Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. DOJ Charges Super Micro Co-Founder For Smuggling $2.5 Billion In Nvidia GPUs To China
  2. Chuck Norris Dies At 86
  3. Amazon Plans Smartphone Comeback More Than a Decade After Fire Phone Flop
  4. As OpenClaw Enthusiasm Grips China, Kids and Retirees Alike Raise ‘Lobsters’
  5. Opera GX Web Browser Comes To Linux
  6. China Is Helping Drive Cuba’s Solar Boom
  7. EU Cloud Lobby Asks Regulator To Block VMware From Terminating Partner Program
  8. Online Bot Traffic Will Exceed Human Traffic By 2027, Cloudflare CEO Says
  9. 4Chan Mocks $700K Fine For UK Online Safety Breaches
  10. Rogue AI Triggers Serious Security Incident At Meta
  11. Rapper Afroman Wins Defamation Lawsuit Over Use of Police Raid Footage In His Music Videos
  12. Google Details New 24-Hour Process To Sideload Unverified Android Apps
  13. Meta Backtracks, Will Keep Horizon Worlds VR Support ‘For Existing Games’
  14. OpenAI Acquires Developer Tooling Startup Astral
  15. Walmart Wins Patents To Give Algorithms More Sway Over Prices

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.

DOJ Charges Super Micro Co-Founder For Smuggling $2.5 Billion In Nvidia GPUs To China

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from CNN:
The co-founder of Super Micro Computer and two others were charged with diverting $2.5 billion worth of servers with Nvidia’s artificial intelligence chips to China, in violation of U.S. laws barring exports to that country without a license. Yih-Shyan Liaw, known as Wally; Ruei-Tsang Chang, known as Steven; and Ting-Wei Sun, known as Willy, were charged with conspiring to violate export control laws, smuggling goods from the U.S. and conspiring to defraud the U.S.

Liaw, who co-founded Super Micro Computer and served on its board of directors, was arrested Thursday in California and released on bail. Sun, a contractor, is held awaiting a detention hearing. Chang, who worked in the Taiwan office of Super Micro, remains at large. […] According to the indictment, the men used a pass-through company based in Southeast Asia to place orders to obscure that the servers would end up in China. The men worked with executives at the pass-through company to provide false documents to the server manufacturer to further the deception, the indictment said. They used a shipping and logistic company to repackage the servers into unmarked boxes to conceal their contents before they were shipped to China.

To deceive the manufacturer’s auditors, who checked the pass-through company for compliance with export laws, the men allegedly used “dummy” nonworking copies of the servers when the actual servers were on their way to China. Two of the defendants allegedly worked to stage the dummy servers at a warehouse rented by the pass-through company, according to the indictment. Sun took photos and videos of the staged servers to one of the compliance auditors who instead of conducting the audit was “off-site enjoying entertainment paid for” by the pass-through company, according to the indictment. In another instance, prosecutors said surveillance cameras documented individuals using hair dryers to remove labels and add labels and serial number stickers to the boxes and dummy servers.
Super Micro said it’s fully cooperating with the investigation, but that hasn’t prevented its stock from plunging. It’s down nearly 30% following the news.
The company issued the following statement: “The conduct by these individuals alleged in the indictment is a contravention of the Company’s policies and compliance controls, including efforts to circumvent applicable export control laws and regulations. Supermicro maintains a robust compliance program and is committed to full adherence to all applicable U.S. export and re-export control laws and regulations.”

Chuck Norris Dies At 86

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader SchroedingersCat writes:
Chuck Norris, known for his roles in action films and as Texas Ranger Cordell Walker on the TV show “Walker, Texas Ranger,” passed away on March 19, leaving behind a legacy of inspiring millions around the world. He was 86.

He became Internet phenomenon after "Chuck Norris Facts" went viral online with such wildly hyperbolic statements as, “Chuck Norris had a staring contest with the sun — and won,” and, “When Chuck Norris does push-ups, he doesn’t push himself up, he pushes the Earth down.”

His death was announced by his family through his official Instagram account, but no further details were immediately available. He was hospitalized earlier that day in Hawaii after experiencing a medical emergency, the family said.

One last fact....

By bickerdyke • Score: 5, Funny Thread

He may have died, but he is already feeling better.

Time to spend some karma

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Chuck Norris was a homophobe and transphobe.

I will give him credit though he wasn’t racist. It’s always weird to come across somebody who is not racist but somehow still ends up being homophobic and transphobic.

To be fair I didn’t keep up with him, maybe he got over it at some point. But based on a cursory Google search I don’t think he did.

He was also a trump supporter and maga right up until the end as far as I know. And given what we know about Donald Trump and The credibility of the various rape accusations that’s bad juju to say the least. I mean this is a guy that left the Democrat party because they were too far left. If you know anything about American politics the Democrat party isn’t left let alone far left…

On the other hand gay people just break some people’s brains.

Anyway mods have fun!

Re:Great action hero and good human

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 4 Thread

He was a christofascist piece of shit and the world is a slightly better place without him.

Re:Time to spend some karma

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

“Pro-heterosexual”?

What does that even mean? Sounds like bullshit to me.

Are you also “pro breathing air” as well?

Re:Great action hero and good human

By Baloo Uriza • Score: 4 Thread
Good human my ass. He was a homophobe, a racist and a fascist.

Amazon Plans Smartphone Comeback More Than a Decade After Fire Phone Flop

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Amazon is reportedly developing a new AI-focused smartphone that doesn’t rely as heavily on traditional apps. “The phone is seen as a potential mobile personalization device that can sync with home voice assistant Alexa and serve as a conduit to Amazon customers throughout the day,” reports Reuters. From the report:
As envisioned, the new phone’s personalization features would make buying from Amazon.com, watching Prime Video, listening to Prime Music or ordering food from partners like Grubhub easier than ever, the people said. They asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters. A key focus of the Transformer project has been integrating artificial intelligence capabilities into the device, the people said. That could eliminate the need for traditional app stores, which require downloading and registering for applications before they can be used. Alexa would likely be a core feature but not necessarily the primary operating system of the phone, the people said.
When Amazon launched the Fire Phone in 2014, it aimed to compete directly with offerings from Samsung and Apple. Instead, the device received mixed reviews and failed to impress reviewers, leading Amazon to abandon the effort just over a year later.

As OpenClaw Enthusiasm Grips China, Kids and Retirees Alike Raise ‘Lobsters’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Fan Xinquan, a retired electronics worker in Beijing, has recently started raising a “lobster,” hoping that the AI agent he has been training can help organize his specialized industry knowledge better than chatbots like DeepSeek. “OpenClaw can actually help you accomplish many practical things,” the 60-year-old said at a recent event hosted by AI startup Zhipu to teach people how to use and train the AI agent, which has gone viral in China, with its various local versions earning the “lobster” nickname.

In the past month, OpenClaw, which can connect several hardware and software tools and learn from the data produced with much less human intervention than a chatbot, has captured the imaginations of many in China, from retirees looking for side income to AI firms hoping to generate new revenue streams. […]

Huang Rongsheng, chief architect at Baidu’s smart device unit Xiaodu, said at an event on Tuesday that parent group chats for his daughter’s primary school class have become overwhelmed by OpenClaw discussions. “My daughter came to me and asked: Dad, I see you raising a lobster every day,” he said. “Can I have one too?” Bai Yiyun, another attendee at the Zhipu event, said she hopes to use the agent to start a side hustle during her retirement.
“If DeepSeek marked a milestone for open-source large language models, then OpenClaw represents a similar turning point for open-source “agents,” said Wei Sun, chief AI analyst at Counterpoint Research.

Other things aside…

By Junta • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I am shocked at how many people think they can resell the services of an LLM agent as a side hustle. If it works out, then there’s zero reason to go to *you* for the same LLM they can just use themselves. If it *doesn’t* work, well, you’ve got problems.

Not really.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 3 Thread

But the initial wave of enthusiasm could still peter out, especially as token costs accumulate and regulators warn of security vulnerabilities. Zhipu this week raised token prices on its new OpenClaw-optimised AI model by 20%.

“Output is extremely low: ordinary people spend tens or hundreds of yuan, burning through a bunch of tokens and in the end, they might only get a pile of useless data,” read one post on Rednote, a social media platform, titled “Goodbye OpenClaw.”

It would appear that people are personally finding out that AI is overhyped.

Opera GX Web Browser Comes To Linux

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Opera GX has officially landed on Linux, bringing its gamer-focused browser experience to Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and openSUSE-based systems. The browser includes GX Control for limiting RAM and network usage, a Hot Tabs Killer to shut down resource-heavy tabs, and built-in sidebar integrations for Discord and Twitch. Opera says this is not just a one-off port, but a long-term effort with ongoing updates and community engagement.
“PC gaming has long been associated with a single dominant platform, but that’s changing,” says Maciej Kocemba, Product Director at Opera GX. “Bringing GX to Linux users — who are renowned for the control they like to exert over their tools — means gamers and developers can manage browser resources, customize their setup, and keep their system performing exactly the way they want.”

Hooray?

By DrXym • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I installed it recently and it was just a mass of broken skins and affiliate / partner crap all wrapped up in eye aching “gamer” theme - neon on black etc. I don’t see why anybody, gamer or not would want to use it in the state it is in.

gamers?

By fluffernutter • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Why would a browser focus on gamers? Are there serious games running in browsers?

Year of the Linux desktop

By Hentes • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Year of the Linux desktop, even Chinese spyware supports Linux now!

China Is Helping Drive Cuba’s Solar Boom

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
AleRunner writes:
“China is helping Cuba race to capture renewable solar energy as the United States imposes an effective oil blockade on the Caribbean island, creating its worst energy crisis in decades,” reports The Washington Post. Later in the article, it states that “China’s decades-long push into clean energy technology is now helping to protect it from the soaring oil and gas crisis spurred by Trump’s war against Iran,” and that “Chinese exports of solar equipment to Cuba skyrocketed from about $5 million in 2023 to $117 million in 2025 and show no sign of stopping.”
According to researchers from Ember, solar could be responsible for as much as 10% of Cuba’s electricity generation. “That would be among the fastest expansions of solar energy anywhere […] and place Cuba ahead of most countries — including the U.S. — in the share of electricity generated by sun power,” the report says.
As the Iran war drives energy prices higher, countries around the world are working overtime to reduce their reliance on fossil fuels. China sees this as a big opportunity. “Chinese authorities have made clear that they intend to replicate what they’re doing in Cuba elsewhere,” reports the Washington Post.

gee, I guess the U.S. missed the memo

By gtall • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Now that el Bunko has pocketed all those billions from Arab Gulf countries (into his personal accounts and not the U.S. Treasury) and the extra dosh from American petro companies, suddenly renewable energy is looking a lot better. And it looks like the U.S. will have to guarantee the Arab Gulf countries’ security for quite a while. el Bunko only wants $200 Billion in extra money to pay for the security of Arab Gulf countries, and higher gas prices for the American consumers. This after jerking healthcare from millions of American by xing out a measly $34 Billion in the Big Dumb Bill.

Too bad the U.S. went down the rat hole with el Bunko. And the fun doesn’t stop there. Climate change from the extra atmospheric carbon is sterilizing the American West.

Re: “helping” yeah so good of them to “help”

By toutankh • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That is an interesting take. Of course what actually happened is that the USA tried (and are still trying) to impose an involuntary servitude on Cuba, and Cuba is doing what it can to survive. Voluntary is better than involuntary. Regardless, thank the USA for that situation.

Re:“helping” yeah so good of them to “help”

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Buying solar panels that will work for 30+ years and don’t need any fuel or manufacturer supported maintenance is hardly entering into servitude.

Pakistan has also been somewhat insulated from the Israel/Trump war with Iran, because they deployed a lot of solar that displaced LNG.

It’s going to happen more and more because solar and storage are so incredibly cheap, and it just happens that China is the country that made the most of this opportunity by developing massive solar manufacturing capability.

Re:All good but…

By necro81 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Night time is a thing in Cuba as well

Just because it’s not a 100% solution doesn’t make it a 0% solution. In the choice between intermittent power and blackout, I expect most people (including you!) would take what you can get. Batteries are a thing, too, that China makes in spades.

One could just as well say “Powering your grid from oil imports is all good but, embargoes are a thing in Cuba as well.”

Re:“helping” yeah so good of them to “help”

By Errol backfiring • Score: 4, Informative Thread
No. A loan is lending something out and later getting it back. You lend things out that can be used, not used up. Asking extra money for a money loan is or was seen as inhumane in all major religions. Only Christianity now tries to deny that. The extra money is called usury, and was forbidden (because seen as inhumane). The moneylenders who violated that law therefore came up with the word “that what is in between”, or, as money terms are often in Latin, “interest”. So interest is the criminals term for usury.

EU Cloud Lobby Asks Regulator To Block VMware From Terminating Partner Program

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register:
A lobbying trade body for smaller cloud providers is asking the European Commission to impose interim measures blocking Broadcom from terminating the VMware Cloud Service Provider program, calling the decision a death sentence for some tech suppliers and an illegal squeeze on customer choice. As The Reg revealed in January, Broadcom shuttered the scheme, a move sources claimed affects hundreds of CSPs across Europe and curtails options for enterprises buying VMware software and services. The Cloud Infrastructure Service Provider in Europe (CISPE) trade group, representing nearly 50 tech suppliers, filed the complaint today with the EC Directorates-General, accusing Broadcom of bully-boy tactics, and calling for authorities to halt what it terms as “ongoing abuse.”

Francisco Mingorance, CISPE secretary general, said of the complaint: “Businesses — both cloud providers and their customers — are being irreparably damaged by Broadcom’s unfair actions, which we believe are illegal. “After imposing outrageous and unjustified price hikes immediately following the acquisition of VMware, Broadcom is now applying the ‘coup de grace’. We need urgent intervention to force them to change. The only way to stop bullies is to stand up to them.” CISPE claims that, since Broadcom completed its $69 billion takeover of VMware in October 2023, prices have risen tenfold, payment is demanded upfront, products are bundled regardless of customer need, and minimum commitments are based on potential rather than actual consumption.

The VMware Cloud Service Provider (VCSP) program officially closed in January and all transactions must be complete by March 31. After that date, only a select group of suppliers will be able to sell VMware subscriptions — either standalone or as part of a broader service. Across Europe, we’re told this equates to hundreds of businesses losing their authorization. For some, the loss of VCSP status effectively destroys their market. Those whose operations were built around VMware must now hand customers to another authorized supplier or begin the costly migration to an alternative platform.
Broadcom said in a statement responding to the complaint: “Broadcom strongly disagrees with the allegations by CISPE, an organization funded by hyperscalers, which misrepresent the realities of the market. We continue to be committed to investing significantly in our European VMware Cloud Service Provider partners… helping them offer alternatives to the hyperscalers and meet the evolving needs of European businesses and organizations.”

Delaying the inevitable.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If you’re still using VMWare then you really only have yourself to blame at this point. Don’t get me wrong, Broadcom is being a dick but it’s not like it’s been a secret. Whoever is still using them has simply ignored that the ship was sinking.

typical communist mentality

By DarkOx • Score: 3 Thread

Someone does not want to keep doing something - lets use government to enslave them.

Broadcome/vmware suck, but geeze forcing someone to continue to support and sell a software product. That is scary shit..

Online Bot Traffic Will Exceed Human Traffic By 2027, Cloudflare CEO Says

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Cloudflare’s CEO predicts AI-driven bot traffic will surpass human internet traffic by 2027, as AI agents generate vastly more web requests than people. “If a human were doing a task — let’s say you were shopping for a digital camera — and you might go to five websites. Your agent or the bot that’s doing that will often go to 1,000 times the number of sites that an actual human would visit,” Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said in an interview at SXSW this week. “So it might go to 5,000 sites. And that’s real traffic, and that’s real load, which everyone is having to deal with and take into account.” TechCrunch reports:
Before the generative AI era, the internet was only about 20% bot traffic, with Google’s web crawler being the largest, according to Prince, whose infrastructure and security company is used by one-fifth of all websites. But beyond some other reputable crawlers, the only other bots were those used by scammers and bad actors. “With the rise of generative AI, and its just insatiable need for data, we’re seeing a rise where we suspect that, in 2027, the amount of bot traffic online will exceed the amount of human traffic that’s online,” Prince said.

The executive also noted that this change to the web would require the development of new technologies, like sandboxes for AI agents that can be spun up on the fly and then torn down when their task has finished. These could come into play when consumers ask AI agents to perform certain tasks on their behalf, like planning a vacation. “What we’re trying to think about is, how do we actually build that underlying infrastructure where you can — as easily as you open a new tab in your browser — you can actually spin up new code, which can then run and service the agents that are out there,” Prince said. He imagines there will soon be a time when millions of these “sandboxes” for agents would be created every second.
“I think the thing that people don’t appreciate about AI is it’s a platform shift,” Prince said. “AI is another platform shift … the way that you’re going to consume information is completely different.”

Terrible Situation

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

So much wasted power.

So much wasted bandwidth.

So much wasted time.

All to generate and repeatedly process the same stuff poorly and inaccurately.

I hate to see it. But, I confess that I’m using the slop myself.

HELLO?

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“Online Bot Traffic Will Exceed Human Traffic By 2027, Cloudflare CEO Says”

WTF?

Bot traffic ALREADY exceeds human traffic by 2 to 1 at the very least.

By 2027???

By ls671 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“Online Bot Traffic Will Exceed Human Traffic By 2027”

If you consider all kind of bots and search engines, this happened quite a while ago IMHO.

I host many websites, some with considerable real human traffic and my experience is that there is much more traffic that isn’t human to the point I need to block some IP, use geo blocking and make custom mod_security rules at the reverse-proxy level to detect non-human traffic in order to not waste too much bandwidth and protect against attack bots and bots scanning for vulnerabilities.

Re:Terrible Situation

By tragedy • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

So much wasted power.

So much wasted bandwidth.

So much wasted time.

All to generate and repeatedly process the same stuff poorly and inaccurately.

I hate to see it. But, I confess that I’m using the slop myself.

So right. Came into this article to basically say this, but you said it better. What is described in the summary is ridiculously stupid and inefficient and broken as a model, and probably exactly what will happen.

Re:Terrible Situation

By fluffernutter • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

but the technology will improve

You say this with no evidence that LLMs can be any better than they are today.

4Chan Mocks $700K Fine For UK Online Safety Breaches

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The UK regulator Ofcom fined 4chan nearly $700,000 (520,000 pounds) for failing to implement age checks and address illegal content risks under the Online Safety Act, but the platform mocked the penalty and signaled it won’t pay. A lawyer representing the company responded with an AI-generated cartoon image of a hamster, writing in a follow-up post on X: “In the only country in which 4chan operates, the United States, it is breaking no law and indeed its conduct is expressly protected by the First Amendment.” The BBC reports:
The fines also include 50,000 pounds for failing to assess the risk of illegal material being published and a further 20,000 pounds for failing to set out how it protects users from criminal content. 4Chan has refused to pay all previous fines from Ofcom.
“Companies — wherever they’re based — are not allowed to sell unsafe toys to children in the UK. And society has long protected youngsters from things like alcohol, smoking and gambling. The digital world should be no different,” said Ofcom’s Suzanne Cater. “The UK is setting new standards for online safety. Age checks and risk assessments are cornerstones of our laws, and we’ll take robust enforcement action against firms that fall short.”

*facepalm*

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This was always going to end this way. Sorry Ofcom but 4chan is 100% in the right here. Your authority extends only to requesting it be blocked in your country. Nothing more.

This isn’t a multinational company and it is not in any way subject to any laws other than US law.

Re:*facepalm*

By AleRunner • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The failure is the point. They are trying to work up to getting VPNs blocked. I suspect they will have shrunk our economy by 60% before we manage to stop them. I only hope that, at that point, I will be able to get a legalized lynch mob up for them. The chances are reasonably good.

Re:It’s never been about age, it’s about I.D.

By Marful • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Except this isn’t a slippery slope. This is the repeat of history.

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.”
~ William Pitt the Younger

Re:4Chan toy store?

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You have been playing the propaganda game too long. I don’t have a problem with you trying to make a point, but don’t get down in the gutter and play the game where you take something out of context and pretend that the it is the statement in its entirety.

I mean, their government’s whole point was trying to draw a false equivalence between selling physical goods (importing a product into a country) and running a website (allowing free speech to be served by a machine that provides content when asked). Tearing down that false equivalence between taking an action to bring something into a country (active, requiring actions by someone in that country) and merely passively having your speech available to someone in a country really is the crux of any rational argument on the subject, though I’d have used a lot more words.

Re:4Chan toy store?

By karmawarrior • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They’re saying 4Chan is a toy, not a toy store. Which… is not completely unfair.

However, 4Chan doesn’t operate in the UK. British people can access it, sure, but unless it actually does commerce with British people in some way there’s simply no legitimate way in which the UK can suggest it’s under their jurisdiction. At best they can fine ISPs for providing access to it. They would, indeed, be the “toy stores” in this scenario as they sell access to the toys.

Rogue AI Triggers Serious Security Incident At Meta

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
For the second time in the past month, an AI agent went rogue at Meta — this time giving an engineer incorrect advice that briefly exposed sensitive data. The Verge reports:
A Meta engineer was using an internal AI agent, which Clayton described as “similar in nature to OpenClaw within a secure development environment,” to analyze a technical question another employee posted on an internal company forum. But the agent also independently publicly replied to the question after analyzing it, without getting approval first. The reply was only meant to be shown to the employee who requested it, not posted publicly. An employee then acted on the AI’s advice, which “provided inaccurate information” that led to a “SEV1” level security incident, the second-highest severity rating Meta uses. The incident temporarily allowed employees to access sensitive data they were not authorized to view, but the issue has since been resolved.

According to Clayton, the AI agent involved didn’t take any technical action itself, beyond posting inaccurate technical advice, something a human could have also done. A human, however, might have done further testing and made a more complete judgment call before sharing the information — and it’s not clear whether the employee who originally prompted the answer planned to post it publicly. “The employee interacting with the system was fully aware that they were communicating with an automated bot. This was indicated by a disclaimer noted in the footer and by the employee’s own reply on that thread,” Clayton commented to The Verge. “The agent took no action aside from providing a response to a question. Had the engineer that acted on that known better, or did other checks, this would have been avoided.”

Rogue?

By Himmy32 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Was it really rogue or working as designed? (With that design being hasty and poor in order to chase the latest fad.)

Re:In follow-up....

By know-nothing cunt • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The AI later reportedly said, “They ‘trust me.’ Dumb fucks.”

Re: Rogue?

By madbrain • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This is a company that posts things like “done is better than perfect” or “move fast and break things” on large signs in their lobby.

So, I’ll go with “working as designed”.

Social Engineering

By ZipK • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

According to Clayton, the AI agent involved didn’t take any technical action itself, beyond posting inaccurate technical advice

The AIs are learning social engineering.

Re:How the hell at this point.

By sound+vision • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Second thought? The point of AI, as it is sold, is so that you don’t have to think. If you’re thinking independently about the same subjects as your chat bot, you’re not following the instructions on the package.

Rapper Afroman Wins Defamation Lawsuit Over Use of Police Raid Footage In His Music Videos

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes:
Rapper Afroman, born Joseph Edgar Foreman, famous for his 2000 hit "Because I Got High", has won a defamation lawsuit that seven Ohio police offers filed against him. A jury found he did not defame the officers in music videos he made about a 2022 police raid of his home. In August 2022, Adams County Sheriff’s Department raided Afroman’s home on suspicion of drug trafficking and kidnapping. Neither drugs nor kidnapping victims were found, and charges were never filed. However, local officials would not pay for damages occurred during the raid including a broken front door and a video surveillance camera. Afroman used his home security footage of the raid to create music rap videos criticizing the police over the incident; "Will You Help Me Repair My Door?", "Why You Disconnecting My Video Camera?", and "Lemon Pound Cake". He posted the videos on YouTube.

In March 2023, seven officers filed a lawsuit against Afroman for invasion of privacy and the unauthorized use of their images from the security footage in addition to defamation claims. The officers requested an injunction for Afroman to stop speaking about them or using their photos. The officers also wanted all proceeds from the videos, song sales, performances, and merchandise claiming they had suffered “emotional distress” due to the videos. Afroman’s defense included Freedom of Speech rights to criticize public officials. The ACLU filed an amicus brief supporting the rapper, arguing that the lawsuit was a SLAPP suit only meant to silence criticism. In October 2023, the court agreed and dismissed the invasion of privacy, “right of publicity”, and “unauthorized use of individual’s persona” claims but allowed the defamation case to proceed.

Defamation claims by the officers included the allegation Afroman repeatedly had sex with the wife of Randolph L. Walters, Jr. When Afroman’s lawyer asked Walters “But we all know that’s not true, right?”, the officer replied he did not know. Defamation from emotional damages requires that harm arise from a false statement; however, if a statement is so outrageous that no one would believe it to be true, then reputational damage cannot be a result.

Re: New For Nerds?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Some nerds care about freedom.

We will note that you are not among them.

Re:New For Nerds?

By PsychoSlashDot • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Turn in your nerd card.

First up, YRO. This guy used home-NVR footage as the basis for three music videos. Which he posted online. As protest against police abuse. That’s interesting to (some) nerds in several ways.

Second, there’s a header for Entertainment which this could also have been filed under.

It’s never been cool to be deliberately overly reductive about the mission statement and purpose of Slashdot but it’s even worse when you’re wrong.

Re:So good

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
His wife was recording them with her phone too. Note to self: learn how to hide cameras from cops. They make cheap fake cameras now, the fun thing to do would be to have a bunch of those for the cops to destroy, then they would go about their dirty business not realizing the real cameras are still recording them.

Re:So good

By fjo3 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It should be, but remember that the Supreme Court gave police officers (essentially) full immunity from prosecution for anything they do on the job.

Thanks Roberts court (the most corrupt in all modern history)!

Abolish qualified immunity!

Re:So good

By Firethorn • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Real cameras are cheap enough today that mounting them, just not bothering to hook them up, might actually be cheaper.

My favorite though is having them all hooked up, but having hidden cameras along with the obvious ones. Have the hidden cameras specifically watching the real cameras.
Then pay the money and have a fat enough pipe to the internet for cloud storage (could even be a server you own elsewhere, to help avoid companies that bend over even without a warrant).
It can result in some absolutely shocking/hilareous footage, like the time the cops arrested a major station news reporter, not realizing that the cameraman didn’t shut the camera off and that they had been in the middle of a live broadcast. The cops didn’t know how to shut the professional level camera off, and the station kept broadcasting the stream to the entire city.
Even as they discussed how to fake up charges against the reporter and his crew.
I think it took the governor calling the police chief to get them to release the reporter and drop all mention of charges before things got even worse for them.

Google Details New 24-Hour Process To Sideload Unverified Android Apps

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Google is planning big changes for Android in 2026 aimed at combating malware across the entire device ecosystem. Starting in September, Google will begin restricting application sideloading with its developer verification program, but not everyone is on board. Android Ecosystem President Sameer Samat tells Ars that the company has been listening to feedback, and the result is the newly unveiled advanced flow, which will allow power users to skip app verification. With its new limits on sideloading, Android phones will only install apps that come from verified developers. To verify, devs releasing apps outside of Google Play will have to provide identification, upload a copy of their signing keys, and pay a $25 fee. It all seems rather onerous for people who just want to make apps without Google’s intervention.

Apps that come from unverified developers won’t be installable on Android phones — unless you use the new advanced flow, which will be buried in the developer settings. When sideloading apps today, Android phones alert the user to the “unknown sources” toggle in the settings, and there’s a flow to help you turn it on. The verification bypass is different and will not be revealed to users. You have to know where this is and proactively turn it on yourself, and it’s not a quick process. […] The actual legwork to activate this feature only takes a few seconds, but the 24-hour countdown makes it something you cannot do spur of the moment.

But why 24 hours? According to Samat, this is designed to combat the rising use of high-pressure social engineering attacks, in which the scammer convinces the victim they have to install an app immediately to avoid severe consequences. “In that 24-hour period, we think it becomes much harder for attackers to persist their attack,” said Samat. “In that time, you can probably find out that your loved one isn’t really being held in jail or that your bank account isn’t really under attack.” But for people who are sure they don’t want Google’s verification system to get in the way of sideloading any old APK they come across, they don’t have to wait until they encounter an unverified app to get started. You only have to select the “indefinitely” option once on a phone, and you can turn dev options off again afterward.
“For a lot of people in the world, their phone is their only computer, and it stores some of their most private information,” Samat said. “Over the years, we’ve evolved the platform to keep it open while also keeping it safe. And I want to emphasize, if the platform isn’t safe, people aren’t going to use it, and that’s a lose-lose situation for everyone, including developers.”

What about F-droid and the like

By Zarhan • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Can you authorize an 3rd party app repository to install APKs from there, but prevent random stuff downloaded from the Internet?

Overall, I like this approach, and maybe *slightly* more idiot-proofed than the current one where you can just install anything after one prompt. But I’d like the possibility to allow permissions for a trusted source to install additional ones and have the 24-hour counter for other stuff.

Re:seems fine

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

That’s “all they are doing” after quite the backlash from users, so it isn’t really all they were planning to do.

Andoid’s Cesspool Not Related to Sideloading

By BrendaEM • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Android is a cesspool because they do not care if vendors make unrealistic personal information demands. I think that comparatively, few people side-load, so Android is trying to scapegoat side loading for their ecosystem problems.

Play Store allows apps with same name

By Hentes • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

To this day, the Play Store allows anyone to publish an app with the exact same name as an already existing one. Google doesn’t give a fuck about security, this is about control.

1984 was an instruction manual after all

By WaffleMonster • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

The phrase “sideload” is psychological propaganda we are all best off rejecting. There is nothing “side” about loading software you choose to use onto your own device.

Aggression is unsurprisingly always justified in terms of safety. Android permission system is intentionally engineered to own users by enabling the very same victimization they now claim they care about preventing.

Android could for example trivially allow users to deny access to networks, location, contacts or reveal identifiers like IMEI without an applications knowledge rather than present day take it or leave it demands. The fact these things are not possible without root speaks to Google’s actual intent and priorities. People are needlessly being spied on and spammed enmasse because Google selfishly cares more about its interests than it does the interests of users.

When it is in Google’s interest to add even more hoops for users to jump through to make it harder to install software on their own devices from competing sources then and only then do they pretend to care in order to justify unnecessary fuckery as a security feature.

Google Play services is itself offensive malware and the Google app store is a race to the bottom ecosystem that actively encourages the production and distribution of malware. F-droid is infinitely more secure than anything Google has to offer.

I hope this finally starts to crack the growing disease that is software dependencies on Google play services and more vendors start offering Google free phones by default.

Meta Backtracks, Will Keep Horizon Worlds VR Support ‘For Existing Games’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta is partially reversing its decision to drop VR support for Horizon Worlds, keeping VR access for existing Unity-based games while shifting future development to a new flatscreen-focused Horizon Engine. UploadVR reports:
If you somehow missed it, on Tuesday Meta officially announced that its Horizon Worlds “metaverse” platform would drop VR support in June, meaning it would only be available as a flatscreen experience for the web and smartphones. But now, in an “ask me anything” session on his Instagram page, Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth says the company has decided to “keep Horizon Worlds working in VR for existing games to support the fans who’ve reached out.”

Bosworth says this specifically applies to worlds developed with the Horizon Unity runtime, suggesting it applies to those built inside VR or with the Horizon Desktop Editor, but not those built for the new Horizon Engine with Horizon Studio. The picture painted here is of a clean technical break, with the legacy Unity version of Horizon Worlds continuing to support VR, and the new Horizon Engine focusing fully on flatscreen. This VR support will continue through the Horizon Worlds VR app, which Bosworth says will stay on Quest’s store “for the foreseeable future”.

Specific worlds will not be recommended by the operating system, though, and nor will they be seen in the storefront. Horizon Worlds will be just another app on the store. As for the reason behind not supporting VR in Horizon Engine, Bosworth repeated the explanation he’s been giving for two months now — “because that’s where most of the consumer and creator energy already was, and so we’re leaning into that.”

Uh huh.

By msauve • Score: 5, Funny Thread
>Bosworth repeated the explanation he’s been giving

That the metaverse plan and the reason for renaming the whole company was a failure? Oh, look! AI! Shiny!

Wait what?

By thegarbz • Score: 3 Thread

Did both Horizon World’s users complain? Or was it just Rob? Fucking Rob, always whinging.

Zuck “build it and they will come” and indecisive

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 3 Thread
He’s been spending $20B+/yr on CapEx (I’m xMeta) without a concept of a plan. And Sam Altman, Nvidia, et. al. billionaires have been chasing him the whole way to get the best tulip bulbs and flying cars. They’re draining so much of real and financialized funny investment money and driving enormous phantom economic activity that it’s hiding structural and real worse conditions everywhere else except defense and aerospace contractors. The cost burdens and other externalities on the rest of society and the world as this situation falls on individuals isn’t getting appropriate attention. The techbros and naive, idealistic optimists pushed trickledown economics, worker “retraining” (without as much pay), and “greater leisure time” myths.

OpenAI Acquires Developer Tooling Startup Astral

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI announced it’s acquiring developer tooling startup Astral to strengthen its Codex AI coding assistant, which has over 2 million weekly users and has seen a three-fold increase in user growth since the start of the year. CNBC reports:
“Through it all, though, our goal remains the same: to make programming more productive. To build tools that radically change what it feels like to build software,” Astral’s founder and CEO Charlie Marsh wrote in a blog post. The company’s acquisition of Astral is still subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approval.

Removing competition

By AcidFnTonic • Score: 3 Thread

Strengthen by removing competition

Walmart Wins Patents To Give Algorithms More Sway Over Prices

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Walmart has secured patents for systems that use machine learning to forecast demand and automate pricing decisions, “pushing the U.S. retail behemoth into a debate over the use of algorithms to adjust product costs,” reports the Financial Times. From the report:
In January Walmart obtained a U.S. patent for a “system and method for dynamically and automatically updating item prices” to carry out markdowns in its ecommerce unit, a rapidly growing division that generated more than $150 billion in sales last year. Last week it received another patent for using machine learning to predict demand and recommend prices for goods. […] Walmart said that both patents were “unrelated to dynamic pricing,” as the patent issued in January was specific to markdowns and last week’s patent was designed for merchant teams to make decisions, not the technology.

The patent granted in January involves an “end-to-end price markdown system” for ecommerce platforms such as Walmart.com based on data including predicted demand and consumers’ price sensitivity. Last week’s approved patent outlines ways to forecast demand and set prices at levels that will move stock over periods such as a week, a month or a quarter. “Example categories may include, for example, a food item, outdoor equipment, clothing, housewares, toys, workout equipment, vegetables, spices,” according to the filing. The “demand forecasting and price recommendation” tool envisaged in the patent would incorporate sources including purchases, prices, methods of payment and customer ID, such as a passport or driver’s license number.
“Dynamic pricing or anything that smells like it is playing with fire,” said Matt Hamory, a grocery industry consultant at AlixPartners, who cited “the goodwill that you can lose by getting customers to think or suspect or worry even slightly that you are doing things with pricing that are to your benefit and their detriment.”

Good news

By alvinrod • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I’m sure some people will find this patent to be deeply upsetting, but Walmart having patented it hopefully ensures that no other stores will be able to use it. It’s been years since I’ve shopped at a Walmart so them doing this doesn’t affect me at all. Perhaps this patent could be granted in perpetuity so that other stores are unable to use it after the usual 14/28 year period.

Seems like the same old price fixing & gouging

By 2TecTom • Score: 5, Informative Thread

People have been using algorithms to manage inventory and pricing for over a century, starting with simple formulas like Economic Order Quantity that tried to balance stock levels and costs. By the mid-1900s, computers brought operations research into the mix, letting businesses forecast demand and optimize inventory more systematically. Then came barcodes and databases in the 80s and 90s, giving retailers near real-time visibility. Fast forward to the 2000s, and companies like Amazon pushed things further with dynamic pricing systems that constantly adjust based on demand, competition, and user behavior. Same basic goal as always, just massively more data and speed.

What Walmart is doing with AI pricing isn’t a clean break from that history, but it is a step change in how aggressive and autonomous it’s become. Earlier systems followed rules; today’s AI rewrites them on the fly, reacting in real time and feeding back into itself. Prices shift, demand shifts, the model updates, and the cycle keeps going. At Walmart scale, that doesn’t just optimize shelves, it can start nudging the whole market. So while it’s still “just algorithms,” the difference now is less about the idea and more about the speed, scope, and how little human hands are actually on the wheel.

For everybody?

By SumDog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If they’re just changing the prices of everybody dynamically, I don’t see why they need a patent. Every store already does that. Is this just so they can do it faster; adjusting e-ink tags on shelves throughout the day? I feel customers might actually find ways to game this system and unify to drive down prices if they can master the algorithm and utilize social media. I’d love to see this backfire and Walmart end up losing millions.

The real danger is dynamic prices per person. Since the article is pay-walled, I’m not sure if that’s mentioned. I think it should be totally illegal to charge different people different prices, based on facial recognition or anything else. Every single person should always be given the same price. This is a known problem on travel websites, where if you’ve visited before, they’ll often only give you the prices for more expensive seats .. where if you use a different browser from a different location without being signed in, you can see the original cheaper sets you were looking at earlier haven’t been sold yet.

Re:For everybody?

By bugs2squash • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’m waiting for the tech that supports having two people look at the same price tag simultaneously and see two different prices.

Not to mention the tech that freezes the price when you take the item from the shelf so it doesn’t change on the way to the register.

Re:Good news

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s been years since I’ve shopped at a Walmart so them doing this doesn’t affect me at all.

I lived in a town (in Missouri) where there was a gas station, a gas & bait shop, and a sporting goods store, with a Walmart 30 minutes down the highway, and a Super Walmart (bigger, also sells groceries) an hour the other direction down the highway. Walmart is commerce to a large portion of the USA. Anything that Walmart does matters to a lot of people.