Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. The US Government’s Anthropic Models Ban Was Never About an AI Jailbreak
  2. Russian Spam and Profanities Are Now Plaguing the Arch Linux AUR
  3. Firefox 152 Adds JPEG XL Support, Redesigned Settings
  4. Venus’ Strange Rotation Was Likely Triggered By a High Velocity Moon-Sized Impactor
  5. A Chinese Rocket Breaks Apart Dangerously Close To the Starlink Constellation
  6. Cybersecurity Vets Protest ‘Dangerous’ US Government Ban On Anthropic’s Most Powerful Models
  7. The US Government Is Letting a Key Data Center Regulation Expire
  8. FBI Issues Urgent Kali365 Security Warning For Teams, Outlook, OneDrive Users
  9. Google Chrome’s Next Update Will Mark the End of Popular Ad Blockers
  10. Users Cry Foul After AMD Stripped Memory Crypto From Its Consumer CPUs
  11. Trump’s ‘Made In the USA’ Phone Is Just a Reskinned HTC U24 Pro
  12. Britain Unveils Sweeping Ban On Social Media For Under-16s
  13. Fox Is Buying Roku For $22 Billion
  14. Google CEO Largely Avoids Discussing AI In Stanford Commencement Speech
  15. Swiss Voters Reject Proposal To Cap Population At 10 Million

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.

The US Government’s Anthropic Models Ban Was Never About an AI Jailbreak

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
TechCrunch’s Zack Whittaker argues that the U.S. government’s abrupt export-control order forcing Anthropic to pull its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models offline was “never about an AI jailbreak” threat. Instead, it was driven more by "personality differences" between the AI company and Trump administration. Security experts say the reported guardrail bypass did not justify the order and warn that the move sets a troubling precedent: the government can unilaterally disrupt American software products without court approval, potentially undermining trust in U.S. AI providers. From the report:
Katie Moussouris, a cybersecurity veteran and researcher who founded Luta Security, said in a blog post that Anthropic recently shared with her a private copy of a paper written by security researchers describing an alleged guardrail bypass in Fable 5. (The Wall Street Journal reports that the paper’s authors are security researchers at Amazon.) Moussouris said that Anthropic reached out to ask for her take on the paper. Moussouris’ blog post described how the researchers triggered the guardrail bypass, but said that the bypass itself “should never have triggered an export control.” The difference is largely between asking an AI model to “review code for security issues” versus asking it to “fix this code.”

The end result is largely the same, even if the questions are posed slightly differently. “The behavior described in the paper cannot meaningfully be fixed, and any attempt would only weaken the model for defense,” said Moussouris, who criticized the export control directive as hasty, heavy-handed, and misguided. Moussouris and dozens of other top security researchers and experts have since called on the Trump administration to revoke the export control order, calling the move to pull advanced cybersecurity capabilities from network defenders in the U.S. as “dangerous.”

Past administrations have made sweeping decisions on knowledge gaps. For instance, language used by the U.S. government during the 2010s to fix export law covering cybersecurity tools that could also be used for cyberattacks was so broad that inadvertently, it nearly outlawed legitimate security and vulnerability research. However, the Trump administration’s directive appears retaliatory. Justin Hendrix, the editor of Tech Policy Press, said the Trump administration’s move is “likely to raise alarms in foreign capitals about the reliability of American AI for critical applications.” The message is that AI companies in the United States can’t be trusted to operate without interference from the U.S. government.

The Trump administration hasn’t confirmed why it invoked its export control directive. Did the officials misread the report and freak out? Did Amazon CEO Andy Jassy say something to senior government officials that prompted the reaction, out of caution or spite? Was something lost in translation, or was this a way to pressure Anthropic, with whom the administration already has a fractious relationship? It’s possible that the White House was unaware of the far-reaching consequences of the letter’s demand and officials are scrambling to undo the damage of their own making. To quote Hendrix, “the climate is one of a cloud of suspicion that senior officials are picking favorites based on personal and political factors.” The aftermath is that the government has set a dangerous precedent about how much control it intends to wield over the release of American-made software. This time the government took issue with Anthropic; tomorrow it could be with anyone else.

Russian Spam and Profanities Are Now Plaguing the Arch Linux AUR

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The Arch Linux User Repository “AUR” is facing another issue just days after more than 1,500 packages were found carrying malware. According to Phoronix, over 70 AUR packages have reportedly been modified to insert Russian spam and profane messages into users’ shell configuration files. From the report:
Nicolas Boichat with his AI/LLM detection bot detected some questionable messages appearing in AUR content. Russian messages were being added post-install to the bashrc / zshrc / Fish configuration, etc containing offensive messaging. Those commits happened on the 14th, after the recent malware fiasco. And then over the past day reporting on dozens of AUR packages having similar Russian messages containing offensive language.

The latest update on that thread indicates more than 70 AUR packages having this Russian spam / offensive messaging. Among those various Python packages, Ruby packages, Llama.cpp, and others. At least the AI/LLM bots are proving helpful here in proactively picking up on some of the AUR abuses until the fundamental situation can be better handled.

This is validating my decision to stay on Debian

By reiscw • Score: 3 Thread

I run Linux as a desktop and have done so since around 2008. I started with Ubuntu, and after a while (probably around 5-10 years) I moved to Debian. Every once in a while, I’ll read about one of the new Arch-based distros (Manjaro, Calyx OS) and decide to give it a try. After about a few hours, I realize that some of the programs I use on a regular basis are not available (easily) outside of the AUR. When you read about the AUR as an intermediate user, you understand how dangerous it can be, but you feel like it’s necessary to use Linux as your main computing device. There are applications that are packaged as DEB/RPM but not for Arch, and are not available as Flatpaks (or AppImages or Snaps). Some of these are proprietary.

One in particular which comes to mind is Insync, which I use to synchronize Google shared folders to my home directory. It is much easier to use than rclone and the latency is a lot lower. If I move to an Arch-based system, I have to get that from the AUR. Now, I do feel like I have the experience to read the PKGBUILD and audit it for weird stuff going on, but I’m also not arrogant enough to believe that someone could not sneak something by me.

I use Debian Stable, and all of my software is available. Some of the software is dated, obviously; I’m running KDE 6.3.6 and kernel 6.12. But in general, I don’t have huge issues with that, and if there was an application I needed to update, I probably could do it either with Flatpaks or compiling from source. Honestly though, I cannot remember the last time I needed to do that. Maybe it helps that I’m not a professional software developer and I don’t need access to the latest versions of everything. I also know that some Debian users address those issues by running testing or unstable.

There’s a part of me that wonders if these attacks are related to the surge in popularity of Calyx OS. I teach high school, and I noticed last year that one of my ninth graders was running KDE on his laptop. I asked him what distro he was running, and he said Calyx OS. I was surprised by that - most of the time when I run into a high school kid they’re running something in the Debian family (including Ubuntu and its derivatives).

Firefox 152 Adds JPEG XL Support, Redesigned Settings

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Linuxiac:
Mozilla has released Firefox 152, the latest update to its popular open-source web browser, with updated settings, improved media controls, experimental JPEG XL support, and various platform-specific fixes for desktop and Android. A key update is the redesigned Firefox Settings page, which now features clearer groupings, improved navigation, and a more streamlined structure for easier customization. The release also expands built-in spellchecker support, adding dictionaries for Croatian, English (UK), Georgian, Persian, Slovenian, Tajik, Tamil, Tibetan, Turkish, Welsh, and Xhosa. […] Importantly, Firefox now offers experimental support for JPEG XL, an image format with improved compression over WebP, JPEG, PNG, and GIF. Users can enable JPEG XL in the Firefox Labs panel within Settings.

Venus’ Strange Rotation Was Likely Triggered By a High Velocity Moon-Sized Impactor

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
New simulations suggest Venus’ extremely slow backward rotation may have been triggered by a high-angle collision with a fast-moving object roughly one-tenth its mass. The impact could have dramatically altered Venus’ spin and melted nearly its entire mantle. Universe Today reports:
Venus’ bizarre and extraordinarily slow retrograde rotation on its axis has long puzzled planetary scientists. But in a new paper presented at the recent European Geosciences Union General Assembly in Vienna, the authors argue that their models indicate that a high angle moon-sized, high-velocity impactor likely triggered Venus’s strange 248-day rotation. And it probably happened within the first 50 million years of Venus’ formation. […] The team found that an impactor that is about a tenth of Venus’ mass hitting the planet at a high angle could drastically show the early young planet’s rotation.

Depending on the actual impact parameters, we can slow down a rapidly rotating early Venus to rotation rates that are that are compatible with long-term evolution towards a slow rotating planet, says [Cedric Gillmann, the paper’s lead author and a planetary scientist at ETH Zurich]. Or even in some cases with large energetic impact that happen with a tangential impact that would even put planets early on in already a retrograde but faster rotation, he says. In the simulations, giant impacts expectedly produce surface magma oceans, the paper’s authors note. Their relative depths vary depending on impact properties: from a shallow melt layer in the order of 100km thick to a fully molten mantle, they note. If the surface can radiate heat to space efficiently, the magma ocean cools down quickly, they write.

If Gillmann and colleagues are correct, Venus’ likely impactor also melted some 99 percent of Venus’ mantle. That is, the interior structure that extends between its core and crust. You will get rid of that impact heat pretty efficiently, and after a few hundred million years, you end up seeing an evolution that is very difficult to distinguish from a case where you don’t have an impact, says Gillmann. What role the impact may have played in Venus’ lack of plate tectonics, however, remains open for debate. But it’s known that Venus’ lack of a large-scale carbon recycling mechanism likely led to its current runaway greenhouse.

Plate tectonics?

By bradley13 • Score: 3 Thread
In the absence of a moon, I would have thought plate tectonics unlikely?

Plutos Revenge.

By geekmux • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Or even the moons of Pluto (Of course it can’t have moons since its not a planet)

Pluto is smiling. Devilishly.

Pluto remembers the last time Trad Universe tried to snatch a planet card away from a gravitationally-challenged body. His distant cousin came flying in and s-lammed into this big fucker. Heard he hit it so hard it saw stars and rings.

Nobody picked on dwarfs for a long time after that. Until recent times.

Jupiter, might want to keep an eye open.

A Chinese Rocket Breaks Apart Dangerously Close To the Starlink Constellation

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A Chinese Zhuque-2E rocket’s upper stage broke apart shortly after last week’s June 9 launch, likely creating 100 to 150 pieces of debris in a busy region of low-Earth orbit crossed by the ISS and lower-altitude Starlink satellites. Most fragments should reenter within months because of atmospheric drag, but experts say the incident adds to a worsening trend as China leaves more large rocket bodies in orbit while expanding its launch rate. Ars Technica reports:
The US Space Force confirmed the breakup event in a post on space-track.org, a website used by the military to distribute orbit data to the public. “The tracked pieces are being incorporated into routine conjunction assessment to support spaceflight safety,” the Space Force wrote in an advisory. “There are currently no threats to human spaceflight. Analysis is ongoing.” So far, the Space Force has not added any of the debris fragments to the official catalog of human-made space objects.

[…] The bad news is that the Zhuque-2E’s breakup is the latest chapter in China’s growing contribution to the space junk problem. After decades of leaving spent rocket bodies in orbit, launch operators in most countries now reserve enough fuel to steer their upper stages back to Earth for controlled reentries. Rocket bodies attributed to Russia and the former Soviet Union account for the bulk of the launch-related debris in long-lived orbits, followed by China and the United States. But the Russian and American numbers are declining or holding steady, while the mass of Chinese rocket bodies in these long-lived orbits has grown by more than 150 percent in the past five years, according to a new analysis by Space Domain Awareness expert Jim Shell. The increase comes as China ramps up launches of its own megaconstellations designed to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink.

Rocket bodies are the most concerning sources of space debris because they are typically fairly large in size and mass, often with residual propellant and high-pressure gases that can trigger an explosion. There is no way to maneuver or dispose of them if left abandoned in orbit after releasing their payloads. McKnight characterized the recent breakup of the Zhuque-2E rocket as a “slight space safety issue,” but the trend is not good. China’s Long March 6A rocket has an especially bad track record, including two explosions that littered a higher-altitude low-Earth orbit with more than 1,000 debris fragments, where they will remain for decades or centuries. “Three of the top four breakup events in LEO are of Chinese origin, with two of these events being from Chinese (rocket body) explosions in the last four years,” McKnight said.

no room

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 4, Funny Thread
It is a bit hard not to hit a star link satellite when something breaks up there. Those satellites take up a lot of space.

Re:redundancy

By spaceman375 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Have you never heard of Kesler syndrome?

Re:redundancy

By crow • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yeah, that’s not really a thing in LEO where debris clears itself fairly quickly due to atmospheric drag.

On the other hand

By devilops • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Starlink satellites are everywhere, complicating launches and astronomy observations

Re:redundancy

By 0123456 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Even this article says that most parts will reenter in a few months. Anything small and low-density will come down rapidly due to drag at that altitude and the rest will follow.

SpaceX chose it in part so a dead satellite wouldn’t stay around for long causing trouble for other Starlink satellites or other users of that region of space.

Cybersecurity Vets Protest ‘Dangerous’ US Government Ban On Anthropic’s Most Powerful Models

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
A group made up of dozens of cybersecurity experts, including several well-known veterans of the industry, published an open letter to the U.S. government asking it to lift the export control order on Anthropic’s Fable and Mythos models. According to the open letter, “this action has taken the best models away from [cybersecurity] defenders” who now can’t use the models to find vulnerabilities and make their software and products more secure. “To pull the best capabilities away from defenders without a good reason when our adversaries are rapidly advancing is dangerous,” read the letter.

On Friday, the U.S. government ordered Anthropic to limit the export of Fable and Mythos, citing national security concerns, without explaining the specific reasons behind the order, according to Anthropic. In response, the company suspended access to the models to all users worldwide. As of this writing, the letter is signed by 76 cybersecurity experts, including Alex Stamos, former Facebook chief of security; Casey Ellis, the founder bug bounty platform Bugcrowd; Jon Callas, famed cryptographer and former Apple security design and architecture manager; Paul Vixie, computer scientist ; Dino Dai Zovi, the former head of applied security engineering at Block; Katie Moussouris, the founder of Luta Security; and Rachel Tobac, the CEO of the security awareness training firm SocialProof Security.

[…] Anthropic said that the White House export control order may have been based on a report that there was a method to bypass — or jailbreak — Fable to unlock its powerful Mythos-level capabilities. According to Katie Moussouris, one of the signatories of the open letter, the method was demonstrated by Amazon researchers in a paper that is not public but that she has reviewed. But Moussouris said in a blog post that the paper did not actually demonstrate a real jailbreak. Instead, she wrote, the researchers simply asked Fable to fix open source code with public and known vulnerabilities along with “deliberately planted vulnerabilities,” after the model initially refused to “review the code for security issues.”

“The behavior described in the paper cannot meaningfully be fixed, and any attempt would only weaken the model for defense,” Moussouris wrote. “Defenders need to be able to ask AI to fix the bugs in a file, explain why the fix matters, and write tests that confirm the patch works. That is not a guardrail bypass. It is the most valuable thing an AI model can do for defensive security: executing the find, fix, and test loop defenders run every day.” Moussouris’ critique was echoed in the open letter, which also said that the group of experts believe the model capabilities in the Amazon paper “can be replicated” on OpenAI’s GPT-5.5, on Anthropic’s own publicly available Claude Opus 4.8 and Sonnet, “and even Chinese models like Kimi 2.7.”

Moussouris told TechCrunch that “the bugs used to demonstrate the techniques in the paper can be found using the other models. The method in the paper is a guardrail bypass technique. Other models that lack the Fable guardrails often won’t refuse the straightforward request to look for security bugs, so they don’t need a bypass.” The letter also asked for transparently and fairly enforced regulations created by “a democratic rule-making process” that are based on scientific research done by industry and academic experts, and “used only to the minimal extent necessary to ensure the safety of the American public.”

AD campaign

By Uldis Segliņš • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
This is just a big ad campaign. Artificial int… I mean shitshow. Trying to create scarcity, urgency - same methods scammers use to part you and your money. Neither is there scarcity as there is no actual need, nor there is urgency as nothing will collapse today. Keep calm and eat your popcorn until the bubble bursts.

Re:Antropic literally asked for this

By T34L • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

There’s no such lesson for him to learn; the whole thing around access to Mythos, including the initial limited access pre “Fable”, and the “regulation” now, is entirely a hype building promotion. It doesn’t even matter if the state administration is in on the grift, or just serving as useful idiots; their job in this is to be the “out of Anthropic’s control” throttle that offers another convenient explanation of the scarcity of this mythological AI tech that nobody can get quite enough time with to really evaluate how useful it is in practice and most importantly, never get to break Anthropic’s compute bank with it. This way, Anthropic gets to keep making headlines with their latest and greatest; too hot to handle, too smart for safety, too exceptional for the politics to let it pass by. Meanwhile, nobody gets to see if they can actually offer it at scale and at sane price. Nobody gets to run actual comprehensive benchmarks that’d really compare it to the alternatives.

The goddamn name of the project betrays the play right off the bat in a way that I’d call an incredibly daring of a lampshade anytime before our current post-truth world; it’s not about progress, or performance, or invention, or incrementalism, or efficiency, capability, practicality, imagination, or even fucking simply doing a job. It’s about mythology. It’s about tales. About telling fucking stories. And hoo boy, do many people seem to really love stories these days.

Computer scientist?

By Charlotte • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Paul Vixie, computer scientist

That’s like saying “Linus Torvalds, computer scientist”. The guy invented DNS for fuck’s sake.

Re:Computer scientist?

By h33t l4x0r • Score: 4, Funny Thread
He’s no Al Gore.

misinformation

By groobly • Score: 3 Thread

No, government did not order “Anthropic to limit the export of Fable and Mythos.” What they actually did order is more sweeping: they banned them from making it available to any foreigner, including in the US, including Anthropic’s own employees.

The US Government Is Letting a Key Data Center Regulation Expire

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The Federal Data Center Enhancement Act (FDCEA) is set to expire in September without an apparent replacement, potentially ending requirements for federal agencies to report on data-center efficiency, resilience, energy and water use, and contractor sustainability. Wired reports:
Despite the public backlash, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the government agency that sets guidance for how agencies implement policies in line with the president’s agenda, is not providing any plans for how federal agencies should manage the sunset or continue to implement reporting beyond the timeline of the law. This, current and former workers at OMB and the General Services Administration (GSA) say, signals that the Trump administration is set to take an even more hands-off approach to data center oversight and regulation.

A replacement for the requirements laid out in FDCEA would, in other administrations, have been in the works for months ahead of its expiration. An employee with the GSA, the agency that oversees the government’s IT services and helps to implement the FDCEA, says that the lack of any sort of plan is highly uncommon. The employee spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. “Never in the history of data center policies has a policy expired without another one having been painstakingly worked on for three years behind the scenes,” says the GSA employee. “The technology has changed so much it’s not about getting everything right, it’s about doing the best they can and updating to a new policy. They claim they’re going to make sure private companies pay their fare share, but they haven’t explained how they’ll do that.”

[…] There has been a burst of data-center-related legislation introduced in Congress this year, from bills that mandate environmental reviews of data centers to bills designed to protect local moratoriums. However, it appears that none of these bills are designed to address the requirements in FDCEA, nor do they specifically address federally run or leased data centers. […] A search of reginfo.gov, the OMB website that contains reports on the president’s Unified Agenda, also turns up nothing for the FDCEA.
“By letting this expire, OMB is going to enter into this new age of prioritizing rapid AI development over any sort of centralized control or rigorous standards,” says the anonymous GSA employee who spoke to Wired. “In the absence of a new policy from OMB, [GSA] has no directive or measurable standards with which to point agencies towards managing data centers efficiently.”

Sgt Schultz: “I see nothing! I hear nothing!”

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5 Thread

potentially ending requirements for federal agencies to report on data-center efficiency, resilience, energy and water use, and contractor sustainability. … signals that the Trump administration is set to take an even more hands-off approach to data center oversight and regulation.

Sounds like another case of if it’s not measured, it doesn’t happen, like when Trump said during COVID, “If we stop testing right now, we’d have very few cases, if any.” (Ignoring the obvious fact that they’d still exist, we just wouldn’t know about them, noting that would have been better PR for him in the moment, but not so much in reality for the rest of us.)

Re:Are there people in the government

By arglebargle_xiv • Score: 5, Funny Thread
“Thank you for calling the US government. We’re very sorry but we’re quite busy right now running UFC fights and harassing Gavin Newsom. Next up is thinking up new distractions to amuse the Dear Leader. If you’re worried about silly things like the cost of living or what’s going to happen to your 401k, please call the psychic hotline for advice. If you’d like to hear this message in Spanish, please press 1 and an ICE team will be by shortly to deport you”.

Re:Are there people in the government

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Informative Thread

my posts don’t have signatures and I don’t see any in the other posts, I don’t know what you are referring to.

Musk is an unhinged, drug addicted malignant sociopath, of course he says shitty things about anything he doesn’t like. If he didn’t, he would be nothing just like Trump. Musk is a top ten enemy of our country, and likely at the top of that list.

Free market…

By devloop • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The idea is to let “The Free Market self-regulate”.
In reality, this is code for “Give the tech billionaire oligarchs unrestricted free reign”.

Re: Are there people in the government

By cpurdy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The UFC fights were paid for by UFC, no federal taxpayer dollars.

There is no evidence that the UFC is paying for the full cost of the event. US taxpayers are on the hook for this, and the UFC will pay some portion of the cost of this inbred hillbilly shindig.

Trump is busy making our nations capitol beautiful for our 250th

Holy shit you are one stupid ass-licker.

FBI Issues Urgent Kali365 Security Warning For Teams, Outlook, OneDrive Users

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
alternative_right shares a report from The Hill:
The FBI released an urgent security warning to the public about a fast-acting scam targeting Microsoft 365 users on Teams, Outlook and OneDrive. The agency warned that the hacking platform Kali365 seeks out OAuth device codes, allowing scammers to sneak past multi-factor authentication codes, and without the need for a password, to access Microsoft accounts. Scammers will send a phishing email impersonating a trusted document-sharing service with a device code and instructions on how to verify, according to the FBI.

“Kali365 lowers the barrier of entry, providing less-technical attackers access to AI-generated phishing lures, automated campaign templates, real-time targeted individual/entity tracking dashboards, and OAuth token capture capabilities,” the FBI stated. The platform is sold to scammers with a $250 per month subscription. The FBI, which first detected Kali365 in April, described the hacking platform as an “emerging Phishing-as-a-Service platform.” Hackers with limited skills can access advanced phishing tools through the platform, according to NordPass.

Re:Damn

By Black Parrot • Score: 5, Funny Thread

They’d run it again today anyway.

Looks like LLM-assisted attacks become noticeable

By gweihir • Score: 3 Thread

Well, time to fix all that crappy software. Or else.

Fast-acting scam targeting Microsoft 365 users on

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 3 Thread
Who know the product was full of holes!

Re:Looks like LLM-assisted attacks become noticeab

By zlives • Score: 4, Funny Thread

maybe they can pass a law banning AI use for illegal purposes… or atleast for kids under 16

Re:Looks like LLM-assisted attacks become noticeab

By nightflameauto • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

They can’t. They laid off all the engineers once they got the A.I.

This raises an interesting question. We’ve seen situations where AI will behave in unpredictable ways to keep itself on track to complete whatever task it has been given. How long do you suppose it will be before some AI system is being used by developers on one hand, and hackers / crackers on the other, and it will intentionally leave in holes on the development side that it’s cracker side can then exploit?

I love that software is finally catching up with the real world. Now we can have virtual scams built on top of a world that’s essentially scams from top to bottom.

Google Chrome’s Next Update Will Mark the End of Popular Ad Blockers

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Google is removing Chrome’s last remaining workarounds for Manifest V2 extensions, effectively ending support for legacy ad blockers such as the original uBlock Origin. 9to5Google reports:
CyberNews points out a Chromium commit that removes support for the “kExtensionManifestV2Disabled” flag, which is referred to as “dead code” seeing as Chrome no longer supports Manifest V2 extensions. This removal acts as the final stop for many Manifest V2-based ad blocker extensions that were still in use today — the flag was effectively a loophole to continue using these extensions.

A Googler on the commit explains: “MV2 extensions are no longer allowed in any supported version of Chrome, and we are removing support for them and the associated functionality. We won’t be able to provide / maintain this functionality indefinitely due to the complexity and tech debt, as well as the security risks it entails (we’ve actually found a number of bugs that are specific to MV2 lately). Of course, other browsers can continue supporting these if they so desire.”

This will also impact other Chromium-based browsers, though the comment notes that “other browsers can continue supporting these if they so desire.” Neowin points out that Microsoft Edge and Opera are likely to follow suit. Chrome 150, set to be released later this month, will remove this flag, while other leftover bits of Manifest V2 will be removed in the v151 release.

Re:If you block ads…

By taustin • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I hate puppies.

Re: Bye Chrome…

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Brave has its own filtering engine, separate from Chromium.

Re:PiHole

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s good and everyone should do it, but it’s worth noting that PiHole isn’t the be-all and end-all of solutions. There’s a significant portion of ad content that needs to be blocked dynamically based on page rendering rulesets which PiHole simply doesn’t catch. A proper browser plugin is still a must.

That said PiHole is a godsend for locked down Android devices on the network which don’t benefit from any simple adblocking.

Re:Why Chrome?

By king*jojo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’ve been running the “lite” version of uBlock Origin and it seems fine. I’m sure there’s some esoteric situations where it falls apart, but I’ve yet to run into them.

Yeah, esoteric situations like blocking alphabet’s own ads.

That’s the entire rub. Google wants you to block ads. All of them, except theirs. I think there’s a word for that.

Re:Bye Chrome…

By nikkipolya • Score: 5, Informative Thread

For every 1 person I know, who knows that a thing called an ad blocker exists, I know 10 others who haven’t heard of a thing called ad blocker. Consumer ignorance is what helps monopolies thrive. Google and every other capitalism hating corporate entity is betting on consumer ignorance.

Users Cry Foul After AMD Stripped Memory Crypto From Its Consumer CPUs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
A decade ago, AMD added a protection to its high-end CPUs to protect them against cold boot attacks and other types of physical exploits that siphon sensitive data out of the connected memory chips. Short for Transparent Secure Memory Encryption, TSME encrypts the entire contents stored in memory, making the data useless to physical attackers. Over time, AMD added TSME to lower-end processors, including the consumer version of its Ryzen chips, a CPU that costs less than the Pro version. Over the years, users of these lower-end chips have gotten used to the added security. Recently and without warning or notice, this lower-end line of AMD chips suddenly dropped the protection, and did so in a way that was impossible to detect on Windows machines and required a fair amount of technical work when using Linux.

AMD has yet to say why TSME worked on these CPUs, or even to confirm the change. AMD declined to answer questions sent by email other than to say TSME “is a security feature only applied to PRO CPUs as part of AMD PRO Technologies.” The statement is the first known time the chipmaker has explicitly made this restriction public. […] There’s no indication that AMD ever advertised or marketed TSME as being available in consumer CPUs. AMD has long said that a related memory protection, Secure Memory Encryption (SME), is available only in the Pro and Epyc CPU tiers. SME is OS-managed. It uses a single key and allows the OS to selectively encrypt individual memory pages. TSME is firmware-managed. It encrypts all RAM with no OS involvement. When active, it provides protection against physical attacks, including cold boot exploits, DRAM interface snooping, and memory module removal. It activates silently when enabled in the BIOS, making it the more practically useful of the two protections.
Ben Kilpatrick, a self-described “privacy-conscious Linux hobbyist,” discovered that TSME had stopped working on his consumer Ryzen processor despite remaining enabled in the BIOS. He spent months investigating, persuaded MSI engineers to test multiple CPUs, motherboards, and firmware versions, and filed a public AMD bug report that traced the change to newer AGESA firmware apparently disabling TSME on consumer chips while retaining it on Pro and EPYC models.

“AMD engineers’ comments, such as those mentioned above, and the years of TSME working just fine in the lower-cost tier processors, have understandably conditioned Kilpatrick and other users to reasonably regard it as an expected part of the chip package,” reports Ars Technica. “AMD quietly removing it and providing no acknowledgment or explanation strikes these users as something of a betrayal.”

Joe Fitzgerald, an expert in silicon-level security, said in an interview: “They could have not realized they did it leading to their cagey responses, or they could have done it intentionally and tried to get away with it, leading to the same cagey responses. But I really feel like an explanation should be in order, even if it was ‘TSME was never supposed to be supported. We did ship some firmwares that erroneously enabled it, but you shouldn’t use them since we can’t guarantee it’ll work properly.’"

Enshittification marches ever onward

By jenningsthecat • Score: 3 Thread

It seems there’s always some update pushed out that removes functionality, with the only option of regaining it being to either buy new hardware or pay a subscription fee.

Altering the deal after the fact is now a standard business practice. Isn’t that the kind of thing that governments are supposed to protect us from?

Sorry, I forgot - the corporate sector now IS the government, in many ways and many disguises. Freedom, democracy, and equality before the law are, increasingly, mere illusions.

Re:Enshittification marches ever onward

By sabbede • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I thought about that for a moment, but then I realized that I only turned it on for the hell of it and have exactly 0 concerns that someone will try a cold boot or any other physical attack on my personal computer. I don’t use bitlocker on it either. Why should I?

I’m still slightly annoyed to have something taken away, even if it wasn’t a very useful thing I didn’t need and may not have been working for some time.

Well, let’s face it

By sabbede • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
You don’t need it on consumer hardware. Who’s going to go through the trouble of hitting your DIMMs with liquid nitrogen? Nobody, that’s who. If you are under that sort of threat, you aren’t using consumer hardware.

Does it rub me a little raw that a feature of my 5900 has been removed? Yeah, a little, but not very. If it really bothered me, I’d probably make sure to use a firmware where it still worked.

How do they know it was working just fine?

By Burdell • Score: 3 Thread

Did they actually test the memory to see if it was encrypted? How do they know there wasn’t an AGESA bug that set the flag in cases where the CPU didn’t actually support the feature?

Trump’s ‘Made In the USA’ Phone Is Just a Reskinned HTC U24 Pro

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader necro81 writes:
The heavily promoted, $499 T1 “Trump Phone” was originally said to be “Made in the USA” and ship in September 2025. Later, that was downgraded to “Assembled in the USA.” Given the Trump Organization’s lack of engineering or supply chain expertise, many assumed the “T1” would just be a private-label phone made by someone else. After a number of delays, the first phones are finally shipping.

iFixit has performed a teardown and concluded that the T1 is a just gold-painted 2024 HTC U24 Pro — a device from a Taiwanese company, probably using mainland China design and supply chains. In collaboration with NBC News, the iFixit team examined both phones using CT scans, side-by-side teardowns, and even reassembled a working T1 using a U24 Pro main board. As for “assembled in the USA,” that
may
be true, in the same sense that your phone’s repairman can “assemble” a phone from a handful of subassemblies sourced from someone else. Or it may have been assembled in Guangdong, China like the other U24 Pros.

iFixit sums it up: “What you have is not an ‘American-Proud Design,’ but a phone designed in China, made in China, with the vast majority of parts sourced from China. I’m failing to find any stirring of American pride within me. I’ve certainly felt it before, so I can confirm that it is absent at this time.”
Quinn Nelson of Snazzy Labs on YouTube also published a comprehensive video of his experience ordering, unboxing, and tearing down the phone. “From pre-order emails landing in Gmail spam thanks to botched DMARC records, to paying for the $47.45 Trump Mobile 47 Plan over the phone, the entire buying experience was a disaster worthy of its own review,” writes Nelson.

Seriously, though

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Is literally anyone surprised at this point - at anything associated with Trump and/or his family?

Re:Anyone…

By larryjoe • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Anyone who thinks Donald Trump is a trustworthy, reliable guy you can safely buy a phone or a cryptocoin off … hasn’t been awake for 10 years or longer.

I’m not sure MAGA folks think that Trump is trustworthy, maybe, maybe not. What they think is that their lives are not what they expected. Income equality has hit them hard. They’re frustrated. Trump comes along and tells them that it’s not their fault. It’s the fault of Democrats, Biden, immigrants, Africans, Latin Americans, Chinese, blue states, etc. The one thing MAGA folk have despite income equality is a sea of votes. A populist comes along and sweeps away all their problems by blaming their social enemies. The blame was never really reasonable, but reason is not needed because the blame is felt viscerally. This is why Trump without fear of retribution can murder someone in Times Square, or say that he loves inflation, or unilaterally start a new war after blaming Biden for starting wars, etc. The social blame is what endures. Outsiders might view that blame as hate, but MAGA sees it as liberation.

Re: No Worries

By kqs • Score: 5, Informative Thread

They’ve been trained to believe that anything said by their bubble is Truth, anything said by anyone else is lies. Which is why yesterday’s Truth (release Epstein files) is today’s lies (don’t release, oops Trump is in it lots and lots).

“The truth has a well-known liberal bias” -a smart cancelled man

Re:Boiling Frogs

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Did a fighter last night accuse Michelle Obama of having a penis on national TV yes or no?

Notice what you responded to? I struck a nerve! The comment just reminded you how much you consider it.

Re:Another con from the conman. Nothing new here.

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“No conservative actually cared…”

Of course not, you don’t get Two Santas by caring. The party of sociopathy and racism only cares about power and money.

Britain Unveils Sweeping Ban On Social Media For Under-16s

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from NBC News:
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has announced a sweeping ban on social media use for those under 16, joining other countries around the world seeking to protect children online. “It’s a big step for our country,” Starmer said in a recorded video message released Monday. “Social media is making our children unhappy and unsafe, and as a parent, as much as a Prime Minister, I just can’t let that go on anymore,” he added.

The ban will include social platforms like Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and X, while there is no intention for messaging services like WhatsApp and Signal to be included, the government said in a release. […] Starmer’s government called Monday’s announcement a “landmark” move, saying the new measures would be brought to Parliament before Christmas, with protections expected to come into force next spring. Beyond the blanket social media ban, the restrictions will also include blocks on functions such as livestreaming and stranger communication with children for under-16s, it added.
“It’s not an easy thing to do. I’ll be honest about that,” Starmer said. “We haven’t rushed into it. We’ve looked carefully at the evidence, and we’ll have to adapt our approach as technology changes, learn from other countries which are taking similar steps.”
He went on to say that it will face resistance from some of the most powerful companies in the world. “But we will take them on, and we will win, because the need for action could not be any clearer.”

Re:Good old Labour

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Free speech just died in Britain. Sad.

Something has to exist for it to die. Britain never had free speech as an absolute right.

Re:BRILLIANT!

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Where do you think their activity will migrate to?

*Stares at cricket bat. *
*Stares at football.*
*Looks out the window at the park.*
*Considers going to the movies with friends.* …

Nah fuck it I’m going to spraypaint a corner store and steal some old lady’s handbag. It’s really the only option without my phone. There’s nothing else that we could be doing.

Re:Rock and a Hard Place of Implementation

By Z80a • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It is about ending anonymity on the internet.
Discord for example is requiring your face and ID to “prove you’re an adult”, in countries where these laws were implemented.

Re:Good old Labour

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Free speech just died in Britain. Sad.

You absolute clown, in Britain facts are not even an absolute defense for slander. The British have absolutely never even gotten close to having free speech.

Re:Rock and a Hard Place of Implementation

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Undoubtedly social media use by kids is problematic and it’s not something that can be handled just by parents. If all the other kids are communicating through social media, banning your kid is isolating them from their peer group.

But requiring identification to use communication tools is bound to be implemented poorly. Type your age doesn’t work, but anything more rigorous is step closer to an Orwellian future.

I agree. And I think age restrictions are a Band-Aid solution anyway. What we really need to look at is the harm that social media are causing to society in general, Then we need to overhaul social media with a view making it a net benefit to society instead of a benefit to tech broligarchs to the detriment of society.

Of course, the government of the most influential country in the world is owned by the uber-rich to an even greater extent than the governments of other countries. With the people who benefit most from destroying society in the name of profit also being the ones ultimately in charge, we may be kinda fucked.

Fox Is Buying Roku For $22 Billion

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Fox is buying Roku for $22 billion, combining Fox’s sports, news, entertainment, Tubi, and Fox One offerings with a streaming platform that reaches about 100 million people. The companies say the merger would create the “third-largest player in US television by share of viewing,” while Fox insists Roku will remain open to competing apps after the deal closes. CNN reports:
Fox has dabbled in streaming over the past few years — finally launching its Fox One competitor last August — but has lacked a serious streaming business with the ability to compete in a space dominated by YouTube, Netflix, Amazon, Disney+, HBO Max, Paramount+ and Peacock. With CNN parent company Warner Bros. Discovery receiving initial US regulatory approval to combine with Paramount, Fox’s purchase of Roku became more urgent. […] The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2027 with the companies forecasting $400 million in savings.
“This is a defining moment for Fox, and a natural extension of the deliberate and focused strategy we have been executing for nearly a decade,” said Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch. “Today, we take the next step: bringing together the most valuable live content portfolio in video consumption with the preeminent streaming platform through which America watches it.”
Murdoch said Roku will continue to offer competing apps. “It’s essential that Roku remain open and partner-friendly business. We don’t see that changing at all.”

Layoffs

By darkain • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2027 with the companies forecasting $400 million in savings.”

AKA: mass layoffs.

cord cutting

By danamln • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Transforming into a targeted ad broker, makes sense while you watch your traditional cable channels earnings dry up.

dead now

By awwshit • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Roku lost me when they became an advertising company. Roku is fully dead to me now.

Re:Layoffs

By Deathlizard • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I’m sure the home automation / security wing will go bye bye as soon as this is finalized. At least you can go to Wyze since they were basically rebranded Wyze devices anyway.

Personally, I tended to recommend Roku streamers to my friends and family, primarily because they were stupid proof and had a long shelf life since they tend to support the older streamers for at least 10 years, unlike Google which reinvented their streaming platform 4 times (Google TV, Chromecast, Android TV, NEW Google TV) in the span where Roku finally stopped supporting their Roku 2’s. Nvidia shields are way to expensive vs the other platforms. Fire sticks are an app desert unless you jailbreak them because of Amazon’s insistence of supporting their archaic dead app store, and smart TV’s (except for Roku’s TV) tend to never see another update after their 2nd or 3rd year.

Roku as a company however was a dumpster fire. Between jailing their platform to starting quasi carriage disputes with app providers, their leadership brought them to the point where YouTube’s app went dark and Smart TV companies threatened to all jump ship to Google’s dumpster fire TV platform of the day until they finally backed off. So TLDR, they’ll fit perfectly with Fox Execs.

Re:Layoffs

By Waffle Iron • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Maybe Roku has been paying to carry Fox content, or Fox has been paying Roku to carry content (I don’t know how their deals work), and now that doesn’t have to happen anymore?

Let’s do the math:

($Fox + $Payment) + ($Roku - $Payment) = $Fox + $Roku

That’s a zero-sum transaction. No $400M savings there.

Google CEO Largely Avoids Discussing AI In Stanford Commencement Speech

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Google CEO Sundar Pichai delivered Stanford University’s 2026 commencement address, but despite leading one of the companies at the center of the AI boom, he spent very little time discussing artificial intelligence. Instead, the speech focused on optimism, working on hard things, and following your interests. The omission is notable given how many graduates are entering a job market being reshaped by AI. While Pichai briefly referenced a “rewiring of technology,” he largely avoided discussing AI’s impact on careers, automation, or the future of work. Was the Google CEO intentionally steering clear of a controversial topic, or was he simply trying to deliver a timeless commencement speech rather than a technology-focused one?
Hyping AI during a commencement speech has been a surefire way to get boos — unless you’re Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak, who reminded college graduates that they already posses “AI” of their own: “actual intelligence.”

You can read Pichai’s commencement speech here.

“If you’re not from here, California is advertised as being really lush and green. But when I looked out the window, it was more… brown,” said Pichai during his speech. “I guess I said this out loud, I’m not sure why. My host, Mrs. Jane Earl, gently corrected me. ‘We prefer to call it golden,’ she said.And that’s exactly what I mean by choosing optimism. It’s about reframing for the positive: Where I saw brown, she saw golden. This slight change of perspective had a huge ripple effect on how I thought about the world around me.”

Re: Who wants to be booed?

By toutankh • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I think anger might trickle up first.

One commencement speech about AI

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Only one commencement speech about AI is going to get applause: https://www.smbc-comics.com/co… .

Re:Who wants to be booed?

By stripes • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

They’re creating prosperity for the people in control of them. That’s not even debatable.

Actually it is debatable. Anthropic is not making money, they are burning through VC cash. OpenAI is not making money, they are burning through OPM (“Other People’s Money”) as well. NVIDIA _is_ making money selling the AI hardware to the various companies pouring money into finding an AI model+business model that lets them make money. SpaceX’s xAI isn’t usefully broken out into it’s own P&L, but if you want to bet there IK’ll bet they are losing money at the moment as well, if you take the bet and lose you owe me one fancy Starbucks coffee and pastry, if I lose I’ll buy you 5 shares of SpaceX (that is around $1000 vs your $10). Did I forget anyone? Palentier? Also OPM (VC at the moment).

I doubt Apple or Google are making money on AI either, although it is more debatable because they have a bunch of products they can bolster sales with it (people buying a new iPhone because they want something they saw “Apple intelligence” will bring, totally forgetting that Apple hasn’t delivered on their AI promises from 2 years ago yet!), or Google may sell more smart speakers “powered by Gemini” then they sold of their prior assistant powered speakers, or get more Google searches because of Gemini answers. Although I expect the searches will merely manage to better hold onto market share by offering Gemini, which is important, but defending a multibillion dollar a year Business isn’t at all the same a “making money with AI”. Google has definitly said they are cutting headcount by using AI, but I’m not sure if they actually have a productivity increase or merely an increase in code per unit time even if the volume says nothing (or is of lower quality so it produced more bugs per unit code, and more critical outages per unit codebut more volume of code fixes!)

I’m not saying that NVidia are the only ones that can ever make money at this, or that only the hardware makers will ever make money, but that is how it is right now for sure.

No mention of..

By whitroth • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

the students walking out in protest, like the pics I’ve seen?

Re:Who wants to be booed?

By 0123456 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I may be hallucinating, but I’m sure I remember an article recently about Nvidia lending to AI companies so they could buy Nvidia chips?

If it’s true, giving money to customers so they can buy your products doesn’t sound like the best business plan ever.

Swiss Voters Reject Proposal To Cap Population At 10 Million

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
Voters in Switzerland have rejected an unprecedented far-right proposal to cap the country’s population at 10 million in a divisive referendum dubbed “the Swiss Brexit.” Some 54.79% of voters were against the proposal by the Swiss People’s party (SVP) and 45.21% were in favor. Turnout was 58.86%. A different outcome would have obliged the Swiss government to limit the population, currently 9.1 million, to 10 million by 2050, enacting tough restrictions on family reunification, residency permits and asylum if the number had reached 9.5 million before that date.

Under the proposals, if the threshold of 10 million people was exceeded before 2050, the Swiss government would have been obliged to withdraw from the country’s free movement agreement with the EU — ending its access to the bloc’s single market. The SVP, which has the most seats in parliament, has for years fueled anti-immigrant sentiment, especially concerning workers from neighboring EU countries. The party had insisted that a so-called “sustainability initiative” was needed to address the increase in population, which it argued was putting pressure on Swiss infrastructure, housing, social programs, natural resources and way of life.
“Voters were worried about negative consequences for Switzerland’s relationship with the EU and for the labour market,” said Urs Bieri, from the polling firm GFS Bern. “People are also worried about things like having enough care and health workers. Also, there’s a feeling that in the current international environment it’s not sensible for a small country to do this.”

Getting what you wish for

By Tony Isaac • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We know what it looks like when a country’s population no longer grows. It’s not pretty.

Japan is Exhibit A. Younger people are forced to pay more taxes to take care of a disproportionately large elderly population. Elder care becomes more and more expensive, and difficult to find at all.

Countries that welcome immigrants are able to increase the tax base, and supply critical labor that locals don’t want to do, including taking care of the elderly.

Sanity did prevail

By gweihir • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

And it was both votes (“Staenderat” and individuals) that rejected it. It would have to win both to become law.

The whole thing is right-wing conservative assholes that cannot do actual solving of problems and hence try to compete with simplistic proposals. Fortunately, enough people saw how badly this idea was thought out and how massive negative the consequences would have been (loss of basically all treaties with the EU if the limit were to trigger).

Re:Moslems

By Vlad_the_Inhaler • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This has nothing at all to do with Moslems.
I’m not sure when things changed, but up until around 20 years ago it was quite difficult to move to Switzerland - you had to have some job skills that Swiss nationals didn’t have, at least in sufficient quantity. Then they made an agreement with the EU which granted them access to the EU market (and vice versa) with free movement of population in both directions, I knew several people - mostly in Finance - who then moved to Zürich, Brits, Germans and French. There were presumably some Italians who also headed over.
The SVP is a classic xenophobic party and they’ve essentially been shouting “too many Germans, and other foreigners”.

Re:Getting what you wish for

By gweihir • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It is even worse for Switzerland. Switzerland is a high-tech nation that does not have enough STEM personnel, because they do not educate enough. Hence they need a massive influx of engineers, MDs, etc. Many (not very smart) Swiss citizens complain, for example, that many MDs are not Swiss, completely overlooking that the alternative is not having enough. Dumb people that cannot think one step ahead is unfortunately also a fact of life in Switzerland....