Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. US Government Warns That Russia State Hackers Are Coming After Your Router
  2. German Firm Files For Insolvency After Cybercriminals Shut Down Production For 6 Weeks
  3. States Sue to Block Paramount-Warner Bros Merger, Defying DOJ
  4. Apple Reportedly Agreed to Intel Chips To Avoid White House Tariffs
  5. Cloudflare Precursor Watches Your Mouse and Keyboard To Decide If You Are Human
  6. Social Media Limits Are Coming For Teens Across Europe
  7. Why 55% of Americans Stopped Posting On Social Media
  8. China, Russia and Others Seek To Inflame Debate Over AI Data Centers
  9. Linus Torvalds on Rust, C, Bugs, and AI Patch-Checking Tools
  10. Japan’s Space Agency Conducts First Test Flight For Experimental Reusable Rocket
  11. America May Soon Be Facing Largest Labor Shortage in Its History
  12. Semi-Trailer Trucks Test Converting Into Plug-In Hybrids
  13. ‘Billionaire Exodus? California Drew 10x More Venture Capital Than Any Other State This Year’
  14. ‘Forget Coders. The Real AI Threat Is In the Back Office’
  15. Linus Torvalds on AI, Junk Patches, Humans, and Godzilla

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.

US Government Warns That Russia State Hackers Are Coming After Your Router

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
CISA and allied governments are warning users to secure their routers as Russian state-backed hackers continue compromising the devices and turning them into proxy nodes to disguise attacks against critical infrastructure. The advisory urges users to disable outdated SNMP versions, use strong passwords, update firmware, and turn off unnecessary router services to reduce the risk of being swept into these botnets. Ars Technica reports:
“Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) Center 16 cyber actors continue to exploit poorly configured and vulnerable networking devices worldwide, opportunistically compromising multiple critical infrastructure sector networks,” the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said Monday. The hacking groups are tracked under various names, including Berserk Bear, Energetic Bear, Crouching Yeti, Dragonfly, Ghost Blizzard, and Static Tundra. The advisory was co-issued by governments from around the world, including Australia, Denmark, New Zealand, and the UK.

The primary means of compromise the agency warned about was hackers scanning IP ranges with active Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) agents that accept common or default authentication credentials. These scans are run by the very sorts of router botnets the actors are trying to enroll the targeted device in. By sending malicious traffic from spoofed addresses, the hackers can use the SNMP agent on poorly configured routers to run malware. SNMP allows users to collect and organize information about managed networking devices or to modify that information to change device behavior.

With control of a device, the hackers then use it as an exit node when probing or attacking targets in the communications, defense, energy, financial services, and government sectors. By funneling the malicious traffic through a benign-appearing device on a trustworthy IP address, the attackers are able to lower the chances of getting blocked by firewalls and other security defenses. Monday’s advisory made no mention of identical operations carried out in recent years by China. So-called residential proxies are also a go-to tool used by financially motivated criminal hackers to obscure their true IP address. In many cases, these sorts of proxies are made up of millions of streaming devices that are sold with preloaded malware.

standard practice

By DrMrLordX • Score: 3 Thread

Aren’t vulnerable routers the backbone of most botnets?

German Firm Files For Insolvency After Cybercriminals Shut Down Production For 6 Weeks

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
German textile firm ZEGO has filed for insolvency and is blaming a March cyberattack that shut down production for nearly six weeks. “ZEGO’s filing adds another name to the short but growing list of companies that say a digital break-in was commercially fatal to their business,” reports The Register. From the report:
In a notice to customers and suppliers, the organization said it had exhausted every available option before seeking insolvency protection. Managing director Johannes Zenglein described the filing as “one of the most difficult steps in our company’s 37-year history.” “The cyberattack of March 29, 2026, however, impacted our company to an extent that we could not fully compensate for despite our best efforts,” Zenglein wrote. “The consequences resulted in a production outage of nearly six weeks and significant financial strain. These effects ultimately impacted our financial situation so severely that filing for insolvency became necessary.”

ZEGO did not disclose what kind of attack it suffered, whether ransomware was involved, who was behind it, or whether customer or employee data was compromised. What it has made clear is that the operational disruption alone was enough to push the business beyond the point of recovery. ZEGO said insolvency proceedings have now been initiated, but insisted the filing does not necessarily spell the end of the business. It said it plans to keep production running while administrators attempt to restructure the business, preserve jobs, and keep customers and suppliers on board.

States Sue to Block Paramount-Warner Bros Merger, Defying DOJ

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A coalition of 12 states led by California is suing to block the $111 billion Paramount Skydance-Warner Bros. merger, arguing it would reduce competition in theatrical distribution, blockbuster films, and basic cable licensing. The challenge (PDF) defies the DOJ’s approval of the deal. Variety reports:
The coalition, led by California Attorney General Rob Bonta, alleges that the $111 billion transaction violates the Clayton Act by lessening competition in three distinct markets: wide-release theatrical distribution, “top-grossing” theatrical distribution, and basic cable licensing. “The unlawful merger of these two entertainment behemoths would lead to higher prices, lower quality, and less content for film and television, harming movie theaters, basic cable distributors, and ultimately, audiences on every sofa and movie theater seat in the U.S.,” Bonta said in a statement on Monday.

The suit argues that the combined company will control 27% of the wide-release theatrical distribution market, 30% of the submarket comprising “anticipated blockbuster films,” and 27% of the basic cable bundle. The states argue that such consolidation will harm theaters and cable and satellite providers that rely on competition among distributors. Paramount and Warner Bros. are two of the five remaining legacy studios. Together, all five — including Disney, Sony and Universal — control 86% of theatrical distribution and 90% of blockbuster distribution, the states said. Warner Bros. and Paramount are also the second- and third-largest basic cable distributors, respectively.

[…] The states are expected to seek an injunction to block the transaction, which Paramount expects to close sometime after July 22. The 12 states in the coalition are Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Washington. […] All are represented by Democratic attorneys general.
“Consolidation here not only leads to higher prices — it also leads to fewer opportunities for important stories to come to life, and fewer ways for audiences to encounter stories, ideas, and perspectives beyond their own experiences,” Bonta said. “In this country, no one is above the law. With this lawsuit, California and our sister states are fighting for free and fair markets, not rigged markets. America has no kings in government or our economy.”

Let it burn

By TwistedGreen • Score: 3 Thread

I can only see this as a good thing, similar to what Microsoft did to the gaming industry: buy up a bunch of studios, do nothing with them for years, then fire everyone. Basically a money burning party. All those developers are now free to work for independent studios and do something new.

Are blockbuster films and basic cable really things worth preserving?

Re:What about Netflix?

By The-Forge • Score: 5, Informative Thread

At this point they see Netflix as the way lesser of 2 evils.

Apple Reportedly Agreed to Intel Chips To Avoid White House Tariffs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
According to the Wall Street Journal (paywalled), Apple agreed to use Intel’s U.S. chipmaking plants after White House officials pressured Tim Cook during tariff-relief talks last summer. MacRumors reports:
In August 2025, Apple CEO Tim Cook was in Washington to lobby the Trump administration to drop its proposed 100 percent tariff on semiconductor imports — a levy that would have raised costs across Apple’s product line. Apple reportedly secured an exemption after pledging to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in the U.S., although many of those investments were already planned. During the meetings, president Trump and commerce secretary Howard Lutnick are said to have urged Cook to use Intel’s fabrication plants to make some of Apple’s chips. The link between the tariff talks and the Apple-Intel deal had not been previously reported.

Almost a year later, Trump announced via his Truth Social platform that Apple would begin using Intel-made chips in some products. “We need to design and build our Chips right here in America,” the president posted. The news sent Intel shares to record highs. According to a person familiar with the negotiations cited by the WSJ, Apple plans to have Intel make chips for both Mac laptops and iPhones. The report doesn’t say which chips or in what volume, and Apple is expected to remain reliant on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, for the majority of its custom silicon.

Correction:

By Sebby • Score: 5, Funny Thread

During the meetings, president Trump and commerce secretary Howard Lutnick are said to have....

“During the meetings, president Taco Tuesday and commerce secretary Howard Nutlick are said to have....”

There FTFY.

If only

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Informative Thread

There was some sort of… its been so long, whats that stuff called? Oh yeah, legislation! What if there was sort of legislation that funded and support domestic semiconductor fabrication and all the precursor stuff needed for it?

Whats that? There was?

Wonder what happened? Oh yeah, it was picked apart and kind of left to rot. I’m sure gladhanding and handshake deals with the President will be just as good.

Beyond Natcast’s discontinuation (and the apparent termination of the NSTC itself), the Industrial Advisory Committee has been disbanded, the National Advanced Packaging Manufacturing Program is not active,4 the new semiconductor-focused Manufacturing USA Institute has been discontinued, and the Consortium Steering Committee has not met since the change of administration.5 As these activities are mandated by the CHIPS Act, it is not clear how Commerce intends to comply with the Act without substantially increasing staff — at odds with the administration’s push for smaller government. From the outside, the new CHIPS R&D vision appears more like a profit-driven investment program than a provider of core infrastructure benefiting all participants and prioritizing American national and economic security.

https://www.factorysettings.or…

Re:TSMC is promising new fabs in the USA

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

promising is they keyword here. Fabs take years to build and the USA isn’t exactly a reliable trading partner.

Apple already using TSMC chips made in the USA

By drnb • Score: 5, Informative Thread

promising is they keyword here. Fabs take years to build and the USA isn’t exactly a reliable trading partner.

I think “current status” is the key phrase here. From Google:

“TSMC’s massive $65 billion Phoenix, Arizona, project is rapidly expanding into a “gigafab” cluster. The first fab has been in production since late 2024 using 4nm process technology. Construction on the second fab is complete, with equipment installation underway ahead of an accelerated 2027 production target for 3nm chips

Fab 1: High-volume production of 4-nanometer (N4) chips is actively supplying major U.S. customers like Apple and NVIDIA.

Fab 2: The physical building structure is complete. Equipment installation is slated for 2026, with high-volume production of 3-nanometer (N3) chips targeted for the second half of 2027.

Fab 3: Groundbreaking and structural topping ceremonies are complete, with this facility slated to utilize even more advanced 2nm and A16 process technologies.

Future Expansion: TSMC has acquired additional land and laid the groundwork for up to six fabs plus research and development facilities”

Re:If only

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

this seems a case where Trump actually acted in (in his judgement) the country’s best interests.

It might happen, but I’m not sure you can say it was Trump’s judgement that got us there. Seems to me he acts in self-interest almost exclusively, except for his kids and close friends. And even then it seems transactional. If it benefits someone else as well, that’s a collateral effect.

“America First” has been his rallying cry, but by word and deed he seems to think “Trump first.”

Cloudflare Precursor Watches Your Mouse and Keyboard To Decide If You Are Human

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Cloudflare has launched Precursor, a new behavioral bot detection system that monitors mouse movement, typing cadence, scrolling, clipboard activity, page visibility, and other signals across an entire browsing session. The system is designed to catch advanced bots that can run JavaScript, use real browsers, and pass traditional CAPTCHA challenges. Cloudflare says Precursor does not record actual keystrokes and instead studies timing and rhythm. The company also says the data is not tied to user identities or persistent profiles. Even so, software that watches how people move and type throughout a visit raises privacy concerns, especially as Cloudflare claims bots now generate roughly 57 percent of all Internet requests.

People do the same.

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Everyone my age knows what the stereotypical ‘robotic’ voice is. They changed it because they wanted to hide the fact you were talking to a machine.

We all know that a mouse moving in a perfectly straight line means a machine is controlling it, while humans do something more like a squiggly line. Basically a normal human drawing a line looks like someone with Parkinsons did it as compared to what a machine drawing a line looks like.

Similarly, humans typing have pauses that tend to end after set thoughts. New sentence = a pause. If I am seeing a long unbroken, steady text output or text that all appears in full sentences quickly, I know it is a machine.

Re: People do the same.

By clive27 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Sounds incredibly easy for bots to add some randomness to its movements and typing speed.

Chrome only, I assume

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

Safari and Firefox would likely block this, given it’s a third party JavaScript tool.

508 and JAWS

By kyoko21 • Score: 3 Thread

How does it interact with 508 and accessibility type devices/software like JAWS and other screen readers?

Social Media Limits Are Coming For Teens Across Europe

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The European Union is considering major new restrictions on children’s access to social media, including age limits, phased access, and an outright ban. “This is not about whether children can access social media,” said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. “It is about when social media can access our children.” The Verge reports:
Social media platforms could also be forced to prove their services are not harmful before young people are allowed to use them. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc’s executive arm could propose new legislation within months, after reviewing recommendations from a panel of experts released today.

The panel recommended using a phased approach, including “no screens at all” for children under 3, supervised internet use for those under 13, and some limits for older teens. It also said social media platforms should have to prove their services are safe to younger users, an approach von der Leyen said she supports. Von der Leyen said the Commission will consider the report and return with proposals “after the summer.” Any legislation would still need approval from the European Parliament and the EU’s 27 member countries before becoming law across the bloc.

Terrible idea

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Funny Thread

How are we supposed to sell ad space in children’s loot box games if the government takes away all of our users?

Kick ‘em outside

By alvinrod • Score: 3 Thread
Mandate teenagers go outside and interact with their peers. While I’m sure that this idea might at first horrify some of you, there’s nothing that says they can’t go play D&D together or any number of nerdy things that everyone here did before the internet existed. Social media should have an age restriction at least as great as alcohol and tobacco, if not higher.

Good

By devslash0 • Score: 3 Thread

Social media companies have a solid strategy to hook people in early. After all, if social media is a part of your growing up, it becomes an inseparable part of your identity. That’s why they fight so hard for access to children - they’re trying to build returning customers for life, and these sort of schemes are outright abuse.

ID Checks

By RegistrationIsDumb83 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
This isn’t about protecting kids, it’s about identifying adults.

This would have been less of an issue…

By Shakes Fist • Score: 3 Thread
…if youth clubs, libraries etc hadn’t been closed down everywhere. Where are kids supposed to go in the evenings?

Why 55% of Americans Stopped Posting On Social Media

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A new Incogni survey suggests Americans are pulling back from social media, with more than half saying “maintaining an online presence feels like work” and 55% reporting they post less than they did five years ago. “The full study concludes that there’s been a significant shift in public attitudes toward social media,” reports PCMag. “Where it was once fun and relaxing, it’s now growing dark and angsty…” From the report:
As the chart shows, there’s also a clear correlation with age. A full 60% of Gen Z respondents feel the pain of maintaining a social presence. Perhaps they have a niggling hope that they might still be discovered as an influencer? Those of us in the Boomer category are clearly more relaxed about it, with just 38% saying that maintaining a social presence feels like work. The survey quizzed respondents about how they feel when they don’t keep up with checking their socials and, by extension, how they’d feel if they just plain quit. They were given choices, both positive (peace, relaxation, and relief) and negative (anxiety, fear of missing out, and discomfort).

Overall, positive reactions held slightly greater sway, with an average of about 21% compared with 19% for negative reactions. The Gen Y contingent accentuated that split, with 25% positive and 21% negative, while Gen X went even further, with 20% positive and just 13% negative. But the Gen Z group flipped the results, identifying 27% negative and 26% positive reactions to going without social media.

There’s another force pushing folks away from the socials: increasing politicization. Of the survey’s respondents, 44% agreed that political content is driving people away from social media, and only 20% disagreed. Among Gen Z respondents, the impetus was stronger: 48% agreed, and just 13% disagreed. These negative feelings associated with politics only serve to highlight the positive reactions to deleting your social media.

Are you posting less on social media than you did five years ago, and are you being more selective about who can see what you post? Then you’re with the majority. More than half of the respondents answered yes to each of those questions. But would you ever parlay fewer posts into no posts (aka quit posting entirely)? When asked what it would take to finally get them to terminate a social media account, a die-hard group of one in six respondents said there’s nothing that could make them quit. But more than half could picture quitting due to security concerns, and almost half accepted the possibility that harassment or hate speech could send them packing. Others cited the amount of time wasted on scrolling through social media and the mental health threats of doomscrolling.

It’s bots and ragebait, thats why

By Tyr07 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

People have figured out that rage bait is the major way to drive interaction with posts, Facebook knew long before, there was a report about that.
It’s clear it’s senseless bots spamming narratives for whatever side you don’t like targeting you to get you to engage.

There is zero point in responding, it’s a bot farming for a attention. Again, common sense not applied. They always think their little pet projects will keep the peasents engaged, but as usual, it’s failing.

Social Media Uses have become negative

By forrie • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In its early days, social media was a fun, amusing pastime. Today, it’s the source of political and social manipulation — perception management — by both people, corporation and state-sponsored interests. And let’s not forget the anguished advertising industry, that works very diligently to mine, distract, track and monetize nearly everything they can.

It’s not fun anymore. At times, it has become outright immature and banal. Look at products like TikTok, Facebook and what they were *really* designed for.

I’m old enough to remember where compute resources were useful, they helped get things done — as they got more powerful, the impact on society became more negative. Is it human nature or corporate interests? I think it’s both, but one clearly understands and manipulates the other (corporate), and so it goes.

Having said that, there are positive uses, such as sharing information — as much as people use terms “sheeple” and other terms, which are often true, I believe the public (those of us that think for ourselves) are much smarter, more well-informed, even closer, because of these tools — but hopefully those of us also know how to moderate our consumption of it.

Remembering that the ultimate social benefit is, when possible, in person.

It’s AI and “the algorithm”

By Nkwe • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
For me social media used to be a way that I could keep up with what my family, friends, and peers were doing. I saw what they posted and they saw what I posted. Now feeds are overrun with stuff I don’t care about (the algorithm) and stuff that isn’t real (AI), so it is becoming less and less worth my time to post stuff (my intended audience won’t see it, and is also leaving the platforms) and likewise I don’t see stuff my peers post. On top of this there is all the political crap and advertising.

joined fb for the people, chased away by corp

By flipk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

When I first joined facebook, my feed was my family and friends commenting on their lives. I’d say what I was doing, I’d like or comment on what others were doing. We had discussions. I remember comment threads 40 posts long going back and forth on ideas. I knew everyone on my feed. Today (if I even bother to log in), I look at the notifications to see if there are any messages from someone I know to me (there never is), and the feed is almost entirely political groups I didn’t chose, products I don’t want to buy, non-reddit summaries of screenshots of reddit AITA posts, neighborhood group “need recommendation for kitchen cabinet painters”, or AI generated “she was shocked to discover what her husband was really doing on weekdays” crap. every 40th story is pictures my nephew’s cats but no mention of that they’re actually doing, because people don’t like to say what they’re doing on the internet anymore. everyone’s so afraid of how their information can be used against them that they won’t post anything about anything, and i don’t either.

i joined facebook for the people. i left because of the corporations.

Re:It’s AI and “the algorithm”

By kjdrtgxf • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I came to say the first half. It used to be so easy to see MY family and MY friends updates. Now even finding those posts would be impossible amongst the deluge of click bait, so both the urge to post and the reason to stay has departed those platforms. For a long time I did not engage on political comments there so it was not on the feed. That has changed. Overall I view instagram facebook etc the same as YouTube, Netflix, AppleTV; a place where I can go see commercial efforts to entertain me.

China, Russia and Others Seek To Inflame Debate Over AI Data Centers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The New York Times:
A state-owned newspaper in China recently published a satellite image of a data center in Gainesville, Va., writing in English that the development of artificial intelligence posed a threat to Americans’ physical and financial well-being. A comic strip made to look as if it had been published by a Maryland news outlet — created with OpenAI’s ChatGPT by people in China, the tech company said — circulated on X this year, blaming data centers for soaring electricity bills. It showed a tycoon smoking a cigar and clutching bags of cash. A video shared on X by a known covert Russian influence operation questioned the viability of a data center that an American company, Firebird, is constructing in Armenia, the small Caucasus nation that has been a focus of Kremlin pressure. “The country’s electrical grid instability may render it useless,” the video’s narrator says.

All are examples of a push by foreign adversaries to seize on what polls have shown is deep ambivalence — verging at times on hostility — about the spread of the data centers needed to power A.I. in the United States and elsewhere. China, Russia and, to a lesser extent, Iran have sought to use state media outlets to turn the controversy over data centers in the United States into “a domestic fracture point,” according to a new analysis by Alethea, a threat intelligence company, which identified scores of articles and posts on social media this year. These campaigns, whose impact on public opinion remains to be seen, have raised alarms in Washington, where A.I. is seen as a top issue heading into this year’s midterm elections.

They’re not wrong

By SumDog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I mean, it might be propaganda, but is it wrong? I think people are pretty hostile to these things in their backyards to begin with. They’re not creating ragebait, they’re taking a serious, existing political issue and capitalizing on it.

Now the great irony is China doing this when they have their own horrifically worse massive surveillance state, but make no mistake: these Data Centers are for the AI surveillance state.

They’re not using all that compute to make cat videos and write code. Our end uses can’t even account for a fraction of the capacity they’re building. These companies are lying to us about what it’s all for.

Re:and?

By swillden • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Every nation does this, they mock the failures of their adversaries. We do it constantly relating to China and Russia. So what?

I think you’re misreading the intent. This isn’t random mockery by individuals, shared with their friends for fun, this is a focused disinformation campaign being targeted through western communication channels. China is concerned about what it might mean geopolitically if AI turns out to be as significant as it might, and the US wins the AI race. This is an effort to slow AI development. A small and opportunistic one, probably not part of the core strategy, but a cheap, easy one that might have some beneficial effect.

Re:and?

By alcmena • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Given how much screaming I’ve seen by the AI & DC boosters, how certain are we that this isn’t a false flag operation created by those boosters to say, “See, all that outrage against AI / DCs is caused by Chinese / Russian propaganda and America is falling for it!”?

I think the part that bothers me the most is that seems just as plausible as China / Russia actually creating propaganda to do the same…

Pouring gasoline on an oil-refinery fire?

By Todd Knarr • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Russia, China and Iran trying to inflame the AI data-center debate is like pouring 5 gallons of gasoline on an oil-refinery fire: technically you did make it worse but by such a small amount nobody’s going to notice.

Re:and?

By HiThere • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Astroturfing was invented in the US. To claim we don’t do it is just silly. (But I would suspect that it might be more companies than the govt.)

Linus Torvalds on Rust, C, Bugs, and AI Patch-Checking Tools

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Git and email are the two really only tools I use,” Linus Torvalds said at Open Source Summit India 2026. But ZDNet reports that he also shared his thoughts on Rust, C, and patch-checking tools:
“I use Google as a way to look things up.” He added, “I’m unusual; most of the other maintainers end up using many more tools, and I think a lot of them are starting to use AI tools for patch checking,” while he “works at a higher level. I work with people, not tools.”

When asked about Rust both in Git and the kernel, he pushed back against hype: “I’m not sure Rust is going to take over the world. I still think Rust is very interesting, [but] I still find C to be a much simpler tool.” Torvalds continued, “I’m much more excited about all the tools we have for verification of C,” including “automated patch verification tools” and “automated email checking tools for patches like Sashiko.” Summing up, Torvalds told the Mumbai audience: “I’m more of a hack-and-slash kind of person, and I still like the raw and simple power of C, and I don’t think that’s going to change.”

Torvalds also warned against overestimating Rust’s benefits: “Rust fixes a few easy bugs that you can make in C, but it does not fix the logic errors, right? It does not think for you, and when you write incorrect code, the language does not matter. The end result will be incorrect.” On mixed C/Rust code bases, he pointed out that guarantees are limited: “The guarantees that Rust give you only apply in the Rust-only parts of your code base, and wherever you interact with C code, all bets are off,” with most Rust code in Linux talking to “core kernel C code” that is “much better quality… because that code has been tested in every single environment.”
At the same time, Torvalds pointed out, “some of our big and more high-profile bugs in the kernel lately have been logic errors” rather than the kind of memory errors Rust prevents.

“It was just bad programming, which sadly happens even in carefully maintained subsystems and important kernels that are supposed to be very secure.”

But…

By Junta • Score: 3 Thread

I work with people, not tools.

But what about when the people *are* tools?

Re:Old man yells at clouds

By JBMcB • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I think anyone who’s worked in a professional setting is going to know the value of code review. Having a tool that can easily give you an extra, high quality code review is incredibly useful.

From the summary.

, “I’m much more excited about all the tools we have for verification of C,” including “automated patch verification tools”

Where are you getting that he doesn’t like code review tools? Keep in mind that he isn’t expected to run them, he’s expecting the submitters to run them, which is why he gets testy when he finds obvious errors in submitted patches.

Re:Old man yells at clouds

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I get the wish to avoid changing your process, and I’m sure Linus puts a lot of thought into how he does things, but I think he’s very likely yelling and shaking his fist at the clouds here.

That’s an irritating way to say you disagree with him. Just give your counter-argument, don’t insult him.

I think anyone who’s worked in a professional setting is going to know the value of code review. Having a tool that can easily give you an extra, high quality code review is incredibly useful.

Are you trying to make the point that AI easily gives you high quality code reviews? It’s not clear what your point is or why you don’t like Linus.

Japan’s Space Agency Conducts First Test Flight For Experimental Reusable Rocket

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Japan’s experimental reusable rocket took off and safely landed in a first test flight Saturday,” reports the Associated Press, as Japan “seeks to achieve the technology key to cut launch costs and compete in the global space market dominated by SpaceX.”
The RV-X rocket lifted off, hovered and moved horizontally before landing [watch the video here] during its less than one-minute flight at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s Noshiro Testing Center in northeastern Japan, which was livestreamed by the NVS, a group of space fans… Saturday’s flight is a step forward for Japan in achieving the technology needed to develop a lower cost successor to the country’s current mainstay, single-use H3 series.
Japan’s test comes the same week that China recovered an orbital booster rocket for the first time.

Reusable Launch Vehicle is key to sustainability.

By Kisai • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

If we expect to have a space industry for the next 20 years, we need to urgently get back to reusable launch vehicles. I’m not saying we need to go quite as far as the NASA space shuttle, but we need to get reusability of large vehicles to get the next space station or even build larger orbital space stations or spacecraft.

But ultimately some kind of space catapult/electrically launched vehicle/space-plane is the final form of this. We know “technically” we can push a jet high enough that a space craft could then be launched from to have the first stage be a completely reusable by landing it right after the vehicle unmounts from the launch vehicle.

Awesome Achievement

By necro81 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
It’s an awesome achievement - a really challenging problem, of depth and complexity beyond the ken of most armchair engineers, executed successfully.

That said: what they have achieved is basically the same as the DC-X from 30+ years ago! Let us sincerely hope this effort has a longer life ahead of it than that one did!

Re: Reusable Launch Vehicle is key to sustainabili

By LindleyF • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
The problem isn’t altitude, at least not entirely. Atmospheric density does play a role. But the main problem is velocity. Jets cruise at around 600 MPH. Rockets to LEO need to reach thirty times that speed.

America May Soon Be Facing Largest Labor Shortage in Its History

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
America “is facing what’s projected to become the largest labor shortage in its history,” according to experts interviewed by the Washington Post:
Economists warn that the worsening labor problem, due in part to a skills shortage and population shifts, will be vast and reach beyond tech. It “could hobble the American economy for years to come,” predicts the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. Lightcast, a labor market data company, calls it “the largest labor shortage the country has ever seen.” JPMorgan Chase warns of a national security risk from “a pervasive talent deficit that constrains the nation’s capacity to build, compete, and protect its interests.” There will be shortages in the tens or even hundreds of thousands of nurses, physicians, teachers, engineers, pharmacists, mental health counselors, construction worker and airplane mechanics — jobs AI generally can’t do…

Among the trends that have been leading to this moment: a mismatch between the careers college graduates are pursuing and the jobs employers are struggling to fill. Far fewer students are majoring in health care fields than are needed to meet demand, for instance. “We have pumped so many young people into business and finance” when what’s really in demand are graduates in other fields, [said Ron Hetrick, Lightcast’s principal economist]. “It’s like a factory producing these workers like widgets, even though society is saying, ‘We really don’t need them.’ And the factory just keeps pumping them out.” But the principal reason for the looming workforce shortages is much more basic. A protracted decline in birth rates is coinciding with a record wave of retirements, data shows.

From 2024 to 2032, when the last baby boomers sign up for Social Security payments, more than 18 million college-educated workers will leave the labor force while fewer than 14 million enter it, according to the Georgetown center. Meanwhile, even as the number of people with associate and bachelor’s degrees falls, the number of jobs requiring them will grow, the center forecasts. That will leave a gap of 4.6 million workers. Lightcast puts the deficit at an even higher 6 million… The effect of population shifts on the supply of talent, with or without degrees, has been compounded by a drop in the proportion of high school graduates choosing to go to college, a sharply reduced rate of immigration, and a growing number of Americans leaving the workforce altogether because of such issues as lack of child care, early retirement, incarceration and substance addiction, according to the Chamber of Commerce.
Three interesting statistics from the article:

whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap

By Morromist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We could have been working for the last decade or 3 to make this a great country to have and raise children in but nah, we decided to have the most expensive healthcare system in the world (by far), no provisions for childcare for workers, no maturnity leave laws, no social safty net that would make having children less risky and very expensive housing.

Instead we were politically focused on getting rid of immigrants, which we’ll eventually need to import more of because we don’t have any young people because we were too focused on getting rid of immigrants to make life stable & happy enough for anyone to have babies.

Re:whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also rea

By CAIMLAS • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Man, they really need to pass a law or something to make it affordable to have healthcare in this country, man. Someone should run on that premise. It’s something long past having not been tried.

Re:Oh well

By SeaFox • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

There’s a cost to increasing salaries. The cost of the product or service will be higher, meaning fewer consumers will have access to it.

This doesn’t seem to be a concern when it comes to increasing executive salaries. They could lower some of those and have plenty more money to spend on new workers. Really… “We have pumped so many young people into business and finance” — No shit, Sherlock. Maybe because the only people making 7 figures in healthcare are the administrators and folks in insurance, not the ones actually practicing medicine. The very long shifts medical careers seem famous for are a good indicator healthcare facilities need to hire more people, but who wants to enter a job with such long hours. Meanwhile the work to be done isn’t going down, so everyone has to work longer. It becomes a feedback loop.

Re:whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also rea

By Un-Thesis • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

With Silver Healthcare.gov insurance, i was quoted a bill of $17,500 for medical tests and 6 months of medication.

I flew down to Colombia:

* Specialty Doctor’s visit: $35 x 2 vs $50 x 2
* Blood tests: $250 vs $1,820
* Medicine: $102/month vs $1,250 x 6
* Injection pen: Free via gov subsidy vs $200
* Flight to Colombia: $650 round trip
* Airbnb for a week: $244
* US insurance: $551/month

* Cost in Colombia: 244 + 650 + (102 × 6) + 250 + 70 = $932 without travel ($1,826 total)
* Cost in USA with insurance: 200 + (1250 × 6) + 1820 + 100 + (551 × 6) = $12,926

So Colombia is 13.87 times cheaper (or a 92.79% discount).

Re: Oh well

By Mindragon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It would be useful to fund schools that provide education pathways to gainful employment.

Also to fund Universal Healthcare and support services as a part of an overall employment tax split between employee and employers.

But all of this requires a thinking that goes beyond pure greed.

Semi-Trailer Trucks Test Converting Into Plug-In Hybrids

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time Slashdot reader necro81 writes:
There are several companies, such as Tesla, trying to make semi trucks fully electric. The capital cost for such a truck, and the MW-scale infrastructure to recharge it, may be a hard sell for some operators. [IEEE Spectrum notes that’s a charging infrastructure “that most freight corridors do not yet reliably provide.”] But some companies are instead adding batteries and an electric motor to the semi-trailers that trucks haul behind them.

“The Nivalis Powered Trailer Kit centers on an electric axle [rated at 50 kilowatts-peak]… capable of both propulsion assistance and regenerative braking. It draws on a 60-kilowatt-hour, 400-volt lithium-ion battery pack charged from three sources: the axle itself during braking and deceleration, a full-rooftop array of photovoltaic panels generating up to 3.7 kilowatts-peak, and a 32-amp, three-phase AC grid connection available during parking stops.”

This approach is more akin to a plug-in hybrid: the truck may still be diesel-powered, but the electric assist from the trailer allows the truck to run more efficiently. Replacing diesel with kWh can save operators money while also reducing emissions. This incremental approach may be more accessible and less capital-intensive than replacing the truck itself.
From the article:
The driver’s only window into the system is a small display readable from the cab’s side mirror that shows the system status and battery charge level. Nothing about the trailer’s handling or licensing requirements changes. The partners project savings of up to 7,000 liters of diesel per trailer per year, which is enough to keep about 19 tonnes of carbon dioxide out of the air…

Trailer Dynamics, an Aachen-based company, has conducted field tests with BMW Logistics, DB Schenker, Duvenbeck, and Volkswagen Konzernlogistik, reporting average fuel savings of around 40% for diesel tractor combinations, substantially higher than the up to 18% reduction implied by the Nivalis projection… Trailer Dynamics prices its system between €145,000 and €195,000 and targets a payback period of no more than five years. Nivalis targets five to six years at current costs.

Travel trailers too

By MDMurphy • Score: 3 Thread
There are a few electric travel trailers out there now. They are fully electric, like these, but I guess when you combine with the hauling vehicle you could call the whole system a hybrid. Besides the usual regenerative braking, you could apply a little resistance on long flat stretches of road to top off the battery for either an upcoming hill, or to run a refrigeration unit. With route planning, the system could know if you have a big hill coming up and need to top off, or if you’ll be dropping the trailer before then.

This seems dubious…

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This seems dubious at multiple levels.

Solar panels: The roof of a trailer is about 450 square feet. In the northeastern U.S., you would average only 3.5 hours of full sun, so you’d get only a little over 13 kW per day.

Tesla semis are pretty efficient, and they use about 1.7 kWh per mile. So in an entire day, covering the entire roof of a trailer with solar panels would add a whopping 7 miles of range, or 15 minutes of extra driving — the equivalent of plugging into a Tesla Megacharger for maybe 30 seconds or so.

Let’s optimistically assume that the vehicle can carry 48,000 pounds. If those panels occupy the full roof area, then at about 3 pounds of weight per square foot, those solar panels would weigh 1500 pounds, or about 3% of your cargo, all to reduce your fuel usage by as little as 1% if you’re doing long haul at 65 MPH. And that weight number may be wildly optimistic. Trailers like that aren’t designed to have weight on the roof, and would require additional structure to hold that extra weight. The real losses could be significantly higher. Unless you’re driving less than a couple of hundred miles in a day, the solar panels won’t break even. And if you’re driving less than a couple of hundred miles per day, there’s no reason you can’t go electric.

Battery and motor on the trailer: I would expect most trucks to be used primarily for either short-haul or long-haul purposes, not both. If you’re doing long-haul, you’d probably be better off with an actual hybrid tractor so that you get the benefit no matter whose trailer you’re hauling. If you’re doing short-haul, there’s likely no reason not to go full electric.

I just don’t get it.

‘Billionaire Exodus? California Drew 10x More Venture Capital Than Any Other State This Year’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
California drew more than $335 billion in venture capital funding this year, reports the Los Angeles Times, citing data released Thursday by PitchBook on private market funding:
Its next biggest competitor, New York, raised less than a tenth of California’s total. Texas raised 1/40th of the amount… Although a campaign for a new tax on billionaires has convinced some ultra-rich residents to shift to other states and businesses often complain that high property and energy costs and an anti-business regulatory regime make it too tough to make money in the state, the inability of the top talent, companies and investors in AI to set up elsewhere shows California’s enduring attraction.

The state’s economy grew 5% last year to a record $4.25 trillion, making it larger than every country other than the U.S., China and Germany. It is home to nearly 400 billion-dollar startups — more than any other state, according to CB Insights… Among metropolitan regions, Los Angeles ranked behind only Silicon Valley and New York, which attracted $98 billion and $11.5 billion in venture investment, respectively… Investors poured in nearly $8 billion across 207 deals in the Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Santa Ana metro areas, up 28% from a year earlier, according to PitchBook…

Nearly 90% of invested dollars [in California] went to AI firms, up from last year, when around 65% of new funds were allocated to AI. “If you’re a tech company and you’re not an AI company, you have a very, very difficult opportunity ahead of you to raise capital,” Stanford said.

Re:Wait…?

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You have no idea what the article is saying or what is real. here is an unbiased summary of reality.

No state ‘dislikes’ billionaires, they all want them.
All states have various taxes.
A bunch of conservatives claim California hates billionaries, because they tax them more than certain red states do.
Some conservatives think a proposed one time tax law in California will drive away billionaires.
The actual facts are that billionaires do MORE business in California than they do in ANY other state. After it is New York City.
California has not changed anything about themselves, they continue to do the same thing they always did.

This article is implying that the conservatives are wrong about the relationship between California and Billionaires, as demonstrated by these facts. But of course, the conservatives that hate California also do not respect the Los Angeles Times.

Going to be interesting in CA

By oldgraybeard • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Once, the one time 5% is spent the state will have to figure out how to do the one time 5% more than once to keep feeding the spending machine.
The problem is Fraud, Grift and run away Government spending can not co exist so they will need to do something different at some point.

Re: Wait…?

By kenh • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Horseshit.

The article claimed an increase in venture capital investments in CA was proof that billionaires weren’t fleeing CA to avoid a wealth tax.

The two things are untelated.

Re: Wait…?

By broward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

almost $1 trillion has left CA since that tax proposal was floated.

https://www.scry.llc/2026/01/1…

and most of the VC capital is AI bubble investment?
yeah, let’s see how that works out. :)

Re: Leaving. Billionaires or billionaires’ money?

By Todd Knarr • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

That works short-term, but then they become a non-resident with CA-based income which means they have to file CA taxes under non-resident rules. Much less favorable, and leaves them open to CA doing any number of things to tax rules. One would be considering loans secured by stock options (not actual shares) to be income.

‘Forget Coders. The Real AI Threat Is In the Back Office’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Which jobs are most threatened by AI? “Programmers, software engineers and other tech industry employees,” goes one common answer.

“But many economists are more concerned about a different, larger group of white-collar workers,” reports the New York Times: customer service reps, bookkeepers, payroll clerks and HR specialists, “who fly under the radar but collectively account for tens of millions of jobs…”
They are spread across the country and throughout the economy, working in every industry, in big cities and small towns, at major corporations and mom-and-pop businesses… These jobs typically offer a middle-class salary or a pathway to achieving one — much as manufacturing jobs did for men before decades of globalisation and automation wiped many of them away… For now, such an outcome is a fear, not a forecast. Despite high-profile layoffs in tech and finance, there is little firm evidence that AI has hurt the labour market as a whole.

Economists have become increasingly convinced that disruptions are likely, but they say it is too early to know where or how widespread they will be. They remain broadly sceptical of claims that the technology will lead to mass unemployment in the near future. Some AI industry leaders have walked back such predictions in recent weeks. But given the extraordinary pace at which companies are adopting AI — and at which the technology is improving — economists say policymakers need to consider the potential effects on the labour market. And they say they are concerned that the public debate has focused too much on software engineers and a relative handful of other high-status careers — lawyers, consultants, economists — rather than the workers who could be most vulnerable…

Economists at Northwestern University recently recalculated measures of AI exposure based on the makeup of the total workforce, not just the people using the technology. Administrative and front-line roles, such as customer service representatives, rose to the top of the list. “The most affected jobs are secretaries, are routine clerks,” said Michelle Yin, one of the working paper’s authors. “They’re not computer scientists or data scientists at all.”
The article also includes this counterpoint from an economist at the University of Illinois who has studied earlier waves of white-collar automation: that like other disruptive technologies, AI likely will also create new jobs. So the possibility exists AI will make workers more productive and allow them to earn more. “I would be cautious about just focusing on what are we losing as opposed to what are we going to gain on the other side.”

Lol

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
“AI will make workers more productive and allow them to earn more” yeah sure that’ll happen. Best I can give you is more work for the same pay and it’s your fault when the AI fucks up.

Some statistics on who works those jobs

By will4 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

https://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat…

Human resources managers - 314,000 workers - 79% women - 80% are white
Human resources workers - 897,000 workers - 78% women - 78% are white
Human resources assistants, except payroll and timekeeping 124,000 workers - 79% women - 73% are white

Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks - 1,254,000 workers - 82% women - 81% are white

Payroll and timekeeping clerks 166,000 workers -82% women - 81% are white

Customer service representatives 2,600, workers - 64% women - 71% are white

AI will remove all the clerks

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If your job is filling out forms or collating information to produce reports, if it’s taking notes, if it’s taking inventory, if it’s managing schedules, if it’s producing documentation…

All those jobs are going to fall to IT. Not entirely, but it’ll be human oversight and an AI replacing a team of white collar workers.

At the same time, it’ll be embodied in robots and unskilled manual labor jobs will evaporate (this is already happening).

Good luck adjusting when the disruption is broad, deep, and rapid throughout the economy and workers can’t retrain as quickly as jobs are eliminated. This isn’t the automobile, this is “cheap obedient slaves with almost no support cost for those who can afford the upfront price tag”.

Who are they? Secretaries

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Here’s the article’s actual answer to the question (not in the summary): “The most affected jobs are secretaries, are routine clerks,” said Michelle Yin, one of the working paper’s authors…

Secretarial jobs were already cataclysmically wiped out by the word processing/computer revolution. It’s hard to remember anymore how ubiquitous secretaries were to businesses.

However, turns out that this previous revolution didn’t reduce the workforce, because the number of IT support personnel required increased directly as the number of secretaries decreased.

Accounting oddly is resilient

By aaarrrgggh • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

My old company tried workday to simplify time tracking and accounting. It was a miserable failure despite a huge committment and time investment. The bulk of accounting is significantly more shades of gray than black and white which makes it terrible for AI/automation. You can make it easier to automate by designing your systems and processes around automation, but that can force you to lose some of the benefits of the original system.

My guess is that HR will be much more gutted, as the whole point of HR today is to make everything a repeatable process and eliminate subjective bias. Customer service automation is miserable so far, but the decision tree/script does lend itself to automation, at least for first tier support (if you don’t care about actually providing service to your customers).

Linus Torvalds on AI, Junk Patches, Humans, and Godzilla

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Linus Torvalds once said LLMs might bring a 10X increase to programmer productivity. But speaking at Open Source Summit India 2026, he now says that number was “not scientific,” reports ZDNet. “That was pulled out of my ass number, obviously.”
Today, he continued, “we’re at the point where hopefully it creates more productivity than it takes away,” but “we certainly saw more junk being generated by LLMs than we saw useful code up until the like early this year.... it can actually be a huge drain on resources when it takes humans a lot of effort to figure out that, hey, this machine-generated report was not true.” Even now, he said, “most of the good ones require more than just the LLM,” because “we’ve had to push back quite a bit… if you find a bug with an LLM, it’s not enough to just ask the LLM to make a bug report and then throw it over the fence to us. We want to see a suggested patch; we want to see the human who ran the LLM act as a kind of back-and-forth.”

Torvalds described many AI-generated patches as “mindless band-aid kind of patches… they may fix the immediate problem, but the kind of bug remains, and it just is waiting in the hallway to hit you in another place.” For his own toy projects, he uses LLMs as prototypers: “I use them as a way to prototype things… quite often the code is not usable in that form, but it’s a great way to try something out,” while insisting that for kernel-level fixes, “LLMs, in my experience, have not been at that level yet.”

Torvalds acknowledged that some AI-found issues have been “absolutely, stunningly, I mean, interesting in a painful kind of way,” especially security problems that “show up in the technology press two days later.” Despite the embarrassment, he said, “I’m very much not a shoot-the-messenger kind of person. I think we’re much better off with LLMs finding bugs, even when they are embarrassing, and they are things that we should probably have found two decades ago.”
Torvalds also said he’s using AI “for my own toy projects… Every time I travel to some new place, and this is the first time I’ve been to India, I send the kids pictures of where I am, and for some strange reason, Godzilla seems to follow me around and gets added to those pictures.”

ZDNet notes that Torvalds concluded, “There are many useful and less useful uses for AI,” and “I think Godzilla is a great place to stop.”

Thanks to Slashdot reader joshuark for sharing the article.

Re: I’m waiting for…

By madbrain • Score: 5, Informative Thread

No, they are not as accurate as senior devs. They still hallucinate, peppering their work with some elementary school mistakes no human dev would ever make. The human supervisor needs to be able to catch those.