Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Google Warns EU Risks Undermining Own Competitiveness With Tech Sovereignty Push
  2. Spotify Says Its Best Developers Haven’t Written a Line of Code Since December, Thanks To AI
  3. FTC Ratchets Up Microsoft Probe, Queries Rivals on Cloud, AI
  4. EPA Reverses Long-Standing Climate Change Finding, Stripping Its Own Ability To Regulate Emissions
  5. OpenAI Claims DeepSeek Distilled US Models To Gain an Edge
  6. Waymo is Asking DoorDash Drivers To Shut the Doors of Its Self-Driving Cars
  7. Bill Introduced To Replace West Virginia’s New CS Course Graduation Requirement With Computer Literacy Proficiency
  8. Meta Plans To Let Smart Glasses Identify People Through AI-Powered Facial Recognition
  9. Ring Cancels Its Partnership With Flock Safety After Surveillance Backlash
  10. Russia Fully Blocks WhatsApp
  11. Windows 11 Notepad Flaw Let Files Execute Silently via Markdown Links
  12. CIA Makes New Push To Recruit Chinese Military Officers as Informants
  13. IBM Plans To Triple Entry-Level Hiring in the US
  14. WP Engine Says Automattic Planned To Shake Down 10 Hosting Companies For WordPress Royalties
  15. Anthropic Raises $30 Billion at $380 Billion Valuation, Eyes IPO This Year

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.

Google Warns EU Risks Undermining Own Competitiveness With Tech Sovereignty Push

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Europe risks undermining its own competitiveness drive by restricting access to foreign technology, Google’s president of global affairs and chief legal officer Kent Walker told the Financial Times, as Brussels accelerates efforts to reduce reliance on U.S. tech giants. Walker said the EU faces a “competitive paradox” as it seeks to spur growth while restricting the technologies needed to achieve that goal.

He warned against erecting walls that make it harder to use some of the best technology in the world, especially as it advances quickly. EU leaders gathered Thursday for a summit in Belgium focused on increasing European competitiveness in a more volatile global economy. Europe’s digital sovereignty push gained momentum in recent months, driven by fears that President Donald Trump’s foreign policy could force a tech decoupling.

We’re not restricting the technologies…

By Charlotte • Score: 3 Thread

… we’re going to buy them from European companies

Spotify Says Its Best Developers Haven’t Written a Line of Code Since December, Thanks To AI

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Spotify’s best developers have stopped writing code manually since December and now rely on an internal AI system called Honk that enables remote, real-time code deployment through Claude Code, the company’s co-CEO Gustav Soderstrom said during a fourth-quarter earnings call this week.

Engineers can fix bugs or add features to the iOS app from Slack on their phones during their morning commute and receive a new version of the app pushed to Slack before arriving at the office. The system has helped Spotify ship more than 50 new features throughout 2025, including AI-powered Prompted Playlists, Page Match for audiobooks, and About This Song. Soderstrom credited the system with speeding up coding and deployment tremendously and called it “just the beginning” for AI development at Spotify. The company is building a unique music dataset that differs from factual resources like Wikipedia because music-related questions often lack single correct answers — workout music preferences vary from American hip-hop to Scandinavian heavy metal.

Please don’t

By OrangeTide • Score: 3 Thread

Please don’t work during your morning commute. Especially if you’re the one driving.
But almost as importantly, if your employer makes you come into the office then you should ONLY work while at the office. And they can go F themselves if they want you to work on your own time as well.

Is it true?

By Revek • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Is it true that AI code can’t be copyrighted? If so, could spotify’s code now be freeware? Semi trolling minds want to know.

AI Hype needs money

By fuzzyf • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
This smells like bs to me. No way experienced developers are letting AI generate bug fixes or entirely new features using Slack to talk to AI on the way to work.

The only question here is: What are they selling?

Increased stock value?
AI Coding tool that management has a stock option for?


The simple fact is that AI can generate code, but has absolutely no understanding of anything. It’s a very useful tool, but not as what this bs article is trying to sell it as.

Spotify = worst company to work for

By test321 • Score: 3 Thread

Engineers can fix bugs or add features to the iOS app from Slack on their phones during their morning commute and receive a new version of the app pushed to Slack before arriving at the office.

This makes Spotify the most awful workplace on the planet for suggesting (even if not demanding), that employees should be working during commute.

But also, this makes it the most poorly managed software shop. They’re expecting employees to do away with being serious, and carelessly push updates “from Slack during commute”. AI apart, you’d think he wants his engineers to at least pay attention to what they’re doing. No way this attitude can end up well for the product.

why commute?

By awwshit • Score: 3 Thread

If you can do all of your work while commuting then why commute at all? Obviously does not matter where you sit.

FTC Ratchets Up Microsoft Probe, Queries Rivals on Cloud, AI

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The US Federal Trade Commission is accelerating scrutiny of Microsoft as part of an ongoing probe into whether the company illegally monopolizes large swaths of the enterprise computing market with its cloud software and AI offerings, including Copilot. From a report:
The agency has issued civil investigative demands in recent weeks to companies that compete with Microsoft in the business software and cloud computing markets, according to people familiar with the matter. The demands feature an array of questions on Microsoft’s licensing and other business practices, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss a confidential investigation.

With the demands, which are effectively like civil subpoenas, the FTC is seeking evidence that Microsoft makes it harder for customers to use Windows, Office and other products on rival cloud services. The agency is also requesting information on Microsoft’s bundling of artificial intelligence, security and identity software into other products, including Windows and Office, some of the people said.

Learning a lesson

By ArchieBunker • Score: 3 Thread

Microsoft learned that a tyrant is never appeased. https://www.cnbc.com/2025/01/0…

Nadella run out of cash?

By boxless • Score: 3 Thread

Seems like some cash, or a gold bar in the shape of the Msft logo, delivered in some sycophantic ceremony in the Oval Office should help here. All the cool CEOs are doing similar now.

How is it a monopoly this time?

By unixisc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Unlike in 2000, when Microsoft had done a lot of things to sabotage Netscape, OS/2, Borland and others, this time, they’re on an even footing. I’m no fan of MS, especially now, but how is the market situation even close to being a monopoly?

On the Cloud front, there is AWS and Azure as the top 2, but there are others as well - Google, Oracle,… Anyone who doesn’t want Microsoft can go to any of these 4, or myriad others. Also, the entry barriers to starting a Cloud service are not that high

On the AI front, CoPilot is not even #1. There is ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Grok, AskPerplexity and a whole host of others. And many are just better

Unlike in 2000, Microsoft is no longer in a position where they can extend, embrace and extinguish their competition

EPA Reverses Long-Standing Climate Change Finding, Stripping Its Own Ability To Regulate Emissions

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
President Donald Trump announced Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency is rescinding the legal finding that it has relied on for nearly two decades to limit the heat-trapping pollution that spews from vehicle tailpipes, oil refineries and factories. From a report:
The repeal of that landmark determination, known as the endangerment finding, will upend most U.S. policies aimed at curbing climate change. The finding — which the EPA issued in 2009 — said the global warming caused by greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane endangers the health and welfare of current and future generations.

“We are officially terminating the so-called endangerment finding, a disastrous Obama-era policy,” Trump said at a news conference. “This determination had no basis in fact — none whatsoever. And it had no basis in law. On the contrary, over the generations, fossil fuels have saved millions of lives and lifted billions of people out of poverty all over the world.”

Major environmental groups have disputed the administration’s stance on the endangerment finding and have been preparing to sue in response to its repeal.

Live by the Executive Order, die by the EO

By PackMan97 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This is what happens when we have kings in the White House issuing decrees. A new king comes in and wipes out the decrees from the old king.

As disastrous as this sounds, the short term impact will be minimal. Companies are not going to invest in new capability without having a stable regulatory environment. If Dems lose big in Nov ‘26, they might then…but if Dems win big, expect companies to do nothing knowing that in 2028 the Endangerment Finding will be back and even more dire.

At the end of the day, Congress should be legislating these types of regulations and not leaving it up the current person occupying the White House. They need to get it together and do their job…or maybe “We the People” need to start doing our job instead of electing politicians that care more about their own power than they do about the future of America.

I’m a founding member of MASA - Make America Sane Again

Re:Live by the Executive Order, die by the EO

By shilly • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think there will be a number of opportunities for companies to profit from the removal of the rules for as long as the rules are gone. For example, manufacturers may turn to cheaper, high GHG feedstocks over the next couple of years.

In the end, this is being done by a bunch of old scared men shouting at the future, and they will die and leave the rest of us alone. But they can certainly make things shittier until they’re gone

Re:Live by the Executive Order, die by the EO

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Apparently republicans no longer believe pollution is detrimental to their health.

How the fuck am I supposed to compromise on that?

Needs a new name

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It should now be called EDA, for Environmental Destruction Agency. Of course, that would necessitate new stationary, and the shredding or burning of the old stuff - an action which is perfectly aligned with their new mission.

Convince your Boomer parents and Gen x buddies

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
To stop voting republican. They are objectively bad for the economy and the environment and everyone knows it but people keep electing them.

The problem is you have to get people away from right-wing media and 90% of all media is now owned by billionaires.

On top of that it’s not socially acceptable to point out that Republicans are bad. We have been conditioned for decades that partisan politics is a no no topic. We are all just supposed to pretend that both sides bad and all politicians lie.

I fucking wish the Democrats would go back to lying to me. Even Obama never lied I think the last Democrat who told me an honest to God lie is Bill Clinton.

Lies win elections. The Democrats stop fighting dirty when LBJ was out the door and they’ve been getting their asses kicked ever since.

OpenAI Claims DeepSeek Distilled US Models To Gain an Edge

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
OpenAI has warned US lawmakers that its Chinese rival DeepSeek is using unfair and increasingly sophisticated methods to extract results from leading US AI models to train the next generation of its breakthrough R1 chatbot, according to a memo reviewed by Bloomberg News.

In the memo, sent Thursday to the House Select Committee on China, OpenAI said that DeepSeek had used so-called distillation techniques as part of “ongoing efforts to free-ride on the capabilities developed by OpenAI and other US frontier labs.” The company said it had detected “new, obfuscated methods” designed to evade OpenAI’s defenses against misuse of its models’ output.

OpenAI began privately raising concerns about the practice shortly after the R1 model’s release last year, when it opened a probe with partner Microsoft Corp. into whether DeepSeek had obtained its data in an unauthorized manner, Bloomberg previously reported. In distillation, one AI model relies on the output of another for training purposes to develop similar capabilities.

Distillation, largely tied to China and occasionally Russia, has persisted and become more sophisticated despite attempts to crack down on users who violate OpenAI’s terms of service, the company said in its memo, citing activity it has observed on its platform.

Unfair?

By Orgasmatron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What the fuck is unfair? If you don’t like how they are using your service, stop them. Cut them off, feed them garbage, get clever and solve the problem.

What are lawmakers going to do about it? Order President Trump to nuke China? More tariffs? Sanctions on Russia?

Said the companies that distilled the internet

By xack • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Millions of webmasters have had their servers vandalized by AI companies, and then all the wholesale book destruction. Now they are getting a taste of their own medicine it’s not so nice is it.

Next they will be interrogating humans in torture chambers to train their models. I’m calling it now.

Re:Said the companies that distilled the internet

By kencurry • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Note how they use a term “distillation”. Like that isn’t what they’ve been doing this whole time lol.

No polite response available.

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Dear OpenAI,

Go fuck yourselves.

For years, individuals, other companies, publishing industries across the board, and user groups have been fed the ever-loving fuck up with you stealing everything that isn’t bolted down to train your fucked up vision of a future devoid of work, in a world that doesn’t value humans when they don’t work. And you and your ilk have proclaimed repeatedly that this is just the way things have to be, that the information belongs to you if it exists because you can access it. That there is no unfairness in you taking any information you can find because all information should go into training your new computer god.

And now that someone has done the exact fucking same god damned thing that you’ve been doing all along, you whine about it like a spoiled fucking child that had one tiny piece of its candy taken from a pile of ever-expanding, continually self-replenishing candy that will never end and never could end.

Fuck you, you entitled pieces of god damned shit. Combine this with your future visions of completely disrupting society for your financial benefit, while potentially causing the entire economy to collapse whether your visions come true, or you crash out in your quest and take the entire dream-o-sphere of Wall Street with you, and you are beyond disgusting. We’re sick of your shit, and I hope to crap that this begins to drive home the fact that the term “corporation” does not deserve the respect it gets in society today. You are a parasite, through and through. And just because you found a tapeworm within your shit, it doesn’t mean you aren’t a tapeworm in society’s shit yourself.

Good grief, some of us can’t wait until you AI based companies stop being the 100% focal point of all world governments and all economic concerns. It’s like we’ve handed the reins of society over to the most narcissistic, self-obsessed idiots in all of existence, and somehow they always find a way to double-down on the ugliest parts of humanity in their quest.

boo fuckin’ hoo

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They have no respect for the law or the wishes or creators. Now they want the other companies to be forced to respect those things? They can get fucked all day.

Waymo is Asking DoorDash Drivers To Shut the Doors of Its Self-Driving Cars

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Waymo’s autonomous vehicles can transport passengers across six cities without a human driver, but the Alphabet-owned company has discovered that its cars become completely inert if a passenger accidentally leaves a door open. The company confirmed that it is now paying DoorDash drivers in Atlanta to close these doors as part of a pilot program.

A Reddit post from a DoorDash driver showed an offer of $6.25 to drive less than one mile to a Waymo vehicle and close its door, plus an additional $5 after verified completion. Waymo and DoorDash told TechCrunch the post is legitimate. The door-closing partnership began earlier this year and is separate from the autonomous delivery service the two companies launched in Phoenix in October. Waymo has also worked with Honk, a towing service app, in Los Angeles on the same problem. Honk users in L.A. have been offered up to $24 to close a Waymo door. Future Waymo vehicles will have automated door closures.

Be kind, please rewind

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The video tape rental business solved this type of issue by billing customers if they returned a tape without rewinding it.

Add an extra charge to a fare if they don’t properly close the door. If the door won’t close, they can report a fault to avoid the charge. It’ll cut down drastically on the need to hire third parties and completely avoid the need to add automatic door closure systems.

Re:Be kind, please rewind

By MikeDataLink • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The video tape rental business solved this type of issue by billing customers if they returned a tape without rewinding it.

Add an extra charge to a fare if they don’t properly close the door. If the door won’t close, they can report a fault to avoid the charge. It’ll cut down drastically on the need to hire third parties and completely avoid the need to add automatic door closure systems.

This isn’t quite the same. A video tape does not block or impede traffic if you don’t rewind it. An autonomous car with it’s door(s) open does. For these systems to be successful, they need to be able to self correct for errors, including doors left open.

Re:Be kind, please rewind

By geekmux • Score: 5, Funny Thread

This isn’t quite the same. A video tape does not block or impede traffic if you don’t rewind it.

..says the Millennial who’s never held up an angry Blockbuster line on a Friday night waiting for the only copy of Top Gun to finish rewinding.

“Iceman” in the buzzcut was pissed I got the last rental. Never bicycled faster in my life. Almost took out 7 grannies worth of sidewalk traffic at the bus stop.

Hmmm…

By yo303 • Score: 3 Thread

1. Become DoorDash driver, and follow Waymos when you see them
2. Tell them to leave a door open (not ??????)
ÂÂ. Split the profits!

Re:Be kind, please rewind

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The automotive industry solved this problem with self-closing doors. Waymo somehow didn’t figure out that vehicles with this feature should be mandatory for a self-driving car service. This is stupidly obvious.

Bill Introduced To Replace West Virginia’s New CS Course Graduation Requirement With Computer Literacy Proficiency

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
theodp writes:
West Virginia lawmakers on Tuesday introduced House Bill 5387 (PDF), which would repeal the state’s recently enacted mandatory stand-alone computer science graduation requirement and replace it with a new computer literacy proficiency requirement. Not too surprisingly, the Bill is being opposed by tech-backed nonprofit Code.org, which lobbied for the WV CS graduation requirement (PDF) just last year. Code.org recently pivoted its mission to emphasize the importance of teaching AI education alongside traditional CS, teaming up with tech CEOs and leaders last year to launch a national campaign to mandate CS and AI courses as graduation requirements.

“It would basically turn the standalone computer science course requirement into a computer literacy proficiency requirement that’s more focused on digital literacy,” lamented Code.org as it discussed the Bill in a Wednesday conference call with members of the Code.org Advocacy Coalition, including reps from Microsoft’s Education and Workforce Policy team. “It’s mostly motivated by a variety of different issues coming from local superintendents concerned about, you know, teachers thinking that students don’t need to learn how to code and other things. So, we are addressing all of those. We are talking with the chair and vice chair of the committee a week from today to try to see if we can nip this in the bud.” Concerns were also raised on the call about how widespread the desire for more computing literacy proficiency (over CS) might be, as well as about legislators who are associating AI literacy more with digital literacy than CS.

The proposed move from a narrower CS focus to a broader goal of computer literacy proficiency in WV schools comes just months after the UK’s Department for Education announced a similar curriculum pivot to broader digital literacy, abandoning the narrower ‘rigorous CS’ focus that was adopted more than a decade ago in response to a push by a ‘grassroots’ coalition that included Google, Microsoft, UK charities, and other organizations.

West Virginia

By phantomfive • Score: 3 Thread
West Virginia needs to stop doing whatever the hypest corporation tells it to do.

I’m fine with this

By leonbev • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Not everybody needs to know how to program, and those people who were being forced into taking a CS class were likely never going to be all that good at it.

If anything, they were likely creating the next generation of managers who think that they understand IT because they took one college course in it. They know just enough to have dangerous assumptions, but not enough knowledge to be genuinely useful.

Squishy

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It’s a bit hard to judge this change, to the degree it is one; because both ‘CS’ and ‘computer literacy’ are both extremely vulnerable to being squished into almost anything people want them to be. Sure, in an ideal world, ‘CS’ is a branch of mathematics focused on complexity, computability, information, some formal logic, potentially the number theory required for hashing and cryptography; but it routinely gets slapped on everything from super hardcore academic mathematics to ‘bootcamp’ language-fad-of-the-week, to ‘how do I excel even? 101’; and when it’s a graduation requirement you need to get everyone past it’s probably being softballed a bit.

‘Computer literacy’ is a fuzzier term to start out with; and can range from terrifyingly basic “how do I press button on android 16?” quasi-vocational stuff; to various product-focused but less trivial things (autocad or arcGIS say) to things that have much less to do with computers specifically and would historically have been taught as some sort of ‘media literacy’, quite possibly by the school librarian(not that most people really need to know dewey decimal in any detail; but library science programs are often excellent groundings in knowing how to sensibly deal with data sources to obtain actual knowledge).

Whether this change is good or bad seems like it hinges more or less entirely on what they meant by ‘CS’ previously and what they will mean by ‘computer literacy’ now. If the old plan was to genuinely attempt to turn high schoolers into apprentice line of business java slingers that is probably worth abandoning; but if they abandon “we’ll be thinking about how to decompose a desired outcome into a series of steps, using python as an example” with “how to chat with chatbots” they will be doing the students a considerable disservice.

Re:West Virginia

By FictionPimp • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

As a child you have no idea what you want to do with your life. The goal of high school should be both to educate in critical areas (reading, math, social studies, financial literacy, health, etc) but also to expose students to the broadest amount of trades possible. I think students should spend time writing code as much as they should spend time disecting an animal, mixing a chemical, or welding. Only through doing can we learn what our passion is.

If a student never experiences something how can they decide to do it as a career?

They can’t even read…

By steak • Score: 3 Thread

How are they going to understand a programming language?

Meta Plans To Let Smart Glasses Identify People Through AI-Powered Facial Recognition

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Meta plans to add facial recognition technology to its Ray-Ban smart glasses as soon as this year, New York Times reported Friday, five years after the social giant shut down facial recognition on Facebook and promised to find “the right balance” for the controversial technology.

The feature, internally called “Name Tag,” would let wearers identify people and retrieve information about them through Meta’s AI assistant, the report added. An internal memo from May acknowledged the feature carries “safety and privacy risks” and noted that political tumult in the United States would distract civil society groups that might otherwise criticize the launch. The company is exploring restrictions that would prevent the glasses from functioning as a universal facial recognition tool, potentially limiting identification to people connected on Meta platforms or those with public accounts.

“Profit” on one side of the scale…

By kackle • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

promised to find “the right balance” for the controversial technology

It was good to start the day with a laugh.

Title Correction:

By Sebby • Score: 4, Informative Thread

"Privacy Rapist Meta[stasize] Plans To Let Smart Glasses Identify People Through AI-Powered Facial Recognition"

There FTFY.

Meta Approach

By Koreantoast • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Given Meta’s style, they’ll one day turn on facial recognition for all users leveraging their full database of all tagged imagery they’ve gathered throughout their history (that they claimed they deleted). Then they’ll say oops, my bad, then hide behind their lawyers.

How a Society Kills Privacy.

By geekmux • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Meta plans to add facial recognition technology to its Ray-Ban smart glasses as soon as this year..

For exactly what benefit? Yes Meta. Get specific for me while I walk through your executive hallways wearing your finest feature to face-ID and auto-search the Epstein files.

Kills me it was barely over a decade ago that wearers of smart glasses were known as “glassholes” in public. For privacy reasons. And Google’s version at the time didn’t have anywhere NEAR this privacy-raping capability.

A new privay-destroying concept reaching the median-intelligence level to garner an “are you insane?” response from the average seasoned citizen, used to take more than a generation. Today, it barely takes a decade for a horrible idea to come ‘round again pretending to be better, because people are that stupid and shortsighted.

too easy to do

By ZipNada • Score: 3 Thread

Unfortunately the cat is out of the bag on this, it is basically unpreventable. Facial recognition can be applied to any video stream or recording from existing surveillance cameras, such as one that’s pointed at the entrance to the supermarket where you shop. These rayban glasses are merely a mobile platform for acquiring the video. Packing the recognition tech into such a small package is a demonstration that it can be deployed almost anywhere.

“Face recognition technology on the streets of America poses a uniquely dire threat to the practical anonymity we all rely on,” said Nathan Freed Wessler of the American Civil Liberties Union. “This technology is ripe for abuse.”

And boy, it sure is. A garden variety miscreant will be able to tag and acquire the name, address, phone number, and marital status of all the pretty girls he comes across in the grocery store for future stalking purposes. Potentially vulnerable elderly people can be similarly identified. Wire this into the Flock license plate reader network and the government will have full coverage of your movements, indoors and out.

Ring Cancels Its Partnership With Flock Safety After Surveillance Backlash

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Following intense backlash to its partnership with Flock Safety, a surveillance technology company that works with law enforcement agencies, Ring has announced it is canceling the integration. From a report:
In a statement published on Ring’s blog and provided to The Verge ahead of publication, the company said: “Following a comprehensive review, we determined the planned Flock Safety integration would require significantly more time and resources than anticipated. We therefore made the joint decision to cancel the integration and continue with our current partners … The integration never launched, so no Ring customer videos were ever sent to Flock Safety.”

[…] Over the last few weeks, the company has faced significant public anger over its connection to Flock, with Ring users being encouraged to smash their cameras, and some announcing on social media that they are throwing away their Ring devices. The Flock partnership was announced last October, but following recent unrest across the country related to ICE activities, public pressure against the Amazon-owned Ring’s involvement with the company started to mount. Flock has reportedly allowed ICE and other federal agencies to access its network of surveillance cameras, and influencers across social media have been claiming that Ring is providing a direct link to ICE.

Smash their Ring cameras?

By Powercntrl • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Earlier the previous evening, my Ring camera managed to capture the neighbor’s teenager backing into my parked work van. Thanks to the camera, I’ve got timestamped footage footage of both the before and after. Now, you might be thinking to yourself “Surely they owned up to their mistake and you don’t need surveillance footage?” Nope, the parent/guardian was extremely belligerent about the whole thing, with a main character attitude like their kid was just playing GTA and hitting a NPC’s parked car is no big deal.

So no, I won’t be smashing my Ring camera. We need these things because some people no longer do the right thing even when you’ve got them on video. I used to wonder why almost everyone in Russia seemed to have a dashcam - now I completely understand why.

Re:Smash their Ring cameras?

By PsychoSlashDot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Earlier the previous evening, my Ring camera managed to capture the neighbor’s teenager backing into my parked work van. Thanks to the camera, I’ve got timestamped footage footage of both the before and after. Now, you might be thinking to yourself “Surely they owned up to their mistake and you don’t need surveillance footage?” Nope, the parent/guardian was extremely belligerent about the whole thing, with a main character attitude like their kid was just playing GTA and hitting a NPC’s parked car is no big deal.

So no, I won’t be smashing my Ring camera. We need these things because some people no longer do the right thing even when you’ve got them on video. I used to wonder why almost everyone in Russia seemed to have a dashcam - now I completely understand why.

There is nothing wrong with this use-case, and that’s exactly the kind of scenario they’re marketed for. For you to protect you.

Now, take another scenario into consideration. A string of B&Es has been happening in the area. Your kid goes out with some buddies and comes home at a time near when a neighbor gets broken into. LEOs pull footage and the only evidence they can find of anyone in the area is your kid. So they start scrutinizing them. And it goes South. These things absolutely do happen. Law-enforcement will focus on what evidence they do have over evidence they don’t have. You should have the option to turn over any footage when someone knocks on your door, asking. Not because some default checkbox sends your footage to be scraped at-will.

Should be illegal…

By bradley13 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Ring cameras in the US are apparently usually mounted so that they film your entryway, behind that the public sidewalk and street, and across from that your neighbor’s house. To me - in Europe - that seems insane. Here, it is generally illegal to film public areas, because people have a right to move through the world without being tracked. And it is hugely illegal to film other people’s property, because - well, that ought to be obvious - it’s their property and not yours.

And yet here we have a business that not only lets you record all of that, but actively hands it out to anyone who wants it, for any reason whatsoever.

I have nothing against cameras filming what’s happening on your own property, but Ring has normalized surveilling your neighbors.

Re:Should be illegal…

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

> Here, it is generally illegal to film public areas, because people have a right to move through the world without being tracked.

Where exactly is “here”? CCTV coverage in Europe seems pretty pervasive, from what I’ve seen. All sorts of tracking, people and ANPR, presumably by the government.

Re:Should be illegal…

By Swervin • Score: 4, Funny Thread
If you don’t want me seeing it, quit spraying your photons all over my property.

Russia Fully Blocks WhatsApp

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
U.S. messenger app WhatsApp, owned by Meta Platforms, has been completely blocked in Russia for failing to comply with local law, the Kremlin said on Thursday, suggesting Russians turn to a state-backed “national messenger” instead. “Due to Meta’s unwillingness to comply with Russian law, such a decision was indeed taken and implemented,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, proposing that Russians switch to MAX, Russia’s state-owned messenger.

I wish the EU would do the same

By roskakori • Score: 4, Funny Thread
And recommend that people switch to Signal.

Re:Which platforms now?

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

The government-sponsored Maks chat engine, which is linked to the State Services portal.

It is very neat, as you can not only find the St. Peterburg’s babes videos, but also see your kid’s grades from school in it, submit a report on your neighbors’ enemy activities, apply for a stormtrooper slot in the Special Military Operation and even send your farewell video to your widow up to the very moment that drone kills you.

It is a great service, the greatest service that was ever designed.

Meta could also be blocked in Europe

By Elektroschock • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Out of Greenlad solidarity we should do the same in Europe. US Tech is a danger to the liberties in our societies. It is a small measure we could take against the Trump regime and hiis backers.

Windows 11 Notepad Flaw Let Files Execute Silently via Markdown Links

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft has patched a high-severity vulnerability in Windows 11’s Notepad that allowed attackers to silently execute local or remote programs when a user clicked a specially crafted Markdown link, all without triggering any Windows security warning.

The flaw, tracked as CVE-2026-20841 and fixed in the February 2026 Patch Tuesday update, stemmed from Notepad’s relatively new Markdown support — a feature Microsoft added after discontinuing WordPad and rewriting Notepad to serve as both a plain text and rich text editor. An attacker only needed to create a Markdown file containing file:// links pointing to executables or special URIs like ms-appinstaller://, and a Ctrl+click in Markdown mode would launch them. Microsoft’s fix now displays a warning dialog for any link that doesn’t use http:// or https://, though the company did not explain why it chose a prompt over blocking non-standard links entirely. Notepad updates automatically through the Microsoft Store.

Oh Microsoft…

By yo303 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You took something simple like Notepad, added features we didn’t want, and not only made it worse but actually made it insecure and fundamentally broken.

This could have been prevented by not removing Wordpad.

Wrong

By ebunga • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The goal of Microsoft is to keep turning record profits after they saturated the market 30 years ago. Want to make sure your endpoints are up to date on patches? They now have a subscription for that. Want to avoid installing crap like this in the first place? They have a subscription for that too.

Good Low Level video on it

By caseih • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Youtuber Low Level did a pretty good video on this vulnerability. Yes it is a bad vulnerability and yes it is serious, but it’s not like a user isn’t warned several times when clicking on such a link.

He also pointed out that the drive to put AI into everything now makes restricting process permissions a lot harder. For example in the past there was no reason to ever let notepad.exe access the internet. Now with copilot integrated, it’s regularly accessing the internet. I don’t think the boys at MS were thinking this through clearly.
https://youtu.be/sZ8aAkeZ6dw

Re: Oh Microsoft…

By fluffernutter • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I don’t know why these companies don’t realize when you take an application that can’t execute anything and you make it into an application that will execute anything depending on embedded codes, it’s worth scrutinizing it. If you don’t have the manpower or skills available to scrutinize it then you don’t change it. Isn’t that obvious?

Re:Wrong

By Ol Olsoc • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

What Microsoft overlooks is that there is a red line where they will just die if they cross it. They are dangerously close to that line and may be over it. I mean, how utterly incompetent can you get? A mistake like the one here can only happen if security aspects were completely ignored during development.

Any good monopolist knows that they have to deliver at least somewhat reasonable quality to retain the monopoly. MS does not understand that. Hence their products are now incompetently made toys.

This. They crossed that line for me a good while ago. Like Windows 8 ago. And taking a simple but still useful product like Notepad, and bitching it up to the point that it is now a malware vector has me shaking my head, not in disbelief, but “here we go again”. At this point, I only use my Windows Laptop if there’s no other choice. I swapped out the space it was in for a Raspberry Pi 5 I’ve been playing with, and my not updatable to Windows 11 laptop that screams along on Linux Mint.

Now for myself, a geek - it’s not all that surprising to abandon Microsoft as much as possible. But I’m getting feedback And am giving instructions from and to quite a few others who aren’t such geeks. Technical adjacent. People who need a stable platform, who need a bit more than email, and web browser. And are tired of Windows update hell. And some times Microsoft even bitches up their own programs.

There are still a fair number off people out there who believe Microsoft is some kind of permanent entity. That it will be the goto solution until the universe experiences proton decay. Reminds me of Ozymandias “My name is Microsoft, King of Kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!”

CIA Makes New Push To Recruit Chinese Military Officers as Informants

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Just weeks after a dramatic purge of China’s top general, the CIA is moving to capitalize on any resulting discord with a new public video targeting potential informants in the Chinese military. The U.S. spy agency on Thursday rolled out the video depicting a disillusioned mid-level Chinese military officer, in the latest U.S. step in a campaign to ramp up human intelligence gathering on Washington’s strategic rival.

It follows a similar effort last May that focused on fictional figures within China’s ruling Communist Party that provided detailed Chinese-language instructions on how to securely contact U.S. intelligence. CIA Director John Ratcliffe said in a statement that the agency’s videos had reached many Chinese citizens and that it would continue offering Chinese government officials an “opportunity to work toward a brighter future together.”

Re: Not very subtle

By RightwingNutjob • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Demoralizing your enemy by making him more concerned about looking over his shoulder than paying attention to you is not a bad strategy.

Dangerous job under the current regime.

By Truth_Quark • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The documents that Trump shouldn’t have had, and stored on the stage in the ballroom included Information on human sources.

Around that time the CIA had dozens of informant captured and executed.

So, I’d give it a few years. The current regime is probably going to take your details and sell the information back to China after the next presidential election.

Re:The Donald Trump Clown Car

By procrastinatos • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Anyone remember that time that Hillary Clinton leaked the IDs of CIA spies in China to China and the CPC executed them all?

No, because it didn’t happen. There is no public record, evidence, or official accusation from the FBI, CIA, or Department of Justice linking her to that specific intelligence failure. Also, I think you meant the CCP instead of the CPC, but hey, gaslight on!

death wish

By ZipNada • Score: 3 Thread

Anyone would be a fool to think that their identity as an informant would be safe with the US government.

Re: Not very subtle

By DrMrLordX • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Correct. Xi is already hyperparanoid. Nobody in the PLA command structure is truly safe. Sowing a little discord could be advantageous.

IBM Plans To Triple Entry-Level Hiring in the US

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
IBM said it will triple entry-level hiring in the US in 2026, even as AI appears to be weighing on broader demand for early-career workers. From a report:
While the company declined to disclose specific hiring figures, it said the expansion will be “across the board,” affecting a wide range of departments. “And yes, it’s for all these jobs that we’re being told AI can do,” said Nickle LaMoreaux, IBM’s chief human resources officer, speaking at a conference this week in New York.

LaMoreaux said she overhauled entry-level job descriptions for software developers and other roles to make the case internally for the recruitment push. “The entry-level jobs that you had two to three years ago, AI can do most of them,” she said at Charter’s Leading With AI Summit. “So, if you’re going to convince your business leaders that you need to make this investment, then you need to be able to show the real value these individuals can bring now. And that has to be through totally different jobs.”

inflexible old folks

By puzzled • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
After all this talk about how the “juniors” pipeline is going to run dry, instead we see that the entry level entrance IS now a second story window, but the kids who get it are going to crush the people my age (Gen-X elder) who think they can organizational politics their way out of having to reskill.
I went through this at U.S. West, First Data, and Experian back in the late 1990s. The last one was the bitter end of my ever working for another large company. Having seen the downsizing/reengineering/rightsizing wars of the late 20th century firsthand, I don’t have any trouble predicting what’s going to happen in the late 2020s.
Starting a company is hard, nerve wracking work, but if I fail it’s on me. No amount of money could tempt me into a Fortune 500 in this environment.

Sounds awful.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Since AI tools can handle most routine coding tasks, the company’s junior software developers now spend less time on that and more time working with customers. In the HR department, entry-level staffers now spend time intervening when HR chatbots fall short, correcting output and talking to managers as needed, rather than fielding every question themselves.

It certainly sounds like IBM wants people to fix broken shit code that AI barfs out. I’m sure that won’t have any native long-term consequences or anything. /s

Re:Sounds awful.

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Since AI tools can handle most routine coding tasks, the company’s junior software developers now spend less time on that and more time working with customers. In the HR department, entry-level staffers now spend time intervening when HR chatbots fall short, correcting output and talking to managers as needed, rather than fielding every question themselves.

It certainly sounds like IBM wants people to fix broken shit code that AI barfs out. I’m sure that won’t have any native long-term consequences or anything. /s

It sounds to me like IBM is seeing short-sighted thinking by management at companies around the globe, and is doing what smart companies with piles of cash should be doing — tying up all the people who could fill those discarded roles so that when those companies realize how screwed they are, they will end up paying overpriced IBM consultants at a premium to do what they could have had employees doing if their c-suites weren’t so busy being penny-wise, pound-foolish.

I mean, it’s taking a calculated risk, but it’s a smart risk, IMO.

Get ‘em while they’re malleable and cheap

By hwstar • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Since H-1B’s are harder to get nowadays, and opening offices in a bunch of countries isn’t cheap (along with the employee-friendly/business-hostile employment laws outside of the USA) Hiring people just out of school might make some sense.

Now, in a few years’ time after the junior employees have groked all the tribal knowledge from the seasoned veterans, the seasoned veterans will be introduced to the IBM job cut guillotine just like they were during the great recession.

The lesson I learned when I was employed is that I should have changed employers more often. Staying put means seasoned veterans get screwed in their 40’s and 50’s.

Re:chatbot monitors

By gweihir • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Ah, so they are setting themselves up for failure. No surprise. Because monitoring LLMs is a job that requires a lot of experience and insight.

WP Engine Says Automattic Planned To Shake Down 10 Hosting Companies For WordPress Royalties

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
WP Engine’s third amended complaint against Automattic and WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg alleges that Mullenweg had plans to impose royalty fees on 10 hosting companies beyond WP Engine for their use of the WordPress trademark.

The amended filing, based on previously sealed information uncovered during discovery, also claims Mullenweg emailed a Stripe executive to pressure the payment processor into canceling WP Engine’s contract after WP Engine sued Automattic in October 2024. Newfold, the parent company of Bluehost and HostGator, is already paying Automattic for trademark use, according to the complaint, and Automattic is in conversations with other hosts.

The filing challenges the 8% royalty rate as arbitrary, citing Mullenweg’s comments at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 where he said the figure was based on what WP Engine “could afford to pay.” Internal Automattic correspondence cited in the complaint includes Mullenweg describing his approach to WP Engine as “nuclear war” and warning that if the hosting company didn’t comply, he would start stealing its customers.

Rent seeking is getting crazy

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I remember seeing recently The dungeons & dragons fiasco and the mess with the unity game engines.

You keep seeing this where some suit sees a whole shitload of users and they get dollar signs in their eyes and get excited about how much revenue they can suck out of them in exchange for basically nothing.

WordPress isn’t magic it’s quick and dirty code and that’s what made it popular if you add cost to it it’s just going to get replaced by something else.

But you never know what you can get away with until you try and everything’s a grift now so here we go with another round of it.

I wonder if there are any actual successes of this particular type of rent seeking that I just haven’t heard about. The two I mentioned above were complete disasters, unity in particular has never fully recovered and basically created a viable competitor that was way behind previously with Godot. Their little snafu brought literally hundreds of thousands of dollars in extra funding to the Godot project and has allowed it to catch up. D&d just barely managed to recognize their fuck up and back off before losing everything.

And Automattic continues to circle the drain

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Matt’s actions make Oracle’s actions towards Java look nurturing and altruistic. This is suicidal, and I don’t see anything coming out of it except moves to other blogging/easy-website-creator platforms.

Tumblr?

By puzzled • Score: 3 Thread
I’m among the half billion Tumblr users that were all excited when they said they were going to support ActivityPub. Automaticc bought it for a song several years ago. I had stopped using Wordpress about two years ago, the interface was as bloated and awful as Wix, and every revision got a little worse. The enshittification spreads … I’m glad I figured out how to host websites using Cloudflare+Github. Now I gotta figure out how to move that Tumblr …

Re:Rent seeking is getting crazy

By Kisai • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Redhat (CentOS), Cpanel, now wordpress pulling out the “pay for a licence now” after years of not having to.

All the free hosters use cpanel, and a lot of them offer “wordpress hosting” packages.

And if you have ever used cpanel recently, there is an entire “wordpress management” toolkit added to it.

Boy would it ever suck to be a host that has to pay all this license bullshit for 100 people to make a business card site (basically a 1 page website with the business name, hours, location.) Cpanel restricts how many sites you can run per machine, so now you have to minmax those licences. If you had to pay more on top, the business model doesn’t work. So you’re now stuck paying $90/mo for one stupid wordpress site.

Anthropic Raises $30 Billion at $380 Billion Valuation, Eyes IPO This Year

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Anthropic has raised $30 billion in a Series G funding round that values the Claude maker at $380 billion as the company prepares for an initial public offering that could come as early as this year. Investors in the new round include Singapore sovereign fund GIC, Coatue, D.E. Shaw Ventures, ICONIQ, MGX, Sequoia Capital, Founders Fund, Greenoaks and Temasek. Anthropic raised its funding target by $10 billion during the process after the round was several times subscribed.

The San Francisco-based company, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers, now has a $14 billion revenue run rate, about 80% of which comes from enterprise customers. It claims more than 500 customers spending over $1 million a year on its workplace tools. The round includes a portion of the $15 billion commitment from Microsoft and Nvidia announced late last year.

Recent good competition to Claude for coding

By caseih • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Last week I praised Claude code, especially the cli here on slashdot. I still think it’s currently the best but it’s also the most expensive. But the competition is getting a lot better (and cheaper). I’ve been using the opencode cli lately with several models: Kimi K2.5, Kimi K2.5 Thinking, OpenCode’s Big Pickle, and Qwen3 Coder Next. Using them through OpenCode’s Zen service and also OpenRouter (for Qwen3 Coder Next), they are all about 1/2 the cost of Claude’s models, maybe less.

Of those I feel that Kimi K2.5 Thinking is probably the closest to Claude Opus 4.6. The rest are quite good at most things, and Qwen3 Coder Next is very fast. Qwen3 Coder Next also has the potential to run on “reasonable” local hardware.

Re:And so it begins

By fleeped • Score: 5, Informative Thread

A “personal” note from “I’m Matt Shumer — founder & CEO at OthersideAI (HyperWrite). I build and invest in AI products, ship fast, and share what I learn with a large audience.”

No conflict of interest, none whatsoever. No reason to skew the truth.

Re:And so it begins

By DMDx86 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The author is a CEO of an AI company and an investor in others. I don’t mean to poo-poo the actual legitimate advances being made in AI, but this isn’t an unbiased piece. He’s overstating the capabilities of LLMs in my opinion, but someone who has vested financial interests in the industry is of course going to say those things. The current AI industry is based primarily on the commercialization of LLMs.

I use the latest coding models in my own work and while they do some really awesome things, they are far from “its replacing software engineers”. I find they struggle on large code bases and sometimes hallucinate. For me that’s okay, because as a SWE I can recognize good code from bullshit and tweak its output but it gets frustrating when it wrongly answers a question about your code (how does X interact with Y, where is the code for that) and it puts you on a wild goose chase around your code base.

LLMs are hitting a brick wall in scaling to the point where the very best models require an incredible amount of resources to run ( = expensive). The resource consumption of LLMs are increasing at a rate greater than what advances in compute power and memory capcity are increasing at.

I’m with Yann LeCun on LLMs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?…

Re:And so it begins

By MunchMunch • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Sorry, the linked summary is really just the same hype cycle I’ve seen.

Programmer friends at Google, Meta and Amazon have certainly convinced me that code is being assisted successfully by AI. However, the author’s level of extrapolation to other fields and situations destroys any credibility he had.

For example, the author - Matt Shumer, who is an AI company founder, booster and frequent submitter to other AI-hype websites, but apparently is not legally trained - spends many paragraphs and anecdotes talking about how a partner at a law firm now has to use AI because he “knows what’s at stake” and that AI can do legal work better than their associates.

Nope, the reason that partner is doing it is because he’s scared of being left behind, which is the entire motive behind hype pieces like this. I’d wager that hypothetical partner is not the one who beats out all his colleagues and becomes “the most valuable person in the firm” but rather the one that gets sanctioned for submitting briefs with hallucinated cases (which is still happening in the wild regularly). As a lawyer, I can say even current flagship AI models cannot solve the problem of lawyer bar-required ethical duties which require effectively re-doing the work AI does so we can attest it is correct, taking more time than doing the work ourselves the first time.

Shumer similarly gives an “oh god, it’s getting so good so fast!” timeline that includes AI passing the bar. That 2023 story was debunked in 2024 and somehow this guy is unaware of that. Why in the world would someone so unable to identify reliable information be trusted on AI reliability?

There may be some functional AI work - like coding within specific environments and circumstances - but there is a huge AI bubble built on this silly “it will do everything better” hype.

Re: And so it begins

By CAIMLAS • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

There’s a billion different ways to do it and I don’t think there’s a right way exactly, but defining scope for the models helps a lot.

A lot of planning before any implementation, with precise criteria for how and where things get implemented, and each plan gets further broken down in that regard. Have a good architectural picture of how things are supposed to look. MVC isolation helps a lot. Know the data model and how your controller does its thing.

I can’t emphasize enough how much planning seems to impact outcomes. You’ll overlook things, but if I’m reasonably thorough it usually goes through without a hitch. Plan, ask for plan diagnosis, refinement… I spend 40-60 minutes planning for any substantial anything, and often have time between agent runs while I’m formulating the next plan.

Also a good primary prompt, and CLAUDE.md files with well defined project definitions, structure, and so on. Be explicit. Have the agent track its work and compare/follow up and review the plan for completion afterwards. Heck, you can even have it build/run/test (which I might do before getting lunch) and iterate. When you find it mess something up, update the project details to do/do not do. The one-shot depends on these things.

Your tooling matters too. opencode and cc seem to work best for me, I’d avoid tools like cursor at this point. memvid is a game changer, it will learn your project’s structure and hallucinate a lot less.