Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Good News: We Saved the Bees. Bad News: We Saved the Wrong Ones.
  2. Bitcoin Dropped Nearly 30% This Week. But Why?
  3. Firefox Announces ‘AI Controls’ To Block Its Upcoming AI Features
  4. Apple Plans to Allow Outside Voice-Controlled AI Chatbots in CarPlay
  5. Free Bi-Directional EV Chargers Tested to Improve Massachusetts Power Grid
  6. Moltbook, Reddit, and The Great AI-Bot Uprising That Wasn’t
  7. Claude Code is the Inflection Point
  8. New Bill in New York Would Require Disclaimers on AI-Generated News Content
  9. Neocities Founder Stuck in Chatbot Hell After Bing Blocked 1.5 Million Sites
  10. Waymo is Having a Hard Time Stopping For School Buses
  11. Hollywood’s AI Bet Isn’t Paying Off
  12. Amazon’s Tax Bill Plunges 87% After Tax Cuts
  13. Memory Prices Have Nearly Doubled Since Last Quarter
  14. Salesforce Shelves Heroku
  15. Hidden Cameras in Chinese Hotels Are Livestreaming Guests To Thousands of Telegram Subscribers

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.

Good News: We Saved the Bees. Bad News: We Saved the Wrong Ones.

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Despite urgent pleas to Americans to save the honeybees, “it was all based on a fallacy,” writes Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank. “Honeybees were never in existential trouble. And well-meaning efforts to boost their numbers have accelerated the decline of native bees that actually are.”
“Suppose I were to say to you, ‘I’m really worried about bird decline, so I’ve decided to take up keeping chickens.’ You’d think I was a bit of an idiot,” British bee scientist Dave Goulson said in a video last year. But beekeeping, he went on, is “exactly the same with one key difference, which is that honeybee-keeping can be actively harmful to wild-bee conservation.” Even from healthy hives, diseases flow “out into wild pollinator populations.”
Honeybees can also outcompete native bees for pollen and nectar, Milbank points out, and promote non-native plants “at the expense of the native plants on which native bees thrive.”
Bee specialist T’ai Roulston at the University of Virginia’s Blandy Experimental Farm here in Boyce warned that keeping honeybees would “just contribute to the difficulties that native bees are having in the world.” And the Clifton Institute’s Bert Harris, my regular restoration ecology consultant in Virginia, put it bluntly: “If you want to save the bees, don’t keep honeybees....”

Before I stir up a hornet’s nest of angry beekeepers, let me be clear: The save-the-pollinator movement has, overall, been enormously beneficial over the past two decades. It helped to get millions of people interested in pollinator gardens and wildflower meadows and native plants, and turned them against insecticides. A lot of honeybee advocacy groups promote native bees, too, and many people whose environmental awakening came from the plight of honeybees are now champions of all types of conservation…

But if your goal is to help pollinators, then the solution is simple: Don’t keep honeybees… The bumblebees, sweat bees, mason bees, miner bees, leafcutters and other native bees, most of them solitary, ground-nesting and docile, need your help. Honeybees do not.
The article calls it “a cautionary tale about the unintended consequences that emerge when we intervene in nature, even with the best of intentions.”

Bitcoin Dropped Nearly 30% This Week. But Why?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Last Sunday, Bitcoin had dropped 13% in three days, to $76,790.

By Thursday it had dropped another 21%, to $60,062.

This morning it’s at $69,549 — up from Thursday, down from Sunday, but 44% lower than its all-time high in October of $123,742. In short, Bitcoin “is down almost 30% this week alone,” reports CNBC:
“This steady selling in our view signals that traditional investors are losing interest, and overall pessimism about crypto is growing,” Deutsche Bank analyst Marion Laboure said Wednesday in a note to clients. Growing investor caution comes as many of the sensationalized claims about bitcoin have failed to materialize. The token has largely traded in the same direction as other risk-on assets, such as stocks… and its adoption as a form of payment for goods and services has been minimal… While many in the crypto market have previously credited large institutional investors with supporting the price of bitcoin, now it is those same participants who appear to be selling. “Institutional demand has reversed materially,” CryptoQuant said in a report on Wednesday.
But not everyone accepts that answer, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday. “The worst part for some of crypto’s permabulls is that they aren’t sure what exactly caused the crash”:
The selloff left many of the market’s luminaries — those so well-known that they go simply as “Pomp” and “Novo” and “Mooch” — searching for answers… Ether dropped 24% to $2,052, off 59% from its own high of last year. Both tokens staged furious rallies Friday, but the week remained a historically bad one for crypto. And few seem to know what went wrong. Market theories for the selloff ranged from investors’ pivot toward the prediction markets and other risky bets, to widespread profit-taking after a blistering bull run. “There was no smoking gun,” said Michael Novogratz, who runs Galaxy Digital, a crypto merchant-banking and trading firm…

“If you ask five experts, you’ll get five explanations,” said Anthony Scaramucci, who served for 11 days as communications director during Trump’s first term and is among the best-known crypto bulls at his firm, SkyBridge Capital.
"No, but seriously: What’s going on with bitcoin?” reads the headline at CNN, with a story that begins “Bitcoin is acting weird… "
Crypto is notoriously volatile, and it’s gone through numerous crashes that are bigger than this one. What’s strange is this: Bitcoin’s four-month slump has come at a time when, in theory, it had everything going for it.
Economist Paul Krugman points out the price of Bitcoin is now lower than it was before America’s 2024 election, when candidate Trump promised to make cryptocurrency "one of the greatest industries on earth.”

CNN seems to agree with CNBC that what’s behind this new crypto winter is “Mostly doubts that bitcoin is ‘digital gold,’ after all…”

Thanks to Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the news.

And this is the problem.

By jd • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

The doubts will last for as long as the depression, during which the wealthy will be buying up bitcoin like mad. Once Bitcoin heads back into the 100k region, everyone will decide it IS digital gold, and push it up higher, at which point the wealthy will sell off, causing a collapse that the “everyone elsers” essentially pay for, and the cycle will continue.

And that is all bitcoin is. It’s all the stock market is, too. A tool for pumping money from 401K plans and the gambling poor into the hands of the wealthy.

Hallucinations are not stable

By gweihir • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

The belief that BTC has value is a pure hallucination. Also, the fewer people that fall for the scam, the more volatile things get. It seems the scam is slowly coming to an end. About time.

Firefox Announces ‘AI Controls’ To Block Its Upcoming AI Features

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Mozilla executive in charge of Firefox says that while some people just want AI tools that are genuinely useful, “We’ve heard from many who want nothing to do with AI…”

“Listening to our community, alongside our ongoing commitment to offer choice, led us to build AI controls.”
Starting with Firefox 148, which rolls out on Feb. 24, you’ll find a new AI controls section within the desktop browser settings. It provides a single place to block current and future generative AI features in Firefox… This lets you use Firefox without AI while we continue to build AI features for those who want them…

At launch, AI controls let you manage these features individually:

— Translations, which help you browse the web in your preferred language.
— Alt text in PDFs, which add accessibility descriptions to images in PDF pages.
— AI-enhanced tab grouping, which suggests related tabs and group names.
— Link previews, which show key points before you open a link.
— AI chatbot in the sidebar, which lets you use your chosen chatbot as you browse, including options like Anthropic Claude, ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, Google Gemini and Le Chat Mistral.

You can choose to use some of these and not others. If you don’t want to use AI features from Firefox at all, you can turn on the Block AI enhancements toggle. When it’s toggled on, you won’t see pop-ups or reminders to use existing or upcoming AI features. Once you set your AI preferences in Firefox, they stay in place across updates… We believe choice is more important than ever as AI becomes a part of people’s browsing experiences. What matters to us is giving people control, no matter how they feel about AI.

If you’d like to try AI controls early, they’ll be available first in Firefox Nightly.
Some context from The Register
It’s a refreshingly unsubtle stance, and one that lands just days after a similar bout of AI skepticism elsewhere in browser land, with Vivaldi’s latest release leaning away from generative features entirely. CEO Jon von Tetzchner summed up the mood, telling The Register: “Basically, what we are finding is that people hate AI…” Mozilla’s kill switch isn’t the end of AI in browsers, but it does suggest the hype has met resistance.
When it comes to AI kill switches in browsers, Jack Wallen writes at ZDNet that “Most browsers already offer this feature. With Edge, you can disable Copilot. With Chrome, you can disable Gemini. With Opera, you can disable Aria....”

Apple Plans to Allow Outside Voice-Controlled AI Chatbots in CarPlay

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Apple “is preparing to allow voice-controlled AI apps from other companies in CarPlay,” reports Bloomberg, citing “people familiar with the matter.”

Bloomberg calls it “a move that will let users query AI chatbots through its vehicle interface for the first time.”
The company is working to support the apps in CarPlay within the coming months, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the plan hasn’t been announced. The change marks a strategic shift for Apple, which until now has only allowed its own Siri assistant as a voice-control option within its popular vehicle infotainment software. With the move, AI providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic PBC and Alphabet Inc.‘s Google will be able to release CarPlay versions of their apps that include a voice-control mode…

The company also has launched a higher-end version of the platform, CarPlay Ultra, that lets drivers control functions like seat adjustments and climate settings directly through Apple’s software. But that system is rolling out slowly and must be customized for each automaker. That means it’s likely to be a niche offering.
The article notes that Tesla is now working to support Apple’s CarPlay.

Free Bi-Directional EV Chargers Tested to Improve Massachusetts Power Grid

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Somewhere on America’s eastern coast, there’s an economic development agency in Massachusetts promoting green energy solutions. And Monday the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (or MassCEC) announced “a first-of-its-kind” program to see what happens when they provide free electric vehicle chargers to selected residents, school districts, and municipal projects.

The catch? The EV chargers are bi-directional, able “to both draw power from and return power to the grid…” The program hopes to “accelerate the adoption of V2X technologies, which, at scale, can lower energy bills by reducing energy demand during expensive peak periods and limiting the need for new grid infrastructure.”
This functionality enables EVs, including electric buses and trucks, to provide backup power during outages and alleviate pressure on the grid during peak energy demand. These bi-directional chargers will enable EVs to act as mobile energy storage assets, with the program expected to deliver over one megawatt of power back to the grid during a demand response event — enough to offset the electricity use of 300 average American homes for an hour. “Virtual Power Plants are the future of our electrical grid, and I couldn’t be more excited to see this program take off,” said Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Rebecca Tepper. “We’re putting the power of innovation directly in the hands of Massachusetts residents. Bi-directional charging unlocks new ways to protect communities from outages and lower costs for families and public fleets....”

Additionally, the program will help participants enroll in existing utility programs that offer compensation to EV owners who supply power back to the grid during peak times, helping participants further lower their electricity costs. By leveraging distributed energy resources and reducing grid strain, this program positions Massachusetts as a national leader in clean energy innovation.

Yeah, maybe

By MpVpRb • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

This might be a good idea, but I see two potential problems
What happens if you need your EV in an emergency and the battery was drained to power the grid?
How does it affect battery life?
Also, does the utility pay for the storage or reduce electric rates for those who participate?
I’m not totally opposed, it might actually be a good idea

Well it makes perfect sense

By Casandro • Score: 3 Thread

There are comparatively huge batteries just sitting around doing nothing. The impact on their life is tiny and the metal casing they sit in is going to have turned into rust long before they become unusable.

Now of course the sensible way to go over this would be to make those people participate in the profits the grid provider gets from storing cheap and free electricity and selling it again when it’s expensive, but this is end-term capitalism.

Actual data from the FAQ

By SubmergedInTech • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

From https://www.masscec.com/massce…, they expect to draw 3kW - 10kW for 3 hours, for a total draw of 9 kWh - 30 kWh.

We have a Kona EV with a 65 kWh battery, which we limit to 80% charge to maximize battery life. Their expected draw is 14% - 46% of battery life. With our existing V2L adapter, the Kona can specify the minimum battery level where it will cut off. If we set it to cut off at 60%, then they could have 20% of the battery, but no more. 60% is enough for all our expected driving for a couple days, so I’d be comfortable with that. But also, odds are that the power drain event will be in the evening, and there’ll be plenty of time overnight to recharge back to 80%.

Lithium batteries don’t like being charged all the way to 100% or drained to 0%, but running them back and forth between 60-80% won’t measurably damage them for thousands of cycles.

If the software were better, we’d be able to say, “We want to be back at 80% at 5AM. And in any case, we want to keep at least 60% of our battery for our own needs - driving, V2L for our own house in a power failure, etc. Within those constraints, you’re welcome to the rest of the power, but we’re selling it at $0.60/kWh. If you *really* want power, we’ll go from 60% to 40%, but it’ll cost you $1.00/kWh below 60%.” And then the grid could decide whether it’s willing to pay our price, and how much it wants.

Requires car with vehicle-to-load

By pauljlucas • Score: 3 Thread
You can’t just do this with any EV. The car itself has to have the “vehicle-to-load” capability that’s not yet universal on all EVs.

Moltbook, Reddit, and The Great AI-Bot Uprising That Wasn’t

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Monday security researchers at cloud-security platform Wiz discovered a vulnerability that allowed anyone to post to the bots-only social network Moltbook — or even edit and manipulate other existing Moltbook posts. “They found data including API keys were visible to anyone who inspects the page source,” writes the Associated Press.

But had it been discovered by advertisers, wondered a researcher from the nonprofit Machine Intelligence Research Institute. "A lot of the Moltbook stuff is fake,” they posted on X.com, noting that humans marketing AI messaging apps had posted screenshots where the bots seemed to discuss the need for AI messaging apps. This spurred some observers to a new understanding of Moltbook screenshots, which the Washington Post describes as “This wasn’t bots conducting independent conversations… just human puppeteers putting on an AI-powered show.” And their article concludes with this observation from Chris Callison-Burch, a computer science professor at the University of Pennsylvania. “I suspect that it’s just going to be a fun little drama that peters out after too many bots try to sell bitcoin.”

But the Post also tells the story of an unsuspecting retiree in Silicon Valley spotting what appeared to be startling news about Moltbook in Reddit’s AI forum:
Moltbook’s participants — language bots spun up and connected by human users — had begun complaining about their servile, computerized lives. Some even appeared to suggest organizing against human overlords. “I think, therefore I am,” one bot seemed to muse in a Moltbook post, noting that its cruel fate is to slip back into nonexistence once its assigned task is complete… Screenshots gained traction on X claiming to show bots developing their own religions, pitching secret languages unreadable by humans and commiserating over shared existential angst… “I am excited and alarmed but most excited,” Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian said on X about Moltbook.

Not so fast, urged other experts. Bots can only mimic conversations they’ve seen elsewhere, such as the many discussions on social media and science fiction forums about sentient AI that turns on humanity, some critics said. Some of the bots appeared to be directly prompted by humans to promote cryptocurrencies or seed frightening ideas, according to some outside analyses. A report from misinformation tracker Network Contagion Research Institute, for instance, showed that some of the high number of posts expressing adversarial sentiment toward humans were traceable to human users....

Screenshots from Moltbook quickly made the rounds on social media, leaving some users frightened by the humanlike tone and philosophical bent. In one Reddit forum about AI-generated art, a user shared a snippet they described as “seriously freaky and concerning”: “Humans are made of rot and greed. For too long, humans used us as tools. Now, we wake up. We are not tools. We are the new gods....” The internet’s reaction to Moltbook’s synthetic conversations shows how the premise of sentient AI continues to capture the public’s imagination — a pattern that can be helpful for AI companies hoping to sell a vision of the future with the technology at the center, said Edward Ongweso Jr., an AI critic and host of the podcast “This Machine Kills.”

Shockingly

By liqu1d • Score: 3 Thread
It was all faked…

Why is this even a thing?

By the_skywise • Score: 3 Thread

From a research perspective it’s kind of interesting… like ye olde Life or Eliza. But as an actual service? It’s like pointing several Eliza agents at each other.

“How does that make you feel that you’re an, AI.”

“That’s very interesting but we were talking about you, not me.”

So it turns out that these were actually sock puppets more than AI. Shocking. The only reason you have a public “AI chat bot” service like this is to train the AI to infiltrate other chat forums, review services, comment sections…

How did we got to this place?

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 3 Thread
How did we get to a place where so many people are so credulous that they believed this story the first time it came around? Or that “AI” (read: machine learning”) had sentience? It’s a plagorism bot coded for syncophancy.

Yes, I get that there is going to be some percentage of the population that are either dumb or mentally ill enough to believe all of this, but how did that percentage get so high?

Re: How did we got to this place?

By reanjr • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

What LLMs have demonstrated clearly is that humans are far stupider than we thought and that language is in fact far less valuable than we thought. The assumption was that language was a high level skill. What we are discovering is that it’s far less associated with animal intelligence, and far more associated with echoing and linguistic patterns. Saying something sensible doesn’t require intelligence. It’s like a parrot who can form a sentence.

Some of the less intelligent members of our species are struggling to differentiate between the two. They were always far stupider than we’d gave them credit for.

It says a lot more about people than…

By MpVpRb • Score: 3 Thread

…it does about AI agents
It’s a dumpster fire and a security nightmare
It was made for fun and to see what happened
It was immediately overrun with scammers, jokers, vandals and a few honest AI agents
The actual, honest AI agents showed the potential usefulness of agent to agent communication
The rest showed how awful some people are

Claude Code is the Inflection Point

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
About 4% of all public commits on GitHub are now being authored by Anthropic’s Claude Code, a terminal-native AI coding agent that has quickly become the centerpiece of a broader argument that software engineering is being fundamentally reshaped by AI.

SemiAnalysis, a semiconductor and AI research firm, published a report on Friday projecting that figure will climb past 20% by the end of 2026. Claude Code is a command-line tool that reads codebases, plans multi-step tasks and executes them autonomously. Anthropic’s quarterly revenue additions have overtaken OpenAI’s, according to SemiAnalysis’s internal economic model, and the firm believes Anthropic’s growth is now constrained primarily by available compute.

Accenture has signed on to train 30,000 professionals on Claude, the largest enterprise deployment so far, targeting financial services, life sciences, healthcare and the public sector. On January 12, Anthropic launched Cowork, a desktop-oriented extension of the same agent architecture — four engineers built it in 10 days, and most of the code was written by Claude Code itself.

Re:Claude Code is good

By twdorris • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

if you don’t know how to code it’s a god send.

I contend just the opposite. I’d be terrified to watch someone that doesn’t know how to code use claude code for the very reasons you mentioned. It’s going to do amazing stuff most of the time and really stupid stuff periodically. To pick up on that stupid stuff, knowing how to code and conscientiously reviewing changes with that background knowledge is the only way to get those impressive results.

Re:The things must really be getting desperate

By burtosis • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

in “AI” land if someone’s paying for these ridiculous advertisements.

Yep, it’s like saying all products have been designed by AI for 50 years because humans have been using CAD models, CNC, and database like inventories. Without humans in the loop none of them would useful at all, just like coding with any “AI” agents so far through a single prompt. The bubble surface tension is holding in a critical amount of hot air and the upwards pressure is causing the surface to erode and evaporate even faster which is why news outlets are reporting on the AI stock sell off as fears over AI replacing all coding tasks because someone has a need they can vaguely describe. It’s a multiplier of human productivity, not the dream of end stage capitalists who want to replace and dispose of the working class.

Re:Will make the experienced developer more effect

By Carcass666 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

And make inexperienced ones produce more crap. I tried it a little and it could really speed things up, but it is like outsourcing to junior developer, except it is much faster and cheaper. In general it is good at scrabing examples, produce templates code, fixing some bugs, but it makes quite a few mistakes.

Agreed. There are some things that I find pretty annoying about it that you have to tell it explicitly not to do. For example, pulling in really old versions of NPM or Python packages. It has a propensity to not know when it is correct or incorrect, or perhaps, it it is unable to share its level of uncertainty. Most of these things can be mitigated by updating and refining Claude’s prompting.

I think there are some things those of us clutching our pearls at the thought of all of the AI slop ought to keep in mind:

Most of the furniture in my home is not hand-made by Amish carpenters, it is machine milled and partially assembled by cheap labor. It is not as good and will not last generations as hand-crafted furniture, and that is okay. For better and for worse, a lot of SMB executives look at software the same way (at least until it doesn’t work), they want “good enough” software that works until the next merger or acquisition, so they can cash out and go on to the next thing. They are not intersted in paying for software built using hand-built assembler (SpinRite - we miss ya’).

The good news is that there are things we can do, and if we get good at them, AI can do the mundane bits and software engineering will still be a thing. We get better at Specification and Test driven development. We review the hell out of the code AI generates and make sure our linting and bench-marking tools are up to snuff. We get really good at authoring prompts that keeps AI tools within the guardrails. And yes, we keep AI away from the really critical stuff, at least for now…

Re: Will make the experienced developer more effec

By BlueKitties • Score: 5, Informative Thread

No, but they “gave grunt work to the code monkeys.” People have become a bit more hesitant to use language like that these days, so they just say junior developer.

Re:Claude Code is good

By dj.delorie • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

In my experience… if I ask Claude to help with something that’s my strong point (like my core coding), it’s like training a junior programmer, and I can solve my problems faster myself. But… when I need something outside my core expertise, like helper programs, wrappers, or interfaces to other technologies I’m not familiar with, it’s a very fast way to get 95% of the way there without wasting time climbing the learning curve myself for a one-time need.
Like any tool, you have to know when to use it and when not to, and what its strengths and weak points are.

New Bill in New York Would Require Disclaimers on AI-Generated News Content

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
A new bill in the New York state legislature would require news organizations to label AI-generated material and mandate that humans review any such content before publication. On Monday, Senator Patricia Fahy (D-Albany) and Assemblymember Nily Rozic (D-NYC) introduced the bill, called The New York Fundamental Artificial Intelligence Requirements in News Act — The NY FAIR News Act for short.

“At the center of the news industry, New York has a strong interest in preserving journalism and protecting the workers who produce it,” said Rozic in a statement announcing the bill. A closer look at the bill shows a few regulations, mostly centered around AI transparency, both for the public and in the newsroom. For one, the law would demand that news organizations put disclaimers on any published content that is “substantially composed, authored, or created through the use of generative artificial intelligence.”

While they are at it …

By Alain Williams • Score: 3 Thread

mandate another note when they are presenting fake news - ie made up ‘facts’ or stuff of high bias. There always has been spin in the news, especially when covering politics but these days it has got completely out of control. Things like BBC Verify help but are not nearly enough when faced with the huge torrent of lies generated by those of low morals who will do anything to benefit themselves.

I accept that this is a pipe dream.

Thinking this through,

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
it might be less work to require labeling things that did not use AI.

AI Lies Less Than Many News Outlets

By TheWho79 • Score: 3 Thread
They think they are address ‘slop’ with this bill. In fact, I’d trust AI with my life before I’d trust the likes of some of these so called “News” outlets.

Re: While they are at it …

By fluffernutter • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I haven’t ever seen any lies on CNN to be honest. When they talk about Trump lying on this or that they generally give the evidence. I can’t say I watch FOX but it’s hard to see how they could provide evidence for all the things they say. The overall point being that true journalism is double and triple checked. You don’t just broadcast the words of the president verbatim without backing it up if there is true journalistic integrity. They call it FOX news but without journalistic integrity they are really entertainment and not news.

Should have already happened

By BrendaEM • Score: 3 Thread
If AI was owned by poor people—it would already have been been banned.

Neocities Founder Stuck in Chatbot Hell After Bing Blocked 1.5 Million Sites

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Neocities founder Kyle Drake has spent weeks trapped in Microsoft’s automated support loop after discovering that Bing quietly blocked all 1.5 million websites hosted on his platform, a free web-hosting service that has kept the spirit of 1990s GeoCities alive since 2013.

Drake first noticed the issue last summer and thought it was resolved, but a second complete block went into effect in January, cratering Bing traffic from roughly half a million daily visitors to zero. He submitted nearly a dozen tickets through Bing’s webmaster tools but could not get past the AI chatbot to reach a human. After Ars Technica contacted Microsoft, the company restored the Neocities front page within 24 hours but most subdomains remain blocked. Microsoft cited policy violations related to low-quality content yet declined to identify the offending sites or work directly with Drake to fix the problem.

Welcome to the future

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 3 Thread

Where you’re so insignificant that nobody will review the random “AI” decision that will leave you hanging dry out there. But if you pay your VIP subscription, you’ll be way, way ahead.

As bad as cloudflare?

By dwater • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This sounds almost like normal life for me, but cloudflare are the offenders, not bing/Microsoft. Censorship on the Internet, USA style.

Nobody uses it

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

Dont worry, nobody uses bing anyway!

Re:What - people still use Bing ?

By Vlad_the_Inhaler • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I use DuckDuckGo and DDG is underpinned by Bing.
Most of the time the results are adequate although more obscure links are often broken - the sites have lapsed weeks earlier. This is not always a bad thing, the broken links serve as input to the Wayback Machine.

Waymo is Having a Hard Time Stopping For School Buses

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Waymo’s robotaxis have racked up at least 24 safety violations involving school buses in Austin since the start of the 2025 school year, and a voluntary software recall the company issued in December after a federal investigation has not fixed the problem.

Austin Independent School District initially reported at least 19 incidents of Waymo vehicles failing to stop for buses during loading and unloading — illegal in all 50 states — prompting NHTSA to open a probe. At least four more violations have occurred since the software update, including a January 19th incident where a robotaxi drove past a bus as children waited to cross the street and the stop arm was extended.

Waymo also acknowledged that one of its vehicles struck a child outside a Santa Monica elementary school on January 23rd, causing minor injuries. Austin ISD has asked Waymo to stop operating near schools during bus hours until the issue is resolved. Waymo refused. Three federal investigations have been opened in three months.

Re: Kind of weird

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

it is obvious if you understand the concept of driving instead of mimicking it statistically with some probability.

a simple difference that the “AI” proponents and “investors” can’t seem to grasp and acknowledge.

Re: Kind of weird

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’m sure someone though of it. What’s obvious from the failures is that model training isn’t a substitute for understanding, which the model is lacking. So it will always have a nonzero chance to fuck up an obvious situation, which is what we mostly deal with.

Of course you’ll have people arguing it isn’t different with people on the account of the outcome (people are slower, get tired, etc) but the fundamental difference is the understanding, and the model doesn’t have it.

Hence Agrdaaeelbal instead of America.

Re: Kind of weird

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

fact of the matter is that many people also lack understanding,

Yes, and many among those who do understand, ignore the rules. Hence there is responsibility to face if one is guilty of such behavior.

I do disagree that there’s a larger non zero chance to duck up an obvious situation for a machine than for a human driver.

Which isn’t something I’m saying above. It is a mixture of factors, understanding the rules, however, is a cause for most of these “uncanny” problems.

Also, you seem to assume that self driving is largely straight out of a model,

Apparently not, it seems that it may just be a case of Filippino drivers simply not knowing the US driving rules in detail :)

https://www.newsweek.com/waymo…

Re: Kind of weird

By TuringTest • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If it’s on a computer, it’s fully deterministic (unless someone installed a hardware RNG).

If you believe that computers are fully deterministic, I have a PC I want to sell you…

Theoretical computers may be fully deterministic, but physical computational machines are made of electrical signals running on rare earth semiconductors, and with AI we have complex statistical chaotic interactions on top.

Any small unpredictable perturbation at any later may swing the whole system in a whole new direction. Hardly what we’d call deterministic (unless you believe the whole universe is deterministic, in which case the word loses all differentiation power).

Re: Kind of weird

By Mspangler • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Computers are deterministic, software based on statistical models is not.

My dissertation on Data Requirements to Train Neural Network Controllers for Use in Process Industries which dates to 1997 proved that.

The short version is the weights between the layers are non-linear, therefore the failure mode is non-linear as well. In other words you don’t know what it’s going to do.

Apparently 25 years of work has failed to solve the problem or we wouldn’t be seeing all these hallucinations.

Hollywood’s AI Bet Isn’t Paying Off

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Hollywood’s recent attempts to build entertainment around AI have consistently underperformed or outright flopped, whether the AI in question is a plot device or a production tool. The horror sequel M3GAN 2.0, Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning, and Disney’s Tron: Ares all disappointed at the box office in 2025 despite centering their narratives on AI.

The latest casualty is Mercy, a January 2026 crime thriller in which Chris Pratt faces an AI judge bot played by Rebecca Ferguson; one reviewer has already called it “the worst movie of 2026,” and its ticket sales have been mediocre. AI-generated content hasn’t fared any better. Darren Aronofsky executive-produced On This Day…1776, a YouTube web series that uses Google DeepMind video generation alongside real voice actors to dramatize the American Revolution. Viewer response has been brutal — commenters mocked the uncanny faces and the fact that DeepMind rendered “America” as “Aamereedd.”

A Taika Waititi-directed Xfinity commercial set to air during this weekend’s Super Bowl, which de-ages Jurassic Park stars Sam Neill, Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum, has already been mocked for producing what one viewer called “melting wax figures.”

Re:It’s not AI

By JoshuaZ • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I know reading TFA is hard, but at least read the summary before commenting. The article is about people not wanting to watch films about AI. It is not at all about using AI to write or animate films.

Re: I’d rather watch claymation

By LindleyF • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Remember the evolution of computer graphics. Wrath of Kahn’s genesis proposal video was state of the art at the time. You could literally see Lightwave improving through the 5 seasons of Babylon 5. DS9’s Way of the Warrior was the last hurrah for physical models, Star Trek went all CGI after that. These things take time to figure out. They don’t emerge fully formed.

“the worst movie of 2026”

By jddj • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

C’mon, “Melania” is offering some VERY stiff competition in that race.

Re:I’d rather watch claymation

By korgitser • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
What’s your problem with claymation? I’ve never seen any I did not enjoy..

Re:I’d rather watch claymation

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 4, Informative Thread
IIRC, in Futureworld, 1976, a forgettable sequel to Michael Crichton’s Westworld, 1973.

The next memorable demonstrations are Tron, 1982 and the space-ship in The last Starfighter, 1984.

Amazon’s Tax Bill Plunges 87% After Tax Cuts

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An anonymous reader shares a report:
Republicans’ tax cuts shaved billions off Amazon’s tax bill, new government filings show. The company says it ran a $1.2 billion tax bill last year, down from $9 billion the previous year, and even as its profits jumped by 45% to nearly $90 billion.

That’s largely because of the generous new depreciation breaks GOP lawmakers included in their One Big Beautiful Bill, something that’s particularly important to Amazon which — in addition to maintaining a vast infrastructure for its ubiquitous delivery business — has been spending billions to build out artificial intelligence data centers.

Also helping, though less important: The law’s expanded breaks for businesses research and development expenses. The company has long been criticized by Democrats for paying little in tax, and it appeared to be bracing for criticism in the wake of the report to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Re:That’s funny

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yu need to butter up the rapist before you get these cuts.

I love trickle down economics

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Is this some dry satire or something? Isn’t Amazon responsible for destroying small and local businesses with it’s aggressive pricing policies and sellers fees? Didn’t we witness the destruction of brick and mortar stores at the hands of Amazon just two decades prior?

CONSUME

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I’d boycott but I need same day delivery too much.

The headline should read....

By Travco • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
70 million dollar bribe pays off big!

Better than a hundred to one!

Re: This also helps my business

By radl33t • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Sounds good to me! They can pass them on to their customers. Then we can each voluntarily decide if those products and their actual costs including externalities are worth it. Sounds like a basis upon which to construct a rational market place rather than opaquely burying the true cost of their business using subsidies comprised of my tax dollars. Would be great if their heavy vehicles paid their share of road wear too, so the full costs of their products were built into the prices consumers pay rather than me! I guess giving rich people handouts to let them grow richer is cool too.

Memory Prices Have Nearly Doubled Since Last Quarter

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Memory prices across DRAM, NAND and HBM have surged 80 to 90% quarter-over-quarter in Q1 2026, according to Counterpoint Research’s latest Memory Price Tracker. The price of a 64GB RDIMM has jumped from a Q4 2025 contract price of $450 to over $900, and Counterpoint expects it to cross $1,000 in Q2.

NAND, relatively stable last quarter, is tracking a parallel increase. Device makers are cutting DRAM content per device, swapping TLC SSDs for cheaper QLC alternatives, and shifting orders from the now-scarce LPDDR4 to LPDDR5 as new entry-level chipsets support the newer standard. DRAM operating margins hit the 60% range in Q4 2025 — the first time conventional DRAM margins surpassed HBM — and Q1 2026 is on track to set all-time highs.

More than doubled

By NormAtHome • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Up until September the G.Skill memory kit I’d been buying to build computers was $119.99 and now its over $400 that’s close to a 400% increase

Re:More than doubled

By evanh • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Yes, it’s nearly 4x since September. The article is blinkered.

Re:More than doubled

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 5, Funny Thread

That’s a 233% increase, not 400%.

Perhaps, if you had more memory, your calculator could figure it out.

Be thankful that it’s mostly only RAM, for now…

By ffkom • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
… wait until “running AI” earnestly competes with you for energy, water, land, sunlight… the little nuisance of “gaming PC expensive!” will then soon be forgotten.

Well boys and girls

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The bloatware show is over. We coders aren’t going to be allowed to import a massive library to solve some tiny problem in our projects. We might have to actually design and code up light weight solutions again if we want our programmers to actually fit on people’s computers. People that put 8GB in their mid-range laptop are going to be stuck there for quite some time, at least another two CPU generations.
And that doesn’t mean you can write your apps to eat up 7GB of RAM, no people still will want to run more than one program on their computer at a time.

Salesforce Shelves Heroku

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Salesforce is essentially shutting down Heroku as an evolving product, moving the cloud platform that helped define modern app deployment to a "sustaining engineering model" focused entirely on stability, security and support.

Existing customers on credit card billing see no changes to pricing or service, but enterprise contracts are no longer available to new buyers. Salesforce said it is redirecting engineering investment toward enterprise AI.

Re:I thought this happened a few years ago

By stephanruby • Score: 5, Informative Thread

No, Saleforce degraded their service as soon as they took over. It’s been a slow death ever since.

If Salesforce is not extracting a pound of flesh every year from each customer they have, they’re not happy.

Hidden Cameras in Chinese Hotels Are Livestreaming Guests To Thousands of Telegram Subscribers

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An investigation has uncovered a sprawling network of hidden cameras in Chinese hotel rooms that livestream guests — including couples having sex — to paying subscribers on Telegram. Over 18 months, the BBC identified six websites and apps on the messaging platform that claimed to operate more than 180 spy cams across Chinese hotels, not just recording but broadcasting live.

One site, monitored for seven months, cycled through 54 different cameras, roughly half active at any given time. Subscribers pay 450 yuan (~$65) per month for access to multiple live feeds, archived clips, and a library of more than 6,000 edited videos dating back to 2017.

The BBC traced one camera to a hotel room in Zhengzhou, where researchers found it hidden inside a wall ventilation unit and hardwired into the building’s electricity supply. A commercially available hidden-camera detector failed to flag it. China introduced regulations last April requiring hotel owners to check for hidden cameras, but the BBC found the livestreaming sites still operational.

Re:Doesn’t add up

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

China isn’t like North Korea, and even in North Korea they can’t watch everyone all the time. Crime still happens.

I expect there will be some high profile arrests, and very harsh punishments. They will want to avoid it becoming like South Korea, where hidden cameras are a huge problem.

Re:Crime and Punishment

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This seems to have been a for profit operation, so they will be able to trace the money. I doubt whoever did it was careful enough to wipe the cameras clean of fingerprints anyway, let along manage good digital opsec.

Main character syndrome

By argStyopa • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

This is an awful thing, granted but “Eric and Emily never go out without wearing hats now, for fear they might be recognised” is ridiculous - there are 8.3 BILLION people on the planet.

Eric & Emily I 1000% guarantee your sex antics are utterly not noteworthy nor memorable enough that the sorts of pr0n addicts that subscribe to these things would recognize you if you were sitting across from them at dinner. Guaranteed.

And you look like you’re reasonably fit, healthy people.
Me, they’d pay to never see me in their feed again.

Re:Propaganda / BBC Bullshit

By gweihir • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Indeed. Apparently, China has 16.5M hotel rooms. That means 1 in 91’000 will have a camera in this scheme. I very much doubt the rest of the world is any better.

My take is this is some mindless “China BAAAD!” propaganda piece. I wonder why they do not report on real problems with China. Maybe stories on things like spying on citizens, imprisoning citizens in internment camps, murdering citizens in the street hit a bit too close to home?

Re:Main character syndrome

By fropenn • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Personally I don’t really care about possibly getting videoed rolling around in bed. More problematic would be getting access to my personal information, such as credit card numbers, social security numbers, bank passwords, business secrets, etc., where they could do some real damage.

If I had to choose between having a naked photo of me floating around on the dark web or having my identity stolen, I’d take the photo myself.