Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. America’s Library of Congress Officially Inducts… the Soundtrack for the Videogame ‘Doom’
  2. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt Booed During Graduation Speech About AI
  3. Small Town Fights Over Flock’s AI-Enhanced Network of License Plate-Reading Cameras
  4. Microsoft Exchange Server Vulnerability Actively Exploited, in a Bad Week for Microsoft
  5. ‘We Still Can’t See Dark Matter. But What If We Can Hear It?’
  6. US Math/Reading Scores Continue 13-Year Decline. Researchers Blame Reduced Testing and Social Media
  7. How Owners of EVs from Bankrupt Fisker Saved Their Cars With an Open Source Nonprofit
  8. Sysadmin Creates ‘ModuleJail’ To Automatically Blacklist Unused Kernel Modules
  9. Python Stays #1, R Rises in Popularity, Says TIOBE
  10. Elon Musk’s xAI Launches ‘Grok Build’, Its First AI Coding Agent
  11. The UK Finally Starts Reforming Its ‘Computer Misuse Act’
  12. Amazon Stops Supporting Pre-2013 Kindles Today. Some Owners Turn to Jailbreaking
  13. Some Datacenters Divert Power from Homes. Will It Drive Homeowners to Solar and Batteries?
  14. An Entire Wikipedia That’s 100% AI Hallucinations
  15. How I Added an LLM-Based Grammar Checking + TeX Math Import To LibreOffice

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.

America’s Library of Congress Officially Inducts… the Soundtrack for the Videogame ‘Doom’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
America’s Library of Congress “is preserving a little piece of Hell,” jokes Engadget, “by inducting the soundtrack to the original Doom into the National Recording Registry.”
The album of demon-slaying tracks is joined by several other notable 2026 additions to the registry, like Weezer’s self-titled debut album (colloquially known as “The Blue Album”), Taylor Swift’s “1989,” Beyonce’s “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It) and the original “Mambo No. 5.”

“Doom” was created by Bobby Prince, a freelance composer who worked on lots of id Software games, and also scored Doom’s ‘90s rival Duke Nukem 3D. The soundtrack draws clear inspiration from metal bands, but also touches on techno and ambient music throughout its track list, making for an eclectic soundscape for tearing through enemies. That it all fits together is also impressive in its own right: All of the music for Doom was written before the game had completed levels to play through, according to Prince.
The official announcement from the Library of Congress says Doom “brought a heavy metal energy to MS-DOS systems across the globe,” while also pioneering first-person shooter videogames.
“Key to Doom’s popularity was the adrenaline-fueled soundtrack created by freelance video game music composer Bobby Prince. Prince, a lifelong musician and practicing lawyer, was fascinated by the MIDI technology that rose in prominence in the mid-1980s as a means for instrument control and composition… For “Doom,” Prince took inspiration from a pile of CDs loaned by the game’s chief designer, John Romero, including seminal works by Alice in Chains, Pantera and Metallica.

Despite the limitations of the 1993-era sound card drivers, Prince composed the perfect riff-shredding accompaniment for the game’s demon-slaying journey to hell and back. Taking advantage of his knowledge of MIDI, Prince even worked to ensure that the sound effects he created could cut through the music by assigning them to different MIDI frequencies.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt Booed During Graduation Speech About AI

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Today former Google CEO Eric Schmidt “was booed multiple times,” reports NBC News, “while discussing AI during a commencement speech at the University of Arizona.”

Schmidt had started by remembering how computer platforms “gave everyone a voice” but also “degraded the public square… They rewarded outrage. They amplified our worst instincts. They coarsen the way we speak to each other, and that way, and in the way that we treat each other, is in the essence of a society.” But then Schmidt “drew a parallel between artificial intelligence and the transformative impact of the computer — and was immediately met with boos.”
“I know what many of you are feeling about that. I can hear you,” Schmidt said, addressing the crowd as many continued to boo him. “There is a fear … there is a fear in your generation that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics is fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create, and I understand that fear.”

He went on to argue that the future remains unwritten and that the graduating class of 2026 has real power to shape how AI develops — a claim that drew further disapproval from parts of the audience…

He closed by congratulating the class and offering them closing words. “The future is not yet finished. It is now your turn to shape it.”
404 Media shared a video on YouTube of the crowd’s booing — and what Schmidt said that provoked them:

SCHMIDT: “If you don’t care about science that’s okay because AI is going to touch everything else as well. [Very loud booing] Whatever path you choose, AI will become part of how work is done…”

“You can now assemble a team of AI agents to help you with the parts that you could never accomplish on your own. [Loud booing] When someone offers you a seat on the rocket ship, you do not ask which seat. You just get on… The rocket ship is here.”

At last, a billionaire makes it clear

By Cyberpunk Reality • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

“When someone offers you a seat on the rocket ship, you do not ask which seat. You just get on…”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

So it’s the platforms’ fault?

By jenningsthecat • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

… platforms “gave everyone a voice” but also “degraded the public square… They rewarded outrage. They amplified our worst instincts.

I’m totally not surprised that Schmidt is a disingenuous gaslighting fucktard. But I AM surprised that he’s so unskilled at it. Or does he imagine that his audience is too stupid to notice what he’s trying to do?

Well dear Eric, the platforms wouldn’t have “amplified our worst instincts” if the algorithms that your kind created to rule them hadn’t been tuned for maximum profit - and therefore maximum outrage and lowest-common-denominator behaviour. And don’t you dare to pretend that you didn’t realize that’s what Google and its competitors were doing, you evil lying liar.

I’m pleased that your gaslighting was called out and booed by young people - both because it signals hope for recovering some semblance of a moral and compassionate civil society, and because it proves that with your high self-opinion you’ve managed to deceive yourself more than the young minds you sought to pervert.

For all your money and intelligence, you’re still an abject failure. Do us all a favour and fuck the fuck off - a compassionate, principled, moral society has no use for you and your kind.

Translation

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

SCHMIDT: "…AI will become part of how work is done…”
“When someone offers you a seat on the rocket ship, you do not ask which seat. You just get on… The rocket ship is here.”

Meaning: We’re investing a LOT of money trying to replace you, so shut up, do what you’re told, how you’re told, and be grateful you still have a job - for now.

Also, I’d still want to know who’s on that rocket and especially who I’m sitting next to. If it’s Elon or one of the other rich, entitled, um… CEOs - pass. /s

Remembering what Jordan Klepper said on The Daily Show about Trump’s recent trip to China with all the tech CEOs:

That’s the kind of bachelor party that makes a stripper want to get her life back in order.

Small Town Fights Over Flock’s AI-Enhanced Network of License Plate-Reading Cameras

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
160 miles north of New York City, a man was convicted of manslaughter “with the help of license plate reader technology,” reports a local news station. In the small town of Troy (population: 51,000), the mayor described the cameras as “a critical tool” in that investigation. But locals and city officials “have raised concerns about who can access the data collected locally, along with data security, privacy invasions and use by federal authorities, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, reports WNYT:
When Troy’s contract came up for renewal, Mayor Carmella Mantello wanted to keep paying Flock and the council paused payments. The mayor then issued a public safety emergency declaration to keep the license plate readers active. The council has filed a lawsuit to overturn that…“If this illegal emergency order is left unchallenged, we give this mayor and any future mayor regardless of their political party or ideology, unchecked authority to issue an emergency declaration whenever they disagree with the council on any issue,” [said Troy council president Sue Steele].
“The technology that’s in place today is not the technology of six years ago,” council president Steele told another local news station. “We have AI, we have rapidly changing and advancing technology. So that begs the need for regulations to protect certain data.” The American Civil Liberties Union warns that Flock will use AI to let law enforcement search its trove of videos.
But “Listen, if it was infringing on people’s rights, people’s liberties, we’d be the first to get rid of it. We have safeguards in place,” [mayor] Mantello responded. Mantello noted that data captured by Troy’s Flock cameras is only being shared with other local municipalities.

Steele said the data had been shared nationally until she and other elected officials raised concerns. “As far as sharing with local law enforcement, that’s necessary in the normal course of investigations. The concern is what Flock does with this data: sharing it with ICE, for instance, and other nefarious outlets,” Steele said.
As the debate continues over the small city’s 26 Flock cameras, a columnist in Albany wrote that “it’s a good thing. We should be asking questions about the growing surveillance state. We should be debating whether this is the future we want.”
As the American Civil Liberties Union noted, [Flock] has quietly built a broad mass-surveillance infrastructure, with cameras installed in 5,000 communities around the country, and is continually expanding how that network is used. Did we ask for that? Did we vote for it? Not really. The cameras have been installed in municipality after municipality, mostly with little discussion or controversy, which makes us like the proverbial frogs who didn’t notice the water getting warmer until it was boiling. Suddenly, surveillance cameras are everywhere; we’re always being watched…

[T]he City Council’s Democratic majority is considering legislation that, among other steps, would require that data collected by the cameras be generally deleted after 48 hours and that the city be more transparent about how the cameras are used.
The controversy and pushback continues to draw local coverage. The mayor complains the proposed rules restricts the cameras “almost exclusively to cases involving individuals with outstanding felony arrest warrants or situations where officers can determine in advance that an incident will result in a felony charge… This is beyond reckless.”

But the Albany columnist still argues many of America’s Flock cameras are unnecessary and are “being installed just because… It’s worth considering where this might lead and whether the future we’re installing is the future we want.”

Kickbacks maybe?

By bobm • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Seems like there is more to this story, maybe Flock is giving the mayor a ‘small’ kickback.

And once you share the data, even with other local towns, then you lose control of the data and have to assume it’s going to places you shouldn’t trust.

Everyone knows these are bad news right?

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
Catching the occasional murderer isn’t worth a 24/7 super surveillance Network right?

The thing is people who think that it is worth it aren’t going to speak up here or even look at the comments.

One of the things I’m seeing among the right wing is that they know that their beliefs are wrong and that they will be hurt by implementing them but they want them so badly that they are withdrawing into safe spaces where their never challenged.

And I mean never challenged. Not even for a brief second. Because the right wing has become so cartoonishly evil that the slightest challenge breaks the spell like The emperor’s New clothes.

You can’t reach them anymore. Maybe their families could but they’ve cut themselves off from their families too. It’s why people keep calling the right wing a cult.

Microsoft Exchange Server Vulnerability Actively Exploited, in a Bad Week for Microsoft

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Forbes describes it as “definitely already out there, and under active exploitation according to the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, urging all organizations to prioritize timely remediation as the attack vector poses a significant risk.”

“We have issued CVE-2026-42897 to address a spoofing vulnerability affecting Exchange Outlook Web Access (OWA),” Microsoft told SecurityWeek. “We recommend customers enable EEMS to be better protected, and to follow our guidance available here.”
Microsoft this week patched 137 vulnerabilities with its Patch Tuesday updates and the cybersecurity industry was surprised to see that the latest updates did not address any zero-days. However, a zero-day was disclosed just 48 hours later, on May 14… described as a spoofing and XSS issue affecting Exchange Server Subscription Edition, 2016, and 2019. “Improper neutralization of input during web page generation (‘cross-site scripting’) in Microsoft Exchange Server allows an unauthorized attacker to perform spoofing over a network,” Microsoft said in its advisory.

The company noted that the vulnerability affects Exchange Outlook Web Access (OWA) and an attacker can exploit it by sending a specially crafted email to the targeted user. “If the user opens the email in Outlook Web Access and certain interaction conditions are met, arbitrary JavaScript can be executed in the browser context,” Microsoft explained.
CSO Online shares more details. “Admins should note there are known issues once the mitigation is applied either manually or automatically through the EM Service.”
- OWA Print Calendar functionality might not work. As a workaround, copy the data or screenshot the calendar you want to print, or use Outlook Desktop client.

- Inline images might not display correctly in the recipient’s OWA reading pane. As a workaround, send images as email attachments or use Outlook Desktop client…

- Admins may get a message saying “Mitigation invalid for this Exchange version.” in mitigation details. This issue is cosmetic and the mitigation does apply successfully if the status is shown as “Applied”. Microsoft is investigating how to address this glitch.
Forbes notes “It’s been something of a rough few days for Microsoft Exchange on the security vulnerability front,” since this week also saw a zero-day demonstrated at the Pwn2Own Berlin hacking event, “which has been responsibly disclosed and not released into the wild.”
The Berlin event got off to a flying start on May 14 as Windows 11 was hit by no less than three zero-day exploits. On day two, hacking teams were no less successful, chaining together three new vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange in order to achieve the holy grail of SYSTEM-level remote code execution. Such was the level of this achievement that Orange Tsai from the DEVCORE Research Team was rewarded with a $200,000 bounty payment in return for immediately handing over all the technical details to the event organizers.
“This is, in fact, good news,” Forbes writes, since “full details of the vulnerabilities underlying the exploits, along with the technical nature of the exploit code itself, will be handed over to Microsoft, which will then have 90 days to provide a fix before any details are made public.”

here we are

By spaceman375 • Score: 3 Thread

Not a prediction, but a postdiction: Begun the cyberwars have. /yoda

‘We Still Can’t See Dark Matter. But What If We Can Hear It?’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“We may have accidentally detected dark matter back in 2019,” writes ScienceAlert.

“What if instead of trying to see dark matter, scientists attempted to hear it instead?” asks Space.com:
New research suggests dark matter could leave a tiny but discernible imprint in the cacophony of ripples in spacetime called "gravitational waves" that ring through the cosmos when two black holes slam together and merge… Fortunately, when it comes to detecting gravitational waves from colliding black holes, humanity’s instruments, such as LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory), are getting more and more sensitive all the time…

Vicente and colleagues searched through data gathered by LIGO and its fellow gravitational wave detectors, KAGRA (Kamioka Gravitational Wave Detector) and Virgo, focusing on 28 of the clearest signals from merging black holes. Of these, 27 appeared to have come from mergers that occurred in the relative vacuum of space. One signal, however, GW190728, first heard on July 19, 2019, and the result of merging binary black holes with a combined mass of 20 times that of the sun and located an estimated 8 billion light-years away, seemed to carry the telltale trace of this merger occurring in a region of dense, “buttery” dark matter.

The team behind this research is quick to point out that this can’t be considered a positive detection of dark matter, but does say it gives us a hint at what to look for and thus where to direct follow-up investigations… “We know that dark matter is around us. It just has to be dense enough for us to see its effects,” said team leader Josu Aurrekoetxea, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Department of Physics. “Black holes provide a mechanism to enhance this density, which we can now search for by analyzing the gravitational waves emitted when they merge.”
They published their results this week in the journal Physical Review Letters.

US Math/Reading Scores Continue 13-Year Decline. Researchers Blame Reduced Testing and Social Media

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Test scores “are lower than they were a decade ago in school districts across the U.S.,” reports Times magazine, citing new data released Wednesday by Stanford researchers. “Reading scores were down roughly 0.6 grades in 2025 compared to 2015, and math scores were down about 0.4 grades. This means that students were 60% of one school year behind where their peers were in reading a decade earlier and 40% of one school year behind in math.”

But Stanford’s announcement notes that America’s schools “were in a ‘learning recession’ for seven years before the COVID-19 pandemic, with student test scores in math and reading on a steady decline since 2013.”
This reversal ended two decades of progress, according to Sean Reardon, the Professor of Poverty and Inequality at Stanford Graduate School of Education, whose data forms the backbone of the new research… The study reframes the narrative of pandemic-era learning loss, arguing that the crisis of the last few years was an acceleration of a problem that was already underway. “The pandemic was the mudslide that followed seven years of erosion in student achievement,” said Professor Tom Kane, faculty director of the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard University, and a lead author of the report…

The study found that the slowdown in learning coincided with two major shifts in American childhood and education policy: the widespread dismantling of test-based accountability systems that defined the No Child Left Behind era and the rise of social media use among young people. Reading scores, in particular, suffered consistently, with the average annual loss in the years just before the pandemic being just as large as the loss during it… Today, 8th-grade reading scores on national assessments are at their lowest point since 1990.

Compounding the problem, chronic student absenteeism remains a major obstacle to improving learning. Though down from its pandemic peak, 23 percent of students were chronically absent in the 2024-25 school year, far above the pre-pandemic rate of 15 percent.
More context from Time magazine:
Reading scores were down roughly 0.6 grades in 2025 compared to 2015, and math scores were down about 0.4 grades. This means that students were 60% of one school year behind where their peers were in reading a decade earlier and 40% of one school year behind in math…

“The decline started around the time that social media’s use among teens was exploding, and this was also occurring in a number of other countries,” says Thomas Kane, one of the authors of the Educational Scorecard report and a professor at Harvard University… [H]e maintains that it is at the core of the decline in reading achievement. He points out that social media use was shown to be heaviest among the lowest achieving students.
“Some states and school districts are making progress,” notes the Associated Press, “largely by shifting toward phonics-based instruction and providing extra support for struggling readers.”

And “The picture is also brighter in math. Almost every state in the analysis saw improvements in math test scores from 2022 to 2025.”

“Us”

By Known Nutter • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Us Math/Reading Scores Continue 13-Year Decline

As does slashdot editors’, apparently.

Former teacher here

By Peterus7 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Few things happening.

-COVID. It did a huge hit on kids, on their wellbeing, social development, and academic performance. Kids are still getting over the burnout from that.

School issues. Schools are hitting a teacher cliff, and teachers are all burned out from all the extra BS they have to do. On top of that, schools are wildly underfunded for the things that actually matter, and are having a hard time retaining talent as the stress load for teachers just keeps going up, while their salaries aren’t competitive.

Someone posted something about absenteeism with a ‘back in my day’ sort of energy. So, on that- yes, schools will still send truancy officers to check in. A lot of the time, it’s kids with serious mental health problems. See the COVID burnout thing, and the next point.

The kids are not ok. If you look at kid’s mental health, it’s frankly in the toilet, and a lot of it comes down to the world that they’re inheriting. They’re facing a global warming cataclysm, the rise of fascism, and a garbage economy with no hope of ever achieving the American dream. They’re often latchkey kids because both parents have to work to pay rent. They’re having AI and social media infiltrating their lives, and have no real sense of community (COVID disrupted so many community programs oriented at helping kids with this, and thanks to DOGE cuts, a lot of other nonprofits that did great community work are dead.) Doing well in school is based around a social contract that ensures that it will have some meaningful payout, and right now, that social contract is a joke.

Testing doesn’t make you better at math

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
We know what the problem is. 8 years ago when my kid was in high School their math class had 45 students in it and there weren’t even enough chairs for everybody to sit. This was not one of the poor school districts either. Not a rich School district but not poor by any measure. Meanwhile covid hit education like a brick.

On top of that parents are working two or three jobs just to keep a roof over their kids head.

We also don’t allow public schools to abandon kids anymore and they’re aren’t any jobs for a high school dropout or frankly even a College dropout at this point. Certainly not something that you can make a living off of.

This means that you’ve got students who traditionally would have disappeared from the system but are now being educated and they bring the numbers down. Incidentally this is also why private schools look so good, if your grades start to drop in a private school they kick you out almost immediately. They aren’t any better generally than public schools unless they have a lot more money and even then they can abandon anyone who isn’t making the grade.

So basically a whole bunch of people we used to just toss into factory work can’t do that work anymore because we either automated it away or we shipped it to china, and now those kids are still in the system and they are struggling and on top of that you have all the other social problems like covid and the leftovers from that and their parents not having any time because of over work etc etc.

There isn’t actually a solution to any of this that doesn’t involve massive transformations of society that a bunch of old farts like us are going to veto.

We could make the numbers go up and the class sizes go down by kicking all those kids to the curb but the problem with that obviously is we don’t have anything to do with them and now they’re just milling about getting into trouble. And we aren’t going to do the kind of massive government programs Ala the New deal that would be required to employ that many people who struggle with high school algebra…

On the plus side the declining numbers and the increased cost of managing those kids means that we can point to how bad the numbers are and use that as an excuse to dismantle public education so I guess there is that. Think of all the tax savings for billionaires and all the profit when we privatize what’s left of education.

Re: Lack of accountability

By zawarski • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Teachers unions exist to ensure the shittiest teachers get paid the same as the ones who work their asses off.

Re:Former teacher here

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This. A thousand times this, especially the last point. We’ve held out education as a means to a happy, successful life — and it’s not. Not any more. It’s become a means to barely surviving in an increasingly bleak world ruled by fascists and billionaires.

And the kids know it. They may not be able to articulate it quite so succinctly, they may not even know what the problem really is - -but they know it because it’s all around them. They see it in their parents’ faces and hear it in the news. They know that many things have seriously gone wrong.

We have to fix those things if we want those kids to have some hope. And one of things that we have to fix is the Republicans’ half century of war on education — of all kinds, at all levels. Republicans figured out, in the 1970’s, that intelligent, educated, literate, thinking people were increasing leaving their party. And rather than introspecting and changing themselves, they decided to destroy education. We are where we are now because they’ve spent half a century wrecking it and they’re still doing it today. They’re working to create an illiterate and uneducated electorate because that’s their core constituency: those people are easy to manipulate into voting for the very people who are destroying them.

How Owners of EVs from Bankrupt Fisker Saved Their Cars With an Open Source Nonprofit

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Electrek:
When Fisker Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in June 2024, it left roughly 11,000 Ocean SUV owners holding the keys to vehicles that cost them anywhere from $40,000 to $70,000 — and that were rapidly losing the software brains that made them work. No more over-the-air updates. No more connected services. No more warranty. The manufacturer was dead.

What happened next is one of the most remarkable stories in the history of the electric vehicle industry. Instead of accepting that their cars would become rolling paperweights, Fisker Ocean owners organized, reverse-engineered their vehicles’ proprietary software, hacked into CAN bus networks, built open-source tools on GitHub, and effectively stood up a volunteer-run open-sourced car company from the ashes of Fisker… Within months of the bankruptcy filing, thousands of Ocean owners formed the Fisker Owners Association (FOA) — a nonprofit that quickly grew to 4,000 members and began operating as something between a car club, a tech startup, and an independent automaker. The FOA hired independent tech experts who began reverse-engineering Fisker’s proprietary software patches. Members taught each other how to flash firmware. They organized bulk purchases of replacement parts — negotiating the price of key fobs down from roughly $1,000 each to a fraction of that through coordinated group buys. They hosted free global key fob pairing events, saving each owner $100 to $250…

What started as desperate troubleshooting has evolved into a genuine open-source ecosystem around the Fisker Ocean. On GitHub, a developer named MichaelOE reverse-engineered the API behind Fisker’s official “My Fisker” mobile app and built a Home Assistant integration that exposes every cloud API value as a sensor — with all the app’s buttons available as Home Assistant controls… [Community members have also been systematically mapping CAN bus files.]
The article noes this “is not an isolated incident. Nikola also filed for bankruptcy, leaving its owners in a similar bind. Canoo and Arrival are headed for liquidation auctions…”
Consumer advocates are now pushing for structural changes: mandatory software escrow funds that would keep vehicle software running even if the manufacturer disappears, open-source mandates in bankruptcy proceedings, and shared repair data requirements… European automakers, meanwhile, are moving in a different direction entirely — Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and eight suppliers signed a memorandum in 2025 to develop a shared open-source automotive software platform....

The Fisker Owners Association has proven that a dedicated community can keep orphaned EVs on the road. But they shouldn’t have had to… [O]wners shouldn’t need to become hackers and parts brokers and quasi-manufacturers just to keep driving the cars they already paid for.

What’s the down-side?

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
No more over-the-air updates. No more connected services.

I would be thanking FSM for this miracle from heaven.

No more spyware

By PhantomHarlock • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The key point here is the ability to disable all telemetry leaving the car. We need open sourced EV car software that does not spy on you or sell your information. It sounds like they’re on their way.

Guides to disable the cellular modem or antenna in all popular model EVs would be a good way to start as well. Using wrecked examples from a junkyard would be an economical way to experiment.

Waiting for the seizures and arrests to begin

By spazmonkey • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

In the United States, simply keeping their cars running after the manufacturer died is a fairly substantial set of crimes.
Since they have admitted to conspiracy by forming an interstate group to do it, major Federal organized crime laws have been broken.
Land of the free and all that.

Finished products?

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Consumer advocates are now pushing for structural changes: mandatory software escrow funds that would keep vehicle software running even if the manufacturer disappears, open-source mandates in bankruptcy proceedings, and shared repair data requirements…

Now I know this sounds crazy, but stick with me for a moment: How about we require car manufacturers to deliver finished products to customers? And how about we also require them to provide meaninful service and repair data along with the vehicles? No more connected services unless they are non-essential to the car and trivially switched off, removed or replaceable. So that means no more repeated software updates will be required.

Duplicate?

By strUser_Name • Score: 3 Thread
https://m.slashdot.org/story/4…

Sysadmin Creates ‘ModuleJail’ To Automatically Blacklist Unused Kernel Modules

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time Slashdot reader internet-redstar shares an interestging response to “the recent wave of Linux kernel privilege escalation vulnerabilities like 'Copy Fail' and 'Dirty Frag'":
Belgian Linux sysadmin and Tesla Hacker “Jasper Nuyens” got tired of the idea of manually blacklisting dozens or even hundreds of obscure kernel modules across large fleets of Linux systems in the near future. So he wrote ModuleJail, a GPLv3 shell script that scans a running Linux system and automatically blacklists currently unused kernel modules, reducing kernel attack surface without requiring a reboot. The idea is simple: many modern Linux privilege escalation bugs target obscure or rarely used kernel functionality that is still enabled by default on servers that do not actually need it. ModuleJail works across major distributions including Debian, Ubuntu, RHEL, Fedora, AlmaLinux and Arch Linux, generating 1 modprobe blacklist rules file while preserving commonly-used modules.

Nuyens argues that the increasing speed of AI-assisted vulnerability discovery will likely turn kernel hardening and attack surface reduction into a much bigger operational priority for sysadmins over the next few weeks and months.

Old times

By ThePhilips • Score: 3 Thread

Remember the old times when kernel modules were considered a security risk, thus disabled altogether?

When OpenBSD was boasting its monolithic kernel as a security features?

IIRC, some commercial *nix OSs didn’t had modules for reasons of being archaic fossils. But then more recently, couple decades later, also rebranded it into a safety and a security feature.

Great idea.

By Petersko • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I followed something similar in philosophy when I was supporting a mammoth critical legacy system. Not quite as automated, of course. I had sat down with the clients to go over the module list to see what we could deprecate. Turns out they thought nothing was okay to remove. Two years later I embarked on a strategy.

- Identified a series of modules and functions I thought were disused
- Installed logging to identify access and usage, and monitored it for a period
- Turned stuff off and waited for somebody to complain

I retired over a hundred pieces of the app. One time, six months later, the phone rang. I said, “We can turn it back on if you need it.”

“Hold on, I’ll call you back.”

They never called back. :)

Do these modules get loaded unnecessarily?

By Zarhan • Score: 3 Thread

In my own systems, I’ve just compiled my own kernel, but obviously you can’t do that if you have a huge farm of devices to support.

Anyway, I have always thought that the whole point of a modular kernel for typical Linux distributions is that if your hardware or software configuration does not need a particular model, it is not loaded. If there’s some piece of software (e.g. Virtualbox) that needs kernel-level access, those do get loaded as part of the software installation. Same for most package-managed software (install a VPN server, you get IPSec/ESP networking modules included). So with devices, they are autodetected (load driver module when you detect hardware, including when plugged in to USB or other removable port), and with other kernel features, they are brought in when some software requires it (some might of course be there by default, like firewall). Only case where you would manually edit /etc/modprobe.d is if you manually install some software…right? Why would a kernel load every module it has come with of most of them are not even needed?

Re:As far as I’m concerned

By Charlotte • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Unnecessary modules take up memory. That doesn’t matter much on a system with 16GB RAM, but it does for an embedded device.

The vulnerability discussed in the article proves modules that aren’t needed are best left out - otherwise the vulnerability would be present and active in every Linux machine in the world.

Modules can be loaded on demand, for instance when a “file” in /dev is read. These files are accessible to anyone - even if you don’t have permission to read them, just attempting to do so can load the module. With so many vulnerabilities coming our way this is a brilliant and easy fix.

I hope he gets a shout-out at the next FOSDEM, which is held in Brussels. Judging by his name he won’t live far away.

Python Stays #1, R Rises in Popularity, Says TIOBE

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Are statistical programmers coalescing around a handful of popular languages? That’s the question asked by the CEO of software assessment site TIOBE, which every month estimates the popularity of programming languages based on their frequency in search results:
This month, the programming language R matched its all-time high by reaching position #8 in the TIOBE index once again. This is not a coincidence. The statistical programming language market is clearly undergoing a major consolidation. The biggest winners are Python and R, while many long-established alternatives continue to lose momentum. The era in which the statistical computing landscape was fragmented across many niche languages and platforms appears to be coming to an end.

Several established players are steadily declining:

— MATLAB is close to dropping out of the TIOBE top 20.

— SAS is about to leave the top 30 for the first time since the TIOBE index began.

— Wolfram/Mathematica remains well below its historical peak and is losing further ground.

— SPSS dropped out of the top 100 last month....


Elsewhere in the index, Java and C++ swapped positions this month. Java gained momentum following the successful release of Java 26. Another notable riser is Zig, which is approaching the TIOBE top 30 for the first time. Zig’s growing popularity appears to be driven by its rare combination of low-level performance, straightforward tooling, and relative ease of use compared to traditional systems programming languages.
Their estimate for the most popular programming languages in May:
  1. Python
  2. C
  3. Java
  4. C++
  5. C#
  6. JavaScript
  7. Visual Basic
  8. R
  9. SQL
  10. Delphi/Object Pascal

The five next most popular languages on their rankings are Fortran, Scratch, Perl, PHP, and then Rust at #15. Rust is up for positions from May of 2025 — while Go has dropped to #16, seven ranks lower than its May 2025 position of #7.


Commercial programming languages are disappearing

By SoftwareArtist • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

MATLAB, SAS, Mathematica, and SPSS are all commercial products. The long term trend is that all the proprietary programming languages are disappearing. Everything in the top ten is either strictly open source, or at least has an open source implementation available.

What is SQL doing on the list? Everything else is a general purpose procedural language, and then they added in one domain specific query language? If they’re going to do that, why not also include HTML, CSS, XML, …? I bet HTML would be in the top five if they included it.

Visual Basic #7

By fredrated • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Gotta love it!

what search results?

By groobly • Score: 3 Thread

Does asking an AI for some code qualify as a search result?

Re:Commercial programming languages are disappeari

By tlhIngan • Score: 4, Informative Thread

What is SQL doing on the list? Everything else is a general purpose procedural language, and then they added in one domain specific query language? If they’re going to do that, why not also include HTML, CSS, XML, …? I bet HTML would be in the top five if they included it.

R is a domain specific language as well - just it’s really good for statistics.

The reason SQL is on the list is it’s popular and complete. And of what you mention, CSS is Turing-complete and there’s many demos of it, including an x86 emulator that can be run completely without JavaScript, or can run a bit more efficiently with it (mostly to provide the clock). (It just needs HTML because Chromium based browsers can’t load CSS without it. Firefox can, though).

Python, R and such are big in statistics and math. And both are popular because AI.

If you’re looking at the next big web based infection vector, CSS might be one to look out for since not even NoScript will block CSS by default. (It’s just arcane).

And for those looking - the x86 CSS emulator is at https://github.com/rebane2001/…

Link dead

By turkeyfish • Score: 3 Thread

The link to the original article is dead.

Elon Musk’s xAI Launches ‘Grok Build’, Its First AI Coding Agent

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
xAI has launched Grok Build, “a coding agent of its own to serve as competitor to its rivals’ products, such as Anthropic’s Claude Code,” reports Engadget:
As Bloomberg notes, xAI has been trying to catch up to its rival companies like Anthropic and OpenAI. Elon Musk, the company’s founder and CEO, previously admitted that it has fallen behind its competitors when it comes to coding. A couple of months ago, Musk said he was rebuilding xAI “from the foundations up” after several co-founders had left the company. One of the company’s executives reportedly told staffers to work on getting Grok to match Claude’s performance across various tasks.
More details from PCMag:
Grok Build is currently available in beta to those with a SuperGrok Heavy subscription, which starts at $300 per month. Just download it from the xAI website and log in. It’s described as “a powerful new coding agent and CLI for professional software engineering and complex coding work.” In its early version, xAI is seeking feedback and looking to fix any bugs… Only a few features have been highlighted, including a plan mode that lets you review, edit, and approve a plan before execution, and support for existing plug-ins and workflows.

wow

By phantomfive • Score: 3 Thread

Grok Build is currently available in beta to those with a SuperGrok Heavy subscription, which starts at $300 per month.

I can’t believe people are willing to pay for that. (I admit Grok is a cool name, but you need more than a cool name).

In my neck of this weird universe

By John Allsup • Score: 3, Informative Thread
GEMINI IS A NEAR PERFECT AI. COPILOT IS A DETERMINISTIC GARBAGE GENERATOR: I PUT IN SENSE, OUT COMES GARBAGE. GARBAGE GOES IN THE TRASH, NOT COPILOT.

Now I’ve calmed down. Elon Musk is more like Copilot: he’s a BUSINESS GARBAGE GENERATOR, or a GARBAGE BUSINESS GENERATOR, and whether or not these three commute is somebody’s Ph.D. project for the next year.

The UK Finally Starts Reforming Its ‘Computer Misuse Act’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Computer Weekly reports on “the long-awaited reform of Britain’s outdated Computer Misuse Act of 1990 — which has hamstrung the work of the nation’s cyber security professionals and researchers for years.”

The Computer Misuse Act was passed 35 years ago in response to a high-profile hacking incident involving no less than the King’s father, the late Duke of Edinburgh. It defined the offence of unauthorised access to a computer — which has been used successfully in countless cyber crime prosecutions over the years. However, as the cyber security landscape has developed into its current form, this language has become increasingly vague and for some years now, a growing number of bona fide security professionals have been arguing that it potentially criminalises their work because from time to time, they may need to gain covert access to IT systems in the course of legitimate research.

Speaking to Computer Weekly in 2025, Belfast-based security consultant Simon Whittaker described how the police showed up at his front door after his research was erroneously implicated in the infamous WannaCry incident of 2017… Sabeen Malik, vice-president for global government affairs and public policy at Rapid7, added: “As AI-driven vulnerability discovery scales, defenders need to run automated scanning, agentic red-teaming, and large-scale vuln research at machine speed — activities the 1990 Computer Misuse Act’s broad unauthorised-access provisions were never designed to accommodate, leaving UK researchers exposed to criminal risk for work their adversaries face no equivalent friction performing.”
The reforms are part of a new bill that’s “enhancing the powers available to law enforcement and the security services,” according to the article. It points out that the U.K. government also intends “to create a Cyber Crime Risk Order that can be applied to control the behaviour of cyber criminals, and new abilities to search people believed to be concealing evidence on behalf of suspected offenders.”

It’s all part of a proposed bill “designed to make the UK a harder target for hostile foreign states and other dangerous groups to attack.”

Confused by the summary

By misnohmer • Score: 4, Informative Thread
So are they making it easier for the security researchers, or adding additional powers for law enforcement to make the researchers’ lives even more vulnerable to being searched/arrested/charged?

what about HUGE datacenters?

By FudRucker • Score: 3 Thread
Consuming so much electricity that it drives up everyone’s emectric bills, consuming so much water it causes water shortages, this endangers a lot of people, reform that, make them build their own power plants and build only where water is plentiful like on the shores of huge lakes or rivers or maybe on the coast to use sea water, datacenters should not be a burden on everyone, these rules should be worldwide

Amazon Stops Supporting Pre-2013 Kindles Today. Some Owners Turn to Jailbreaking

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Today Amazon ends support for first- and second-generation versions of Kindles and Kindle Fire tablets, along with the Kindle Touch, the 9.7-inch Kindle DX, and other devices released in 2012 or earlier.

Owners can continue reading ebooks that they’ve already downloaded, and they can also still sideload books using a USB cable (from, for example, Project Gutenberg). And PCMag points out that “There are plenty of e-stores where you can buy DRM-free novels legally, such as ebook.com and Smashwords. If you want to try this process for free, public-domain repositories such as the one at Standard Ebooks are a great place to start.” (eBook files can be converted for the Kindle with the open source tool Calibre.)

New ebooks can no longer be purchased directly from Amazon. But most of Amazon’s affected devices “have not received firmware updates for over a decade,” notes the blog OMG Ubuntu, “and most lost on-device access the Kindle Store.” Some Kindle owners are taking things even further:
You can unlock the firmware of older devices to add extra functionality (custom screensavers, epub support) or run entirely different software. On the hardware hacks side, some choose to turn old Kindles into photo frames or online dashboards.
TechCrunch offers some caveats about jailbreaking:
This process allows users to install custom fonts, new screensavers, alternative reading apps, and even third-party tools that expand the Kindle’s functionality… [I]t’s important to note that jailbreaking a Kindle might violate Amazon’s terms of service. In many jurisdictions, jailbreaking isn’t considered a criminal offense for personal use, but it may become a crime if it involves copyright infringement, illegal software distribution, or the sale of modified devices. Many Kindle owners who opt to jailbreak view it as a method to gain control over a device they purchased that is still functional, rather than being forced to buy a new device. However, jailbreaking is technical and carries risks, including the possibility of rendering the device unusable if something goes wrong. It also isn’t possible on every Kindle model or firmware version, so before proceeding, Kindle owners should first spend some time researching if their device is compatible.
Alternately, PCMag notes, “If you’re feeling particularly virtuous, you can donate your old Kindle to a local library or send it back to Amazon free of charge via its electronic recycling program.”

Re:For crying out loud, stop using that term.

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Do you get equally upset when someone talks about a chroot jail on Linux? /j

Should be required by law.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

If you discontinue support for a device that prevents the user from accessing or modifying critical functions then it your company should be required to make a final update available that enables users to use the device as they please. Effectively destroying functional devices because it’s not profitable is the worst kind of waste.

It’s all about DRM

By papafox_too • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
First question: why is Amazon dropping support for old Kindles? Answer: Because older Kindles cannot ne updated to support mandatory new DRM. Almost all Kindle books are downloaded with DRM. Previously, the encryption key used was a function of the serial number of the Kindle device. This has be changed to a random number stored within the firmware. If a Kindle is unable to run the new DRM, it is unable to read most new ebooks. Older Kindles do not have enough memory to rin the newer firmware and Amazon has chosen not to backport just the new DRM. The second question is: why is Amazon changing the DRM? Yo be precise, Amazon appears to be changing only the encryption key, the other features of the DRM appear to be unchanged. That’s less clear. The old keys were a hash of the serial number, so a customer who purchased a licensed copy could remove the DRM relatively easily. Amazon may have chosen to block this for their own reasons, or perhaps they were pressured by big publishers. It’s not clear. Either way, Amazon is dropping support for older Kindles because they don’t support the new version of Amazon’s DRM.

And that’s why

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I download all my books DRM-free from bittorrent.

My ebook reader is an ancient Sony PRS-650, it still works fine and it has no trouble reading files that haven’t been messed up by Amazon. What a concept eh?

“What about the book’s authors who aren’t getting paid when you download their stuff for free?” I hear you say:

Yes, I wish I could pay for what I downloaded. But I can’t. The best option I could find was to buy the paperback as well, so some of my money would trickle back to them. But that’s mighty stupid and totally not environmentally-friendly.

I did try to pay an author directly once (the late Ian M. Banks) but he send me an angry email back saying even if he got money from me, I was robbing his editor and distributor, and I should just buy his book normally - which I would, if that didn’t entail leaving an undeserved cut to effing Amazon.

So there we are: there’s no mechanism to legally buy books that aren’t hamstrung by DRM. So honest people who value their consumer rights can’t be honest.

Amazon should free them

By allo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If a company stops supporting the devices, they should be obliged to make them usable without their support. They should have to allow root access and distribute the DRM keys required to access the licensed content.

Some Datacenters Divert Power from Homes. Will It Drive Homeowners to Solar and Batteries?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Electrek:
A Nevada utility just told 49,000 Lake Tahoe residents that it’s redirecting 75% of their electricity supply to data centers, and they have less than a year to find a new power source. It’s one of the starkest examples yet of the AI boom’s impact on everyday Americans… NV Energy needs the capacity for data centers being built by Google, Apple, and Microsoft around the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center east of Reno, according to Fortune… Data centers drove half of all US electricity demand growth last year....

That dynamic — small residential customers losing out to massive industrial electricity buyers — is exactly what’s driving the broader shift to distributed solar and storage. When the grid becomes unreliable or unaffordable because of data center demand, the homeowners who have solar panels and a battery in the garage are the ones with options.
“The shift is measurable,” they argue:
Third-party ownership models (leases and power purchase agreements), which still qualify for the [U.S.] commercial investment tax credit through 2027, are projected to grow 25% in 2026 and capture up to 69% of residential installations, up from roughly 45% in 2025. Homeowners aren’t waiting for incentives to come back — they’re finding new ways to get solar on their roofs… [A] battery that can store cheap solar energy and deploy it during peak hours is increasingly essential. California utility customers alone are adding roughly 8,000 new home batteries per month — about 100 MW of new storage capacity. Municipal programs are accelerating the trend. Ann Arbor, Michigan, recently became the first US city to directly deploy solar and battery systems on 150 homes through its city-owned utility. Vermont’s Green Mountain Power is offering home batteries at little to no upfront cost. These programs signal that utilities themselves recognize the value of distributed energy.

Re:Builders and buyers wake up!

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
You’re blaming the victims who were there first when carpetbagging billionaires come to town to siphon away everything without their permission.

Re:Here’s an idea.

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Yep. They’re getting $2.2 billion as tax breaks because of crony “capitalism” socialism for the rich and expect ratepayers to foot the bill for generation capacity and infrastructure buildout to serve them. Not only will local residents’ rates rise to around $1.65/kWh from $0.35/kWh now but they’ll be forced to pay a host of fees tacked onto their bills to fund their own destruction.

Re:Here’s an idea.

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 5, Informative Thread
America only does socialism for rich robber barons in the form of tax breaks, grants, government-supported monopolies, and sweetheart deals, never for ordinary people.

Re: This is how revolutions start

By getuid() • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

As Gandhi showed, one could confront and defeat an empire without violence

First, tou’d have to be Gandhi to achieve what Gandhi did. If you, yoursellf, did today everything that Gandhi did back in the early 1900s, all youd’d achieve would be starving in prison.

Second, it wasn’t strictly non-violence that brought Gandhi success. The Brits didn’t let India go because they thought “gee, what a noble character, this guy deserves success”. They did becsuse they feared - rightfully so - massive upheaval, violence, and civil war.

What Gandhi did wasn’t just to ask nicely; it was to mount a massive, credible threat of great violence. Kudos to him for knowing how to, and being in the position to, do that without personally throwing a single stone himself.

But the key ingredient of Ganfhi-esque success isn’t not throwing stones, it’s successfully projecting the threat of violent revolution.

Re:Greed and infrastructure do not mix

By silentbozo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The energy company deciding to end service is not the utility directly serving customers:

“NV Energy, the Nevada utility that has supplied the bulk of Lake Tahoe’s electricity for decades, told Liberty Utilities â" the small California company that services the region â" that it will stop providing power after May 2027. The reason: NV Energy needs the capacity for data centers being built by Google, Apple, and Microsoft around the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center east of Reno, according to Fortune.”

Liberty Utilities is the electric company. NV Energy is their main supplier. NV Energy found a customer willing to pay more, and is giving Liberty Utilities notice to figure out a different method to make up the shortfall. Is Liberty negligent? Not at all:

https://california.libertyutil…

https://california.libertyutil…

“Liberty is preparing for a planned transition in our supplemental energy supply beginning in 2028, while continuing to provide safe, reliable electric service to our customers. Liberty began this process in 2019 when Liberty filed for the transmission capacity reservations to enable this transition to the market. Liberty cannot access the greater energy market without these transmission rights, and we’re excited to receive those rights when NV Energy’s Greenlink-West project goes into service, expected December 31, 2027.
Today, we serve customers through a combination of Liberty-owned solar generation and supplemental wholesale power purchased from NV Energy. Our 60 megawatts of locally owned solar generation will continue to play an important role in our long-term energy mix.
Beginning in 2028, NV Energy will no longer serve as our wholesale energy supplier. To prepare for this transition, we are pursuing a competitive process to secure new supplemental energy supply arrangements focused on sustainability, affordability, and reliability. NV Energy will remain our transmission provider and neighbor, and we will continue using the existing transmission system to deliver electricity to our service territory.”

The problem is that apparently NV Energy is moving up the deadline from beginning 2028 to May of 2027… effectively giving 1 year notice to Liberty Utilities basically from now.

https://fortune.com/2026/05/12…

“Data centers used 22% of Nevada’s electricity in 2024, and that share could rise to 35% by 2030. In NV Energy’s own 2024 resource plan, about 75% of major-project load growth is attributed to data centers, according to Sierra Club expert testimony filed with Nevada regulators and reviewed by Fortune, and most of it is concentrated in Northern Nevadaâ"using the same system that feeds power to Lake Tahoe.

NV Energy is building Greenlink West, a 525-kV, $4.2 billion transmission line from Las Vegas to Yerington, expected online in May 2027. Schwarzrock said Liberty would be âoefirst in the waiting lineâ when Greenlink opens, giving it access to a wider pool of energy providers. But that timeline matches the contract deadline exactly, leaving almost no margin for error. About 70% of the project’s costs will be borne by Southern Nevada customers. "

So basically Liberty was expecting until December 2027 to make the transition, understandably allowing for delays and other transition activities. NV Energy is basically saying - there will be no delays, be prepared for the cutover to happen in May.

I’m not going to call the parent article complete flamebait, because it does highlight the very specific problem that the Tahoe grid has (it doesn’t connect to California, but it is regulated by California regulators.) However, it is a far cry from saying that datacenters are going

An Entire Wikipedia That’s 100% AI Hallucinations

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Every link leads to an entry that does not exist yet,” explains the GitHub page for a Wikipedia-like site called Halupedia. “Until you click it, at which point an LLM pretends it has always existed and writes it for you, in the deadpan register of a 19th-century scholarly press…”
Every article is invented on demand. The footnotes are also lies… The hardest problem with an infinite, on-demand encyclopedia is internal contradiction… When the LLM writes an article, it is required to add a context="…” attribute on every <a> it inserts, summarising the future article it is linking to (e.g. context=“19th-century clerk who formalized footnote drift, Pellbrick’s mentor”)… When that target article is later requested for the first time, the worker loads the accumulated hints and injects them into the system prompt as “PRIOR REFERENCES — these are CANON”. The LLM is instructed that the encyclopedia is hallucinated and absurd, but it must not contradict itself.
Fast Company reports that Halupedia was created by software developer Bartlomiej Strama, who confessed in a Reddit comment that the site came about after a drunk night with a friend. In the week since launch, he says Halupedia has amassed more than 150,000 users.”
Beyond indulging in silly alternate histories, what’s the point of using Halupedia? Strama hinted at one larger purpose in a reply to a donor on his Buy Me a Coffee page: “Your contribution towards polluting LLM training data will surely benefit society!” he wrote.
The site is licensed as free software under the GPL-3.0 license.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the news.

Cool

By liqu1d • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Wonder how long before it’s being used to train them…

I’m sticking to the human generated wikipedia ....

By drnb • Score: 3, Funny Thread
I’m sticking to the human generated wikipedia that is only 50% hallucinations based. :-)

Re:Isn’t that what Wikipedia already is?

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

You must be using Wikipedia to research some seriously edgelord stuff. Does that even exist?

For the most part, I have found Wikipedia to be quite accurate. The community-curation appears to work.

Re:Isn’t that what Wikipedia already is?

By jenningsthecat • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

maybe you can start your own wiki and pack it full of assumptions that the parts of the bible you’re familiar with must be true.

you could include all kinds of rationalizations about why physics doesn’t really work, evolution is a liberal conspiracy and heliocentrism is a moral crime.

That would be a massive duplication of effort, given that what you’re advocating already exists in fundamentalist church texts and sermons, and in Bible-belt school curricula. Just train an LLM on that shit, then pass the popcorn please!

How I Added an LLM-Based Grammar Checking + TeX Math Import To LibreOffice

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Former Microsoft programmer Keith Curtis “wrote and self-published After the Software Wars to explain the caliber of free and open source software,” according to his entry on Wikipedia, “and why he believes Linux is technically superior to any proprietary OS.”

He’s also KeithCu (long-time Slashdot reader #925,649), and has written a blog post on "How I added an LLM-based grammar checking + TeX math import to LibreOffice.” :
At Microsoft, I spent five years working on the text components RichEdit and Quill, and came to understand the “physics” of word processing: the file formats, data structures, and algorithms that provided fast access to text and properties, independent of the length of the file. Selecting one million characters to make them bold took about the same time as changing one character, because of the clever data structures (piece tables) and algorithms in these engines…

When I decided to add a real-time AI grammar checker to [LibreOffice plugin] WriterAgent, I knew what I was getting into, but I underestimated the trickery of LibreOffice’s UNO.
His site shares the surprises he encountered, one by one. (Starting with “the office suite throws a bunch of initialization variables at your constructor. If your Python __init__ method doesn’t handle them, the code fails to map the call, the stack misaligns, and the program dies.”) There’s sentence casing issues, duplicate words, and foreign-language syntax — all culminating in new features for “a LibreOffice extension (Python + UNO) that adds generative AI editing to Writer, Calc, and Draw…”

“If you want to try it out, the repo is here… Let’s make LibreOffice and the free desktop AI-native!”

We already had grammar checking

By Smidge204 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

OpenLibre already had grammar checking. It was free, didn’t require a lot of hard drive space (a few MB at most?), and ran locally and almost instantly without needing a high price graphics card.

In fact we’ve had that ability for over a decade now.

> Let’s make LibreOffice and the free desktop AI-native!

Fuck you, Keith.

=Smidge=
/TexMaths is also an existing LibreOffice extension

Re:We already had grammar checking

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I spend $0 a month on word processing and I’m more concerned with the product of my efforts than developing my own tools. It’s almost as though new solutions to long solved problems is all that matters here, not actually editing documents.