if it hard braked, it would get to the destination later than if it went around the object and also be uncomfortable for the passengers. Therefore, in the situation where it won’t hit another car or pedestrian, it would choose to go around rather than hard brake. That’s “reasoning” .. doing a projection into the future and making a decision based on the optimal route.

Robotics People are … Aspirational

By machineghost • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I recently joined a robotics company, and quickly learned that there’s a giant divide between the “aspirational” robotics companies, which promise humanoid (or canine) robots, and the practical real-world companies. The humanoids get all the press, while the practical robots rarely make the news at all.

But if you notice, you will almost never see a humanoid robot demo next to an actual human … because those things are freaking dangerous! Humanoids are still a decade or more away from being able to safely interact with human beings. But, just from all the overhyped robot demo videos you see, you’d think they’re all but ready for production.

Meanwhile, practical robots all look nothing like a living creature: they look like your Roomba! In other words, they have a boring/practical form factor, which almost certainly involves wheels to move around. There’s some incredibly cool stuff happening with those kinds of robots, and some are being used in the workplace today … but they don’t make for sexy robot demo videos, so few people outside the industry even know they exist.

US Jobs Too Important To Risk Chinese Car Imports, Says Ford CEO

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In an interview with Fox News, Ford CEO Jim Farley warned that allowing Chinese vehicle imports could put nearly a million U.S. jobs at risk. He said China’s heavily subsidized auto industry has enough excess capacity to supply the entire U.S. market, while also raising serious cybersecurity concerns given how much data modern connected cars collect. Ars Technica reports:
“First of all, the Chinese have huge direct support for their auto companies,” Farley said, while noting that China has the ability to build an additional 21 million vehicles a year on top of the 29 million that are expected to roll off Chinese production lines in 2026. “They have enough capacity in China to cover all the manufacturing, all the vehicle sales in the United States,” Farley said.

“Manufacturing is the heart and soul of our country, and for us to lose those exports would be devastating for our country,” he continued, before pointing out the cybersecurity worries about Chinese cars. “All the vehicles have 10 cameras. They can collect a lot of data,” he said.

Farley has praised Chinese EVs like the Xiaomi SU7, even going on podcasts to sing its praises. But he believes Ford’s forthcoming affordable Kentucky-built EVs, due to start hitting dealerships next year, have what it takes to be competitive. When asked about new car prices rising an average of 2 percent last year, Farley repeatedly said that Ford had “worked with the administration” so that there’s “essentially no big impact” of the Trump tariffs. The CEO justified the rising costs by pointing to the F-150’s sales as proof of its value.

You still don’t have civil rights in China

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Don’t get me wrong I’m American and my civil rights have been substantially eroded and it’s getting really bad over here. I mentioned this on another thread but one of the core supreme Court rulings that allowed the federal government to prevent abuse and corporate crime is in the process of being dismantled by our courts over moonshining of all things.

And that’s before we talk about Trump using immigration enforcement to gank citizens off the streets and disappear them. So far all them have popped back up after a few weeks but it’s only a matter of time before one of them just goes missing or dies in custody.

But none of that makes China’s civil rights situation any better. You go to China and you live there and you criticize the government and ask me how that goes for you. Or try to unionize. Which is hilarious because they pretend to be communist. Never mind the fact that they have an American style Private healthcare system.

It’s not 1987 but that doesn’t mean China has gotten any better. Becoming the world’s factory has improved some of the people’s economic situation but that doesn’t make the slave labor or the cancer villages okay.

Re: He’s Not Wrong.

By ctilsie242 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

China has been able to handle those regulations, just as they are able to handle the European and other EMEA ones. For example, BYD’s Shark is taking off in Mexico because it has what the Big 3 brands have… but a lot lighter on the wallet.

I don’t like advocating for China, on the other end, I would assert the US has the most miserable and overpriced vehicle selection anywhere in the civilized world.

Re: He’s Not Wrong.

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Funnily enough, pissing off the entire world and trashing the economy doesnt help selling your products to them.

Re:So enforce the same working standards

By sit1963nz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So the world says the USA must have the same universal healthcare, same compulsory holidays, same minimum wages for ALL employees, same maternity care provisions, same education system, etc etc etc

It is unfair the USA does not have to do this.

Re:Subsidies

By shilly • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Ford literally only exists because of the largesse of the US government, bailing it out. Not TARP, but everything else, billions and billions, including wars for oil to keep it cheap so that ever bigger high margin gas guzzlers could be sold