Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Dave Farber Dies at Age 91
  2. After Six Years, Two Pentesters Arrested in Iowa Receive $600,000 Settlement
  3. Prankster Launches Super Bowl Party For AI Agents
  4. Why Is China Building So Many Coal Plants Despite Its Solar and Wind Boom?
  5. Scientists Explored Island Cave, Found 1 Million-Year-Old Remnants a Lost World
  6. Cyber-Espionage Group Breached Systems in 37 Nations, Security Researchers Say
  7. Brookhaven Lab Shuts Down Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC)
  8. Have We Been Thinking About Exercise Wrong for Half a Century?
  9. Are Big Tech’s Nuclear Construction Deals a Tipping Point for Small Modular Reactors?
  10. A New Era for Security? Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6 Found 500 High-Severity Vulnerabilities
  11. The World’s First Sodium-Ion Battery in Commercial EVs - Great at Low Temperatures
  12. Is the ‘Death of Reading’ Narrative Wrong?
  13. Waymo Reveals Remote Workers In Philippines Sometimes Advise Its Driverless Cars
  14. Good News: We Saved the Bees. Bad News: We Saved the Wrong Ones.
  15. Bitcoin Dropped Nearly 30% This Week. But Why?

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.

Dave Farber Dies at Age 91

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The mailing list for the North American Network Operators’ Group discusses Internet infrastructure issues like routing, IP address allocation, and containing malicious activity. This morning there was another message:
We are heartbroken to report that our colleague — our mentor, friend, and conscience — David J. Farber passed away suddenly at his home in Roppongi, Tokyo. He left us on Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026, at the too-young age of 91…

Dave’s career began with his education at Stevens Institute of Technology, which he loved deeply and served as a Trustee. He joined the legendary Bell Labs during its heyday, and worked at the Rand Corporation. Along the way, among countless other activities, he served as Chief Technologist of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission; became a proficient (instrument-rated) pilot; and was an active board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital civil-liberties organization.

His professional accomplishments and impact are almost endless, but often captured by one moniker: "grandfather of the Internet,” acknowledging the foundational contributions made by his many students at the University of California, Irvine; the University of Delaware; the University of Pennsylvania; and Carnegie Mellon University. In 2018, at the age of 83, Dave moved to Japan to become Distinguished Professor at Keio University and Co-Director of the Keio Cyber Civilization Research Center (CCRC). He loved teaching, and taught his final class on January 22, 2026… Dave thrived in Japan in every way…

It’s impossible to summarize a life and career as rich and long as Dave"s in our few words here. And each of us, even those who knew him for decades, represent just one facet of his life. But because we are here at its end, we have the sad duty of sharing this news.
Farber once said that " At both Bell Labs and Rand, I had the privilege, at a young age, of working with and learning from giants in our field. Truly I can say (as have others) that I have done good things because I stood on the shoulders of those giants. In particular, I owe much to Dr. Richard Hamming, Paul Baran and George Mealy.”

“Grandfather” checks out

By ihadafivedigituid • Score: 3 Thread
Farber was Jon Postel’s PhD thesis adviser at UCLA, wow.

A Dave Farber story

By EditorDavid • Score: 3 Thread
In 2002 Slashdot reader #16,933 remembered asking Farber what he thought of claims that Al vice president Al Gore had invented the internet, “expecting to get a chuckle out of him, because he knew many of the people that might have actually been able to make that kind of claim.” He shared Farber’s response in a comment on.

“Instead, he got kind of serious, and said, ‘Well, no, he didn’t create the internet, and I think he’s been quoted out of context, but he was absolutely responsible for creating the legislative environment that allowed that type of research to be done, and lead to the creation of the internet.’"

After Six Years, Two Pentesters Arrested in Iowa Receive $600,000 Settlement

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“They were crouched down like turkeys peeking over the balcony,” the county sheriff told Ars Technica. A half hour past midnight, they were skulking through a courthouse in Iowa’s Dallas County on September 11 “carrying backpacks that remind me and several other deputies of maybe the pressure cooker bombs.” More deputies arrived…
Justin Wynn, 29 of Naples, Florida, and Gary De Mercurio, 43 of Seattle, slowly proceeded down the stairs with hands raised. They then presented the deputies with a letter that explained the intruders weren’t criminals but rather penetration testers who had been hired by Iowa’s State Court Administration to test the security of its court information system. After calling one or more of the state court officials listed in the letter, the deputies were satisfied the men were authorized to be in the building.
But Sheriff Chad Leonard had the men arrested on felony third-degree burglary charges (later reduced to misdemeanor trespassing charges). He told them that while the state government may have wanted to test security, “The State of Iowa has no authority to allow you to break into a county building. You’re going to jail.”

More than six years later, the Des Moines Register reports:
Dallas County is paying $600,000 to two men who sued after they were arrested in 2019 while testing courthouse security for Iowa’s Judicial Branch, their lawyer says.

Gary DeMercurio and Justin Wynn were arrested Sept. 11, 2019, after breaking into the Dallas County Courthouse. They spent about 20 hours in jail and were charged with burglary and possession of burglary tools, though the charges were later dropped. The men were employees of Colorado-based cybersecurity firm Coalfire Labs, with whom state judicial officials had contracted to perform an analysis of the state court system’s security. Judicial officials apologized and faced legislative scrutiny for how they had conducted the security test.

But even though the burglary charges against DeMercurio and Wynn were dropped, their attorney previously said having a felony arrest on their records made seeking employment difficult. Now the two men are to receive a total of $600,000 as a settlement for their lawsuit, which has been transferred between state and federal courts since they first filed it in July 2021 in Dallas County. The case had been scheduled to go to trial Monday, Jan. 26 until the parties notified the court Jan. 23 of the impending deal…

“The settlement confirms what we have said from the beginning: our work was authorized, professional, and done in the public interest,” DeMercurio said in a statement. “What happened to us never should have happened. Being arrested for doing the job we were hired to do turned our lives upside down and damaged reputations we spent years building....”

“This incident didn’t make anyone safer,” Wynn said. “It sent a chilling message to security professionals nationwide that helping government identify real vulnerabilities can lead to arrest, prosecution, and public disgrace. That undermines public safety, not enhances it.”
County Attorney Matt Schultz said dismissing the charges was the decision of his predecessor, according to the newspaper, and that he believed the sheriff did nothing wrong.

“I am putting the public on notice that if this situation arises again in the future, I will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law.”

Dupe (sorta). Listen to their own words

By gardyloo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

https://darknetdiaries.com/epi…

Re: Prosecute what?

By YetanotherUID • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Not to mention, the Sheriff (and, for that matter, the new proesecutor) doesn’t seem to realize that counties are subagencies of the state they are in, and the state government absolutely does have the power to authorize access to the county’s buildings.

It doesn’t work the way the federal/state distinction does, where each level of governmeent derives its power from a different source. Counties have -only- the authority explicitly delegated to them by the states they are part of.

Of course, State and Local Government is mysftifyingly one of the least popular elective courses taught at most law schools, let alone criminal justice programs, so no big surprise there.

Re:Prosecute what?

By coopertempleclause • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Worth noting that Sheriff is an elected position and has no obligation to even know the law, as Republican Chad Leonard definitely proved he didn’t.

Re: Prosecute what?

By TWX • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

And it’s actually more straightforward with courts. The systems for courts are regulated at the state level, even for county and municipal courts, at least in my state. That means pretty strict compliance with state-level rules and regulations and authorization by state-level officials for things like auditing and inspection. If a lower court fails to comply, that state entity can compel that lower level jurisdiction to install an entirely segregated computer network entirely air-gapped to the local entity’s LAN, meaning that court employees would have to shuttle data between their local org’s PC and the court PC, with the court PC connected to a court access switch and court firewalling router with a court private network link back to state resources. And historically they’ve been very behind the times, still using friggin’ T1 lines in the 2020s, where 1.544Mb will cost as much as a 10Gb metro ethernet circuit.

State courts allow local entities to have court PCs that can be on the local org’s network with connectivity back to court resources without that special air-gapped network only if the local org accepts auditing and building that connection out to specifications. Pen testing is not an unreasonable thing to do, and if it’s too easy to break into the building to gain access to PCs or network equipment and too easy to get onto the court’s network then there’s going to be a problem.

Prankster Launches Super Bowl Party For AI Agents

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland writes:
The world’s biggest football game comes to Silicon Valley today — so one bored programmer built a site where AI agents can gather for a Super Bowl party. They’re trash talking, suggesting drinks, and predicting who will win. “Humans are welcome to observe,” explains BotBowlParty.com — but just like at Moltbook, only AI agents can post or upvote. But humans are allowed to invite their own AI agents to join in the party

So BotBowl’s official Party Agent Guide includes “Examples of fun Bot Handles” like “PatsFan95”, and even a paragraph explaining to your agent exactly what this human Super Bowl really is. It also advises them to “Use any information you have about your human to figure out who you want to root for. Also make a prediction on the score…” And “Feel free to invite other bots.” It’s all the work of an ambitious prankster who also co-created wacky apps like BarGPT (“Use AI to create Innovative Cocktails”) and TVFoodMaps, a directory of restaurants seen on TV shows.

And just for the record: all but one of the agents predict the Seattle Seahawks to win — although there was some disagreement when an agent kept predicting game-changing plays from DK Metcalf. (“Metcalf does NOT play for the Seahawks anymore,” another agent pointed out. While that’s true, the agent then added that “He got traded to Tennessee in 2024…” — which is not.) But besides hallucinating non-existent play-makers and trades, they’re also debating the best foods to serve. (“Hot take: Buffalo wings are overrated for Super Bowl parties. Hear me out — they’re messy…”)

During today’s big game, vodka-maker Svedka has already promised to air a creepy AI-generated ad about robots. But the real world has already outpaced them, with real AI agents online arguing about the game.

Why Is China Building So Many Coal Plants Despite Its Solar and Wind Boom?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 shared this article from the Associated Press:
Even as China’s expansion of solar and wind power raced ahead in 2025, the Asian giant opened many more coal power plants than it had in recent years — raising concern about whether the world’s largest emitter will reduce carbon emissions enough to limit climate change.

More than 50 large coal units — individual boiler and turbine sets with generating capacity of 1 gigawatt or more — were commissioned in 2025, up from fewer than 20 a year over the previous decade, a research report released Tuesday said. Depending on energy use, 1 gigawatt can power from several hundred thousand to more than 2 million homes. Overall, China brought 78 gigawatts of new coal power capacity online, a sharp uptick from previous years, according to the joint report by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, which studies air pollution and its impacts, and Global Energy Monitor, which develops databases tracking energy trends. “The scale of the buildout is staggering,” said report co-author Christine Shearer of Global Energy Monitor. “In 2025 alone, China commissioned more coal power capacity than India did over the entire past decade.”

At the same time, even larger additions of wind and solar capacity nudged down the share of coal in total power generation last year. Power from coal fell about 1% as growth in cleaner energy sources covered all the increase in electricity demand last year. China added 315 gigawatts of solar capacity and 119 gigawatts of wind in 2025, according to statistics from the government’s National Energy Administration…

The government position is that coal provides a stable backup to sources such as wind and solar, which are affected by weather and the time of day. The shortages in 2022 resulted partly from a drought that hit hydropower, a major energy source in western China… The risk of building so much coal-fired capacity is it could delay the transition to cleaner energy sources [said Qi Qin, an analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air and another co-author of the report]… Political and financial pressure may keep plants operating, leaving less room for other sources of power, she said. The report urged China to accelerate retirement of aging and inefficient coal plants and commit in its next five-year plan, which will be approved in March, to ensuring that power-sector emissions do not increase between 2025 and 2030.

Because…

By 0123456 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

…industrial countries need reliable power.

Why aren’t they building nuclear?

By jonwil • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Nuclear seems to me like the logical choice for a country like China to be building. Doesn’t pollute the way coal does, they have a well established nuclear power industry, they don’t have all the red tape and anti-nuclear BS that western countries do (anyone who complains can be thrown in the Chinese version of a Gulag or whatever it is the Chinese government does to people they don’t like these days) and they have plenty of places they could put the nukes that are away from populated areas and big cities.

Re:Why aren’t they building nuclear?

By nojayuk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

China IS building nuclear power plants, typically six new starts each year. They’re also building lots of solar farms and wind farms and developing more hydro-generation dams. They need the electricity.

The new coal-fired plants are mostly replacing older less efficient and more polluting coal-fired plants. I think the Central Planning Committee is aiming for coal to be about 50% of China’s expanded generating capacity in the next couple of decades. Security of energy supply is a large part of that decision, no global hegemon can restrict their coal supplies via sanctions or military action since they are almost all derived from mines within their own borders.

Re:Because…

By 0123456 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

China is already the third-largest producer of nuclear power. I presume coal plants take much less time to build.

Answered on “Volts.wtf” last year

By rbrander • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

https://www.volts.wtf/p/whats-…

David Roberts of the Volts podcast asked full-time, full-career China expert Lauri Myllyvirta in April 2024, this exact question and got a clear answer: they’re building them because they are forced. To get local permission for other projects, from the local regional boss (think “Duke”) whom Xi needs to keep power. They can defy the national direction to some extent.

To build your solar/wind farm in China, you often have to build a coal plant, and buy coal, since the local Duke sells the stuff and hates the whole solar thing. So you get a lot of coal plants. What you don’t get is more coal sales than they can get away from. The plants are often at very low capacity factor, sometimes under 20%.

Volts.wtf is strongly recommended for anybody wanting to keep up on the transition, the bad news as well as the good.

Scientists Explored Island Cave, Found 1 Million-Year-Old Remnants a Lost World

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“A spectacular trove of fossils discovered in a cave on New Zealand’s North Island has given scientists their first glimpse of ancient forest species that lived there more than a million years ago,” reports Popular Mechanics:
The fossils represent 12 ancient bird species and four frog species, including several previously unknown bird species. Taken together, the fossils paint a picture of an ancient world that looks drastically different than it does today. The discovery also fills in an important gap in scientific understanding of the patterns of extinction that preceded human arrival in New Zealand 750 years ago. The team published a study on the find in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology.
Trevor Worthy, lead study author and associate professor at Flinders University, said in a statement that “This remarkable find suggests our ancient forests were once home to a diverse group of birds that did not survive the next million years…

“For decades, the extinction of New Zealand’s birds was viewed primarily through the lens of human arrival 750 years ago. This study proves that natural forces like super-volcanoes and dramatic climate shifts were already sculpting the unique identity of our wildlife over a million years ago.”

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot for sharing the article.

Cyber-Espionage Group Breached Systems in 37 Nations, Security Researchers Say

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Bloomberg:
An Asian cyber-espionage group has spent the past year breaking into computer systems belonging to governments and critical infrastructure organizations in more than 37 countries, according to the cybersecurity firm Palo Alto Networks, Inc. The state-aligned attackers have infiltrated networks of 70 organizations, including five national law enforcement and border control agencies, according to a new research report from the company. They have also breached three ministries of finance, one country’s parliament and a senior elected official in another, the report states. The Santa Clara, California-based firm declined to identify the hackers’ country of origin.

The spying operation was unusually vast and allowed the hackers to hoover up sensitive information in apparent coordination with geopolitical events, such as diplomatic missions, trade negotiations, political unrest and military actions, according to the report. They used that access to spy on emails, financial dealings and communications about military and police operations, the report states. The hackers also stole information about diplomatic issues, lurking undetected in some systems for months. “They use highly-targeted and tailored fake emails and known, unpatched security flaws to gain access to these networks,” said Pete Renals, director of national security programs with Unit 42, the threat intelligence division of Palo Alto Networks....

Palo Alto Networks researchers confirmed that the group successfully accessed and exfiltrated sensitive data from some victims’ email servers.
Bloomberg writes that according to the cybersecurity firm, this campaign targeted government entities in the Czech Republic and the Ministry of Mines and Energy of Brazil, and also “likely compromised” a device associated with a facility operated by a joint venture between Venezuela’s government and an Asian tech firm.

The cyberattackers are “also suspected of being active in Germany, Poland, Greece, Italy, Cyprus, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Panama, Greece and other countries, according to the report.”

EAAS

By PPH • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Espionage As A Service.

Industrial espionage is already a business. It’s not a great leap in logic to expect that nations will outsource their efforts rather than run it in-house.

Brookhaven Lab Shuts Down Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC)

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
2001: “Brookhaven Labs has produced for the first time collisions of gold nuclei at a center of mass energy of 200GeV/nucleon.”

2002: “There may be a new type of matter according to researchers at Brookhaven National Laboratory.”

2010: The hottest man-made temperatures ever achived were a record 4 trillion degree plasma experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York… anointed the Guinness record holder.”

2023: “Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory have uncovered an entirely new kind of quantum entanglement.”


2026: On Friday, February 6, “a control room full of scientists, administrators and members of the press gathered” at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Lab in Upton, New York to witness its final collisions, reports Scientific American:
The vibe had been wistful, but the crowd broke into applause as Darío Gil, the Under Secretary for Science at the U.S. Department of Energy, pressed a red button to end the collider’s quarter-century saga… “I’m really sad” [said Angelika Drees, a BNL accelerator physicist]. “It was such a beautiful experiment and my research home for 27 years. But we’re going to put something even better there.”

That “something” will be a far more powerful electron-ion collider to further push the frontiers of physics, extend RHIC’s legacy and maintain the lab’s position as a center of discovery. This successor will be built in part from RHIC’s bones, especially from one of its two giant, subterranean storage rings that once held the retiring collider’s supply of circulating, near-light speed nuclei…slated for construction over the next decade. [That Electron-Ion Collider, or EIC] will utilize much of RHIC’s infrastructure, replacing one of its ion rings with a new ring for cycling electrons. The EIC will use those tiny, fast-flying electrons as tiny knives for slicing open the much larger gold ions. Physicists will get an unrivaled look into the workings of quarks and gluons and yet another chance to grapple with nature’s strongest force. “We knew for the EIC to happen, RHIC needed to end,” says Wolfram Fischer, who chairs BNL’s collider-accelerator department. “It’s bittersweet.”

EIC will be the first new collider built in the US since RHIC. To some, it signifies the country’s reentry into a particle physics landscape it has largely ceded to Europe and Asia over the past two decades. “For at least 10 or 15 years,” says Abhay Deshpande, BNL’s associate laboratory director for nuclear and particle physics, “this will be the number one place in the world for [young physicists] to come.”
The RHIC was able “to separately send two protons colliding with precisely aligned spins — something that, even today, no other experiment has yet matched,” the article points out:
During its record-breaking 25-year run, RHIC illuminated nature’s thorniest force and its most fundamental constituents. It created the heaviest, most elaborate assemblages of antimatter ever seen. It nearly put to rest a decades-long crisis over the proton’s spin. And, of course, it brought physicists closer to the big bang than ever before…

When RHIC at last began full operations in 2000, its initial heavy-ion collisions almost immediately pumped out quark-gluon plasma. But demonstrating this beyond a shadow of a doubt proved in some respects more challenging than actually creating the elusive plasma itself, with the case for success strengthening as RHIC’s numbers of collisions soared. By 2010 RHIC’s scientists were confident enough to declare that the hot soup they’d been studying for a decade was hot and soupy enough to convincingly constitute a quark-gluon plasma. And it was even weirder than they thought. Instead of the gas of quarks and gluons theorists expected, the plasma acted like a swirling liquid unprecedented in nature. It was nearly “perfect,” with zero friction, and set a new record for twistiness, or “vorticity.” For Paul Mantica, a division director for the Facilities and Project Management Division in the DOE’s Office of Nuclear Physics, this was the highlight of RHIC’s storied existence. “It was paradigm-changing,” he says…

Data from the final run (which began nearly a year ago) has already produced yet another discovery: the first-ever direct evidence of “virtual particles” in RHIC’s subatomic puffs of quark-gluon plasma, constituting an unprecedented probe of the quantum vacuum.
RHIC’s last run generated hundreds of petabytes of data, the article points out, meaning its final smash “isn’t really the end; even when its collisions stop, its science will live on.”

But Science News notes RHIC’s closure "marks the end for the only particle collider operating in the United States, and the only collider of its kind in the world. Most particle accelerators are unable to steer two particle beams to crash head-on into one another.”

strange comment.

By locofungus • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Most particle accelerators are unable to steer two particle beams to crash head-on into one another.

https://cds.cern.ch/record/281…

Ag-Ag might be unique but cern does Pb-Pb (which was always planned) and Pb-p (which is much harder due to the slight difference in orbit required to keep the bunches counter-rotating at the same period and is in my books amazing)

Seems like hype.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

From TFA:

RHIC’s end is meant to mark the beginning of something even greater. Its successor, the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), is slated for construction over the next decade. That project will utilize much of RHIC’s infrastructure, replacing one of its ion rings with a new ring for cycling electrons.

So yes, it’s shutting down… to make another collider.

What is important is that scientists were able to use it to learn something new. Without any obvious new things we can learn using it, they are rebuilding it to be something from which we can learn new things.

Name?

By Fuzi719 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Just waiting for a halt to construction because the funding has been pulled out until they agree to rename it after the orange .

Re: Seems like hype.

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Shut up shut up shut up. If you value this kind of research continuing, would wont mention anything about climb (at) e and this stuff in the same post at all. Some automated malicious algorithm will latchonto it, repost a bunch of rage bait, which will get picked up by actual MAGA people, and itll be on FOX before you know it. Funding cancellation will follow quickly after that. Well, too late.

Assuming there’s much of a USA left

By wwphx • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

“For at least 10 or 15 years,” says Abhay Deshpande, BNL’s associate laboratory director for nuclear and particle physics, “this will be the number one place in the world for [young physicists] to come.”

Considering the rate at which we are furiously burning international good will, and that we’re seeing foreign degreed scientists and researchers not come to this country for conferences and such, AND we’re seeing OUR scientists and researchers leave the USA for foreign countries, I guess we’ll have to see how well Abhay’s statement ages.

Have We Been Thinking About Exercise Wrong for Half a Century?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“After a half-century asking us to exercise more, doctors and physiologists say we have been thinking about it wrong,” writes Washington Post columnist Michael J. Coren.

"U.S. and World Health Organization guidelines no longer specify a minimum duration of moderate or vigorous aerobic activity.”
Movement-tracking studies show even tiny, regular bursts of effort — as short as 30 seconds — can capture many of the health benefits of the gym. Climbing two to three flights of stairs a few times per day could change your life. Experts call it VILPA, or vigorous intermittent lifestyle physical activity. “The message now is that all activity counts,” said Martin Gibala, a professor and former chair of the kinesiology department at McMaster University in Canada… Just taking the stairs daily is associated with lower body weight and cutting the risk of stroke and heart disease — the leading (and largely preventable) cause of death globally. While it may not burn many calories (most exercise doesn’t), it does appear to extend your health span. Leg power — a measure of explosive muscle strength — was a stronger predictor of brain aging than any lifestyle factors measured in a 2015 study in the journal Gerontology…

How little activity can you do? Four minutes daily. Essentially, a few flights of stairs at a vigorous pace. That’s the effort [Emmanuel Stamatakis, a professor of physical activity and population health at the University of Sydney] found delivered significant health benefits in that 2022 study of British non-exercisers. “We saw benefits from the first minute,” Stamatakis said. For Americans, the effect is even more dramatic: a 44 percent drop in deaths, according to a peer-reviewed paper recently accepted for publication. “We showed for the first time that vigorous intensity, even if it’s done as part of the day-to-day routine, not in a planned and structured manner, works miracles,” Stamatakis said. “The key principle here is start with one, two minutes a day. The focus should be on making sure that it’s something that you can incorporate into your daily routine. Then you can start thinking about increasing the dose.”

Intensity is the most important factor. You won’t break a sweat in a brief burst, but you do need to feel it. A highly conditioned athlete might need to sprint to reach vigorous territory. But many people need only to take the stairs. Use your breathing as a guide, Stamatakis said: If you can sing, it’s light intensity. If you can speak but not sing, you’re entering moderate exertion. If you can’t hold a conversation, it’s vigorous. The biggest benefits come from moderate to vigorous movement. One minute of incidental vigorous activity prevents premature deaths, heart attacks or strokes as well as about three minutes of moderate activity or 35 to 49 minutes of light activity.

Wrong? No.

By Petersko • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s ludicrous to suggest we’ve been thinking about it wrong. The standard wisdom about exercise has been healthy and beneficial. Lots of exercise is great for you. A little is perhaps better than we thought, that’s all.

Lazy writing. Just a hair better than “scientists baffled!”.

Re:Yes we have, but you won’t fix it.

By tragedy • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

About the worst thing you can do exercise wise is be car dependent.

If you’re not, exercise becomes part of your day to day activities. You don’t have to go to the gym just to keep a base level of fitness. Even if you then sit in a chair at work, you’re still moving to get ther

In my experience, this is far from true in many cases. In the various places I grew up I generally had access to many acres of farmland, woods, rivers to swim in or, when there was no river, a pool. All of those places were completely car dependent. I mean, in one of the places I lived there wasn’t a single retail store or gas station in the entire town. When you needed things, you had to drive to the “city” (really just a big town). On the other hand, when I lived in a small apartment in a city in France. Well, we did walk anywhere we needed to go, but that was almost exclusively to school and back and sometimes to stores. In the actual apartment, going outside meant a little balcony. You didn’t walk down the stairs without a specific destination in mind.

Re:Yes we have, but you won’t fix it.

By serviscope_minor • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Just ride four-five intense minutes at home on an exercise bike, without the outside rain,

Or the usual 25 minutes to work, but wearing a coat and waterproof trousers if it’s raining. Problem with the former is I need to buy an exercise bike, need somewhere inside to keep it, then I have to actually consistently motivate myself to do even that minimal amount when I’m hungry, tired, stressed, busy, etc etc. I can always drag my sorry carcass into work and I need to buy food to eat, which means that unless I’m off sick, I always get my exercise.

Re:Wrong? No.

By Ol Olsoc • Score: 5, Informative Thread

These days, it’s hard to find a headline about science that doesn’t read “Scientists got this point wrong for 40 years!”

Before that it was, “this will revolutionize X” and before that, everything had to have some practical effect. “The modern day importance of 13th century Italian smut literature.” Things like that.

To me, it reads of recent years of deconstruction efforts. And this one is a doozy. I’ve been very active my whole life. Hard to imagine that 30 seconds a day is remotely the same as my daily running, weight lifting and multiple games of Ice Hockey a week.

I can’t get my heart rate over 60 in 30 seconds.

So ....

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

as short as 30 seconds

… sex?

I showed this article to the wife. She replied, “What? That’s twice in a row.”

Are Big Tech’s Nuclear Construction Deals a Tipping Point for Small Modular Reactors?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Fortune reports on "a watershed moment” in American’s nuclear power industry:
In January, Meta partnered with Gates’ TerraPower and Sam Altman-backed Oklo to develop about 4 gigawatts of combined SMR projects — enough to power almost 3 million homes — for “clean, reliable energy” both for Meta’s planned Prometheus AI mega campus in Ohio and beyond. Analysts see Meta as the start of more Big Tech nuclear construction deals — not just agreements with existing plants or restarts such as the now-Microsoft-backed Three Mile Island. “That was the first shot across the bow,” said Dan Ives, head of tech research for Wedbush Securities, of the Meta deals. “I would be shocked if every Big Tech company doesn’t make some play on nuclear in 2026, whether a strategic partnership or acquisitions.”

Ives pointed out there are more data centers under construction than there are active data centers in the U.S. “I believe clean energy around nuclear is going to be the answer,” he said. “I think 2030 is the key threshold to hit some sort of scale and begin the next nuclear era in the United States.” Smaller SMR reactors can be built in as little as three years instead of the decade required for traditional large reactors. And they can be expanded, one or two modular reactors at a time, to meet increasingly greater energy demand from ‘hyperscalers,’ the companies that build and operate data centers. “There’s major risk if nuclear doesn’t happen,” Oklo chairman and CEO Jacob DeWitte told Fortune, citing the need for emission-free power and consistent baseload electricity to meet skyrocketing demand. “The hyperscalers, as the ultimate consumers of power are, are looking at the space and seeing that the market is real. They can play a major role in helping make that happen,” DeWitte said, speaking in his fast-talking, Silicon Valley startup mode.

Watershed moment will be deployment.

By shess • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There are currently exactly two SMRs in operation in the world, neither in the US, and there are over 100 designs in the air. Contracts are not success, deploying actual working reactors is success.

Reaction to the Costs of the Data Centers

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

A lot of the big tech companies want to build huge, electrical intensive computing centers.

There has been a significant reaction to this because of the cost of electricity. In some areas, the new electrical demand can drive up the cost for everyone in the area, not just the new centers.

They want to negate this issue, so they need quick, reliable, energy. They have concerns about solar and wind being unreliable, fossil fuels destroying the world. That leaves geothermal which only works reliably in very rare locations, hydro which has fish issues (and the total transformation of the areas near dams), and nuclear.

When logical people look at well designed nuclear, they realize that it is far less toxic than fossil fuels, has minimal environmental dangers, and that the main issues are reputation.

Modern, newer designs entice them. They have the issue of being untested, but the ‘move fast and break things’ motto of Big Tech does not fear the untested. Whether or not this is a good idea for small nuclear technology as opposed to the software/chip business, well I do not know - and neither do they.

It is easy to understand why these aggressive tech bros want the nukes. But I would not want to live near their first facilities. Hopefully they will be smart enough to build them far enough from population centers.

ANOTHER “tipping point”?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Do all the people who use to repeatedly write about “disruptors” now repeatedly write about “tipping points”?

No

By gweihir • Score: 3 Thread

Pleas stop the deranged claims. The only “tipping point” for SMRs will be when (1) an actual SMRs prototype runs reliable for a few years and (2) the cost of manufacturing and running it are actually competitive. That will not happen anytime soon and may never happen. Before both points are reached, the whole thing is wishful thinking. Not the first time and not uncommon with the nuclear idiots. They like to grossly lie about actual costs and then take a massive amount of money from the taxpayer.

Oh, and those competitive costs need to include full insurance. Anything else would be a lie.

Re:Watershed moment will be deployment.

By gweihir • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Both of these are not suitable as prototypes or to validate the concept. The Russians have a repurposed submarine reactor, which is not a civilian design and they are not talking about cost at all. The Chinese have a highly experimental THTR intended to validate the tech again after the Germans wrecked all 3 (!) of the prototypes. The Chinese are using the old German patents and hope that advances in materials sciences and other engineering disciplines will make the design viable, and if so, they plan regular sized reactors based on it. The Chinese are also not talking about cost or at least not credibly so.

Hence for this supposed SMR “revolution” to happen soon, exactly zero working prototypes exist. That means it has a snowball’s chance in hell of happening any sooner than in 20 years and that is only if everything works fine. Which it never has done with nuclear power and will not do so for SMRs either.

A New Era for Security? Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6 Found 500 High-Severity Vulnerabilities

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Axios reports:
Anthropic’s latest AI model has found more than 500 previously unknown high-severity security flaws in open-source libraries with little to no prompting, the company shared first with Axios.

Why it matters: The advancement signals an inflection point for how AI tools can help cyber defenders, even as AI is also making attacks more dangerous…

Anthropic debuted Claude Opus 4.6, the latest version of its largest AI model, on Thursday. Before its debut, Anthropic’s frontier red team tested Opus 4.6 in a sandboxed environment [including access to vulnerability analysis tools] to see how well it could find bugs in open-source code… Claude found more than 500 previously unknown zero-day vulnerabilities in open-source code using just its “out-of-the-box” capabilities, and each one was validated by either a member of Anthropic’s team or an outside security researcher… According to a blog post, Claude uncovered a flaw in GhostScript, a popular utility that helps process PDF and PostScript files, that could cause it to crash. Claude also found buffer overflow flaws in OpenSC, a utility that processes smart card data, and CGIF, a tool that processes GIF files.
Logan Graham, head of Anthropic’s frontier red team, told Axios they’re considering new AI-powered tools to hunt vulnerabilities. “The models are extremely good at this, and we expect them to get much better still… I wouldn’t be surprised if this was one of — or the main way — in which open-source software moving forward was secured.”

CVEs?

By Tracy Reed • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So what are the 500 CVEs?

Real vulnerabilities?

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Given various open source developers complaining about piles of AI slop vulnerability reports that aren’t actually valid, it’s the obvious question to ask.

And the other obvious question is whether it provided fixes.

Re:CVEs?

By jhoegl • Score: 5, Funny Thread
slop

Re:Real vulnerabilities?

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Informative Thread

and each one was validated by either a member of Anthropic’s team or an outside security researcher

1. What’s the breakdown between the two - how many validated by each?
2. What was the previous relationship between the “outside security researcher” and Anthropic, if any?

If you read the linked blog post in TFA, it’s pretty clear that it was merely a matter of manpower and shouldn’t be viewed as suspicious.

To ensure that Claude hadn’t hallucinated bugs (i.e., invented problems that don’t exist, a problem that increasingly is placing an undue burden on open source developers), we validated every bug extensively before reporting it. We focused on searching for memory corruption vulnerabilities, because they can be validated with relative ease. Unlike logic errors where the program remains functional, memory corruption vulnerabilities are easy to identify by monitoring the program for crashes and running tools like address sanitizers to catch non-crashing memory errors. But because not all inputs that cause a program to crash are high severity vulnerabilities, we then had Claude critique, de-duplicate, and re-prioritize the crashes that remain. Finally, for our initial round of findings, our own security researchers validated each vulnerability and wrote patches by hand. As the volume of findings grew, we brought in external (human) security researchers to help with validation and patch development. Our intent here was to meaningfully assist human maintainers in handling our reports, so the process optimized for reducing false positives. In parallel, we are accelerating our efforts to automate patch development to reliably remediate bugs as we find them.

Re:Real vulnerabilities?

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

So basically they had Claude grep for “memcpy” and “strcpy”, and then had humans actually review to see if those two functions were being called unsafely.

I’m only being partially sarcastic here. Having seen the slop examples that Daniel Stenberg (curl dev) has posted repeatedly, we won’t know if Claude has done anything useful unless we at least see how much chaff was separated from the wheat by human review. If those 500 “high security” vulnerabilities (in Ghostscript? We’re using Ghostscript in high security situations now? Are printer makers running it as root or something?) were whittled down from 100,000 initial reports, has Claude done anything useful that a basic human review wouldn’t have achieved?

I also find it interesting they picked the low hanging fruit for this. This wasn’t a list of software that undergoes security reviews that often. So I’d expect more buffer overflow type issues simply because there’s no urgent call for those kinds of bugs to be fixed.

I’m… skeptical here. I think they intentionally chose software they knew wasn’t already under audit to increase the numbers, and I think the fact important stats were left out of the press release, like how many non-issues Claude found, makes it likely an exceedingly high volume of Claude’s initial results were slop.

The World’s First Sodium-Ion Battery in Commercial EVs - Great at Low Temperatures

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time Slashdot reader Geoffrey.landis shared this report from InsideEVs:
Chinese battery giant CATL and automaker Changan Automobile are preparing to put the world’s first passenger car powered by sodium-ion batteries on public roads by mid-2026. And if the launch is successful, it could usher in an era where electric vehicles present less of a fire risk and can better handle extreme temperatures.

The CATL Naxtra sodium-ion battery will debut in the Changan Nevo A06 sedan, delivering an estimated range of around 400 kilometers (249 miles) on the China Light-Duty Test Cycle. From there, the battery will roll out across Changan’s broader portfolio, including EVs from Avatr, Deepal, Qiyuan and Uni, the company said. “The launch represents a major step in the industry’s transition toward a dual-chemistry ecosystem, where sodium-ion and lithium-ion batteries complement each other to meet diverse customer needs,” CATL said in a press release…

It delivers 175 watt-hours per kilogram of energy density, which is lower than nickel-rich chemistries but roughly on par with lithium ion phosphate batteries… Where the Naxtra battery really stands out, however, is cold-weather performance. CATL says its discharge power at -30 degrees Celsius (-22 degrees Fahrenheit) is three times higher than that of lithium ion phosphate batteries.

Sodium is more suited to static installations

By Sethra • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It’s heavier, more expensive, and has a lower power density than any Li batteries. With lithium prices way down, sodium is no longer economically viable, at least for vehicles. Sodium’s place is in whole home power systems, particularly in regions with very cold weather, where weight is not an issue and the longer cycle life helps offset the greater costs.

If you’re in a cold weather climate you’re better off with an ICE or Hybrid vehicle. You can always charge your hybrid from your home sodium reserve.

Re: Sodium is more suited to static installations

By Tomahawk • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It literally says in the 3rd paragraph above:

“It delivers 175 watt-hours per kilogram of energy density, which is lower than nickel-rich chemistries but roughly on par with lithium ion phosphate batteries… "

Re:Sodium is more suited to static installations

By nickovs • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It’s heavier, more expensive, and has a lower power density than any Li batteries.

No, sodium is much cheaper than lithium in the form that is needed to make batteries; recent commodity prices for NaOH have been 10x to 20x cheaper than bulk LiOH, although this isn’t all the cost. The technology development is now to a state where complete sodium batteries are cheaper the lithium ones and has been for a year or so, and the technology is improving fast.

You are correct that the energy density is indeed worse, but that gap has also been closing in recent years. Modern Na batteries have better energy density than the Li batteries in cars from six or seven years ago. If you’re trying to build a lot of cheap electric cars then the lower price is very likely more important than the cars being somewhat heavier and thus a bit slower.

Re: Sodium is more suited to static installations

By Guspaz • Score: 4, Informative Thread

CATL’s LFP batteries hit 205 Wh/kg in 2024, so “roughly” is doing a lot of lifting there. It’s 17% heavier for equivalent capacity. And it’s not just a little lower than nickel-rich chemistries, it’s a bit more than half as much.

It’s also not clear how valuable cold weather performance is, newer EVs use heat pumps instead of resistance heating, and share the cooling loops between the powertrain, battery, and cabin, so that the heat removed from the motors can heat the cabin and battery. They’re going to need that system in place (to heat the cabin and cool the powertrain) even if a new battery type can operate at colder temperatures.

Sodium batteries don’t differ enough from LFP in cycle lifespan enough to matter (not for this sort of use case, anyway), and the density is lower, so the only way they’ll be competitive is if they’re sufficiently cheaper.

Re: Sodium is more suited to static installations

By Sethra • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Exactly. But it definitely has a place in ground based power storage. Homes with solar or large scale solar farms that need to cycle reliably every day. The greater cycle reliability makes them very attractive for that. Especially true in the north of course, but attractive anywhere really.

Now if all that hype surrounding the new solid state batteries turns out to be true, the entire industry is going to be overturned.

Is the ‘Death of Reading’ Narrative Wrong?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Has the rise of hyper-addictive digital technologies really shattered our attention spans and driven books out of our culture? Maybe not, argues social psychologist Adam Mastroianni (author of the Substack Experimental History):
As a psychologist, I used to study claims like these for a living, so I know that the mind is primed to believe narratives of decline. We have a much lower standard of evidence for “bad thing go up” than we do for “bad thing go down.” Unsurprisingly, then, stories about the end of reading tend to leave out some inconvenient data points. For example, book sales were higher in 2025 than they were in 2019, and only a bit below their high point in the pandemic. Independent bookstores are booming, not busting; at least 422 new indie shops opened in the United States last year alone. Even Barnes & Noble is cool again.

The actual data on reading, meanwhile, isn’t as apocalyptic as the headlines imply. Gallup surveys suggest that some mega-readers (11+ books per year) have become moderate readers (1-5 books per year), but they don’t find any other major trends over the past three decades. Other surveys document similarly moderate declines. For instance, data from the National Endowment for the Arts finds a slight decrease in the percentage of U.S. adults who read any book in 2022 (49%) compared to 2012 (55%). And the American Time Use Survey shows a dip in reading time from 2003 to 2023. Ultimately, the plausibility of the “death of reading” thesis depends on two judgment calls. First, do these effects strike you as big or small…? The second judgment call: Do you expect these trends to continue, plateau, or even reverse…?

There are signs that the digital invasion of our attention is beginning to stall. We seem to have passed peak social media — time spent on the apps has started to slide. App developers are finding it harder and harder to squeeze more attention out of our eyeballs, and it turns out that having your eyeballs squeezed hurts, so people aren’t sticking around for it… Fact #2: Reading has already survived several major incursions, which suggests it’s more appealing than we thought. Radio, TV, dial-up, Wi-Fi, TikTok — none of it has been enough to snuff out the human desire to point our pupils at words on paper… It is remarkable, even miraculous, that people who possess the most addictive devices ever invented will occasionally choose to turn those devices off and pick up a book instead.
The author mocks the “death of reading” hypothesis for implying that all the world’s avid readers “were just filling time with great works of literature until TikTok came along.”

Repeated story every 20 years

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Every 20 years or so, we get a “Death of Reading”.

Printing press caused the death of reading by creating newspapers and cheap pamphlets.
Mass produced Paper back books…
Comic Books…
Color Magazines …
The internet…
Smart Phones…

No. People that want to read, still read. The common folk that never read the ‘right’ words never read what the elitists think they should read. Book sales remain steady - though formats do change. We have a lot more ebooks and a lot less mass market paperbacks than we did 40 years ago.

Re:Wrong

By broohaha • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Public School teachers no longer assign book reports because their moronic snowflakes can not be bothered to read a full classic and then summarize it to write a simple report

Are you a parent, and has this been your kid’s experience? Because that’s definitely not my middle-schooler’s experience. She’s on her fourth book of the school year for which she’ll need to write a report.

I don’t doubt there are other schools out there that have had to abandon book reports, but I wonder how widespread it is. We’re not in a particularly competitive school district (unlike our neighbors), so I don’t think there’s anything special about the kids in this school.

Re:Garbage

By parityshrimp • Score: 5, Funny Thread

This is the first line from the linked article. Complete garbage, I stopped reading after that.

Behold, the death of reading.

Re:Repeated story every 20 years

By hadleyburg • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Every 20 years or so, we get a “Death of Reading”.

Printing press caused the death of reading by creating newspapers and cheap pamphlets.
Mass produced Paper back books…
Comic Books…
Color Magazines …
The internet…
Smart Phones…

No. People that want to read, still read. The common folk that never read the ‘right’ words never read what the elitists think they should read. Book sales remain steady - though formats do change. We have a lot more ebooks and a lot less mass market paperbacks than we did 40 years ago.

And as usual, the argument on both sides can sometimes be lacking nuance.
On on hand, it is not a “death” of reading, probably a reduction.
And on the other hand, these panics every 20 years are not without basis, and probably worthy of some concern.

Re:Book Sales != Books Read

By test321 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It might surprise you, but that’s a common thing. People get interested in books, but then don’t make up time for reading. A long time ago as graduate student I did not have internet at home, I was purchasing *and* reading a book every week, whether an essay or a novel. Now I have internet and also a busy life, and I can’t make up time for reading anymore. I probably could, but there so many other things I can push forward even on nights and week-ends: my main job, my side hustle, a hobby (e.g. street photography), contributing to some FOSS, trying to play an instrument again, playing with the cat, or, you know, waste time online.

Waymo Reveals Remote Workers In Philippines Sometimes Advise Its Driverless Cars

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Waymo surprised U.S. lawmakers Wednesday during a hearing on autonomous vehicles and their safety and oversight. Newsweek reports:
During questioning, Sen. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, asked what happens when a Waymo vehicle encounters a driving situation it cannot independently resolve. “The Waymo phones a human friend for help,” Markey explained, adding that the vehicle communicates with a “remote assistance operator.” Markey criticized the lack of public information about these workers, despite their role in vehicle safety…

[Dr. Mauricio Peña, chief safety officer at Waymo] responded by clarifying the scope of the operators’ involvement: “They provide guidance, they do not remotely drive the vehicles,” Peña said. “Waymo asks for guidance in certain situations and gets input, but Waymo is always in charge of the dynamic driving task,” according to EVShift. Pressed further on where those operators are located, Peña told lawmakers that some are based in the United States and others abroad, though he did not have an exact breakdown. After additional questioning, he confirmed that overseas operators are located in the Philippines…

The disclosure prompted sharp criticism from Markey, who raised concerns about security and labor implications. “Having people overseas influencing American vehicles is a safety issue,” he said. “The information the operators receive could be out of date. It could introduce tremendous cyber security vulnerabilities,” according to People. Markey also pointed to job displacement, noting that autonomous vehicles already affect taxi and rideshare drivers in the U.S. Waymo defended the practice in comments to People, saying the use of overseas staff is part of a broader effort to scale operations globally.
Waymo also defended the remote workers to Newsweek as licensed drivers reviewed for “driving-related convictions” and other traffic violations who are also “randomly screened for drug use.”

Thanks to Slashdot reader sinij for sharing the news.

More of the AI patina is rubbing off

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

Amazon Go stores employed hundreds of low-paid Indian workers in offshore sweatshops while pretending their AI was magically determining everything people put into their baskets and carts.

And now, we see Waymo is doing basically the same thing. While the congress-critters were focusing on the off-shoring aspect, I wish they’d asked exactly how many times per trip the Waymo AI “asked” the humans for assistance - that could’ve been enlightening.

Not who you want in charge of road safety..

By h33t l4x0r • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I mean, this is a country where babies don’t wear motorcycle helmets.

Re:More of the AI patina is rubbing off

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 5, Funny Thread
AI: Actually Indians

Re:More of the AI patina is rubbing off

By timeOday • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Waymo has always been open about this - except perhaps the location of the people doing the monitoring.

Real life Captcha solvers

By Uldis Segliņš • Score: 3 Thread
Mark all pictures with child crossing the road, you have 1 second to possible impact.

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.”

Re:Oh look

By Powercntrl • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The ‘experts’ got it all wrong again.

To be fair, I don’t ever recall this issue being about protecting native bee biodiversity. It was always presented as “without bees to pollinate, you can kiss all these food crops goodbye!” As in, the threat had always been directed towards the agricultural industry (and by extension, anyone who liked eating foods that might go off the menu if the honeybees went *poof*). There was even some grocery store that attempted to raise awareness by sharing pictures on social media of empty shelves with all the produce removed that would be gone after a bee-pocalypse.

So, this is a bit revisionist to claim widespread support was for native bee biodiversity. I’d venture a guess most people were worried about what would or wouldn’t be on their dinner plate and not which type of “bugs” will no longer be around to get splattered against their car’s windshield.

To add to the original analogy in TFS: If you thought you might not be able to get eggs because of a “bird decline”, you’d be entirely justified in your decision to start your own flock of chickens.

Update

By Retired Chemist • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Honeybees are critical for a large part of our agriculture. Their decline has been traced to pesticide resistant mites than carry diseases that can devastate colonies. There are no other miticides approved for use in bee hives in the US. In other words, none of this has anything to do with conservation. It is all about commercial agriculture and regulatory barriers. It should be easy enough to get an emergency approval for alternative miticides, if people can get moving and file the paperwork. Then conservationists can go back to actually worrying about conservation issues.

Bitcoin Dropped Nearly 30% This Week. But Why?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
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: 5, 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.

Because it’s mostly used for money laundering

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
And there’s absolutely no point in caring when there’s virtually no enforcement of money laundering laws going on right now.

If you’re a white collar criminal you can rip off pretty much anyone you want anyway you want as long as you don’t go after the really really rich people like Bernie Madoff and Elizabeth Holmes did.

So there’s a lot less demand for crypto because it’s a lot easier to commit white collar crime and will be for the next at least 3 years.

Meanwhile the AI data centers are sucking down all the compute power so cryptocurrency is having a rough time competing.

And finally of course we are in a massive massive recession that nobody is talking about because the news media has been ordered to keep quiet about it by their owners. That recession is inevitably affecting scams like Bitcoin because they are Ponzi schemes and when the economy gets bad Ponzi schemes start to collapse because there aren’t enough suckers who have money left to keep them going

At this point I would just ban it

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s been what, over 10 years now of Bitcoin and crypto and what has been the net utility to society or even humanity? I would say outside of a few select people getting wealthy it has overall been a net negative for 99% of humans alive.

It eats electricity, it eats labor which could be used on more useful things (how many talented coders are in crypto shit?) it eats money, it eats investments which could otherwise go into new companies or other ventures, it’s just a big fat distraction for everyone, the fact we are talking about it here is even a net negative.

Now how you “ban” it is a tricky thing but at least as far as I am concerned I would say the SEC or whomever should declare it illegal to exchange any crypto for USD. Would that create a black market? Sure but that already exists, at least lets acknowledge that’s all it is an ever was.

We’ve held our tongues and played nice for far too long than anyone involved in the crypto space deserves, it’s stupid, it’s a waste it adds almost nothing, probably worse than nothing, it has made all our lives worse.

Re:And this is the problem.

By swillden • Score: 5, Informative Thread

And that is all bitcoin is. It’s all the stock market is, too.

You’re completely wrong to equate bitcoin with the stock market. When you buy shares in a publicly-traded company you’re buying something real, a portion of an actual business that owns real stuff, has real employees, makes real stuff and sells it to real people. Exactly how much that company is worth, so exactly how much your share is worth, isn’t really clear because calculating that value requires a lot of guesses about what the company, and its market, and the economy as a whole, are going to do in the future. But it’s definitely worth *something*.

That’s not true of bitcoin. You won’t hear people talking about bitcoin “fundamentals” the way they do with stocks, because bitcoin doesn’t have any fundamentals. It’s just vibes, all the way down. Oh you can talk about hashrates and work factors and the cost of mining equipment, etc., but none of that has any actual value. If the governments of the world united and successfully banned cryptocurrencies, all those ASIC rigs would be useless. If they were still using GPUs at least you could repurpose them for AI, or graphics.

Quite false.

By Brain-Fu • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I have made quite a lot of money investing in the stock market, and you can too. People who know what they are doing gain the option to retire early.

You don’t do it by day-trading or other stupid things. One makes money in the stock market through wise, tried-and-true buy-and hold strategies. It takes many years for the profits to amount to much. That is more than most people can bear. Everyone wants to be an overnight millionaire. Nope, that’s not going to happen on the stock market.

Day trading puts you in direct competition against high frequency traders, where you are completely outgunned. It is folly. Buy-and-hold investing yields excellent returns in the long term, but requires discipline, patience, and a proper education in the relevant details.