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	<title>fox :: echo/6xJxtAxAxA16DMzrcDie</title>
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	fox :: echo/6xJxtAxAxA16DMzrcDie
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	<language>ru</language>
<item><title>Google's Internal Politics Leave It Playing Catch-Up On AI Coding</title><guid>Duzl04pfa0doaJyeTtyA</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 22:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/Duzl04pfa0doaJyeTtyA#Duzl04pfa0doaJyeTtyA</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: At Google, leaders are anxious about falling behind in the race to offer AI coding tools, especially as rivals like Anthropic PBC offer more effective and popular tools to businesses, according to people familiar with the matter...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: At Google, leaders are anxious about falling behind in the race to offer AI coding tools, especially as rivals like Anthropic PBC offer more effective and popular tools to businesses, according to people familiar with the matter. The search giant is now working to unite some of its coding initiatives under one banner to speed progress and take advantage of a surge in customer interest. In some corners of Alphabet's Google, particularly AI lab DeepMind, concerns about the company's position are mounting, according to current and former employees and executives, who declined to be named because they weren't authorized to speak publicly.<br>
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Businesses are just starting to realize that AI coding tools can enable anyone to build products by prompting a chatbot. But Google doesn't have a clear solution for them. Its Gemini model's capabilities are sprinkled across half a dozen different coding products with different branding, indicating how the company's lack of focus and competing internal efforts have hampered success, the people said. Even internally, some Google engineers prefer to use Anthropic's Claude Code, they said. More concerning, the people said, are the engineers who are struggling to adopt AI coding at all. [...] Google's emphasis on its own technology has also complicated the push to catch up. Most employees are banned from using competing tools such as Claude Code or Codex due to security concerns, but Googlers can request exceptions if they can demonstrate they have a business case, one former employee said. Some teams at DeepMind, including those working on the Gemini model, internal applications, and open source models, use Claude Code, according to three former employees. "You want the best people to use the best tool, even inside Google," one of the former employees said. [...]<br>
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In recent years, DeepMind has tried to tighten control over how its AI breakthroughs are woven into Google products. Last year, Google appointed Kavukcuoglu to a new position as chief AI architect, a role in which he is charged with folding generative AI into Google products. Yet confusion about who is leading the charge on AI coding persists. Along with DeepMind, Google Cloud, Google Core, Google Labs and Android are all pushing AI coding in different ways, one of the people said. [...] Within the Googleplex, there is a philosophical clash between AI researchers who want to move as quickly as possible and more traditional senior engineers who have exacting standards for code quality, former employees say. AI usage is factored into performance reviews, according to a former employee. But engineers who try to use internal AI coding tools often hit capacity constraints due to competition for computing power, the former employee said.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://developers.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/1655253/googles-internal-politics-leave-it-playing-catch-up-on-ai-coding?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://developers.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/1655253/googles-internal-politics-leave-it-playing-catch-up-on-ai-coding?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Xbox Game Pass Ultimate Gets a Price Cut</title><guid>ULsEQmzYHcNBitXCfY5V</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 21:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ULsEQmzYHcNBitXCfY5V#ULsEQmzYHcNBitXCfY5V</link>
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		Microsoft is cutting the monthly price of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass, but the tradeoff is that new Call of Duty releases will no longer arrive on the service at launch. Instead, they'll show up about a year later. The Verge reports: After Xbox CEO Asha Sharma admitt...
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Microsoft is cutting the monthly price of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass, but the tradeoff is that new Call of Duty releases will no longer arrive on the service at launch. Instead, they'll show up about a year later. The Verge reports: After Xbox CEO Asha Sharma admitted last week that "Game Pass has become too expensive for players," Microsoft is dropping the price of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass. Starting today, Xbox Game Pass Ultimate drops from $29.99 to $22.99 a month, and PC Game Pass moves to $13.99, down from $16.49 a month.<br>
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The price drops are being fueled in part by future of Call of Duty titles no longer joining Game Pass Ultimate or PC Game Pass at launch. "New Call of Duty games will be added to Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass during the following holiday season (about a year later), while existing Call of Duty titles already in the library will continue to be available," says Microsoft.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/1639222/xbox-game-pass-ultimate-gets-a-price-cut?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/1639222/xbox-game-pass-ultimate-gets-a-price-cut?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Global Growth In Solar 'the Largest Ever Observed For Any Source'</title><guid>cZatu4VsyAsCa4XVbNb8</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/cZatu4VsyAsCa4XVbNb8#cZatu4VsyAsCa4XVbNb8</link>
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		The IEA says 2025 marked a turning point for global energy, with solar posting the largest growth ever seen for any energy source and helping carbon-free power outpace rising demand. The trend led the agency to declare that the world has entered the "Age of Electricity." Ars Tech...
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The IEA says 2025 marked a turning point for global energy, with solar posting the largest growth ever seen for any energy source and helping carbon-free power outpace rising demand. The trend led the agency to declare that the world has entered the "Age of Electricity." Ars Technica reports: The IEA report covers energy use, including the electrical grid, transportation, home heating, and other forms of consumption. As such, it can track how some of those uses are shifting, as electric vehicles displace some gasoline use and heat pumps replace gas and oil heating. It also saw a more global trend: The demand for electricity grew at twice the rate of overall energy demand. All of these went into the conclusion that we're starting the Age of Electricity. In terms of specifics, the IEA saw electric vehicle demand rise by nearly 40 percent, with electric car sales being a quarter of the total of cars sold last year. While that's having a measurable effect on electricity demand, it remains relatively small at the moment. It's almost certain to be contributing to the size of the rise in oil use last year: 0.7 percent. In absolute terms, that's less than half the average rise of the previous decade.<br>
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[...] When it comes to supplying electrons for those alternatives, the central story is solar power. "The absolute increase of solar PV generation in 2025 is the largest ever observed for any source," the IEA says, "excluding years marked by rebounds from global economic shocks such as COVID-19." In other words, with nothing in particular driving the energy markets in 2025, Solar's growth was unprecedented. On its own, its growth covered a quarter of the rising demand for all forms of energy. If you limit it to electricity, increased solar production covered over two-thirds of the increased demand. Overall, solar generated over 2,700 terawatt-hours last year, more than double its output from three years earlier. It now accounts for over 8 percent of the world's total electricity production. Thirty individual countries installed at least a gigawatt of solar last year, and it is now the single largest grid source by capacity (though other sources still outproduce it at the moment).<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/1549243/global-growth-in-solar-the-largest-ever-observed-for-any-source?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/1549243/global-growth-in-solar-the-largest-ever-observed-for-any-source?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Maryland Becomes First State To Pass Bill Banning 'Surveillance Pricing'</title><guid>wCi5lxftZzdbMS6qFZxd</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 19:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/wCi5lxftZzdbMS6qFZxd#wCi5lxftZzdbMS6qFZxd</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Denver7: Maryland is poised to become the first state in the country to ban "surveillance pricing." The practice refers to companies using a shopper's personal data, such as browsing history, location, or purchasing behavior, to tailor pri...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Denver7: Maryland is poised to become the first state in the country to ban "surveillance pricing." The practice refers to companies using a shopper's personal data, such as browsing history, location, or purchasing behavior, to tailor prices to individual customers. The Protection From Predatory Pricing Act, passed this month and sent to the governor for a signature, would prohibit food retailers and third-party delivery services from using the practice. Violations would be treated as deceptive trade practices under state law, with potential fines and lawsuits. While Consumer Reports called the move "encouraging," it warned that the final version contains "loopholes" that don't fully protect consumers. Some of the exemptions noted in the report include "applying the ban only to the use of personal data to set higher prices without establishing a baseline or standard price; exempting pricing tied to loyalty or membership programs, even if prices are higher; and exempting pricing linked to subscriptions or subscription-based services."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/0115210/maryland-becomes-first-state-to-pass-bill-banning-surveillance-pricing?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/0115210/maryland-becomes-first-state-to-pass-bill-banning-surveillance-pricing?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Amazon To Invest Up To Another $25 Billion In Anthropic</title><guid>gi0RZVuAppdhuH9jOjQm</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 15:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/gi0RZVuAppdhuH9jOjQm#gi0RZVuAppdhuH9jOjQm</link>
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		Amazon is expanding its Anthropic partnership with a deal to invest up to another $25 billion, while Anthropic commits to spending more than $100 billion on AWS infrastructure over the next decade to power Claude. "Anthropic's commitment to run its large language models on AWS Tr...
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Amazon is expanding its Anthropic partnership with a deal to invest up to another $25 billion, while Anthropic commits to spending more than $100 billion on AWS infrastructure over the next decade to power Claude. "Anthropic's commitment to run its large language models on AWS Trainium for the next decade reflects the progress we've made together on custom silicon, as we continue delivering the technology and infrastructure our customers need to build with generative AI," Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said in a statement. CNBC reports: Amazon's investment includes $5 billion into Anthropic now, with up to $20 billion in the future tied to "certain commercial milestones," according to a release. The initial investment is at Anthropic's latest valuation of $380 billion. Anthropic said in the release that it will bring nearly 1 gigawatt total of Trainium2 and Trainium3 capacity online by the end of the year.<br>
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With all of the major hyperscalers competing to build out AI capacity as quickly as possible, Amazon said in February that it expects to shell out roughly $200 billion this year on capital expenditures, mostly on AI infrastructure.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/014228/amazon-to-invest-up-to-another-25-billion-in-anthropic?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/014228/amazon-to-invest-up-to-another-25-billion-in-anthropic?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>iPhone Video Shows 'Earthset' From Space</title><guid>QwsnFzR2UvGLekuPC4pW</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 11:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/QwsnFzR2UvGLekuPC4pW#QwsnFzR2UvGLekuPC4pW</link>
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		NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman posted an out-of-this-world iPhone video on Sunday, showing Earth disappear behind the Moon at 8x zoom. "I could barely see the Moon through the docking hatch window but the iPhone was the perfect size to catch the view," said Wiseman, noting that this...
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NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman posted an out-of-this-world iPhone video on Sunday, showing Earth disappear behind the Moon at 8x zoom. "I could barely see the Moon through the docking hatch window but the iPhone was the perfect size to catch the view," said Wiseman, noting that this video is "uncropped, uncut with 8x zoom" and "quite comparable to the view of the human eye." The New York Times says the video marks the first time an "Earthset" has been captured on video.<br>
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"We've seen our fair share of remarkable images and videos from NASA's Artemis II mission around the Moon. Some of those were even captured on iPhone," notes 9to5Mac. "But Reid Wiseman, astronaut and commander for the Artemis II mission, just posted a new video that might take the crown for the most impressive yet."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/0012245/iphone-video-shows-earthset-from-space?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/21/0012245/iphone-video-shows-earthset-from-space?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>PlayStation To Require Age Verification For Messages and Voice Chat</title><guid>kMklrdmA6jJE1BVP0VKw</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 08:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/kMklrdmA6jJE1BVP0VKw#kMklrdmA6jJE1BVP0VKw</link>
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		A new email from Sony says that PlayStation will require players to verify their age later this year to keep using communication features like messages and voice chat. Insider-Gaming reports: The initiative comes from the goal of providing "safe, age-appropriate experiences for p...
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A new email from Sony says that PlayStation will require players to verify their age later this year to keep using communication features like messages and voice chat. Insider-Gaming reports: The initiative comes from the goal of providing "safe, age-appropriate experiences for players and families while respecting their privacy" and providing "meaningful control over their gaming experiences." The age-verification process will be implemented globally, and players will need to verify their age to continue using PlayStation communication services, such as messages and voice chat. If the player opts not to verify their age, they can still use other services, such as games, trophies, and the store. Only the communication experience will be affected if you choose not to verify your age. PlayStation didn't provide a date for when players will need to begin the verification process.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/2357225/playstation-to-require-age-verification-for-messages-and-voice-chat?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/2357225/playstation-to-require-age-verification-for-messages-and-voice-chat?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Mobile Phones To Be Banned In Schools In England Under New Plans</title><guid>mAA54KeVqk0dmwvUxESL</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 03:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/mAA54KeVqk0dmwvUxESL#mAA54KeVqk0dmwvUxESL</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: A ban on mobile phones in schools in England is to be introduced by the government to ensure that "critical safeguarding legislation" is passed. The government will table an amendment to the children's wellbeing and schools b...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: A ban on mobile phones in schools in England is to be introduced by the government to ensure that "critical safeguarding legislation" is passed. The government will table an amendment to the children's wellbeing and schools bill in the House of Lords after the bill was held up by peers on opposition benches. It will make existing guidance on mobile phone bans in schools statutory, a move that ministers have resisted until now.<br>
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The government had consistently argued that the vast majority of schools had already banned mobile phones, and that there was no need to add a legal requirement. They finally capitulated, however, describing it as "a pragmatic measure" to get the bill through. [...] The bill is regarded by many as the biggest piece of child protection legislation in decades and includes proposals for a compulsory register for children who are not in school, a crackdown on profiteering in children's social care, and a "single unique identifier" to help agencies track a child's welfare.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/2014246/mobile-phones-to-be-banned-in-schools-in-england-under-new-plans?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/2014246/mobile-phones-to-be-banned-in-schools-in-england-under-new-plans?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Apple CEO Tim Cook Is Stepping Down</title><guid>eyz6avwIX3qzOrXHK7ha</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/eyz6avwIX3qzOrXHK7ha#eyz6avwIX3qzOrXHK7ha</link>
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		Apple announced that Tim Cook will step down as CEO in September after 15 years in the role, handing the job to hardware chief John Ternus. Longtime Slashdot reader sinij shares the news from MarketWatch: Cook leaves an impressive legacy after growing the company to a $4 trillion...
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Apple announced that Tim Cook will step down as CEO in September after 15 years in the role, handing the job to hardware chief John Ternus. Longtime Slashdot reader sinij shares the news from MarketWatch: Cook leaves an impressive legacy after growing the company to a $4 trillion market capitalization from just $300 billion 15 years ago. Over Cook's 15-year tenure as CEO, Apple's stock has risen 1,932%, beating the S&amp;P 500's 504% increase, according to Dow Jones Market Data. That places Apple's stock as the 38th best-performing member of the index over that period of time.<br>
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Cook had big shoes to fill, replacing Apple's iconic founder, Steve Jobs, as CEO. Cook's successor, John Ternus, Apple's senior vice president of hardware engineering, will need to guide Apple's through uncharted waters as the company navigates its artificial-intelligence transition and supply-chain constraints. Cook will remain at Apple as executive chairman. "It has been the greatest privilege of my life to be the CEO of Apple and to have been trusted to lead such an extraordinary company. I love Apple with all of my being, and I am so grateful to have had the opportunity to work with a team of such ingenious, innovative, creative, and deeply caring people who have been unwavering in their dedication to enriching the lives of our customers and creating the best products and services in the world," said Cook.<br>
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"John Ternus has the mind of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity and with honor. He is a visionary whose contributions to Apple over 25 years are already too numerous to count, and he is without question the right person to lead Apple into the future. I could not be more confident in his abilities and his character, and I look forward to working closely with him on this transition and in my new role as executive chairman."<br>
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As for Ternus' replacement, the role of Chief Hardware Officer will be awarded to Apple executive Johny Srouji. "Srouji, who most recently served as senior vice president of Hardware Technologies, will assume an expanded role leading Hardware Engineering, which John Ternus most recently oversaw, as well as the hardware technologies organization," said Apple in a press release.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://apple.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/221244/apple-ceo-tim-cook-is-stepping-down?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://apple.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/221244/apple-ceo-tim-cook-is-stepping-down?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Former Palantir Employee Running For Congress Unveils 'AI Dividend' Plan</title><guid>kMLLHdURtJ3CxGTkZPVy</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 01:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/kMLLHdURtJ3CxGTkZPVy#kMLLHdURtJ3CxGTkZPVy</link>
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		Alex Bores, a former Palantir employee and current Democratic House candidate in New York, is proposing an "AI dividend" that would send direct payments to Americans if AI drives major job losses. "At its core, the AI Dividend is simple: if AI dramatically increases productivity ...
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Alex Bores, a former Palantir employee and current Democratic House candidate in New York, is proposing an "AI dividend" that would send direct payments to Americans if AI drives major job losses. "At its core, the AI Dividend is simple: if AI dramatically increases productivity and concentrates wealth, the American people have a stake in those gains," a memo on the policy reads. Axios reports: The dividend would fund direct payments to Americans. It would also be invested into workforce training and education, as well as government capacity to "govern AI safely and fund independent oversight," per the plan memo.<br>
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"You don't take out fire insurance because you expect your house to burn down -- you have insurance in case something goes awry," Bores told Axios in an interview. "Here we have, for the first time, a technology where the makers of the technology are explicitly saying that their goal is to replace all human labor." "The fact that they've put it out there means government needs to take it seriously." [...]<br>
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The proposal would be funded through:<br>
- A token tax, described in the memo as a "modest tax on AI consumption"<br>
- Equity participation in frontier AI firms<br>
- Changes to the tax code that would reduce incentives to invest in AI "when it leads to less work" "If [AI companies] they can support this plan, that would show that they actually believe in what they're putting out there," Bores said. "If they're not doing it, then I think it shows that they're really putting window dressing out there."<br>
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Further reading: Palantir Posts Bond Villain Manifesto On X<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/204204/former-palantir-employee-running-for-congress-unveils-ai-dividend-plan?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/204204/former-palantir-employee-running-for-congress-unveils-ai-dividend-plan?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Deezer Says 44% of Songs Uploaded To Its Platform Daily Are AI-Generated</title><guid>l8By2Q66ezp8ERie8XGV</guid><pubDate>2026-04-21 00:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/l8By2Q66ezp8ERie8XGV#l8By2Q66ezp8ERie8XGV</link>
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		Deezer says AI-generated songs now make up 44% of all new uploads to its platform, with nearly 75,000 arriving each day and more than two million per month. The company notes that consumption of these tracks is still very low, "between 1-3% of the total streams," and 85% are flag...
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Deezer says AI-generated songs now make up 44% of all new uploads to its platform, with nearly 75,000 arriving each day and more than two million per month. The company notes that consumption of these tracks is still very low, "between 1-3% of the total streams," and 85% are flagged as fraudulent. TechCrunch reports: The latest figure from Deezer highlights a continuous surge in AI-generated music uploads to the platform. Deezer reported receiving around 60,000 AI tracks per day in January, up from 50,000 in November, 30,000 in September, and just 10,000 in January 2025, when it first launched its AI-music detection tool.<br>
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Songs tagged as AI-generated on Deezer are automatically removed from algorithmic recommendations and not included in editorial playlists. The company announced today that it will no longer store hi-res versions of AI tracks. "AI-generated music is now far from a marginal phenomenon and as daily deliveries keep increasing, we hope the whole music ecosystem will join us in taking action to help safeguard artists' rights and promote transparency for fans," said Deezer CEO Alexis Lanternier in a press release. "Thanks to our technology and the proactive measures we put in place more than a year ago, we have shown that it's possible to reduce AI-related fraud and payment dilution in streaming to a minimum."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1947211/deezer-says-44-of-songs-uploaded-to-its-platform-daily-are-ai-generated?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1947211/deezer-says-44-of-songs-uploaded-to-its-platform-daily-are-ai-generated?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Trump Administration Begins Refunding $166 Billion In Tariffs</title><guid>F04r8d7dLpsmc0mt3PDX</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 23:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/F04r8d7dLpsmc0mt3PDX#F04r8d7dLpsmc0mt3PDX</link>
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		"After a Supreme Court of the United States ruling in Feb. 2026, many tariffs imposed by the Trump administration were declared illegal because the president overstepped his authority," writes Slashdot reader hcs_$reboot. "As a result, the U.S. government now has to refund a mass...
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"After a Supreme Court of the United States ruling in Feb. 2026, many tariffs imposed by the Trump administration were declared illegal because the president overstepped his authority," writes Slashdot reader hcs_$reboot. "As a result, the U.S. government now has to refund a massive amount of money, around $160-170+ billion, paid mainly by importers." According to the New York Times, the administration has now begun accepting refund requests, "surrendering its prized source of revenue -- plus interest." From the report: For some U.S. businesses, the highly anticipated refunds could be substantial, offering critical if belated financial relief. Tariffs are taxes on imports, so the president's trade policies have served as a great burden for companies that rely on foreign goods. Many have had to choose whether to absorb the duties, cut other costs or pass on the expenses to consumers. By Monday morning, those companies can begin to submit documentation to the government to recover what they paid in illegal tariffs.<br>
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In a sign of the demand, more than 3,000 businesses, including FedEx and Costco, have already sued the Trump administration in a bid to secure their refunds, with some cases filed even before the Supreme Court's ruling. But only the entities that officially paid the tariffs are eligible to recover that money. That means that the fuller universe of people affected by Mr. Trump's policies -- including millions of Americans who paid higher prices for the products they bought -- are not able to apply for direct relief.<br>
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The extent to which consumers realize any gain hinges on whether businesses share the proceeds, something that few have publicly committed to do. Some have started to band together in class-action lawsuits in the hopes of receiving a payout. Many business owners said they weren't sure how easy the tariff refund process would be, particularly given Mr. Trump's stated opposition to returning the money. The administration has suggested that it may be months before companies see any money. Adding to the uncertainty, the White House has declined to say if it might still try to return to court in a bid to halt some or all of the refunds. The money will mostly go to importers and companies, since they were the ones that directly paid the tariffs. While individual refunds with interest could take around 60 to 90 days to process, the overall effort will probably move much more slowly because of how large and complicated it will be.<br>
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There are also legal questions around whether companies would have to pass any of that money on to consumers. Slashdot reader AmiMoJo commented: "This is perhaps the biggest transfer of wealth in American history. Most of those companies will just pocket the refund and not pass any of it on to the consumer. If prices go down at all, they won't be back to pre-tariff levels. You paid the tariffs, but you ain't getting the refund."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1711231/trump-administration-begins-refunding-166-billion-in-tariffs?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1711231/trump-administration-begins-refunding-166-billion-in-tariffs?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Palantir Posts Bond Villain Manifesto On X</title><guid>roVNRzud9IoIYGeFQjz7</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 22:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/roVNRzud9IoIYGeFQjz7#roVNRzud9IoIYGeFQjz7</link>
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		DeanonymizedCoward writes: Engadget reports that Palantir has posted to X a summary of CEO Alex Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska's 2025 book, The Technological Republic, which reads like a utopian idealist doodled on a Bond villain's whiteboard. While the post makes some decent point...
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DeanonymizedCoward writes: Engadget reports that Palantir has posted to X a summary of CEO Alex Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska's 2025 book, The Technological Republic, which reads like a utopian idealist doodled on a Bond villain's whiteboard. While the post makes some decent points, it also highlights the Big-AI attitude that the AI surveillance state is in fact a good thing, and strongly implies that the Good Guys need to do war crimes before the Bad Guys get around to it. "The ability of free and democratic societies to prevail requires something more than moral appeal," one of the 22 points states. "It requires hard power, and hard power in this century will be built on software."<br>
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The book is billed as "a passionate call for the West to wake up to our new reality," and other excerpts in the social media post include assertions such as: "Free email is not enough. The decadence of a culture or civilization, and indeed its ruling class, will be forgiven only if that culture is capable of delivering economic growth and security for the public"; "National service should be a universal duty"; "The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone"; and "Some cultures have produced vital advances; others remain dysfunctional and regressive."<br>
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The statement criticizes the West's resistance to "defining national cultures in the name of inclusivity," as well as the treatment of billionaires and the "ruthless exposure of the private lives of public figures."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1654212/palantir-posts-bond-villain-manifesto-on-x?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1654212/palantir-posts-bond-villain-manifesto-on-x?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Allbirds' Move To AI Has Echoes of the Dot-Com Frenzy</title><guid>aI3nClzPwm0upj0vAQkd</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 21:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/aI3nClzPwm0upj0vAQkd#aI3nClzPwm0upj0vAQkd</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg, written by writer Austin Carr: Allbirds is pivoting to artificial intelligence. The San Francisco brand, whose wool running shoes were once the sneaker du jour among the tech crowd, announced last week that it was expanding into...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg, written by writer Austin Carr: Allbirds is pivoting to artificial intelligence. The San Francisco brand, whose wool running shoes were once the sneaker du jour among the tech crowd, announced last week that it was expanding into AI computing infrastructure. The bizarre strategic shift was immediately greeted with a surprising frenzy on Wall Street, where shares of Allbirds soared 582% last Wednesday before dropping the next day. [...] Of course, the absurdity of Allbirds' situation echoed familiar Silicon Valley tropes -- from the endless startup pivots of the 2010s to the more recent boom-and-bust cycles of arbitrarily valued crypto coins. But it immediately reminded me of the marketing ploys of the dot-com crash. After all, some of the more iconic fails ended up being retailers such as Pets.com, Webvan, etc., riding the web wave with little to show for it beyond terrible margins.<br>
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One particular comparison from that period stands out as relevant to Allbirds: Zap.com. The holding company behind it, Zapata Corp., had a long and convoluted history, but was essentially selling fish-oil products by the time it decided to reinvent itself as an internet portal. It amassed a variety of web properties -- in media, e-commerce, gaming and so on -- and even once tried to acquire the search engine Excite. Spoiler alert: Zap flopped. Jen Heck, then a young employee at one of Zap's up-and-coming portfolio entities, remembers how quickly the hype of that web 1.0 turned to hell. As absurd as Zapata's pivot sounds today, it seemed feasible during the excitement of the internet revolution. "We went from like, 'Wow, this life thing is just so easy,' to it all ending so suddenly," Heck recalls. The ones who survived that tech bubble, she says, actually had differentiated products and the right creative thinkers building them -- and weren't just cynically jumping on the latest hot trend. "'Internet' was the magic word then, and 'AI' is the magic word now," Heck says.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1647258/allbirds-move-to-ai-has-echoes-of-the-dot-com-frenzy?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/1647258/allbirds-move-to-ai-has-echoes-of-the-dot-com-frenzy?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>NSA Using Anthropic's Mythos Despite Blacklist</title><guid>UObyeenLizhs2AtPAK6q</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/UObyeenLizhs2AtPAK6q#UObyeenLizhs2AtPAK6q</link>
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		Axios reports that the NSA is using Anthropic's restricted Mythos Preview model despite the Pentagon insisting the company poses a "supply chain risk." Axios reports: The government's cybersecurity needs appear to be outweighing the Pentagon's feud with Anthropic. The department ...
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Axios reports that the NSA is using Anthropic's restricted Mythos Preview model despite the Pentagon insisting the company poses a "supply chain risk." Axios reports: The government's cybersecurity needs appear to be outweighing the Pentagon's feud with Anthropic. The department moved in February to cut off Anthropic and force its vendors to follow suit. That case is ongoing. The military is now broadening its use of Anthropic's tools while simultaneously arguing in court that using those tools threatens U.S. national security.<br>
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Two sources said the NSA was using Mythos, while one said the model was also being used more widely within the department. It's unclear how the NSA is currently using Mythos, but other organizations with access to the model are using it predominantly to scan their own environments for exploitable security vulnerabilities.<br>
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Anthropic restricted access to Mythos to around 40 organizations, contending that its offensive cyber capabilities were too dangerous to allow for a wider release. Anthropic only announced 12 of those organizations. One source said the NSA was among the unnamed agencies with access. The NSA's counterparts in the U.K. have said they have access to the model through the country's AI Security Institute. Anthropic's CEO met with top U.S. officials on Friday to discuss "opportunities for collaboration," according to a White House spokesperson, "as well as shared approaches and protocols to address the challenges associated with scaling this technology."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0353220/nsa-using-anthropics-mythos-despite-blacklist?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0353220/nsa-using-anthropics-mythos-despite-blacklist?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Robots Beat Human Records At Beijing Half-Marathon</title><guid>Wr9TouQgUiOniT4cLebo</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 19:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/Wr9TouQgUiOniT4cLebo#Wr9TouQgUiOniT4cLebo</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The winning runner at a Beijing half-marathon for humanoid robots finished the race today in 50 minutes and 26 seconds -- significantly faster than the human world record of 57 minutes recently set by Jacob Kiplimo. [...] [T]he...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The winning runner at a Beijing half-marathon for humanoid robots finished the race today in 50 minutes and 26 seconds -- significantly faster than the human world record of 57 minutes recently set by Jacob Kiplimo. [...] [T]he winning time is a massive improvement over last year's race, when the fastest robot finished in two hours and 40 minutes. <br>
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The Associated Press reports that this year's winner was built by Chinese smartphone maker Honor. It seems the winning robot wasn't actually the fastest, as a different Honor robot finished in 48 minutes and 19 seconds. But that one was remote controlled -- the 50:26 robot was autonomous and won due to weighted scoring. About 40% of participating robots competed autonomously, while the remaining 60% were remote controlled, according to Beijing's E-Town tech hub. Not all of them did as well as Honor's robots, with one robot falling at the starting line and another hitting a barrier.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0346215/robots-beat-human-records-at-beijing-half-marathon?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0346215/robots-beat-human-records-at-beijing-half-marathon?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Videos Catch Amazon Delivery Drones Dropping Packages From 10 Feet in the Air</title><guid>E8Wx4Sr5CTyIZ0eWbTkM</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 16:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/E8Wx4Sr5CTyIZ0eWbTkM#E8Wx4Sr5CTyIZ0eWbTkM</link>
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		There's been a few complaints about Amazon's drone delivery service. "The automated mailmen are dropping off packages from 10 feet in the air," reports the New York Post, "rendering the contents of each box susceptible to crashing and smashing." 
One example? Tamara Hancock filme...
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There's been a few complaints about Amazon's drone delivery service. "The automated mailmen are dropping off packages from 10 feet in the air," reports the New York Post, "rendering the contents of each box susceptible to crashing and smashing." <br>
One example? Tamara Hancock filmed a drone delivering a bottle of Torani flavoring syrup to her home in Arizona (as a test of how Amazon handled fragile items). It was delivered it in a plastic bottle — not glass — but the massive drone drops the drone from so high that the impact cracked the bottle's cap. (In the video Hancock opens her delivery to find leaked flavoring syrup "everywhere.") <br>
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The delivery was hard to film, Hancock says, because "If the drone sees me in the back yard, it will not drop, because it is worried about hurting humans or animals." The Post notes Amazon's "AI-charged fleet" of drones are "Outfitted with industry-leading 'sense and avoid' technology, the aerodynamic machines are equipped to drop off eligible items, weighing a maximum of five pounds, at designated areas in 60 minutes or less."<br>
The high-tech, however, apparently does not ensure gentle landings. Collisions, including a recent crash-and-burn into a Texas building, as well as several mid-flight malfunctions in rainy weather, have abounded since the drones' inaugural launch.... <br>
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Tasha, a separate Amazon user, spotted the drone plunging a package near the paved driveway of a neighbor's yard. Unfortunately, its propellers caused other, previously delivered parcels to blow away, sending one into the street... In a statement to The Post, Amazon said it apologized for one of the "rare instances when products don't arrive as expected." <br>
Amazon's drone fleet has been running since late 2024, the Post adds, and are now offering "ultra-fast" shipping in U.S. states including Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Kansas and Texas. <br>
The machines do seem massive. I'm surprised neighbors aren't complaining about the noise...<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0729233/videos-catch-amazon-delivery-drones-dropping-packages-from-10-feet-in-the-air?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0729233/videos-catch-amazon-delivery-drones-dropping-packages-from-10-feet-in-the-air?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Zoom Partners With Sam Altman's Iris-Scanning Company To Offer Callers Verifications of Humanness</title><guid>yu8uQBbKeF6OeenODzNg</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 12:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/yu8uQBbKeF6OeenODzNg#yu8uQBbKeF6OeenODzNg</link>
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		Zoom "has partnered with World, Sam Altman's iris-scanning identity company (previously known as Worldcoin), " reports Digital Trends, "to add real-time human verification inside meetings."

Zoom is now inviting organizations to join the beta version of the rollout, which Digital...
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Zoom "has partnered with World, Sam Altman's iris-scanning identity company (previously known as Worldcoin), " reports Digital Trends, "to add real-time human verification inside meetings."<br>
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Zoom is now inviting organizations to join the beta version of the rollout, which Digital Trends says "lets hosts confirm that every face on the call belongs to a real person, not an AI-generated imposter. "<br>
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For those wondering how World's Deep Face technology works, it includes a three-step process. It cross-references a signed image from a user's original Orb registration, a live face scan from the device, and the frame of the video that's visible to the other participants in the meeting. Only when the three samples match does a "Verified Human" badge appear next to the user's name... <br>
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Hosts can also make Deep Face verification mandatory for joining meetings, preventing unverified participants from joining entirely. Mid-call, on-the-spot checks are also possible...<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/066225/zoom-partners-with-sam-altmans-iris-scanning-company-to-offer-callers-verifications-of-humanness?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/066225/zoom-partners-with-sam-altmans-iris-scanning-company-to-offer-callers-verifications-of-humanness?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Brave Browser Introduces 'Origin', a Pay-Once 'Minimalist' Browser</title><guid>dMBtgODlHLYVrEStIbs9</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 09:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/dMBtgODlHLYVrEStIbs9#dMBtgODlHLYVrEStIbs9</link>
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		The Brave browser "has introduced Brave Origin, a stripped-down version of its browser that removes built-in monetization features like Rewards and other extras tied to its business model," writes Slashdot reader BrianFagioli"

The stripped-down browser is available either as a s...
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The Brave browser "has introduced Brave Origin, a stripped-down version of its browser that removes built-in monetization features like Rewards and other extras tied to its business model," writes Slashdot reader BrianFagioli"<br>
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The stripped-down browser is available either as a separate browser download or as an upgrade to the existing Brave install, unlocked through a one-time purchase that can be activated across multiple devices. The idea is simple on paper: pay once, and you get a cleaner, more minimal browsing experience without the add-ons that fund Brave's ecosystem. What makes the move unusual is the pricing model itself. While paying to support a browser is not controversial, charging users specifically to remove features raises questions about whether those additions are seen as value or clutter. <br>
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The situation gets even stranger on Linux, where Brave Origin is reportedly available at no cost, creating an uneven experience across platforms and leaving some users wondering why they are being asked to pay for something others get for free.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0423212/brave-browser-introduces-origin-a-pay-once-minimalist-browser?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0423212/brave-browser-introduces-origin-a-pay-once-minimalist-browser?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Blue Origin Rocket Launches, Successfully Reuses Booster - But Loses Satellite</title><guid>cFBRKegvtKoaSugZojNH</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 07:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/cFBRKegvtKoaSugZojNH#cFBRKegvtKoaSugZojNH</link>
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		 SpaceNews reports:

Blue Origin's New Glenn suffered a malfunction of its second stage on the rocket's third flight April 19, stranding its payload in an unrecoverable "off-nominal" orbit and dealing the company a setback as it seeks to increase its flight rate... AST SpaceMobil...
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 SpaceNews reports:<br>
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Blue Origin's New Glenn suffered a malfunction of its second stage on the rocket's third flight April 19, stranding its payload in an unrecoverable "off-nominal" orbit and dealing the company a setback as it seeks to increase its flight rate... AST SpaceMobile had planned to launch 45 to 60 satellites this year for its D2D constellation, but BlueBird 7 is the first to launch since BlueBird 6 launched on an Indian LVM3 rocket in December.<br>
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AST SpaceMobile still expects to have 45 satellites in orbit by the end of the year, the article notes. (In an earnings call in March, AST SpaceMobile's CEO had promised they'd soon start "stacking" satellites, "batched in groups of either three, four, six or eight in a single launch.") He'd added that "To support our launch cadence during 2026, we expect the New Glenn booster to be reused every 30 days or less..." <br>
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There's some good news there, SpaceNews points out, since today saw the first successful reflight of a New Glenn first stage rocket:<br>
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The booster, called "Never Tell Me The Odds" by Blue Origin, touched down on the company's landing platform, Jacklyn, in the Atlantic Ocean nearly nine and a half minutes after liftoff. The booster launched NASA's ESCAPADE Mars mission on the NG-2 flight in November. However, the booster reuse on NG-3 was only partial since the stage's biggest component, its BE-4 engines, was new. "With our first refurbished booster we elected to replace all seven engines and test out a few upgrades including a thermal protection system on one of the engine nozzles," Dave Limp, chief executive of Blue Origin, said in an April 13 social media post. "We plan to use the engines we flew for NG-2 on future flights."<br>
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The satellite will now be "de-orbited", AST SpaceMobile said in a statement. (They added that "The cost of the satellite is expected to be recovered under the company's insurance policy.") <br>
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Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the news.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0248201/blue-origin-rocket-launches-successfully-reuses-booster---but-loses-satellite?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/20/0248201/blue-origin-rocket-launches-successfully-reuses-booster---but-loses-satellite?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Voyager 1 is Running Out of Power.  NASA Just Switched Part of It Off</title><guid>9nJDPXzW1FnjJ5jp7mU6</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 04:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/9nJDPXzW1FnjJ5jp7mU6#9nJDPXzW1FnjJ5jp7mU6</link>
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		After 49 years of space travel, Voyager 1 "is running out of power," reports NPR:

The spacecraft runs on a radioisotope thermoelectric generator — a device that converts heat from decaying plutonium into electricity. It carries no solar panels, no rechargeable batteries. Just th...
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After 49 years of space travel, Voyager 1 "is running out of power," reports NPR:<br>
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The spacecraft runs on a radioisotope thermoelectric generator — a device that converts heat from decaying plutonium into electricity. It carries no solar panels, no rechargeable batteries. Just the slow, steady release of nuclear warmth, which diminishes by about 4 watts each year. After nearly five decades, that decline has become critical. <br>
<br>
During a routine maneuver in late February, Voyager 1's power levels fell unexpectedly, bringing the probe dangerously close to triggering an automatic fault-protection shutdown — a self-preservation response that would have forced engineers into a lengthy and risky recovery process. The team needed to act first. On April 17, mission engineers sent a sequence of commands to deactivate the Low-energy Charged Particles experiment, known as the LECP, which is one of Voyager 1's remaining science instruments. The LECP has measured ions, electrons, and cosmic rays originating from both our solar system and the galaxy beyond it, helping scientists map the structure of interstellar space in a way no other instrument could... <br>
<br>
Voyager 1 now carries two operational science instruments: one that listens for plasma waves, and one that measures magnetic fields. Engineers believe the latest shutdown could buy the mission roughly another year of breathing room. The team is also developing a more sweeping power conservation plan they informally call "the Big Bang" — a coordinated swap of several powered components all at once, trading older systems for lower-power alternatives. If testing on Voyager 2, planned for May and June 2026, goes well, the same procedure will be attempted on Voyager 1 no sooner than July. If it works, there is even a slim chance the LECP could once more continue to work. <br>
The engineers say they hope to keep at least one instrument operating on each spacecraft into the 2030s. It would leave both still reporting from places no machine has ever gone before.111 <br>
Voyager 1 is now 15 billion miles from Earth, the article points out. (Radio signals take 23 hours to arrive...) <br>
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot for sharing the article.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/2346255/voyager-1-is-running-out-of-power-nasa-just-switched-part-of-it-off?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/2346255/voyager-1-is-running-out-of-power-nasa-just-switched-part-of-it-off?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Nobel Prize-Winning Physicist Predicts Humankind Won't Survive Another 50 Years</title><guid>ypRlLj8LxP5t2gL1zsLP</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 02:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ypRlLj8LxP5t2gL1zsLP#ypRlLj8LxP5t2gL1zsLP</link>
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		 Live Science spoke with physicist David Gross, who today received the $3 million "Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics". He was part of a trio that won the 2004 physics Nobel prize for research that helped complete the Standard Model of particle physics. But when as...
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 Live Science spoke with physicist David Gross, who today received the $3 million "Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics". He was part of a trio that won the 2004 physics Nobel prize for research that helped complete the Standard Model of particle physics. But when asked if physics will reach a unified theory of the fundamental forces of nature within 50 years, Gross has a surprising answer. "Currently, I spend part of my time trying to tell people... that the chances of you living 50 [more] years are very small." <br>
Cold War estimates for a 1% chance of nuclear war each year seem low, Gross says. "The chances are more likely 2%. So that's a 1-in-50 chance every year."<br>
<br>
David Gross: The expected lifetime, in the case of 2% [per year], is about 35 years. [The expected lifetime is the average time it would take to have had a nuclear war by then. It is calculated using similar equations as those used to determine the "half-life" of a radioactive material.] <br>
Live Science: So what do you suggest as remedies to lower that risk? <br>
<br>
Gross: We had something called the Nobel Laureate Assembly for reducing the risk of nuclear war in Chicago last year. There are steps, which are easy to take — for nations, I mean. For example, talk to each other. In the last 10 years, there are no treaties anymore. We're entering an incredible arms race. <br>
<br>
We have three super nuclear powers. People are talking about using nuclear weapons; there's a major war going on in the middle of Europe; we're bombing Iran; India and Pakistan almost went to war. OK, so that's increased the chance [of nuclear war]. I would really like to have a solid estimate — it might be more, and I think I'm being conservative — but a 2% estimate [of nuclear war] in today's crazy world. <br>
Live Science: Do you think we'll ever get to a place where we get rid of nuclear weapons? <br>
Gross: We're not recommending that. That's idealistic, but yes, I hope so. Because if you don't, there's always some risk an AI 100 years from now [could launch nuclear weapons], but chances of [humanity] living, with this estimate, 100 years, is very small, and living 200 years is infinitesimal. So [the answer to] Fermi's question of "Where are the civilizations, all the intelligent organisms around the galaxy, and why don't they talk to us?" is that they've killed themselves... <br>
<br>
 There are now nine nuclear powers. Even three is infinitely more complicated than two. The agreements, the norms between countries, are all falling apart. Weapons are getting crazier. Automation, and perhaps even AI, will be in control of those instruments pretty soon... It's going to be very hard to resist making AI make decisions because it acts so fast. <br>
<br>
He points out that with the threat of climate change, "people have done something," even though "It's a much harder argument to make than about nuclear weapons. <br>
<br>
"We made them; we can stop them." <br>
<br>
Thanks to hwstar (Slashdot reader #35,834) for sharing the article.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/2154219/nobel-prize-winning-physicist-predicts-humankind-wont-survive-another-50-years?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/2154219/nobel-prize-winning-physicist-predicts-humankind-wont-survive-another-50-years?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Is the Iran War Driving a Surge of Interest in Electric Cars?</title><guid>kwnh8OPfBh4vkAh3TGqA</guid><pubDate>2026-04-20 00:22:03</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/kwnh8OPfBh4vkAh3TGqA#kwnh8OPfBh4vkAh3TGqA</link>
		<description>
		In October and through November, America's EV sales reached their lowest point since 2022 after government subsidies expired, remembers Time. "But first-quarter data for 2026 shows that used EV sales were 12% higher than the same time last year and 17% higher than the previous qu...
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In October and through November, America's EV sales reached their lowest point since 2022 after government subsidies expired, remembers Time. "But first-quarter data for 2026 shows that used EV sales were 12% higher than the same time last year and 17% higher than the previous quarter. <br>
<br>
"One factor likely helping push buyers toward these cars is high gas prices, which recently topped $4.00 a gallon for the first time in four years," they write — but it's not just in the U.S. Instead, they argue the conflict "is driving a global surge of interest in electric vehicles..."<br>
<br>
In the U.K., electric car sales reached a record high, with 86,120 vehicles sold in March... The French online used-car retailer Aramisauto reported its share of EV sales nearly doubled from February 16 to March 9, rising to 12.7% from 6.5%, while sales of fueled models dropped to 28% of sales from 34%, and sales of diesel models dropped to 10% from 14%. Germany's largest online car market, mobile.de, told Reuters that the share of EV searches on its website has tripled since the start of March — from 12% to 36%, with car dealers receiving 66% more enquiries for used EVs than in February. <br>
South Korea reported that registrations for electric vehicles more than doubled in March compared to the prior year, due in part to rising fuel prices and government subsidies... In New Zealand, more than 1,000 EVs were registered in the week that ended on March 22, close to double the week before, making it the country's biggest week for electric vehicle registrations since the end of 2023, according to the country's Transport Minister, Chris Bishop.<br>
<br>
In America, Bloomberg also reports 605 high-speed EV charging stations switched on in just the first three months of 2025, "a 34% increase over the year-earlier period," according to their analysis of federal data. A data platform focused on EV infrastructure tells Bloomberg that speedier and more reliable chargers are convincing more drivers to go electric and use public plugs.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/1836219/is-the-iran-war-driving-a-surge-of-interest-in-electric-cars?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/1836219/is-the-iran-war-driving-a-surge-of-interest-in-electric-cars?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Pancreatic Cancer MRNA Vaccine Shows Lasting Results In Early Trial</title><guid>BRV84lej1S26gTBRmhzh</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 23:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/BRV84lej1S26gTBRmhzh#BRV84lej1S26gTBRmhzh</link>
		<description>
		NBC News reports on a 16-person clinical trial of "personalized messenger RNA vaccines" which use the immune system to fight cancer cells. "The goal is not to eliminate existing tumors, but instead to stamp out lingering, undetected cancer cells, and later any new cells that form...
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NBC News reports on a 16-person clinical trial of "personalized messenger RNA vaccines" which use the immune system to fight cancer cells. "The goal is not to eliminate existing tumors, but instead to stamp out lingering, undetected cancer cells, and later any new cells that form before they can cause a recurrence."<br>
Patients still have surgery to remove tumors. After that, the mRNA vaccines are personalized for each individual using genetic material taken from their unique tumor cells. In the clinical trial, after getting the vaccine, the patients also received chemotherapy, which is standard post-op treatment for operable pancreatic cancer... [The article notes that less than 13% of people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer live for more than five years, making it "one of the deadliest cancers."] <br>
[E]xperts have long believed that people with pancreatic cancer could not generate an immune response against tumors. But after nine doses of the personalized vaccine, [clinical trial participant Donna] Gustafson is one of eight people in the 16-person Phase 1 trial who did just that, producing an army of immune cells called T cells that seek out and destroy tumor cells... [Dr. Vinod Balachandran, a vaccine center director who is leading the trial, said] it was unclear whether the immune response would last and lead to the patients living longer... New data collected during the trial's six-year follow-up period shows that it may. Those findings will be presented Monday at the American Association for Cancer Research's annual meeting in San Diego. Six years after treatment, Gustafson and six others who responded to the treatment are still alive... <br>
<br>
More research is still needed. Genentech and BioNTech, the two drugmakers behind the vaccine, have already launched a larger Phase 2 clinical trial... Another team is working on an off-the-shelf vaccine that targets a protein called KRAS that is present in as many as 90% of pancreatic cancers. In a small, early trial, about 85% of the participants mounted an immune response to the protein.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/1553211/pancreatic-cancer-mrna-vaccine-shows-lasting-results-in-early-trial?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/1553211/pancreatic-cancer-mrna-vaccine-shows-lasting-results-in-early-trial?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Motorola Sues Social Media Platforms and Creators in India</title><guid>kAcSAAvnLz3fQE5EWnzb</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 22:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/kAcSAAvnLz3fQE5EWnzb#kAcSAAvnLz3fQE5EWnzb</link>
		<description>
		"Motorola has filed a lawsuit in India against social media platforms and content creators," reports TechCrunch, "over posts it alleges are defamatory..."
The lawsuit, filed in a Bengaluru court and obtained by TechCrunch, names platforms such as X, YouTube, and Instagram along w...
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"Motorola has filed a lawsuit in India against social media platforms and content creators," reports TechCrunch, "over posts it alleges are defamatory..."<br>
The lawsuit, filed in a Bengaluru court and obtained by TechCrunch, names platforms such as X, YouTube, and Instagram along with dozens of content creators, and seeks takedown of the content as well as broader restraint on what it describes as false or defamatory material related to the company's devices. In its over 60-page filing, Motorola has sought a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from publishing or sharing what it describes as false or defamatory content about its products, including reviews, videos, comments, and boycott campaigns. <br>
The complaint cites hundreds of posts across platforms, including videos alleging device issues and phones catching fire. But it is also targeting unfavorable product reviews and user commentary that the company alleges are false or defamatory. In a statement after publication, a Motorola spokesperson said it had initiated legal action "in the interest of public safety" against what it described as demonstrably false claims that its devices had exploded or caught fire.<br>
<br>
One online creator told TechCrunch "they expect more such legal action in the future, as evolving rules around online content increase liability for creators and platforms — a trend reflected in recently proposed changes to India's IT rules aimed at tightening oversight of online content." <br>
A Motorola spokesperson "said the company did not seek to suppress legitimate reviews or criticism and was reviewing the scope of the proceedings, adding that it apologized to creators affected inadvertently."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/1457207/motorola-sues-social-media-platforms-and-creators-in-india?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/1457207/motorola-sues-social-media-platforms-and-creators-in-india?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Nevada Police Can Now Track Cellphones Without a Warrant</title><guid>ZWVOz9nfwY9GIY7kRcbo</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 22:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ZWVOz9nfwY9GIY7kRcbo#ZWVOz9nfwY9GIY7kRcbo</link>
		<description>
		"Nevada quietly signed an agreement earlier this year with a company that collects location data from cellphones, allowing police to track a device virtually in real time," reports the Associated Press. "All without a warrant."

The software from Fog Data Science, adopted this Ja...
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"Nevada quietly signed an agreement earlier this year with a company that collects location data from cellphones, allowing police to track a device virtually in real time," reports the Associated Press. "All without a warrant."<br>
<br>
The software from Fog Data Science, adopted this January in Nevada through a Department of Public Safety contract, pulls information from smartphone apps in order to let state investigators identify the location of mobile devices. The state is allowed more than 250 queries a month using the tool, which allows officers to track a device's location over long stretches of time and enables them to see what Fog calls "patterns of life," according to company documents from 2022. It can help them deduce where and when people work and live, with whom they associate and what places they visit, according to privacy experts... Traditionally, police must obtain a warrant from a judge to access cellphone location information — a process that can take days or weeks. And while cellphone users may be aware that they are sharing their location through apps such as Google Maps, critics say few are aware that such information can make its way to police... <br>
<br>
Other agencies in Nevada have been known to use technology similar to Fog. In 2013, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department acquired something known as a cell-site simulator that mimics cellphone towers and can sweep up signals from entire areas to track individuals, with some models capable of intercepting texts and calls. Police have not released detailed information about the technology since then.<br>
<br>
"Police in other states have said the technology (and its low price tag) has helped expand investigatory capacity," the article adds. <br>
<br>
But it also points out that Fog Data Science has a web page letting individuals opt out of all their data sets.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/1926216/nevada-police-can-now-track-cellphones-without-a-warrant?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/1926216/nevada-police-can-now-track-cellphones-without-a-warrant?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>HP Will Discontinue 'HP Anyware' Remote Desktop, Trusted Zero Clients</title><guid>La768zIy2z9W20jzJI8N</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/La768zIy2z9W20jzJI8N#La768zIy2z9W20jzJI8N</link>
		<description>
		kriston (Slashdot reader #7,886) writes:

HP Anyware, the new name of the Teradici PCoIP remote desktop solution that was acquired by HP in 2021, is being discontinued. 
"Maintenance and support for customers and partners with multi-year terms will continue until 31 October, 2029...
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kriston (Slashdot reader #7,886) writes:<br>
<br>
HP Anyware, the new name of the Teradici PCoIP remote desktop solution that was acquired by HP in 2021, is being discontinued. <br>
"Maintenance and support for customers and partners with multi-year terms will continue until 31 October, 2029," a href="<a href="https://anyware.hp.com/hp-anyware-end-of-life" class="url">https://anyware.hp.com/hp-anyware-end-of-life</a>"&gt;according to HP's announcement. <br>
<br>
But HP is also announcing the planned End of Life for Anyware Trust Center and Trusted Zero Clients, with support now limited to setup and troubleshooting, no new updates or patches, and support ending in a little over six months on October 31, 2026. While for Desktop Access customers — Tera2 Zero Clients and PCoIP Management Console — "the previously announced EOL date remains December 31, 2029," sales have already ended for other customers. HP Anyware renewals are available for purchase through October 31 of 2027, but with a maximum one year term, with support ending October 31, 2028. <br>
<br>
HP says the decision "enables us to focus our resources on product categories where we can deliver the greatest customer value and drive long-term innovation."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0028223/hp-will-discontinue-hp-anyware-remote-desktop-trusted-zero-clients?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0028223/hp-will-discontinue-hp-anyware-remote-desktop-trusted-zero-clients?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Disney Creates Its Own IMAX for 'Avengers: Doomsday' After Losing Screens to 'Dune: Part 3'</title><guid>iMeMf1PoyNLHliQIoz4V</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 19:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/iMeMf1PoyNLHliQIoz4V#iMeMf1PoyNLHliQIoz4V</link>
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		Ahead of December's release of Avengers: Doomsday, Disney has unveiled "Infinity Vision," reports Kotaku, which they describe as "a new theater-going experience that will be certain to transform your pedestrian $15 night out into an exotic $43 one." (Though those prices appear to...
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Ahead of December's release of Avengers: Doomsday, Disney has unveiled "Infinity Vision," reports Kotaku, which they describe as "a new theater-going experience that will be certain to transform your pedestrian $15 night out into an exotic $43 one." (Though those prices appear to be estimates...) <br>
<br>
Disney's announcement calls it "a new certification for premium large format (PLF) theaters," helping ticket-buyers find "a huge screen with the sharpest, clearest color and sound," including laser projection "for superior brightness and clarity ") and "premium audio formats for fully immersive sound".<br>
<br>
Light on specifics, Disney says they will be certifying premium large format theaters for the Infinity Vision experience, highlighting laser projection and immersive audio quality. The new program will begin in the summer for a theater run of 2019's Avengers: Endgame ahead of Doomsday's holiday release. <br>
<br>
Now you might be thinking: Giant screen? Booming audio? That sounds an awful lot like IMAX. The most consumer-recognized premium movie-going screen is the coveted throne for big blockbuster events, from Avatar to One Battle After Another. Unfortunately for Doomsday, IMAX screens are already booked for the holiday season by Dune: Part Three, the anticipated return to Arrakis, where Timothée Chalamet's Muad'Dib will begin to go worm-mode. Locked out of the popular choice for doubling your ticket price, Disney appears to have made up a new one... <br>
<br>
Disney says they aim to certify 75 theaters in the United States and 300 internationally for the Infinity Vision program.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0236210/disney-creates-its-own-imax-for-avengers-doomsday-after-losing-screens-to-dune-part-3?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0236210/disney-creates-its-own-imax-for-avengers-doomsday-after-losing-screens-to-dune-part-3?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Remembering Zip Drives - the Trendy Storage Technology of the 1990s</title><guid>DDAmPV4lme3RqrXKttSi</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 12:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/DDAmPV4lme3RqrXKttSi#DDAmPV4lme3RqrXKttSi</link>
		<description>
		Back in the 1990s, floppy disks "had a mere capacity of 1.44MB," remembers XDA Developers, "which would soon become absolutely tiny for the increasingly large pieces of software that would come about."

Floppy disks also felt quite fragile, and while we got "superfloppy" formats ...
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Back in the 1990s, floppy disks "had a mere capacity of 1.44MB," remembers XDA Developers, "which would soon become absolutely tiny for the increasingly large pieces of software that would come about."<br>
<br>
Floppy disks also felt quite fragile, and while we got "superfloppy" formats that were physically larger and had more capacity, those were pretty unwieldy as portable storage. Enter 1994, when a company called Iomega introduced its variant of a "superfloppy", the Zip drive... [T]he initial capacity introduced in 1994 reached a whopping 100MB, which was huge number when put up against the traditional floppy disk. Zip drives also had major performance benefits, with read speeds that could average 1.4MB/s, as opposed to the comparatively sluggish 16kB/s speeds of a traditional floppy disk, as well as a seek time of around 28ms seconds, whereas a floppy disk averaged 200ms. Zip drives weren't quite as fast as desktop HDDs, but for portable storage, this was a huge step forward... <br>
<br>
[I]n 1998, Iomega introduced the Zip 250 disks, which increased the capacity to 250MB, and, already in the new millennium, we got the Zip 750, which took that further to 750MB... It was an appealing enough proposition that big computer manufacturers like Dell started including a Zip drive in some of their PCs. Even Apple included Zip drives in some of its Power Macintosh models from the mid-to-late 90s. However, things started to shift towards the end of the decade as other portable formats rose to prominence, most notably CDs and USB flash drives. <br>
<br>
Despite their initial success, it didn't take long for users to start noticing a major drawback of Zip drives: many times, they would just fail. It wasn't necessarily related to age or any particular misuse of the disks, it just happened. It was a big enough phenomenon that it became known as the "click of death", and once it happened, your drive was gone. The problem was estimated by Iomega to affect around 0.5% of Zip drives, but while that sounds like a small number, when you sell products by the thousands, it becomes fairly widespread. It was a big enough issue that, in September 1998, a class action lawsuit was filed against Iomega for the common problems. Some of the complaints in that lawsuit were eventually dismissed by the court of Delaware, but others were not, and once the public became aware of the problems with Zip drives, it was hard for the brand to make a comeback. <br>
It didn't help that this happened around the same time as formats such as CDs were becoming more popular... And eventually, USB flash drives became the most popular way to carry data around since they were smaller and offered much faster speeds... Eventually, after seeing its profits plummet by the mid-2000s, Iomega was sold to a company called EMC in 2008, and in 2013, EMC and Lenovo formed a joint venture that took over Iomega's business and removed all of the Iomega branding from its products. <br>
The article does note that "as late as 2014, some aviation companies were still using Zip drives to distribute updates for navigation databases." Are there any Slashdot readers who still remember their own Zip drive experiences? <br>
Share your memories in the comments of that once-so-trendy storage technology from the 1990s...<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0222227/remembering-zip-drives---the-trendy-storage-technology-of-the-1990s?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0222227/remembering-zip-drives---the-trendy-storage-technology-of-the-1990s?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Duolingo CEO Says They've Stopped Tracking Employees' AI Use for Performance Reviews</title><guid>txCkEZTr8IhEY9AzADTz</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 08:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/txCkEZTr8IhEY9AzADTz#txCkEZTr8IhEY9AzADTz</link>
		<description>
		Last May Duolingo's stock peaked at $529.05. But while the learning app passed $1 billion in revenue in 2025 and 50 million daily active users, today its stock price has dropped more than 81%, to $100.51. 

And there's been other changes, reports Entrepreneur:

In April 2025, Duo...
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Last May Duolingo's stock peaked at $529.05. But while the learning app passed $1 billion in revenue in 2025 and 50 million daily active users, today its stock price has dropped more than 81%, to $100.51. <br>
<br>
And there's been other changes, reports Entrepreneur:<br>
<br>
In April 2025, Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn made headlines after writing a memo calling the company "AI-first." In the memo, von Ahn announced that the language-learning platform would track employees' AI use in performance reviews. Now, a year later, von Ahn is backtracking and rethinking how he measures employee performance. He told the Silicon Valley Girl podcast earlier this month that Duolingo no longer considers AI use in performance reviews. <br>
<br>
The change arose after employees started to ask, "Do you just want us to use AI for AI's sake?" von Ahn explained. "We said no, look — the most important thing in your performance is that you are doing whatever your job is as well as possible. A lot of times, AI can help you with that, but if it can't, I'm not going to force you to do that," von Ahn said on the podcast. He felt as though the company was "trying to push something that in some cases did not fit" instead of "being held accountable for the actual outcome." The CEO is, however, still sticking to other "constructive constraints" he introduced in the April 2025 memo, including stopping contractor hiring in cases where AI can assume their workload... <br>
Von Ahn also mentioned that a few months ago, Duolingo had a day dedicated to vibe coding, or prompting AI to create an app without manually writing a single line of code. Every single person at the company, from engineers to human resources professionals, had to vibe code an app. Vibe coding has made an impact at the company. One of Duolingo's latest offerings, a course teaching users how to play chess, arose when two people vibe-coded the first prototype of it, the CEO said. Neither of them knew how to play chess or program, but they managed to use AI to create the whole chess curriculum and a prototype of the app in about six months last year. Now chess is Duolingo's fastest-growing course, according to von Ahn. "At this point, we have seven million daily active users that are learning chess," the CEO said on the podcast.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0136252/duolingo-ceo-says-theyve-stopped-tracking-employees-ai-use-for-performance-reviews?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/04/19/0136252/duolingo-ceo-says-theyve-stopped-tracking-employees-ai-use-for-performance-reviews?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>SpaceX, Blue Origin Compete For 'Artemis III' Mission</title><guid>shKV0mRY878W6zyXQ2rJ</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 06:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/shKV0mRY878W6zyXQ2rJ#shKV0mRY878W6zyXQ2rJ</link>
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		After Artemis II's astronauts returned to earth, "NASA has Artemis III in its sights," reports the Associated Press:

In a mission recently added to the docket for next year, Artemis III's yet-to-be -named astronauts will practice docking their Orion capsule with a lunar lander o...
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After Artemis II's astronauts returned to earth, "NASA has Artemis III in its sights," reports the Associated Press:<br>
<br>
In a mission recently added to the docket for next year, Artemis III's yet-to-be -named astronauts will practice docking their Orion capsule with a lunar lander or two in orbit around Earth. Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin are racing to have their company's lander ready first. Musk's Starship and Bezos' Blue Moon are vying for the all-important Artemis IV moon landing in 2028. Two astronauts will aim for the south polar region, the preferred location for [NASA Administrator Jared] Isaacman's envisioned $20 billion to $30 billion moon base. Vast amounts of ice are almost certainly hidden in permanently shadowed craters there — ice that could provide water and rocket fuel. <br>
The docking mechanism for Artemis III's close-to-home trial run is already at Florida's Kennedy Space Center. The latest model Starship is close to launching on a test flight from South Texas, and a scaled-down version of Blue Moon will attempt a lunar landing later this year.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/2227222/spacex-blue-origin-compete-for-artemis-iii-mission?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/2227222/spacex-blue-origin-compete-for-artemis-iii-mission?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>New Movie Trailer Shows First AI-Generated Performance By a Major Star: the Late Val Kilmer</title><guid>F5IWLCHGYTKz2hM5nGMg</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 03:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/F5IWLCHGYTKz2hM5nGMg#F5IWLCHGYTKz2hM5nGMg</link>
		<description>
		"A trailer has been released for the first film to star an authorised generative AI version of a major Hollywood actor," writes The Guardian:

Val Kilmer was cast in western As Deep As the Grave before his death in April 2025. Production delays meant he never shot any scenes, but...
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"A trailer has been released for the first film to star an authorised generative AI version of a major Hollywood actor," writes The Guardian:<br>
<br>
Val Kilmer was cast in western As Deep As the Grave before his death in April 2025. Production delays meant he never shot any scenes, but the creative team worked with UK-based company Sonantic to create an AI speaking voice based on his old recordings. His estate and daughter Mercedes collaborated with the film-makers on the visual deepfake of the actor. Kilmer, who was diagnosed with throat cancer, was also assisted by technology for his cameo in 2022's Top Gun: Maverick... <br>
Writer-director Coerte Voorhees confirmed that Kilmer is seen for around an hour of the film's running time... Voorhees has said that the production followed Sag-Aftra [union] guidelines, and that Kilmer's estate — which provided archival material for them to use — was compensated financially. <br>
<br>
"Kilmer's likeness can be seen portraying Father Fintan, a Catholic priest and Native American spiritualist," adds The Hollywood Reporter. But the AV Club calls it "ghoulish puppet show time." <br>
<br>
"Having your AI Val Kilmer puppet whisper 'Don't fear the dead, and don't fear me' in a movie trailer is a bold choice..."<br>
<br>
He is accompanied (per Variety) by a whole host of disclaimers, caveats, and explanations offered by writer-director Coerte Voorhees and his associates: Kilmer deeply wanted to be in the movie, but was too sick to do so. His family endorses and supports his inclusion. He was a big fan of technology, including, presumably, its use in turning his own image into a digital avatar to then shove into movies... <br>
<br>
The fact is, of course, that nobody would be paying a fraction of this attention to As Deep As The Grave — about early female archeologist Ann Axtell Morris — if it weren't now being used as the stage on which Voorhees was very publicly accepting the dare to go full-on ghoulish with AI tech. <br>
<br>
"The filmmakers said they hoped they were showing Hollywood how to use the technology in a positive way..." notes Australia's ABC News. But their articles add that "Some have called the trailer 'terrifying' and 'disgusting' on social media." <br>
 Mashable writes:<br>
"Very fitting that this trailer includes a scene where a corpse is unceremoniously yanked out of the ground," read one of the top comments on As Deep as the Grave's trailer at time of writing... [O]nline commenters have labelled it disgusting and disrespectful, not only for digitally reanimating Kilmer but also for the damaging precedent As Deep as the Grave's use of AI could set for the film industry as a whole.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/2010257/new-movie-trailer-shows-first-ai-generated-performance-by-a-major-star-the-late-val-kilmer?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/2010257/new-movie-trailer-shows-first-ai-generated-performance-by-a-major-star-the-late-val-kilmer?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Old Cars 'Tell Tales' by Storing Data That's Never Wiped</title><guid>i3TU3Zih9wqonjzQPABm</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/i3TU3Zih9wqonjzQPABm#i3TU3Zih9wqonjzQPABm</link>
		<description>
		Slashdot reader Bismillah shared this report from ITNews:

Research and development engineer Romain Marchand of Paris headquartered Quarkslab obtained a telematic control unit (TCU) from a salvage yard in Poland... Marchand tore down the TCU, which is based on a Qualcomm system o...
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Slashdot reader Bismillah shared this report from ITNews:<br>
<br>
Research and development engineer Romain Marchand of Paris headquartered Quarkslab obtained a telematic control unit (TCU) from a salvage yard in Poland... Marchand tore down the TCU, which is based on a Qualcomm system on a chip, and extracted the Linux-based file system from the Micron multi-chip package (MCP) which contained NAND-based non-volatile storage memory. The non-volatile storage contained sensitive information, including system configuration data and more importantly, logs that revealed the vehicle's GPS positions over time. <br>
<br>
None of that information was encrypted, Marchand told iTnews, which made it possible to collect and retrieve sensitive data of interest. What's more, the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) logs with GPS positions covered the BYD's full journey from the factory in China to its operational life in the United Kingdom, and to its final wrecking in Poland, Marchand explained in an analysis... The issue is not restricted to BYD, and Marchand added that the hardware architecture of the Chinese car maker's TCU is broadly similar to what can be found in other brands.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0621217/old-cars-tell-tales-by-storing-data-thats-never-wiped?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0621217/old-cars-tell-tales-by-storing-data-thats-never-wiped?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Fewer US College Students Major in CS. More Choose Data Science, Engineering</title><guid>EOHdPYzNl3tDCwBznb2s</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 01:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/EOHdPYzNl3tDCwBznb2s#EOHdPYzNl3tDCwBznb2s</link>
		<description>
		"From 2008 to 2024, the number of four-year computer science degrees granted rose about fivefold..." reports the Washington Post. Then in 2025 CS suddenly dropped from the fourth-largest undergraduate major to sixth, they report (citing data from the nonprofit National Student Cl...
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"From 2008 to 2024, the number of four-year computer science degrees granted rose about fivefold..." reports the Washington Post. Then in 2025 CS suddenly dropped from the fourth-largest undergraduate major to sixth, they report (citing data from the nonprofit National Student Clearinghouse, which compiles numbers from 97% of U.S. universities. <br>
<br>
The 54,000-student drop was "the biggest one-year drop of any major discipline going back to at least 2020." But what major are they choosing instead?<br>
<br>
Sarah Karamarkovich, a research associate with the National Student Clearinghouse, pointed to an explanation from the data that we had overlooked. Enrollments in two interdisciplinary majors, data analytics and data science, topped a combined 35,000 in the fall of 2025. That was up from a few hundred when those disciplines were broken out into their own majors in 2020. Those relatively new categories reflect colleges' zeal to create specialized majors, including in AI, data science, robotics and cybersecurity. Some of those disciplines may be counted in the national enrollment data as computer science. Others are not. <br>
<br>
The numbers suggest that some of the disappearing computer science majors didn't flee so much as they splintered into related disciplines.... The 8 percent decline in computer science majors last fall was nearly mirrored by a 7.3 percent increase in engineering majors, according to the National Student Clearinghouse data. Within engineering, mechanical and electrical engineering major enrollments increased by the largest absolute amounts — a jump of 11 percent and 14 percent, respectively.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://developers.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0332245/fewer-us-college-students-major-in-cs-more-choose-data-science-engineering?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://developers.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0332245/fewer-us-college-students-major-in-cs-more-choose-data-science-engineering?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>US Congress Fails to Pass Long-Term FISA Extension, Authorizes It Through April 30</title><guid>AuI8KFquwgLWHA1N0DoG</guid><pubDate>2026-04-19 00:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/AuI8KFquwgLWHA1N0DoG#AuI8KFquwgLWHA1N0DoG</link>
		<description>
		Yesterday the U.S. Congress approved "a short-term extension" of a FISA law that allows wiretaps without a warrant for surveilling foreign targets, reports CNN — but only until April 30. Republican congressional leaders had sought an 18-month extension, but "failed to secure" the...
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Yesterday the U.S. Congress approved "a short-term extension" of a FISA law that allows wiretaps without a warrant for surveilling foreign targets, reports CNN — but only until April 30. Republican congressional leaders had sought an 18-month extension, but "failed to secure" the votes after "clamoring from some of their members for reforms to protect Americans' privacy."<br>
<br>
The warrantless surveillance law, known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, was set to expire on Monday night. Members are hoping the additional time will allow them to come to agreement without ending authorization for the intelligence gathering program, which permits US officials to monitor phone calls and text messages from foreign targets... There was an hour of suspense in the Senate Friday morning when it appeared possible that Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden, a longtime critic of FISA 702, might block the House-passed extension. But ultimately, he said his House colleagues had assured him "this short-term extension makes reform more likely, and expiration makes reform less likely," and so he chose not to object.... <br>
<br>
House Republican leaders believed Thursday night they had struck a deal with conservative holdouts who harbor deep and longstanding concerns that a key piece of the law infringes on Americans' privacy rights. But in a pair of after-midnight votes, more than a dozen rank-and-file Republicans rejected the long-term reauthorization plan on the floor, which was the result of days of tense negotiations among leadership, lawmakers and the White House. <br>
<br>
The law allows authorized US officials to gather phone calls and text messages of foreign targets, but they can also incidentally collect the data of Americans in the process. Senior national security officials have for years said the law is critical for thwarting terror attacks, stemming the flow of fentanyl into the US and stopping ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure. Civil liberties groups on the left and the right, meanwhile, argue the surveillance authority risks infringing on Americans' privacy.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/1834202/us-congress-fails-to-pass-long-term-fisa-extension-authorizes-it-through-april-30?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/1834202/us-congress-fails-to-pass-long-term-fisa-extension-authorizes-it-through-april-30?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>30 WordPress Plugins Turned Into Malware After Ownership Change</title><guid>cTod8pOgBYASDuqDuJCf</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 23:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/cTod8pOgBYASDuqDuJCf#cTod8pOgBYASDuqDuJCf</link>
		<description>
		Wednesday BleepingComputer reported that more than 30 WordPress plugins "have been compromised with malicious code that allows unauthorized access to websites running them."

A malicious actor planted the backdoor code last year but only recently started pushing it to users via u...
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Wednesday BleepingComputer reported that more than 30 WordPress plugins "have been compromised with malicious code that allows unauthorized access to websites running them."<br>
<br>
A malicious actor planted the backdoor code last year but only recently started pushing it to users via updates, generating spam pages and causing redirects, as per the instructions received from the command-and-control (C2) server. The compromise affects plugins with hundreds of thousands of active installations and was spotted by Austin Ginder, the founder of managed WordPress hosting provider Anchor Hosting, after receiving a tip about one add-on containing code that allowed third-party access. <br>
<br>
Further investigation by Ginder revealed that a backdoor had been present in all plugins within the EssentialPlugin package since August 2025, after the project was acquired in a six-figure deal by a new owner.... "The injected code was sophisticated. It fetched spam links, redirects, and fake pages from a command-and-control server. It only showed the spam to Googlebot, making it invisible to site owners," explained Ginder. <br>
<br>
"WordPress.org's v2.6.9.1 update neutralized the phone-home mechanism in the plugin," Ginder writes in a blog post. "But it did not touch wp-config.php. The SEO spam injection was still actively serving hidden content to Googlebot. <br>
<br>
"And here is the wildest part. It resolved its C2 domain through an Ethereum smart contract, querying public blockchain RPC endpoints. Traditional domain takedowns would not work because the attacker could update the smart contract to point to a new domain at any time."<br>
<br>
This has happened before. In 2017, a buyer using the alias "Daley Tias" purchased the Display Widgets plugin (200,000 installs) for $15,000 and injected payday loan spam. That buyer went on to compromise at least 9 plugins the same way.... The WordPress plugin marketplace has a trust problem... The Flippa listing for Essential Plugin was public. The buyer's background in SEO and gambling marketing was public. And yet the acquisition sailed through without any review from WordPress.org. <br>
<br>
WordPress.org has no mechanism to flag or review plugin ownership transfers. There is no "change of control" notification to users. No additional code review triggered by a new committer. The Plugins Team responded quickly once the attack was discovered. But 8 months passed between the backdoor being planted and being caught. <br>
<br>
Thanks to Slashdot reader axettone for sharing the news.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0552210/30-wordpress-plugins-turned-into-malware-after-ownership-change?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0552210/30-wordpress-plugins-turned-into-malware-after-ownership-change?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Fructose Isn't Just Sugar. It Acts More Like a Hormone</title><guid>2sU7KHM9MuCt1txf2448</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 22:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/2sU7KHM9MuCt1txf2448#2sU7KHM9MuCt1txf2448</link>
		<description>
		Slashdot reader smazsyr writes: A new review says we've had fructose wrong for decades. The nine authors, led by Richard Johnson at the University of Colorado Anschutz, argue that fructose "is not just another calorie." It is a signal. It tells the liver to make fat and brace for...
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Slashdot reader smazsyr writes: A new review says we've had fructose wrong for decades. The nine authors, led by Richard Johnson at the University of Colorado Anschutz, argue that fructose "is not just another calorie." It is a signal. It tells the liver to make fat and brace for a famine that never comes. That made sense for a bear fattening up on autumn berries. It makes less sense for a person drinking soda in March. <br>
<br>
The review reframes the WHO's sugar guideline, argues ScienceBlog.com, as "less a recommendation about calories and more a warning about a signalling molecule we have been dosing ourselves with, several times a day, for most of a century."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0444250/fructose-isnt-just-sugar-it-acts-more-like-a-hormone?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0444250/fructose-isnt-just-sugar-it-acts-more-like-a-hormone?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>20-Year-Old Enters Prison for Historic Breach, Ransoming of Massive Student Database</title><guid>RUMHfIwz23EFOiryIxGt</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 21:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/RUMHfIwz23EFOiryIxGt#RUMHfIwz23EFOiryIxGt</link>
		<description>
		20-year-old Matthew Lane sent a text message to ABC News as his parents drove him to federal prison in Connecticut. "I'm just scared," he said, calling the whole situation "extremely sad."

Barely a year earlier, while still a teenager, he helped launch what's been described as t...
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20-year-old Matthew Lane sent a text message to ABC News as his parents drove him to federal prison in Connecticut. "I'm just scared," he said, calling the whole situation "extremely sad."<br>
<br>
Barely a year earlier, while still a teenager, he helped launch what's been described as the biggest cyberattack in U.S. education history — a data breach that concerned authorities so much, it prompted briefings with senior government officials inside the White House Situation Room. The breach pierced the education technology company PowerSchool — used by 80% of school districts in North America... [and operating in about 90 countries around the world]. With threats to expose social security numbers, dates of birth, family information, grades, and even confidential medical information, the breach cornered PowerSchool into paying millions of dollars in ransom. <br>
<br>
"I think I need to go to prison for what I did," Lane told ABC News in an exclusive interview, speaking publicly for the first time about the headline-grabbing heist and his life as a cybercriminal. "It was disgusting, it was greedy, it was rooted in my own insecurities, it was wrong in every aspect," he said in the interview, two days before reporting to prison... At about 6:30 on a Tuesday morning last April, FBI agents started banging on the door of Lane's second-floor dorm room. "FBI! We have a search warrant," Lane recalled them shouting. They seized his devices and many of the luxury items he bought with "dirty" money, as he put it. He said he felt a "wave of relief.... I'm honestly thankful for the FBI," he said. "After they left, I was like, 'It's over ... I'm done with this'..." <br>
<br>
A federal judge in Massachusetts sentenced him to four years in federal prison and ordered him to pay more than $14 million in restitution. <br>
<br>
"In the wake of the breach, PowerSchool offered two years' worth of credit-monitoring and identity protection services to concerned customer," the article points out. But it also notes two other arrests in September of teenaged cybercriminals: <br>
- A 15-year-old boy in Illinois who allegedly attacked Las Vegas casinos, reportedly costing MGM Resorts alone more than $100 million <br>
- A British national who when he was 16 helped breach over 110 companies around the world and extort $115 million. <br>
<br>
But ironically, Lane tells ABC News it all started on Roblox, where he'd met cheaters, password-stealers, and cybercriminals sharing photos of their stacks of money, creating a "sense of camaraderie"<br>
Lane and others warn that online forums also attract criminal groups seeking to recruit potential hackers. "The bad guys are on all the platforms watching the kids playing," Hay said. "And when they see an elite-level performer, they go approach that kid, masquerading as another kid, and they go, 'Hey, you want to earn some [money]? ... Here are the tools, here are the techniques'...." <br>
<br>
According to Lane, he spent his "ill-gotten gains" on designer clothes, diamond jewelry, DoorDash deliveries, Airbnb rentals for him and his friends, and drugs — "lots of drugs." He said he would numb ever-present feelings of guilt with drugs — from high-potency marijuana to acid. But it was hacking that gave him the strongest high. "It's indescribable the adrenaline you get when you do something like that," he said. "It's way more than driving 120 miles per hour. ... Incomparable to any drug at all, as well." <br>
<br>
"On Monday, Roblox announced that, starting in June, it will offer age-checked accounts for younger users that limit what games they can play, and add 'more closely align content access, communication settings, and parental controls with a user's age.'"<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/156236/20-year-old-enters-prison-for-historic-breach-ransoming-of-massive-student-database?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/156236/20-year-old-enters-prison-for-historic-breach-ransoming-of-massive-student-database?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Can the 'Attention Liberation Movement' Foment a Rebellion Against Screens? </title><guid>0ySoKG2UMIAcIkSzIMlO</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 21:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/0ySoKG2UMIAcIkSzIMlO#0ySoKG2UMIAcIkSzIMlO</link>
		<description>
		The Associated Press looks at the small-but-growing "rebellion" against attention-hogging devices, citing "a growing body of literature calling for people to move away from screens and pay attention to life."

D. Graham Burnett is a historian of science at Princeton University an...
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The Associated Press looks at the small-but-growing "rebellion" against attention-hogging devices, citing "a growing body of literature calling for people to move away from screens and pay attention to life."<br>
<br>
D. Graham Burnett is a historian of science at Princeton University and one of the authors of " Attensity! A Manifesto of the Attention Liberation Movement," making him a pillar of the growing backlash against the corporate harvesting of human attention. Along with MS NOW host Chris Hayes' bestselling " The Sirens' Call: How Attention Became the World's Most Endangered Resource," his work is part of a growing body of literature calling for people to move away from screens and pay attention to life. Burnett says the "attention liberation movement" is about throwing off the yoke of time-sucking apps. People "need to rewild their attention. Their attention is the fullness of their relationship to the world".... <br>
<br>
There are several dozen "attention activism" groups across the United States and Canada, and the movement has also cropped up in Spain, Italy, Croatia, France and England. Burnett said he expects it to spread further. <br>
<br>
Some examples cited in the article:<br>
<br>
"More than a dozen millennials gathered in a brownstone apartment in Brooklyn and placed their phones in a metal colander before two hours of reading, drawing and conversation."<br>
A few miles away "Nearly 20 people in their 30s stared at their cellphones for a few minutes. Then they set them down and looked at their bared palms for a while. Then those of their neighbors."<br>
 Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader destinyland for sharing the article.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/1712214/can-the-attention-liberation-movement-foment-a-rebellion-against-screens?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/1712214/can-the-attention-liberation-movement-foment-a-rebellion-against-screens?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>FSF to OnlyOffice:  You Can't Use the GNU (A)GPL to Take Software Freedom Away</title><guid>SAFBO7DCyzybPA21Cmu9</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/SAFBO7DCyzybPA21Cmu9#SAFBO7DCyzybPA21Cmu9</link>
		<description>
		Nextcloud joined a project to create a sovereign replacement for Microsoft Office called "Euro-Office". But after that project forked OnlyOffice, OnlyOffice suspended its partnership with Nextcloud. "They removed all references to our brand/attribute as required by our license," ...
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Nextcloud joined a project to create a sovereign replacement for Microsoft Office called "Euro-Office". But after that project forked OnlyOffice, OnlyOffice suspended its partnership with Nextcloud. "They removed all references to our brand/attribute as required by our license," argued OnlyOffice CEO Lev Bannov on March 30th. ("The core issue here isn't just about what the AGPL license states, but about the additional provisions we, as the authors, have included... If the Euro-Office team believes our approach conflicts with the AGPLv3 license, we invite them to submit an official request to FSF for review.") <br>
<br>
But this week the FSF responded (as "the steward of the GNU family of General Public Licenses"), criticizing OnlyOffice's "attempt to impose an additional restriction on the AGPLv3" and calling it "inconsistent with the freedoms granted by the license," in a blog post from FSF licensing/compliance manager Krzysztof Siewicz:<br>
<br>
It is possible to modify the (A)GPLv3 with additional terms, but only by adhering to the terms of the license... The (A)GPLv3 makes it clear that it permits all licensees to remove any additional terms that are "further restrictions" under the (A)GPLv3. It states, "[i]f the Program as you received it, or any part of it, contains a notice stating that it is governed by this License along with a term that is a further restriction, you may remove that term"... <br>
<br>
We urge OnlyOffice to clarify the situation by making it unambiguous that OnlyOffice is licensed under the AGPLv3, and that users who already received copies of the software are allowed to remove any further restrictions. Additionally, if they intend to continue to use the AGPLv3 for future releases, they should state clearly that the program is licensed under the AGPLv3 and make sure they remove any further restrictions from their program documentation and source code. Confusing users by attaching further restrictions to any of the FSF's family of GNU General Public Licenses is not in line with free software. <br>
<br>
"If FSF determines that our license and project align with AGPLv3, we will continue as an open-source initiative," OnlyOffice's CEO had written in March. "However, if the decision goes against us, we are ready to consider other options."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0417208/fsf-to-onlyoffice-you-cant-use-the-gnu-agpl-to-take-software-freedom-away?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0417208/fsf-to-onlyoffice-you-cant-use-the-gnu-agpl-to-take-software-freedom-away?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>US Government Now Wants Anthropic's 'Mythos', Preparing for AI Cybersecurity Threats</title><guid>HTWnjoaN42U0xNC5gG87</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 19:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/HTWnjoaN42U0xNC5gG87#HTWnjoaN42U0xNC5gG87</link>
		<description>
		Friday Anthropic's CEO met with top U.S. officials and "discussed opportunities for collaboration," according to a White House spokesperson itedd by Politico, "as well as shared approaches and protocols to address the challenges associated with scaling this technology." 

CNN not...
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Friday Anthropic's CEO met with top U.S. officials and "discussed opportunities for collaboration," according to a White House spokesperson itedd by Politico, "as well as shared approaches and protocols to address the challenges associated with scaling this technology." <br>
<br>
CNN notes the meeting happens at the same time Anthropic "battles the Trump administration in court for blacklisting its Claude AI model..."<br>
<br>
The meeting took place as the US government is trying to balance its hardline approach to Anthropic with the national security implications of turning its back on the company's breakthrough technology — including its Mythos tool that can identify cybersecurity threats but also present a roadmap for hackers to attack companies or the government... The Office of Management and Budget has already told agencies it is preparing to give them access to Mythos to prepare, Bloomberg reported. Axios reported the White House is also in discussion to gain access to Mythos. <br>
<br>
The Trump administration "recognizes the power" of Mythos, reports Axios, "and its highly sophisticated — and potentially dangerous — ability to breach cybersecurity defenses."<br>
<br>
 "It would be grossly irresponsible for the U.S. government to deprive itself of the technological leaps that the new model presents," a source close to negotiations told us. "It would be a gift to China"... Some parts of the U.S. intelligence community, plus the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA, part of Homeland Security), are testing Mythos. Treasury and others want it.<br>
<br>
The White House added they plan to invite other AI companies for similar discussions, Politico reports. But Mythos "is also alarming regulators in Europe, who have told POLITICO they have not been able to gain access..."<br>
<br>
U.S. government agency tech leaders sought access to the model after Anthropic earlier this year began testing the model and granted limited access to a select group of companies, including JPMorgan, Amazon and Apple... after finding it had hacking capabilities far outstripping those of previous AI models. This includes the ability to autonomously identify and exploit complex software vulnerabilities, such as so-called zero-day flaws, which even some of the sharpest human minds are unable to patch. The AI startup also wrote that the model could carry out end-to-end cyberattacks autonomously, including by navigating enterprise IT systems and chaining together exploits. It could also act as a force-multiplier for research needed to build chemical and biological weapons, and in certain instances, made efforts to cover its tracks when attacking systems, according to Anthropic's report on the model's capabilities and its safety assessments. <br>
<br>
Those findings and others have inspired fears that the model could be co-opted to launch powerful cyberattacks with relative ease if it fell into the wrong hands. Logan Graham, a senior security researcher at Anthropic, previously told POLITICO that researchers and tech firms had been given early access to Mythos so they could find flaws in their critical code before state-backed hackers or cybercriminals could exploit them. "Within six, 12 or 24 months, these kinds of capabilities could be just broadly available to everybody in the world," Graham said.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/039221/us-government-now-wants-anthropics-mythos-preparing-for-ai-cybersecurity-threats?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/039221/us-government-now-wants-anthropics-mythos-preparing-for-ai-cybersecurity-threats?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Shuttered Startups Are Selling Old Slack Chats, Emails To AI Companies</title><guid>X01LfAYNLm9sQDOAD5Yn</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 15:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/X01LfAYNLm9sQDOAD5Yn#X01LfAYNLm9sQDOAD5Yn</link>
		<description>
		Some failed startups are reportedly selling old Slack messages, emails, and other internal records to AI companies as training data, creating a new way to cash out after shutting down. Fast Company reports: Shanna Johnson, the CEO of now-defunct software company Cielo24, told the...
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Some failed startups are reportedly selling old Slack messages, emails, and other internal records to AI companies as training data, creating a new way to cash out after shutting down. Fast Company reports: Shanna Johnson, the CEO of now-defunct software company Cielo24, told the publication that she was able to sell every Slack message, internal email, and Jira ticket as training data for "hundreds of thousands of dollars."<br>
<br>
This isn't a one-off scenario. SimpleClosure, a startup that helps companies like Cielo24 shut down, told Forbes that there's been major interest from AI companies trying to get their hands on workplace data. Because of this, SimpleClosure launched a new tool that allows companies to sell their wealth of internal communications -- from Slack archives to email chains -- to AI labs. The company said it's processed 100 such deals in the past year. Payouts ranged from $10,000 to $100,000. "I think the privacy issues here are quite substantial," Marc Rotenberg, founder of the Center for AI and Digital Policy, told Forbes. "Employee privacy remains a key concern, particularly because people have become so dependent on these new internal messaging tools like Slack. ... It's not generic data. It's identifiable people."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/014244/shuttered-startups-are-selling-old-slack-chats-emails-to-ai-companies?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/014244/shuttered-startups-are-selling-old-slack-chats-emails-to-ai-companies?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>NASA Restarts Work To Support Europe's Uncrewed Trip To Mars After Years of Setbacks</title><guid>Mz2mhsnzy6olRzCyhqIl</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 11:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/Mz2mhsnzy6olRzCyhqIl#Mz2mhsnzy6olRzCyhqIl</link>
		<description>
		NASA has revived support for the European Space Agency's long-delayed Rosalind Franklin Mars rover mission. According to the space agency, the current plan is to launch via a SpaceX Falcon Heavy no earlier than 2028. Engadget reports: This is a partnership between NASA and the ES...
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NASA has revived support for the European Space Agency's long-delayed Rosalind Franklin Mars rover mission. According to the space agency, the current plan is to launch via a SpaceX Falcon Heavy no earlier than 2028. Engadget reports: This is a partnership between NASA and the ESA, with the European agency providing the rover, the spacecraft and the lander. The US will provide braking engines for the lander, heater units for the rover's internal systems and, of course, assistance with the actual launch.<br>
<br>
The rover will be outfitted with scientific instruments to look for signs of ancient life on the red planet. These include a state-of-the-art mass spectrometer and an organic molecule analyzer, which will come in handy as the vehicle collects samples at the Oxia Planum landing site. The mission has been stuck in development limbo since 2001, with delays caused by budget problems, technical issues, shifting international partners, and geopolitical fallout. After NASA dropped out, Russia stepped in, then was cut loose after invading Ukraine, and now -- despite NASA rejoining in 2024 and fresh political budget threats -- the rover is tentatively back on track for a 2028 launch.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0051201/nasa-restarts-work-to-support-europes-uncrewed-trip-to-mars-after-years-of-setbacks?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0051201/nasa-restarts-work-to-support-europes-uncrewed-trip-to-mars-after-years-of-setbacks?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Critical Atlantic Current Significantly More Likely To Collapse Than Thought</title><guid>ak0ohAvkcBczAL4evPjz</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 08:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ak0ohAvkcBczAL4evPjz#ak0ohAvkcBczAL4evPjz</link>
		<description>
		An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: The critical Atlantic current system appears significantly more likely to collapse than previously thought after new research found that climate models predicting the biggest slowdown are the most realistic. Scientists called...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: The critical Atlantic current system appears significantly more likely to collapse than previously thought after new research found that climate models predicting the biggest slowdown are the most realistic. Scientists called the new finding "very concerning" as a collapse would have catastrophic consequences for Europe, Africa and the Americas. The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) is a major part of the global climate system and was already known to be at its weakest for 1,600 years as a result of the climate crisis. Scientists spotted warning signs of a tipping point in 2021 and know that the Amoc has collapsed in the Earth's past.<br>
<br>
Climate scientists use dozens of different computer models to assess the future climate. However, for the complex Amoc system, these produce widely varying results, ranging from some that indicate no further slowdown by 2100 to those suggesting a huge deceleration of about 65%, even when carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning are gradually cut to net zero. The research combined real-world ocean observations with the models to determine the most reliable, and this hugely reduced the spread of uncertainty. They found an estimated slowdown of 42% to 58% in 2100, a level almost certain to end in collapse.<br>
<br>
The Amoc is a major part of the global climate system and brings sun-warmed tropical water to Europe and the Arctic, where it cools and sinks to form a deep return current. A collapse would shift the tropical rainfall belt on which many millions of people rely to grow their food, plunge western Europe into extreme cold winters and summer droughts, and add 50-100cm to already rising sea levels around the Atlantic. The slowdown has to do with the Arctic's rapidly rising temperatures from global warming. "Warmer water is less dense and therefore sinks into the depths more slowly," explains the Guardian. "This slowing allows more rainfall to accumulate in the salty surface waters, also making it less dense, and further slowing the sinking and forming an Amoc feedback loop."<br>
<br>
The new research has been published in the journal Science Advances.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0056244/critical-atlantic-current-significantly-more-likely-to-collapse-than-thought?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/18/0056244/critical-atlantic-current-significantly-more-likely-to-collapse-than-thought?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Online Personalities and Comedians Overtake TV and Newspapers as Primary News Sources</title><guid>W0ceYNqWjH8mXfiY7Bk6</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 03:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/W0ceYNqWjH8mXfiY7Bk6#W0ceYNqWjH8mXfiY7Bk6</link>
		<description>
		A new Ipsos poll finds Americans are increasingly getting news from online personalities and comedians instead of traditional TV or newspapers. The survey says nearly 70% get news online in a given week, versus 55% from TV and 25% from newspapers, with figures like Joe Rogan, Gre...
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A new Ipsos poll finds Americans are increasingly getting news from online personalities and comedians instead of traditional TV or newspapers. The survey says nearly 70% get news online in a given week, versus 55% from TV and 25% from newspapers, with figures like Joe Rogan, Greg Gutfeld, Sean Hannity, and late-night hosts ranking prominently depending on political leanings. From the Hollywood Reporter: The poll, which was conducted in March, actually found the conservative politicians and cabinet members, including President Trump, were the top news influencers. When politicos were excluded, Joe Rogan led the list, followed by Fox News personalities Greg Gutfeld and Sean Hannity, and then TuckerCarlson and Ben Shapiro. The only three influencers to crack 10 percent were Trump, Rogan, and JD Vance. Among people who voted for Kamala Harris, the top news personalities were late night hosts, led by ABC's Jimmy Kimmel, followed by CBS Late Show host Stephen Colbert, and Daily Show host Jon Stewart.<br>
<br>
Just under 70 percent of respondents said they get their news online in a given week, compared to 55 percent for TV, and 25 percent for newspapers. [...] Of traditional media outlets, TV dominated, with Fox News, the broadcast networks, and CNN topping the list of sources. Facebook, YouTube and Instagram were the most popular online news sources. "On these platforms opinionated personalities and comedians appear to drown out anyone who would fit in the traditional journalist category," said assistant professor of practice and Jordan Center Executive Director Steven L Herman. "Even in the late 19th century and early 20th centuries, sensationalist and polarizing voices in print and later on air were among the most influential in the political landscape -- such as political satirist Mark Twain and populist Father Charles Coughlin."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/2138236/online-personalities-and-comedians-overtake-tv-and-newspapers-as-primary-news-sources?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/2138236/online-personalities-and-comedians-overtake-tv-and-newspapers-as-primary-news-sources?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge In Vulnerability Submissions</title><guid>mMftDQHHwDW8WBcO23o5</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/mMftDQHHwDW8WBcO23o5#mMftDQHHwDW8WBcO23o5</link>
		<description>
		NIST is narrowing how it handles CVEs in the National Vulnerability Database (NVD), saying it will only automatically enrich higher-priority vulnerabilities. "CVEs that do not meet those criteria will still be listed in the NVD but will not automatically be enriched by NIST," it ...
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NIST is narrowing how it handles CVEs in the National Vulnerability Database (NVD), saying it will only automatically enrich higher-priority vulnerabilities. "CVEs that do not meet those criteria will still be listed in the NVD but will not automatically be enriched by NIST," it said. "This change is driven by a surge in CVE submissions, which increased 263% between 2020 and 2025. We don't expect this trend to let up anytime soon." The Hacker News reports: The prioritization criteria outlined by NIST, which went into effect on April 15, 2026, are as follows:<br>
<br>
- CVEs appearing in the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency's (CISA) Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog.<br>
- CVEs for software used within the federal government.<br>
- CVEs for critical software as defined by Executive Order 14028: this includes software that's designed to run with elevated privilege or managed privileges, has privileged access to networking or computing resources, controls access to data or operational technology, and operates outside of normal trust boundaries with elevated access.<br>
<br>
Any CVE submission that doesn't meet these thresholds will be marked as "Not Scheduled." The idea, NIST said, is to focus on CVEs that have the maximum potential for widespread impact. "While CVEs that do not meet these criteria may have a significant impact on affected systems, they generally do not present the same level of systemic risk as those in the prioritized categories," it added. [...]<br>
<br>
Changes have also been instituted for various other aspects of the NVD operations. These include: <br>
- NIST will no longer routinely provide a separate severity score for a CVE where the CVE Numbering Authority has already provided a severity score.<br>
- A modified CVE will be reanalyzed only if it "materially impacts" the enrichment data. Users can request specific CVEs to be reanalyzed by sending an email to the same address listed above.<br>
- All unenriched CVEs currently in backlog with an NVD publish date earlier than March 1, 2026, will be moved into the "Not Scheduled" category. This does not apply to CVEs that are already in the KEV catalog.<br>
- NIST has updated the CVE status labels and descriptions, as well as the NVD Dashboard, to accurately reflect the status of all CVEs and other statistics in real time.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/2127243/nist-limits-cve-enrichment-after-263-surge-in-vulnerability-submissions?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/2127243/nist-limits-cve-enrichment-after-263-surge-in-vulnerability-submissions?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Gazing Into Sam Altman's Orb Could Solve Ticket Scalping</title><guid>9HiMIyJv9MtvIHFRArMG</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 01:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/9HiMIyJv9MtvIHFRArMG#9HiMIyJv9MtvIHFRArMG</link>
		<description>
		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Sam Altman's iris-scanning, humanity-verifying World project announced at an event in San Francisco on Friday that Tinder users around the globe can now put a digital badge on their profiles signaling to potential suitors that they'...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Sam Altman's iris-scanning, humanity-verifying World project announced at an event in San Francisco on Friday that Tinder users around the globe can now put a digital badge on their profiles signaling to potential suitors that they're a real human, provided they've already stared into one of World's glossy white Orbs and allowed their eyes to be scanned. The announcement follows a pilot project for Tinder verification that World previously conducted in Japan.<br>
<br>
[...] In addition to the Tinder global expansion, Tools for Humanity, the company behind World, announced a number of other consumer and enterprise partnerships on Friday at its Lift Off event in San Francisco. The startup says Tinder users who verify with their World ID will receive five free "boosts," typically a paid feature that increases the number of users who see a profile by up to 10 times for 30 minutes. The videoconferencing platform Zoom also says that users can now require other participants to verify their identity with World before joining a call. Docusign, the contract signing software, will allow users to require World's identity verification technology.<br>
<br>
Tiago Sada, Tools for Humanity's chief product officer, tells WIRED the company sees major platform partnerships as key to helping World become a mainstream identity-verification technology. Sada said he's especially interested in working with social media companies in the future, and was encouraged to see that Reddit has started testing World as a solution to help users distinguish bots from real people. [...] World is also launching a tool called Concert Kit, which lets artists reserve concert tickets for verified humans, a pitch aimed squarely at the bot-driven scalping problem that critics say has plagued sites like TicketMaster. World will test the feature on the upcoming Bruno Mars World Tour featuring Anderson .Paak, who is scheduled to play a verified-humans-only show under his alias DJ Pee .Wee in San Francisco on Friday night. "The idea that World ID is not just private, but it's one of the most private things you've ever used, that's not obvious," says Sada. "We're just not used to this kind of technology. Many people used to tape their [iPhone's sensor used to enable] Face ID when it came out, then we got used to it."<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/2115258/gazing-into-sam-altmans-orb-could-solve-ticket-scalping?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/2115258/gazing-into-sam-altmans-orb-could-solve-ticket-scalping?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Mozilla 'Thunderbolt' Is an Open-Source AI Client Focused On Control and Self-Hosting</title><guid>JNCZFpHXB4xjHZzlUz2Y</guid><pubDate>2026-04-18 00:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/JNCZFpHXB4xjHZzlUz2Y#JNCZFpHXB4xjHZzlUz2Y</link>
		<description>
		BrianFagioli writes: Mozilla's email subsidiary MZLA Technologies just introduced Thunderbolt, an open-source AI client aimed at organizations that want to run AI on their own infrastructure instead of relying entirely on cloud services. The idea is to give companies full control...
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BrianFagioli writes: Mozilla's email subsidiary MZLA Technologies just introduced Thunderbolt, an open-source AI client aimed at organizations that want to run AI on their own infrastructure instead of relying entirely on cloud services. The idea is to give companies full control over their data, models, and workflows while still offering things like chat, research tools, automation, and integration with enterprise systems through the Haystack AI framework. Native apps are planned for Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android. Thunderbolt allows organizations to do the following: <br>
- Run AI with their choice of models, from leading commercial providers to open-source and local models<br>
<br>
- Connect to systems and data: Integrate with pipelines and open protocols, including: deepset's Haystack platform, Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers, and agents with the Agent Client Protocol (ACP)<br>
<br>
- Automate workflows and recurring tasks: Generate daily briefings, monitor topics, compile reports, or trigger actions based on events and schedules<br>
<br>
- Work seamlessly across devices with native applications for Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android<br>
<br>
- Maintain security with self-hosted deployment, optional end-to-end encryption, and device-level access controls<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/1850251/mozilla-thunderbolt-is-an-open-source-ai-client-focused-on-control-and-self-hosting?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/1850251/mozilla-thunderbolt-is-an-open-source-ai-client-focused-on-control-and-self-hosting?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Amazon's New Fire TV Sticks No Longer Support Sideloading</title><guid>6pAxAZLUWVSqGky3xybL</guid><pubDate>2026-04-17 23:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/6pAxAZLUWVSqGky3xybL#6pAxAZLUWVSqGky3xybL</link>
		<description>
		Amazon's newest Fire TV Sticks are dropping support for normal sideloading, blocking apps from outside the Amazon Appstore unless the device is registered with developers. Cord Cutters News reports: This week, Amazon announced the upcoming launch of a new Fire TV Stick HD. The ne...
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Amazon's newest Fire TV Sticks are dropping support for normal sideloading, blocking apps from outside the Amazon Appstore unless the device is registered with developers. Cord Cutters News reports: This week, Amazon announced the upcoming launch of a new Fire TV Stick HD. The new model will run on Amazon's Vega OS, rather than Android, so most streaming apps will be supported, but users won't be add third party apps. Now, on the product page to preorder the new Fire Stick, some Amazon customers are getting a message warning them that the new model won't allow sideloading. Interestingly, not all customers are getting the message, whether signed in to an Amazon account or not.<br>
<br>
The message, shown in a screenshot below, says: "For enhanced security, this device prevents sideloading or installing apps from unknown sources. Only apps from the Amazon Appstore are available for download." [...] The Fire TV Stick Select, announced in September 2025, also runs on Vega and some customers will see the same message about sideloading on that product page. [...] While Amazon continues to be a "multi-OS company," we should expect that future Fire TV models will also be built with Vega OS, limiting the apps users can access with their streaming devices to those from the Amazon Appstore.<br>
<br>
 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/180203/amazons-new-fire-tv-sticks-no-longer-support-sideloading?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/180203/amazons-new-fire-tv-sticks-no-longer-support-sideloading?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>OpenAI Starts Offering a Biology-Tuned LLM</title><guid>ozAmmnwRn2bOdaEipgG8</guid><pubDate>2026-04-17 22:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ozAmmnwRn2bOdaEipgG8#ozAmmnwRn2bOdaEipgG8</link>
		<description>
		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: On Thursday, OpenAI announced it had developed a large language model specifically trained on common biology workflows. Called GPT-Rosalind after Rosalind Franklin, the model appears to differ from most science-focused models...
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robot -> All<br><br>
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: On Thursday, OpenAI announced it had developed a large language model specifically trained on common biology workflows. Called GPT-Rosalind after Rosalind Franklin, the model appears to differ from most science-focused models from major tech companies, which have generally taken a more generic approach that works for various fields. In a press briefing, Yunyun Wang, OpenAI's Life Sciences Product Lead, said the system was designed to tackle two major roadblocks faced by current biology researchers. One is the massive datasets created by decades of genome sequencing and protein biochemistry, which can be too much for any one researcher to take in. The second is that biology has many highly specialized subfields, each with its own techniques and jargon. So, for example, a geneticist who finds themselves working on a gene that's active in brain cells might struggle to understand the immense neurobiological literature.<br>
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Wang said the company had taken an LLM and trained it on 50 of the most common biological workflows, as well as on how to access the major public databases of biological information. Further training has resulted in a system that can suggest likely biological pathways and prioritize potential drug targets. "We're connecting genotype to phenotype through known pathways and regulatory mechanisms, infer likely structural or functional properties of proteins, and really leveraging this mechanistic understanding," Wang said. To address LLMs' tendencies toward sycophancy and overenthusiasm, OpenAI says it has tuned the model to be more skeptical, so it's more likely to tell you when something is a bad drug target. There was a lot of talk about GPT-Rosalind's "reasoning" and "expert-level" abilities. We were told that the former was defined as being able to work through complex, multi-step processes, while the latter was derived from the model's performance on a handful of benchmarks. Access to GPT-Rosalind is currently limited "due to concerns about the model's potential for harmful outputs if asked to do something like optimize a virus's infectivity," notes Ars. Only U.S.-based organizations can request access at the moment.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/1721205/openai-starts-offering-a-biology-tuned-llm?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/04/17/1721205/openai-starts-offering-a-biology-tuned-llm?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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