Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Code.org President Steps Down Citing ‘Upending’ of CS By AI
  2. T2 Linux Restores XAA In Xorg, Making 2D Graphics Fast Again
  3. The Salvation Army Opens a Digital Thrift Store On Roblox
  4. Researchers Discover Ancient Bacteria Strain That Resists 10 Modern Antibiotics
  5. Is ‘Brain Rot’ Real? How Too Much Time Online Can Affect Your Mind.
  6. How Python’s Security Response Team Keeps Python Users Safe
  7. Hazardous Substances Found In All Headphones Tested By ToxFREE Project
  8. OpenAI’s First ChatGPT Gadget Could Be a Smart Speaker With a Camera
  9. US Particle Accelerators Turn Nuclear Waste Into Electricity, Cut Radioactive Life By 99.7%
  10. NASA Eyes March 6 To Launch 4 Astronauts To the Moon On Artemis II Mission
  11. Fury Over Discord’s Age Checks Explodes After Shady Persona Test In UK
  12. Pinterest Is Drowning in a Sea of AI Slop and Auto-Moderation
  13. Meta’s Metaverse Leaves Virtual Reality
  14. Cyber Stocks Slide As Anthropic Unveils ‘Claude Code Security’
  15. Goldman Sachs Launches AI-Free Index

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.

Code.org President Steps Down Citing ‘Upending’ of CS By AI

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes:
Last July, as Microsoft pledged $4 billion to advance AI education in K-12 schools, Microsoft President Brad Smith told nonprofit Code.org CEO/Founder Hadi Partovi it was time to “switch hats” from coding to AI. He added that “the last 12 years have been about the Hour of Code, but the future involves the Hour of AI.” On Friday, Code.org announced leadership changes to make it so.

“I am thrilled to announce that Karim Meghji will be stepping into the role of President & CEO,” Partovi wrote on LinkedIn. “Having worked closely with Karim over the last 3.5 years as our CPO, I have complete confidence that he possesses the perfect balance of historical context and ‘founder-level’ energy to lead us into an AI-centric future.”

In a separate LinkedIn post, Code.org co-founder Cameron Wilson explained why he was transitioning to an executive advisor role. “Our community is entering a new chapter as AI changes and upends computer science as a discipline and society at large. Code.org’s mission is still the same, however, we are starting a new chapter focused on ensuring students can thrive in the Age of AI. This new chapter will bring new opportunities, new problems to solve, and new communities to engage.”

The Code.org leadership changes come just weeks after Code.org confirmed laid off about 14% of its staff, explaining it had “made the difficult decision to part ways with 18 colleagues as part of efforts to ensure our long-term sustainability.” January also saw Code.org Chief Academic Officer Pat Yongpradit jump to Microsoft where he now helps “lead Microsoft’s global strategy to put people first in an age of AI by shaping education and workforce policy” as a member of Microsoft’s Global Education and Workforce Policy team.

T2 Linux Restores XAA In Xorg, Making 2D Graphics Fast Again

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Berlin-based T2 Linux developer René Rebe (long-time Slashdot reader ReneR) is announcing that their Xorg display server has now restored its XAA acceleration architecture, “bringing fixed-function hardware 2D acceleration back to many older graphics cards that upstream left in software-rendered mode.”
Older fixed-function GPUs now regain smooth window movement, low CPU usage, and proper 24-bit bpp framebuffer support (also restored in T2). Tested hardware includes ATi Mach-64 and Rage-128, SiS, Trident, Cirrus, Matrox (Millennium/G450), Permedia2, Tseng ET6000 and even the Sun Creator/Elite 3D.

The result: vintage and retro systems and classic high-end Unix workstations that are fast and responsive again.

The Salvation Army Opens a Digital Thrift Store On Roblox

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli writes:
The Salvation Army has launched what it calls the world’s first digital thrift store inside Roblox, an experience named Thrift Score that lets players browse virtual racks and buy digital fashion for their avatars.

While I understand the strategy of meeting Gen Z and Gen Alpha where they already spend time and money, I feel uneasy about turning something that, in the real world, often serves low income families in genuine need into a gamified aesthetic inside a video game, even if proceeds support rehabilitation and community programs, because a thrift store is not just a quirky brand concept but a lifeline for many people, and packaging that reality as entertainment creates a strange disconnect that is hard to ignore.
“To be clear, proceeds from Thrift Score are intended to support The Salvation Army’s programs nationwide…” this article points out. “If it drives awareness and funds programs that help people in need, that is a win. But if it turns thrifting into just another cosmetic skin in a digital marketplace, then we should at least be willing to say that it feels off.”

Double bad

By MpVpRb • Score: 3 Thread

Encouraging addiction to support an evil religious cult

It’s good they branched out

By Misanthrope • Score: 3 Thread

From hating gay people and molesting children

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Researchers Discover Ancient Bacteria Strain That Resists 10 Modern Antibiotics

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
CNN reports on a 13,000-year-old glacier in a Romanian cave, where scientists say a bacterial strain they thawed and analyzed "is resistant to 10 modern antibiotics used to treat diseases such as urinary tract infections and tuberculosis.”

But there’s no evidence the bacteria is harmful to humans, CNN notes, and “The scientists said the insights they have gained from the work may help in the fight against modern superbugs that can’t be treated by commonly used antibiotics.”
Analysis of the Psychrobacter SC65A.3 genome revealed 11 genes that are potentially able to kill or stop the growth of other bacteria, fungi and viruses… Matthew Holland, a postdoctoral researcher in medicinal chemistry at the UK’s University of Oxford, said that researchers were searching in new and extreme environments, such as ice caves and the seafloor, for biomolecules that could be developed into new antibiotic drugs. He was not involved in the new study. “The team in Romania found this particular bug had resistance to 10 reasonably advanced synthetic antibiotics and that in itself is interesting,” he said. “But what they report as well is that it secreted molecules that were able to kill a variety of already resistant, harmful bacteria.

“So the hope is that can we look at the molecules it makes and see if there’s the possibility within those molecules to make new antibiotics.”

insert zombie soundtrack

By invisiblefireball • Score: 3, Funny Thread

we won’t discover til Monday when they don’t show up to work that everyone who came into contact with this virus IS ALREADY DEAD

Stop !

By greytree • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Haven’t these people watched enough sci-fi to know not to go digging in caves for ancient bacteria.

They’ll be launching mission to the dark side of the moon next, and waking up the Nazis. Or poking around in Antarctica. Or Europa.

Watch the movies and learn !

Not the first time for old resistant strains

By Firethorn • Score: 3 Thread

I remember cases of them digging out old bacteria samples from things like old wells, a couple centuries old, not 13k, but still resistant to a raft of modern antibiotics, more than many modern strains.
The easiest explanation is that we got most of our antibiotics by examining molds and such, and it isn’t like mold and bacteria haven’t been fighting for millennia already. The bacteria probably just encountered something similar enough to the modern synthetic antibiotics and had to adapt.

Is ‘Brain Rot’ Real? How Too Much Time Online Can Affect Your Mind.

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Can being “very online” really affect our brains, asks the Washington Post:
Research suggests that scrolling through short videos on TikTok, Instagram or YouTube Shorts is affecting our attention, memory and mental health. A recent meta-analysis of the scientific literature found that increased use of short-form video was linked with poorer cognition and increased anxiety…

In a 2025 study published in the journal Translational Psychiatry, researchers looked at longitudinal data from more than 7,000 children across the country and found that more screen use was associated with reduced cortical thickness in certain areas of the brain. The cortex, which is the outer layer that sits on top of our more primitive brain structures, allows for higher-level thinking, memory and decision-making. “We really need it for things like inhibitory control or not being so impulsive,” said Mitch Prinstein, a senior science adviser to the American Psychological Association and professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the study. The cortex is also important for controlling addictive behaviors. “Those seem to be the areas being affected by the reduced cortical thickness,” he said, explaining that impulsivity can prompt us to seek dopamine hits from social media. In the study, more screen time was also associated with more attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms…

But not all screen time is created equal. A recent study removed social media from kids’ devices but let them use their phones for as long as they wanted. The result? Kids spent just as long on their phones but didn’t have the same harmful effects. “It’s what you’re doing on the screen that matters,” Prinstein said.

Yes, next question.

By Sigma 7 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Really, the TikTok/Instagram/Shorts are meant for light engagement for a dopamine hit, being shallow on-par with what’s found in Fahrenheit 451. Just completely shallow, no critical thinking, no discussion - and perhaps influenced towards sending young people weird videos simply because they’re signed out.

Also, it’s the quality, not the quantity. The brain-rot algorithm is just as bad as a real-life social pool with endless bullying and bullshit drama - which also has the added effect of complex PTSD.

How Python’s Security Response Team Keeps Python Users Safe

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
This week the Python Software Foundation explained how they keep Python secure. A new blog post recognizes the volunteers and paid Python Software Foundation staff on the Python Security Response Team (PSRT), who “triage and coordinate vulnerability reports and remediations keeping all Python users safe.”
Just last year the PSRT published 16 vulnerability advisories for CPython and pip, the most in a single year to date! And the PSRT usually can’t do this work alone, PSRT coordinators are encouraged to involve maintainers and experts on the projects and submodules. By involving the experts directly in the remediation process ensures fixes adhere to existing API conventions and threat-models, are maintainable long-term, and have minimal impact on existing use-cases. Sometimes the PSRT even coordinates with other open source projects to avoid catching the Python ecosystem off-guard by publishing a vulnerability advisory that affects multiple other projects. The most recent example of this is PyPI’s ZIP archive differential attack mitigation.

This work deserves recognition and celebration just like contributions to source code and documentation. [Security Developer-in-Residence Seth Larson and PSF Infrastructure Engineer Jacob Coffee] are developing further improvements to workflows involving “GitHub Security Advisories” to record the reporter, coordinator, and remediation developers and reviewers to CVE and OSV records to properly thank everyone involved in the otherwise private contribution to open source projects.

Or just an ad to join a team of questionable value

By Mondragon • Score: 3 Thread

There is no explanation of how they keep Python safe in that post (nor could there be). Pypi is a dumpster fire (not special, other language-specific repositories are also terrible from a security standpoint). At best they’re keeping _python_ itself reasonably secure, but it does _nothing_ to keep _python users_ secure - python _users_ are using dozens to hundreds of community libraries that have no security oversight at all.

Hazardous Substances Found In All Headphones Tested By ToxFREE Project

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian:
You wear them at work, you wear them at play, you wear them to relax. You may even get sweaty in them at the gym. But an investigation into headphones has found every single pair tested contained substances hazardous to human health, including chemicals that can cause cancer, neurodevelopmental problems and the feminization of males. […] Researchers say that while individual doses from particular sources may be low, a “cocktail effect” of daily, multi-source exposure nevertheless poses potentially severe long-term risks to health. […]

Researchers bought 81 pairs of in-ear and over-ear headphones, either on the market in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia and Austria, or from the online marketplaces Shein and Temu, and took them for laboratory analysis, testing for a range of harmful chemicals. “Hazardous substances were detected in every product tested,” they said. Bisphenol A (BPA) appeared in 98% of samples, and its substitute, bisphenol S (BPS), was found in more than three-quarters. Synthetic chemicals used to stiffen plastic, BPA and BPS mimic the action of oestrogen inside organisms, causing a range of adverse effects including the feminization of males, early onset puberty in girls, and cancer. Previous studies have shown that bisphenols can migrate from synthetic materials into sweat, and that they can be absorbed through the skin.

“Given the prolonged skin contact associated with headphone use, dermal exposure represents a relevant pathway, and it is reasonable to assume that similar migration of BPA and its substitutes may occur from headphone components directly to the user’s skin,” the researchers said. Also found in the headphones tested were phthalates, potent reproductive toxins that can impair fertility; chlorinated paraffins, which have been linked to liver and kidney damage; and brominated and organophosphate flame retardants, which have similar endocrine disrupting properties to bisphenols. Most were, however, found in only trace quantities.

Do not eat the headphones,

By Mspangler • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Do not eat the headphones,

Do not grind the headphones into a fine powder and the inhale it.

Do not put powdered headphones into jockstrap.

Got it. Sounds like every other Safety Data Sheet. (Formerly material data safety sheet, or MSDS).

Re:Huh

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Would we have better luck getting rid of some of this stuff and moderating intake of foods that can disrupt hormonal balance if we let everyone know it is not good for women either? This might sound strange to say, but it is obvious that few care about what is happening to men, happening right before us.

I don’t think it works that way. Medical science overwhelmingly neglects women so there’s really no chance that is what would move the needle. The problem is denialism. People addicted to our modern lifestyle who cannot imagine being able to have luxuries if we make changes will resist believing anything that requires them to make any.

Re:Prolonged headphone use?

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Tell me what chemicals are in the fake pleather cover of the ear foam, or the headband foam. Everything else is irrelevant.

Generally, the softer the plastic, the more plasticizers have been added. Plasticizers are usually the chemicals of concern, because they are often endocrine disrupters.

I’m pretty sure these plasticizers routinely leach out of headphone pads because the pads on every pair of headphones I’ve owned over the past 40 years has gotten brittle and disintegrated after a few years of use.

Re: Huh

By ThurstonMoore • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I totally expected that wall of text to end with a link to fark/politics.

Takeaway: Don’t eat headphones

By Tony Isaac • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Most of these harmful compounds are harmful if you *eat* them, not if you *touch* them. They are undesirable for use in microwave ovens because the heat can cause some of the chemicals to leech into the food they contain. But at room temperature, the chemicals almost entirely remain in the plastic.

If these researchers want to raise the alarm, they need to do some measurements of how much of these chemicals can be absorbed through the skin. Just the presence of the chemicals is not enough to raise concern.

OpenAI’s First ChatGPT Gadget Could Be a Smart Speaker With a Camera

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
OpenAI is reportedly developing its first consumer hardware product: a $200-$300 smart speaker with a built-in camera capable of recognizing “items on a nearby table or conversations people are having in the vicinity.” It’s also said to feature Face ID-style authentication for purchases. The Verge reports:
In addition to the smart speaker, OpenAI is “possibly” working on smart glasses and a smart lamp, The Information reports. (Apple may also be working on a smart lamp.) But OpenAI’s glasses might not hit mass production until 2028, and while OpenAI has made prototypes of gadgets like the smart lamp, The Information says it’s “unclear” if they’ll be released and that OpenAI’s devices plans are in early stages.

So a surveillance device?

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I guess that makes sense. Obviously, only idiots will get one, but there are plenty of idiots around and OpenAI knows it.

HAHAHAHAHAHA!

By YuppieScum • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Not only no, but fuck no.

Amazon?

By DrMrLordX • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So their plan to further monetize ChatGPT in an attempt to stem losses is to imitate a product that Amazon (and Google) has been selling for years? Lame.

Metaverse here we come

By boxless • Score: 3 Thread

Leaving aside the creep factor, I believe people just don’t want to interact this way. It’s goofy.

We’ve been down this road before with glasses, augmented reality, whatever.

“This time it’s different. It will actually be useful in ways you can’t even imagine!”

Well, that’s a little scary on its face. And I still recoil from the basic use case/form factor even assuming complete benevolence.

US Particle Accelerators Turn Nuclear Waste Into Electricity, Cut Radioactive Life By 99.7%

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility are advancing Accelerator-Driven Systems (ADS) that use high-energy proton beams to transmute long-lived nuclear waste into shorter-lived isotopes. “The process also generates significant heat, which can be harnessed to produce additional electricity for the grid,” reports Interesting Engineering. The projects are supported by $8.17 million in grants from the Department of Energy’s NEWTON (Nuclear Energy Waste Transmutation Optimized Now) program. From the report:
The researchers are developing ADS technology. This system uses a particle accelerator to fire high-energy protons at a target (such as liquid mercury), triggering a process called “spallation.” This releases a flood of neutrons that interact with unwanted, long-lived isotopes in nuclear waste. The technology can effectively “burn” the most hazardous components of the waste by transmuting these elements. While unprocessed fuel remains dangerous for approximately 100,000 years, partitioning and recycling via ADS can reduce that window to just 300 years. […]

To make ADS economically viability, Jefferson Lab is tackling two primary technical hurdles: efficiency and power. Traditional particle accelerators require massive, expensive cryogenic cooling systems to reach superconducting temperatures. Jefferson Lab is pioneering a more cost-effective approach by coating the interior of pure niobium cavities with tin. These niobium-tin cavities can operate at higher temperatures, allowing for the use of standard commercial cooling units rather than custom, large-scale cryogenic plants. The team is also developing spoke cavities, which is a complex design intended to drive even higher efficiency in neutron spallation.

The second project focuses on the power source behind the beam. Researchers are adapting the magnetron — the same component that powers microwave ovens — to provide the 10 megawatts of power required for ADS. The primary challenge is that the energy frequency must match the accelerator cavity precisely at 805 Megahertz. In collaboration with Stellant Systems, researchers are prototyping advanced magnetrons that can be combined to reach the necessary high-power thresholds with maximum efficiency. The NEWTON program aims to enable the recycling of the entire US commercial nuclear fuel stockpile within the next 30 years.

Re:Interesting, but impractical

By sonamchauhan • Score: 5, Informative Thread

As long as the energy demands are not excessive, this alone makes it worth it…

While unprocessed fuel remains dangerous for approximately 100,000 years, partitioning and recycling via ADS can reduce that window to just 300 years.

History indicates no human construct can reliably safeguard nuke waste for 100K years. But 300 years? That’s do-able!

Storing waste is easy

By FeelGood314 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The waste from the Oklo natural nuclear reactor has moved only centimeters in the last 2 billion years. So we know if you just bury the waste in the right type of rock you will be fine. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Re:Green Goalposts.

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

Does it solve for a highly radioactive and dangerous problem plaguing a planet

No. Every fuel campaign of any one reactor releases hundreds of tons of materials of various levels of radioactivity, over 1k isotopes in all, each and every one of them with their own peculiarities of decay. This translates to millions of moles * 6.10^23 nuclei that the technology has to deal with. The cross-sections for most of these are vanishingly small and you need several decay steps per every product of every nuclei to make it non-radioactive.

So, let’s say you want to dispose of the load from one reactor in a year, you need beam intensity that is on the order of [ ( 10^7 (moles) *6 * 10^23 (nuclei in a mole) *10 (steps, at least) ]/ [ 10^(-5 to -7) probability of reaction ) * 3^10^7 (seconds in a year) ], or approximately I = 2*10^31 protons/sec. The intensities of research beams are typically on orders of hundreds to tens of hundreds of particles per second. You’re off by 20+ orders of magnitude. It is true that for nuclear reactions you need sources in the MeV range, and these can produce higher intensities, but that high? Hardly.

Moreover, the highly radioactive waste isn’t usually a problem, because it is short-lived. The problem is the volume of low level radioactive material. The so-called “nuclear waste” is mostly composed of U-8, the unenriched part of the enriched fuel uranium. This is easily separable EXCEPT that your country’s elites being VERY AFRAID of other countries with nukes, have put an enormous effort to restrict the re-processing.

So instead people come up with this kind of toy stories.

I don’t care if the beam is inefficient.

If you have to actually pay for it, you’ll think otherwise.

Fusion

By Going_Digital • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Well they say cold fusion will be ready 30 years from now, so perhaps they can power it with a fusion reactor, to clean up al the fission waste.

Re:Interesting, but impractical

By test321 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Can it generate enough to power

The concept originally proposed by Nobel laureate Carlo Rubbio is supposed to produce energy. The reactor operates at criticality factor just below 1 (one main idea is safety, by avoiding any risk of meltdown). It only needs a small boost from the proton beam, which at the same time is used to transmute waste actinides. The demonstrator in construction at the SCK-CEN center in Europe uses a linear accelerator of 100 MeV at 4 mA https://www.myrrha.be/about-my… , so nominally a beam power of 400 kW. Of course the overall system will need 10 times more energy, or even more. But even using several megawatts of for the pumping and cooling of the accelerator, the energy balance will be very positive.

What the US team claims is their new development reduces the energy needs for the cryogenics, improving an already positive economical balance.

NASA Eyes March 6 To Launch 4 Astronauts To the Moon On Artemis II Mission

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR:
NASA could launch four astronauts on a mission to fly around the moon as soon as March 6th. That’s the launch date (PDF) that the space agency is now working towards following a successful test fueling of its big, 322-foot-tall moon rocket, which is standing on a launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

“This is really getting real,” says Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator of NASA’s exploration systems development mission directorate. “It’s time to get serious and start getting excited.” But she cautioned that there’s still some pending work that remains to be done out at the launch pad, and officials will have to conduct a multi-day flight readiness review late next week to make sure that every aspect of the mission is truly ready to go. “We need to successfully navigate all of those, but assuming that happens, it puts us in a very good position to target March 6th,” she says, noting that the flight readiness review will be “extensive and detailed.” […]

When NASA workers first tested out fueling the rocket earlier this month, they encountered problems like a liquid hydrogen leak. Swapping out some seals and other work seems to have fixed these issues, according to officials who say that the latest countdown dress rehearsal went smoothly, despite glitches such as a loss of ground communications in the Launch Control Center that forced workers to temporarily use backups.

Target dates are needed

By CommunityMember • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Without a target date, nothing get’s done. Since it is, indeed, rocket science, many things may still happen to cause additional delays, but it is a date. Best wishes to NASA and their team.

Mission: Step 3

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

From TFS and TFA:

NASA could launch four astronauts on a mission to fly around the moon as soon as March 6th.

And come back safely. Funny how articles always seem to forget this bit — noting that JFK specifically *did* say this in his We choose to go to the Moon speech:

I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth.

Re:Target dates are needed

By CaptQuark • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“This is really getting real,” says Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator of NASA’s exploration systems development mission directorate. “It’s time to get serious and start getting excited.”

Not the best quote from an acting associate administrator. To me it sounds like she’s saying everything up to now has been just playing around and now it’s time to get serious. Not the best image to put into the public’s mental vision.

I don’t want a "we’ll keep trying until we get it right" level of certainty. I don’t want a "this rehearsal went smoothly with only a few hiccups" level of certainty. I want a "we’ve now done this four times successfully and landed” level of certainty before we put astronauts on board.

Fury Over Discord’s Age Checks Explodes After Shady Persona Test In UK

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Backlash intensified against Discord’s age verification rollout after it briefly disclosed a UK age-verification test involving vendor Persona, contradicting earlier claims about minimal ID storage and transparency. Ars Technica explains:
One of the major complaints was that Discord planned to collect more government IDs as part of its global age verification process. It shocked many that Discord would be so bold so soon after a third-party breach of a former age check partner’s services recently exposed 70,000 Discord users’ government IDs.

Attempting to reassure users, Discord claimed that most users wouldn’t have to show ID, instead relying on video selfies using AI to estimate ages, which raised separate privacy concerns. In the future, perhaps behavioral signals would override the need for age checks for most users, Discord suggested, seemingly downplaying the risk that sensitive data would be improperly stored. Discord didn’t hide that it planned to continue requesting IDs for any user appealing an incorrect age assessment, and users weren’t happy, since that is exactly how the prior breach happened. Responding to critics, Discord claimed that the majority of ID data was promptly deleted. Specifically, Savannah Badalich, Discord’s global head of product policy, told The Verge that IDs shared during appeals “are deleted quickly — in most cases, immediately after age confirmation.”

It’s unsurprising then that backlash exploded after Discord posted, and then weirdly deleted, a disclaimer on an FAQ about Discord’s age assurance policies that contradicted Discord’s hyped short timeline for storing IDs. An archived version of the page shows the note shared this warning: “Important: If you’re located in the UK, you may be part of an experiment where your information will be processed by an age-assurance vendor, Persona. The information you submit will be temporarily stored for up to 7 days, then deleted. For ID document verification, all details are blurred except your photo and date of birth, so only what’s truly needed for age verification is used.”

Critics felt that Discord was obscuring not just how long IDs may be stored, but also the entities collecting information. Discord did not provide details on what the experiment was testing or how many users were affected, and Persona was not listed as a partner on its platform. Asked for comment, Discord told Ars that only a small number of users was included in the experiment, which ran for less than one month. That test has since concluded, Discord confirmed, and Persona is no longer an active vendor partnering with Discord. Moving forward, Discord promised to “keep our users informed as vendors are added or updated.” While Discord seeks to distance itself from Persona, Rick Song, Persona’s CEO […] told Ars that all the data of verified individuals involved in Discord’s test has been deleted.
Ars also notes that hackers “quickly exposed a ‘workaround’ to avoid Persona’s age checks on Discord” and “found a Persona frontend exposed to the open internet on a U.S. government authorized server.”
The Rage, an independent publication that covers financial surveillance, reported: “In 2,456 publicly accessible files, the code revealed the extensive surveillance Persona software performs on its users, bundled in an interface that pairs facial recognition with financial reporting — and a parallel implementation that appears designed to serve federal agencies.” While Persona does not have any government contracts, the exposed service “appears to be powered by an OpenAI chatbot,” The Rage noted.

Hackers warned “that OpenAI may have created an internal database for Persona identity checks that spans all OpenAI users via its internal watchlistdb,” seemingly exploiting the “opportunity to go from comparing users against a single federal watchlist, to creating the watchlist of all users themselves.”

Leisure Suit Larry Age Check

By thesjaakspoiler • Score: 5, Funny Thread

It was decades ahead of its time!
https://allowe.com/games/larry…

Re:HEY SLASHDOT

By HiThere • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Well, the bar at the bottom is a bit better, but the close box doesn’t close it.

Obvious profiling for repression

By puzzled • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sorry, maybe y’all are new here, but this is an old, familiar pattern.

Platform used by social movements to organize protests becomes highly effective.

But think of the children gets trotted out, new regulations under a plausible guise.

And then suddenly the would be civil society participants are finding ICE kicking in their doors.

Have seen this during Iran’s Green Revolution, Arab Spring, Occupy, Black Lives Matters, same crap over and over and over and over, and people just keep going for it.

Pinterest Is Drowning in a Sea of AI Slop and Auto-Moderation

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Users say Pinterest has become flooded with AI-generated images and heavy-handed automated moderation, with artists reporting wrongful takedowns and their hand-drawn work mislabeled as “AI modified.” As the company doubles down on AI features and layoffs, longtime users argue the platform’s creative ecosystem is being undermined. 404 Media reports:
“I feel like, increasingly, it’s impossible to talk to a single human [at Pinterest],” artist and Pinterest user Tiana Oreglia told 404 Media. “Along with being filled with AI images that have been completely ruining the platform, Pinterest has implemented terrible AI moderation that the community is up in arms about. It’s banning people randomly and I keep getting takedown notices for pins.” […]

r/Pinterest is awash in users complaining about AI-related issues on the site. “Pinterest keeps automatically adding the ‘AI modified’ tag to my Pins… every time I appeal, Pinterest reviews it and removes the AI label. But then… the same thing happens again on new Pins and new artwork. So I’m stuck in this endless loop of appealing, label removed, new Pin gets tagged again,” read a post on r/Pinterest. The redditor told 404 Media that this has happened three times so far and it takes between 24 to 48 hours to sort out. “I actively promote my work as 100% hand-drawn and ‘no AI,’" they said. “On Etsy, I clearly position my brand around original illustration. So when a Pinterest Pin is labeled ‘Hand Drawn’ but simultaneously marked as ‘AI modified,’ it creates confusion and undermines that positioning.”

Artist Min Zakuga told 404 Media that they’ve seen a lot of their art on Pinterest get labeled as “AI modified” despite being older than image generation tech. “There is no way to take their auto-labeling off, other than going through a horribly long process where you have to prove it was not AI, which still may get rejected,” she said. “Even artwork from 10-13 years ago will still be labeled by Pinterest as AI, with them knowing full well something from 10 years ago could not possibly be AI.” Other users are tired of seeing a constant flood of AI-generated art in their feeds. “I can’t even scroll through 100 pins without 95 out of them being some AI slop or theft, let alone very talented artists tend to be sucked down and are being unrecognized by the sheer amount of it,” said another post. “I don’t want to triple check my sources every single time I look at a pin, but I refuse to use any of that soulless garbage. However, Pinterest has been infested. Made obsolete.”

So?

By paul_engr • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Pinterest is ass

Pinterest is a parasite.

By Morromist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Like the AI companies, Pinterest scooped up vast amount of images without artist’s consent and then slopped them on their site, usually at some lower resolution than the artist originally posted, and corrupted by having switched image formats too many times. You had to sign up to their sight to properly view the images they harvested, so they held these stolen images hostage, in a sense. They did have a decent algorithm for finding similar images though, although that’s probably been replaced by AI now.

Anyway, their doom should have come a long time ago. Can’t wait for Instagram to die next.

Authenticity as a Service

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Going forward, authenticity is going to be a rare and therefore valuable commodity.

The platform that figures out how to maintain a user base of real, sincere, honest human beings will have an advantage over its competitors that are nothing more than a raging sea of ads, trolls, bots, and AI slop with the occasional drowning human mixed in but on his way to the exit.

I’m not sure what the formula is (if I knew I’d probably be rich), but maybe something combining credit checks, public/private key identity authentication, and a reputation system that people care about maintaining?

Karma for search result Pinterest slop.

By Fly Swatter • Score: 3 Thread
For a while google search results were drowning in Pinterest slop, er I mean ‘results’.

Meta’s Metaverse Leaves Virtual Reality

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Meta is pivoting Horizon Worlds away from its original VR-centric metaverse vision and toward a mobile-first strategy, "explicitly separating" its Quest VR platform from the virtual world. TechCrunch reports:
By going mobile-first, Horizon Worlds is positioning itself to compete with popular platforms like Roblox and Fortnite. “We’re in a strong position to deliver synchronous social games at scale, thanks to our unique ability to connect those games with billions of people on the world’s biggest social networks,” Samantha Ryan, Reality Labs’ VP of content, said in the blog post. “You saw this strategy start to unfold in 2025, and now, it’s our main focus.” Ryan went on to note that Meta is still focused on VR hardware. “We have a robust roadmap of future VR headsets that will be tailored to different audience segments as the market grows and matures,” Ryan wrote.

Cyber Stocks Slide As Anthropic Unveils ‘Claude Code Security’

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg:
Shares of cybersecurity software companies tumbled Friday after Anthropic PBC introduced a new security feature into its Claude AI model. Crowdstrike Holdings was the among the biggest decliners, falling as much as 6.5%, while Cloudflare slumped more than 6%. Meanwhile, Zscaler dropped 3.5%, SailPoint shed 6.8%, and Okta declined 5.7%. The Global X Cybersecurity ETF fell as much as 3.8%, extending its losses on the year to 14%.

Anthropic said the new tool will “scans codebases for security vulnerabilities and suggests targeted software patches for human review.” The firm said the update is available in a limited research preview for now.

Come on, we’ve been through this…

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Anyone who’s ever looked at output of any code-scanning security tools knows that 50% of findings are about inadequate logging, 25% completely irrelevant to the context of your app because of the highly pedantic nature of such tools (which are going to be reported back to the tool as false positives), 10% about not adhering to the least privileged principle, another 10% about low-severity low-hanging fruit, 4.9999% about somethingg potentially interesting of which most turn out to be completely insignificant, and 0.0001% actual findings.

If you’re really unlucky, you’ll have a non-tech manager who’ll require you to spend weeks fixing everything because he wants findings numbers at the absolute zero for his bonus next month.

Real findings require a real pentest.

Correction or Overreaction

By silentbozo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Thesis 1:

Cybersecurity companies are bloated and had a stock valuation premium created by insurance mandate (thou shalt contract with a cybersecurity company to keep your insurance premiums low) that will be going away.

Thesis 2:

People are freaking out, without basis, that #1 is true, when in fact the opposite is true - even with AI making code more secure, you will still need cybersecurity insurance, and the insurer is still going to mandate that you contract with an existing cybersecurity company in order to keep your premiums low, due to reinsurance rules. In fact, because of dumbshits using vibecoding, AND the use of automated tools to identify and chain vulnerabilities, domain specific expertise provided by a deep bench will be needed in the future.

Thesis 3:

Cybersecurity companies will be trimming headcount and employing more AI tools internally.

Thesis 4:

Instead of hiring a cybersecurity company, companies will staff their own cybersecurity departments.

Of all of these, I think #4 (companies growing their own cybersecurity departments) is the least likely. #3 is highly likely (there will be some reorganizing and continued adoption of automated tooling). And while #1 (companies will no longer be able to command a large premium) may be true in some cases, I think #2 (this is a giant overreaction, and the use of automated exploit chaining means you need more expertise in defense) is probably the most likely outcome. Building a system to ensure your code is foolproof just breeds bigger fools.

Given the low bar to compete against…

By ffkom • Score: 3 Thread
… I would say it should be easy for Anthropic’s tool to be less shit than what those other Snake Oil Security companies have on offer. I mean, the bar for them to be better is as low as “not introducing additional security vulnerabilities by running the ‘security’ tool”.

Re: Come on, we’ve been through this…

By Midnight_Falcon • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Everything you said is true except I’d argue 50 percent are about vulnerable libraries which have bugs which do not affect the codebase they’re used in. Also, now a pentest is being defined as a vulnerability scan by AI; several companies are selling them for just under the price of a human pentest. A real, non-enshittified pentest is harder to come by these days.

Overreaction and maybe correction

By thesandbender • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Whatever the case, Thesis #2 has got to be a part of it. Cloudflare and Akami are two of the stocks taking a hit and that makes no sense. I don’t care how good the code is:
1. I want someone else to handle the brunt of the DDoS crap so I can focus on running my app.
2. AI doesn’t magic a global CDN for you.
People saw AI + Security and just started dumping anything related to security without understanding what Anthropic’s announcement was really about or what the companies they were dumping really do.

Goldman Sachs Launches AI-Free Index

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Goldman Sachs has launched an “S&P ex-AI” index (SPXXAI) that tracks the S&P 500 stocks not related to AI, offering investors a way to “hedge their exposure to the AI trade,” reports Axios. From the report:
“Excluding ‘AI enablers’ from the passive benchmark would eliminate the noise introduced by the AI hype,” Louis Miller, head of the firm’s equity custom basket desk, wrote in a note to clients about the new index.

The ex-AI index is a compilation of all the stocks in the S&P 500 that are not related to AI, also referred to as old-economy stocks. It’s available exclusively to Goldman customers, created in collaboration with S&P Dow Jones Indices.

Taking all the AI out of the S&P doesn’t leave much behind, as AI companies make up ~45% of the index, according to the note. Over the last three years, the S&P 500 is up 76%. The ex-AI index is only up 32% in that same time period.

Old Economy

By OzJimbob • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Non-AI stocks are now just the “old economy”? Maybe we should, maybe, wait until any AI company at all has actually made a cent of profit before we call them the “new economy” and relegate the companies who make real money and things the “old economy”.

Re:Old Economy

By sg_oneill • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Let em cook. We’re months off from a massive AI induced stock market crash at most. OAI will die, because its one of the most ludicrously overvalued company with literally no path to profitibility. When that happens, everyone else in the circle-jerk financing scheme will flee and shed a tonne of value.

Then we can put this AI nonsense on hold for a couple of decades till the wonks figure out its problems.

An index fund?

By newslash.formatblows • Score: 5, Funny Thread
…out of three stocks?