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	<title>fox :: echo/kR6rc2HE3s0CZXdFR67z</title>
	<link>https://idec.foxears.su/echo/kR6rc2HE3s0CZXdFR67z</link>
	<description>
	fox :: echo/kR6rc2HE3s0CZXdFR67z
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	<language>ru</language>
<item><title>Spotify, UMG To Let Fans Make Their Own Music With AI</title><guid>ssOJ7E4AW2mdwEyMphAd</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 23:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ssOJ7E4AW2mdwEyMphAd#ssOJ7E4AW2mdwEyMphAd</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Billboard: Spotify and Universal Music Group (UMG) announced a licensing deal for recorded music and publishing rights, enabling Spotify to launch generative AI music models in the future. With this deal, Spotify's models will allow fans t...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Billboard: Spotify and Universal Music Group (UMG) announced a licensing deal for recorded music and publishing rights, enabling Spotify to launch generative AI music models in the future. With this deal, Spotify's models will allow fans to create covers and remixes of their favorite songs from participating artists and songwriters signed to UMG. The new deal was announced on Thursday (May 21) as part of Spotify's Investor Day presentation, and the company touts that it will open up additional revenue streams on top of what artists already earn on Spotify and will provide new discovery opportunities for participating UMG talent. These AI products will eventually become available to premium users as a paid add-on. It is unclear when they are set to launch. "We recognize there's a wide range of views on use of generative music tools within the artistic community," the announcement read. "Therefore, artists and rightsholders will choose if and how to participate to ensure the use of AI tools aligns with the values of the people behind the music."<br>
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Spotify also announced a feature called "Reserved" that will set aside concert tickets for Premium subscribers it identifies as an artist's most dedicated fans. "Getting concert tickets today can feel like a race you're set up to lose," Spotify wrote in a post on Thursday. "You show up at the right time, refresh endlessly, and still miss out. Too often, the experience is stressful, unpredictable, and disconnected from what should matter most: whether real fans actually get tickets. We think there's a better way."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/1737220/spotify-umg-to-let-fans-make-their-own-music-with-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/1737220/spotify-umg-to-let-fans-make-their-own-music-with-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>This Cannes Film Cost $500,000 to Make. $400,000 Was AI Compute Costs.</title><guid>5q4zZx3tSvSesjJbQYIL</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 22:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/5q4zZx3tSvSesjJbQYIL#5q4zZx3tSvSesjJbQYIL</link>
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		Higgsfield AI is debuting a 95-minute fully AI-generated film at Cannes called "Hell Grind" that reportedly cost $500,000 to make, $400,000 of which was spent on compute alone. The project took just two weeks to produce and is intended to showcase the startup's AI production tool...
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Higgsfield AI is debuting a 95-minute fully AI-generated film at Cannes called "Hell Grind" that reportedly cost $500,000 to make, $400,000 of which was spent on compute alone. The project took just two weeks to produce and is intended to showcase the startup's AI production tools. But it also underscores the current limits of AI filmmaking: thousands of detailed prompts, endless iteration, high costs, and plenty of traditional filmmaking judgment were still required. The Wall Street Journal reports: What might surprise viewers is how much technical film know-how was needed to create the movie, said Adil Alimzhanov, a content lead at Higgsfield who also worked on it. "You have to understand camera composition, which shots are changed. Like you can't have two close-ups back to back, you have to start with an establishing shot," he said. "You still need those filmmaking skills." Higgsfield, which was valued at $1.3 billion in its latest funding round earlier this year, crossed $400 million in annual revenue run rate in May. It doesn't make the actual video-generation models, relying instead on existing tools like Google's Veo 3. But it does provide the tooling on top to make sure that the visuals are consistent across all the incoming generations.<br>
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The core of the movie-making process here was prompting the AI models and getting clips back, Alimzhanov said. Each prompt would generate about 15 seconds of footage. Those 15 seconds needed to be generated a number of times, with tweaks to the prompt to get the best possible version. The first 25 minutes of the movie required 16,181 initial video generations, which ended up as 253 final shots. One of the biggest difficulties in making longer-form films with AI is maintaining consistency across the outputs. AI models can be unpredictable, and a feature-length film can't have scenes that look completely different from one moment to the next.<br>
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Because of that, every prompt had to be extremely long and detailed. Each one would typically start with a prefix that defined requirements like style (8k IMAX, photorealistic), lighting (natural light only, "contre-jour" backlight, camera on shadow side) and the type of camera it should look like it was being shot on ("cine lens," 180-degree shutter motion blur). The lighting was key to avoiding the AI sheen that typically gets branded as "slop," said Alimzhanov. AI-generated video tends to over-light scenes in an unnatural way. That prefix would also have to remind the AI to obey the laws of physics with wording like: "gravity and inertia respected -- mass has real weight, correct contact shadows, no floating props." The individual prompts were, on average, 3,000 words each.<br>
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One aspect of what Higgsfield has built, and sells to clients, is an AI tool that generates these complex, detailed prompts. Users can enter a page from the original script, and the Higgsfield tool will return with a prompt that could be thousands of words long, designed to create production-quality outputs. And all that prompting is how the company racked up a $400,000 AI compute bill on the project. Co-founder and CEO Alex Mashrabov, however, noted that working with "cloud" providers, like Nebius and CoreWeave, rather than big hyperscalers, helped it keep costs from going even higher. You can watch the trailer for Hell Grind on YouTube and judge the results for yourself.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/1723236/this-cannes-film-cost-500000-to-make-400000-was-ai-compute-costs?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/1723236/this-cannes-film-cost-500000-to-make-400000-was-ai-compute-costs?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Venmo Redesign Makes New Users' Posts Friends-Only by Default</title><guid>LLwem2m60FNLXYEzfepP</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 21:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/LLwem2m60FNLXYEzfepP#LLwem2m60FNLXYEzfepP</link>
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		Venmo is testing a major redesign that will make new users' payment posts viewable by their friends by default instead of being public. The Verge reports: It's a notable update for a platform that has struggled with privacy in the past. In 2021, BuzzFeed News tracked down Preside...
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Venmo is testing a major redesign that will make new users' payment posts viewable by their friends by default instead of being public. The Verge reports: It's a notable update for a platform that has struggled with privacy in the past. In 2021, BuzzFeed News tracked down President Joe Biden's Venmo account and the accounts of people in his inner circle because Venmo, at the time, had no way to keep your Venmo contacts private. It fixed that soon after.<br>
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As part of the redesign, if you're a new user and you do want your posts to be public (or private just to you), you'll be able to set that as part of the new onboarding flow. You can also change your preference in settings after the fact; an updated screen for sending money will also show if that post is private, visible just to friends, or is visible publicly before you make the transaction.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/1657237/venmo-redesign-makes-new-users-posts-friends-only-by-default?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/1657237/venmo-redesign-makes-new-users-posts-friends-only-by-default?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Samsung Chip Workers To Get $340,000 Average Bonus In AI Boom</title><guid>GbsdRpzmWxvoefyqibLZ</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/GbsdRpzmWxvoefyqibLZ#GbsdRpzmWxvoefyqibLZ</link>
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		Samsung is reportedly set to pay chip-division workers an average bonus of about $340,000 after reaching a tentative deal with its union, according to Bloomberg (paywalled). The deal ended a standoff that "could have cost the economy as much as 1 trillion won ($658 million) daily...
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Samsung is reportedly set to pay chip-division workers an average bonus of about $340,000 after reaching a tentative deal with its union, according to Bloomberg (paywalled). The deal ended a standoff that "could have cost the economy as much as 1 trillion won ($658 million) daily, with losses potentially multiplying to 100 trillion won ($68 billion) if in-progress semiconductor wafers were rendered unusable," reports Quartz. From the report: The agreement, subject to a union ratification vote running May 22 through May 27, calls for Samsung to direct 10.5% of operating profit into stock bonuses along with a separate 1.5% cash component, according to Bloomberg. The program runs for 10 years, contingent on the company meeting profit thresholds. One-third of the stock award can be liquidated right away, with the rest parceled out in installments across the next two years, Bloomberg reported. The first payout is expected in early 2027.<br>
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Not all workers will fare equally. As an illustration, Reuters cited a union source estimating that someone in the memory chip unit earning an 80-million-won base salary could take home roughly 626 million won in total bonuses this year. By comparison, workers at SK Hynix stand to collect upward of 700 million won should their employer post annual profit of 250 trillion won, Reuters calculated. Unlike at Samsung, SK Hynix employees are not limited to stock payouts and may instead opt for cash, Reuters reported.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/060223/samsung-chip-workers-to-get-340000-average-bonus-in-ai-boom?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/060223/samsung-chip-workers-to-get-340000-average-bonus-in-ai-boom?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>A Bipartisan Amendment Would End Police License Plate Tracking Nationwide</title><guid>ZEF7ToJQpHmHmqAdeWwJ</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 19:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ZEF7ToJQpHmHmqAdeWwJ#ZEF7ToJQpHmHmqAdeWwJ</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: US lawmakers plan to introduce an amendment Thursday at a House committee markup hearing that would prohibit any recipient of federal highway funding from using automated license plate readers for any purpose other than tolling -- a...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: US lawmakers plan to introduce an amendment Thursday at a House committee markup hearing that would prohibit any recipient of federal highway funding from using automated license plate readers for any purpose other than tolling -- a sweeping restriction that, if adopted, would bring an immediate end to state and local ALPR programs across the United States. The amendment, obtained first by WIRED, is sponsored by Representative Scott Perry, a Pennsylvania Republican and Freedom Caucus member, and Representative Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, an Illinois progressive whose state has become a flash point in the national fight over ALPR misuse.<br>
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The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee will mark up the underlying bill -- a $580 billion, five-year reauthorization of federal surface transportation programs -- at 10 am ET on Thursday. The amendment runs a single sentence: "A recipient of assistance under Title 23, United States Code, may not use automated license plate readers for any purpose other than tolling." The amendment is brief, but its reach would be vast. Title 23 funds roughly a quarter of all public road mileage in the US, including most state and county arteries and many city streets where ALPR cameras are becoming ubiquitous. Conditioning that funding on a ban of the technology would, in practical effect, force any state, county, or municipality that takes federal highway money (essentially all of them) to either remove the cameras or restructure their use around tolling alone.<br>
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The amendment's cosponsors, Perry and Garcia, represent opposite ends of the House's ideological spectrum but converge on a surveillance concern that has gathered momentum in legislatures and city halls across the US as ALPR networks have quietly become a pervasive layer of American road infrastructure. ALPR cameras -- mounted on poles, overpasses, traffic signals, and police cruisers -- photograph every passing license plate, log times and locations, and feed data into searchable databases shared across agencies and jurisdictions. [...] Privacy advocates have long warned that the aggregation of license plate data amounts to a de facto warrantless tracking system. New York University School of Law's Brennan Center for Justice has documented the integration of ALPR feeds into police data-fusion systems that combine plate data with surveillance and social media monitoring. And the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights nonprofit, has documented a range of police misuse, including the past targeting of mosques and the disproportionate deployment of the technology in low-income neighborhoods. Earlier this week, 404 Media reviewed FBI procurement records that reveal the agency is seeking up to $36 million for nationwide access to ALPR data, which could let it query vehicle movements across the U.S. and its territories through a commercial database.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0553205/a-bipartisan-amendment-would-end-police-license-plate-tracking-nationwide?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0553205/a-bipartisan-amendment-would-end-police-license-plate-tracking-nationwide?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Steve Wozniak Tells Graduates They All Have 'AI': Actual Intelligence</title><guid>LGlG6T5wdP6MAFymguwd</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 15:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/LGlG6T5wdP6MAFymguwd#LGlG6T5wdP6MAFymguwd</link>
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		While other commencement speeches have been met with boos for hyping up artificial intelligence, Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak reminded college graduates that they already posses "AI" of their own: "actual intelligence." He framed AI as an attempt to duplicate brain-like routines...
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While other commencement speeches have been met with boos for hyping up artificial intelligence, Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak reminded college graduates that they already posses "AI" of their own: "actual intelligence." He framed AI as an attempt to duplicate brain-like routines, and encouraged students to "think different" as they enter a workforce being reshaped by automation. Business Insider reports: Steve Wozniak did what other college graduation commencement speakers couldn't this year: earn applause when talking about AI. The Apple cofounder took the stage during Grand Valley State University's graduation ceremony earlier this month. During his speech, Wozniak offered reassurance to new graduates who are entering the workforce at the height of the AI revolution.<br>
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"It would take too long to go deeply into what I think about AI, but we've been trying to create a brain," Wozniak said. "Is there a way we can duplicate a routine a trillion times and have it work like a brain? AI is one of those attempts." [...]<br>
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During his commencement address, Wozniak reflected on working at Apple and offered students some advice as they begin their careers. "You should always try to think different," he said. "Don't follow the same steps as a million other people. Think, is there something I can do a little different?" You can watch the clip on YouTube.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0530218/steve-wozniak-tells-graduates-they-all-have-ai-actual-intelligence?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0530218/steve-wozniak-tells-graduates-they-all-have-ai-actual-intelligence?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>At Least 80% Responsibility For Ill Health In Old Age Down to Individual, Study Says</title><guid>KMHj24rcAmA2HTlEl4JH</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 11:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/KMHj24rcAmA2HTlEl4JH#KMHj24rcAmA2HTlEl4JH</link>
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		A new Oxford Longevity Project report argues that individuals bear at least 80% of the responsibility for ill health in old age. "The report (PDF), launched at the Smart Ageing Summit in Oxford last week, argues that individuals have far greater control over their longevity than ...
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A new Oxford Longevity Project report argues that individuals bear at least 80% of the responsibility for ill health in old age. "The report (PDF), launched at the Smart Ageing Summit in Oxford last week, argues that individuals have far greater control over their longevity than is commonly understood," reports The Guardian. "The authors call on the government to take legislative action on alcohol comparable to restrictions on smoking." From the report: Living Longer, Better -- the Oxford Longevity Project's first Age-less report -- was co-authored by an interdisciplinary panel of UK-based experts in medicine, physiology, ageing and education policy. It was sponsored by Oxford Healthspan. The report's authors, Sir Christopher Ball, Sir Muir Gray, Dr Paul Ch'en, Leslie Kenny and Prof Denis Noble, present the figure of 80% as a conservative estimate. [...] The claim, however, has been described as simplistic and said to neglect wider arguments about whether people are genuinely in control of individual choices when it comes to issues including poverty, pollution and healthcare access.<br>
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[...] Ball, however, pointed to research including the Landmark Twins Study, where researchers concluded at least 75% of human lifespan is determined by environmental and modifiable lifestyle factors. He also cited large-scale analysis led by Oxford Population Health using data from nearly 500,000 UK Biobank participants which found that environmental exposures and habits carry far greater weight in premature death and biological ageing than inherited genetics. The report's recommendations include avoiding processed foods, abstaining entirely from alcohol, prioritising sleep, not eating after 6.30pm, and cultivating what it calls "a not-meat mindset." On alcohol, it takes a position more forthright than current government guidance. "Alcohol is toxic, don't drink it," said Ball. "The report bravely says so -- whereas the government is afraid to tell the public the truth."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0522204/at-least-80-responsibility-for-ill-health-in-old-age-down-to-individual-study-says?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0522204/at-least-80-responsibility-for-ill-health-in-old-age-down-to-individual-study-says?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>AT&amp;amp;T Sues California In Bid To Stop Offering Traditional Phone Service</title><guid>NPaEj6JgHqyPRoDrj2oe</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 08:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/NPaEj6JgHqyPRoDrj2oe#NPaEj6JgHqyPRoDrj2oe</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: AT&amp;T on Wednesday filed suit (PDF) against California officials seeking a court order declaring it does not have to continue offering traditional copper wire phone service to new customers as it vowed to spend $19 billion on moder...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: AT&amp;T on Wednesday filed suit (PDF) against California officials seeking a court order declaring it does not have to continue offering traditional copper wire phone service to new customers as it vowed to spend $19 billion on modern telecom services. California requires the U.S. wireless carrier to spend $1 billion annually to maintain a century-old telephone network that few use, AT&amp;T said, saying the network now serves just 3% of households in AT&amp;T's California territory.<br>
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AT&amp;T's suit named the California Public Utilities Commission and the state attorney general. AT&amp;T said it is committing to investing $19 billion in California as it works to connect more than 4 million additional households and businesses across California by 2030 and added IP-based networks are far more reliable and efficient. AT&amp;T also Wednesday asked the Federal Communications Commission for permission to discontinue traditional phone service in parts of California where it has faster, more reliable service available. It also filed a petition with the FCC to declare that California's rules that effectively require AT&amp;T to power, repair and sell traditional phone service, even after the FCC has authorized the service to be phased out, are preempted by federal standards.<br>
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AT&amp;T added that transitioning from copper will save an estimated 300 million kilowatt-hours annually by 2030 or the equivalent of eliminating emissions from 17 million gallons of gasoline. The company added that California has already suffered about 2,000 outages from copper thefts this year and it struggles to find replacement parts. The federal government and virtually all states where AT&amp;T historically offered copper-wire service "have now eliminated outdated regulatory obstacles" allowing AT&amp;T to begin powering down its old network and increasing its investments in modern communication technologies, the company said in its lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in southern California.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0129209/att-sues-california-in-bid-to-stop-offering-traditional-phone-service?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/22/0129209/att-sues-california-in-bid-to-stop-offering-traditional-phone-service?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Thousands of Zillow Listings In Chicago Have Vanished</title><guid>rvahZevVyFUF3bIKt9nv</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 03:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/rvahZevVyFUF3bIKt9nv#rvahZevVyFUF3bIKt9nv</link>
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		Thousands of Chicago-area Zillow and Trulia listings disappeared after Midwest Real Estate Data cut off Zillow's access to its feed, "in the latest escalation of a legal battle with Lisle-based Midwest Real Estate Data (MRED)," reports the Chicago Sun-Times. "The fight is over MR...
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Thousands of Chicago-area Zillow and Trulia listings disappeared after Midwest Real Estate Data cut off Zillow's access to its feed, "in the latest escalation of a legal battle with Lisle-based Midwest Real Estate Data (MRED)," reports the Chicago Sun-Times. "The fight is over MRED's private listing network, where homes for sale are shared among real estate professionals. And MRED followed through on a threat to cut Zillow's access to its listing data feed." From the report: There were nearly 5,000 Chicago homes listed on Zillow Tuesday, but as of Wednesday afternoon, that number plummeted to about 1,700. Meanwhile, other listing sites like Redfin and Realtor.com show about 5,000 to 8,000 listings in Chicago. MRED manages listings -- submitted by brokers -- throughout Illinois, as well as parts of Wisconsin and Indiana. The regional multiple listing service has more than 43,000 members and processed more than 264,000 listings worth $43 billion in 2025. The loss of listings on Zillow's websites have made a behind-the-scenes real estate industry fight public. And it now hinders some consumers in their search to buy a home, while also limiting the marketing opportunity for sellers. The legal fight is basically over who gets to control how home listings are marketed and displayed online.<br>
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Zillow recently adopted a rule saying that if a home is marketed privately, such as behind a paywall, login, or private listing network, it should not also appear on Zillow. The policy, the real estate marketplace says, is meant to discourage "pocket listings," preserve transparency, and make sure buyers can see the full market.<br>
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MRED sees it differently. It expanded its private listing network and partnered with Compass, which wants to give sellers more control over whether their homes are broadly publicized or marketed privately first. MRED argues that Zillow is violating MLS rules and licensing agreements by refusing to display certain listings, including private Compass listings. Consumers are now caught in the middle...<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/2052220/thousands-of-zillow-listings-in-chicago-have-vanished?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/2052220/thousands-of-zillow-listings-in-chicago-have-vanished?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Vivaldi 8.0 Arrives With 'Most Significant Design Overhaul' In Browser's History</title><guid>p2GWs2SBIWbC6WJNiWmG</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/p2GWs2SBIWbC6WJNiWmG#p2GWs2SBIWbC6WJNiWmG</link>
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		Vivaldi 8.0 is being pitched as the browser's "most significant design overhaul" yet, featuring a new unified, edge-to-edge interface, six preset layouts, and deeper customization across tabs, toolbars, panels, and themes. The company is also taking a swipe at rivals chasing ques...
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Vivaldi 8.0 is being pitched as the browser's "most significant design overhaul" yet, featuring a new unified, edge-to-edge interface, six preset layouts, and deeper customization across tabs, toolbars, panels, and themes. The company is also taking a swipe at rivals chasing questionable AI features. Neowin reports: After updating to version 8.0, Vivaldi will present you with the ability to select one of the six pre-built styles. You can select a minimal edge-to-edge theme, one with the UI fully hidden for focused work, or a power user variant with everything on the screen. The update comes with a built-in collection theme, and users are free to select one of over 7,000 community themes available on the official website.<br>
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Vivaldi says that while other browsers were busy adding questionable AI features, it focused on "a foundation that no other browser can match" with flexible tab management, built-in productivity tools, and advanced customization. At the same time, Vivaldi does not force the new design onto its users, so those who prefer the previous user interface can go back to it at any moment in settings. "With 8.0, we have done something we have been working toward for a long time: we have given the browser itself a visual system worthy of everything it can do," says Vivaldi's CEO and co-founder, Jon Stephenson von Tetzchner. "With this update Vivaldi feels like one considered, coherent tool."<br>
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You can download Vivaldi 8.0 and view the changelog at their respective links.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/1921205/vivaldi-80-arrives-with-most-significant-design-overhaul-in-browsers-history?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/1921205/vivaldi-80-arrives-with-most-significant-design-overhaul-in-browsers-history?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Trump Calls Off AI Executive Order Over Concern It Could Weaken US Tech Edge</title><guid>smveHjXkmVpCxAiKuGO1</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 01:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/smveHjXkmVpCxAiKuGO1#smveHjXkmVpCxAiKuGO1</link>
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		Trump called off a planned AI executive order just hours before a signing ceremony because he said he was worried the framework could slow America's lead over China. "We're leading China, we're leading everybody, and I don't want to do anything that's going to get in the way of t...
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Trump called off a planned AI executive order just hours before a signing ceremony because he said he was worried the framework could slow America's lead over China. "We're leading China, we're leading everybody, and I don't want to do anything that's going to get in the way of that lead," Trump told reporters. The Associated Press reports: The order would have established a framework for the government to vet the national security risks of the most advanced AI systems before their public release, according to a person familiar with the White House's deliberations with the tech industry but not authorized to speak about it publicly. The directive was being characterized as a voluntary collaboration with participating U.S.-based tech companies, including Anthropic, OpenAI and Google, the person said.<br>
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There are competing factions within the administration, said Serena Booth, a computer science professor at Brown University and former AI policy fellow in a Democratic-led Senate committee. "We do see this kind of public fighting," she said. "'We will release an executive order. No, we won't. We're going to sign it this afternoon. Oh, the signing is canceled.' I think this whiplash is because we're seeing these fractures.'"<br>
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Some of those divides are balancing what Booth said is a "reasonable idea" to test the most capable AI models before their public release, with a concern that government scrutiny, if it takes too long, could burden AI developers. "It does come at a potential very large cost to innovation and speed of development," she said. "There is, I think, a real risk here and I do see both sides." [...]<br>
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"They don't want to do it because it's politically risky in a million different ways," said Dean Ball, now at the Foundation for American Innovation. Ball said he would welcome an executive order that would get those companies working more closely with the government on cybersecurity but "ultimately, I'm fine with them taking time to get this right."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/2034246/trump-calls-off-ai-executive-order-over-concern-it-could-weaken-us-tech-edge?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/2034246/trump-calls-off-ai-executive-order-over-concern-it-could-weaken-us-tech-edge?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>    Flipper One Could Be the Ultimate Linux Cyberdeck</title><guid>QBWUCVEiINqNhmEuBSIf</guid><pubDate>2026-05-22 00:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/QBWUCVEiINqNhmEuBSIf#QBWUCVEiINqNhmEuBSIf</link>
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		BrianFagioli writes: Flipper Devices has finally revealed Flipper One, a Linux-powered cyberdeck that sounds less like a gadget and more like an attempt to rebuild portable ARM computing from the ground up. Unlike Flipper Zero, which focuses on offline protocols like RFID and Sub...
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BrianFagioli writes: Flipper Devices has finally revealed Flipper One, a Linux-powered cyberdeck that sounds less like a gadget and more like an attempt to rebuild portable ARM computing from the ground up. Unlike Flipper Zero, which focuses on offline protocols like RFID and Sub-1 GHz radio, Flipper One is all about networking, modular hardware, SDR experimentation, local AI, and upstream Linux kernel support. The company says it wants to build "the most open and best-documented ARM computer in the world," complete with zero vendor BSP dependency and as few binary blobs as possible. That alone is enough to get Linux folks paying attention.<br>
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The hardware itself is loaded with nerd bait: dual Gigabit Ethernet, Wi-Fi 6E, M.2 expansion for SSDs and 5G modems, GPIO add-ons, HDMI 2.1, and a dual-processor architecture pairing a Rockchip RK3576 with a Raspberry Pi RP2350 microcontroller. Flipper Devices is even developing its own small-screen Linux UI framework because squeezing KDE onto tiny touchscreens is miserable. The company openly admits the project is financially and technically terrifying, which honestly makes this announcement feel more believable than most startup hardware pitches. Whether Flipper One succeeds or not, it is one of the most ambitious Linux hardware projects in years.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/194249/flipper-one-could-be-the-ultimate-linux-cyberdeck?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/194249/flipper-one-could-be-the-ultimate-linux-cyberdeck?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>US To Award $2 Billion To Quantum Companies, Take Equity Stakes</title><guid>kR6rc2HE3s0CZXdFR67z</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 23:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/kR6rc2HE3s0CZXdFR67z#kR6rc2HE3s0CZXdFR67z</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Quantum Insider: The Trump administration is preparing a new round of industrial policy aimed at quantum computing, with roughly $2 billion in grants expected to go to nine companies developing quantum hardware and related technologies...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Quantum Insider: The Trump administration is preparing a new round of industrial policy aimed at quantum computing, with roughly $2 billion in grants expected to go to nine companies developing quantum hardware and related technologies. According to Reuters, citing a Wall Street Journal report, the U.S. Department of Commerce plans to distribute the funding through deals that also give the federal government equity stakes in the companies receiving the awards. The approach would expand Washington's increasingly direct involvement in sectors viewed as strategically important to national security, advanced manufacturing and competition with China.<br>
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Reuters reported that IBM is expected to receive the largest share of the package at about $1 billion. Semiconductor manufacturer GlobalFoundries is slated to receive approximately $375 million, according to the report. Other recipients are expected to include D-Wave Quantum, Rigetti Computing, Quantinuum and Infleqtion, with each company potentially receiving around $100 million, Reuters reported. Australian quantum startup Diraq could receive about $38 million, according to the Wall Street Journal report cited by Reuters. Fast Company notes in its reporting that IBM will invest the funds it receives into a new IBM company called Anderon. It will also match the grant with another $1 billion in cash.<br>
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"Anderon will operate as a state-of-the-art 300-millimeter quantum wafer foundry," IBM stated in an announcement. "It will help the nation solidify its leadership at the center of a thriving new quantum industry that is estimated to generate up to $850 billion in economic value by 2040 and spur American economic growth while also bolstering national security."<br>
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Quantum computing stocks soared after the news. As of publication, IBM is up about 9.7%, D-Wave is up about 28.1%, and Rigetti is up about 26.7%. Meanwhile, Global Foundries rose about 13.8% and Infleqtion jumped about 30.9%.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/1758205/us-to-award-2-billion-to-quantum-companies-take-equity-stakes?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/1758205/us-to-award-2-billion-to-quantum-companies-take-equity-stakes?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Spotify Will Start Reserving Concert Tickets For Fans</title><guid>5qpleuAFAntgIenCIZou</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 22:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/5qpleuAFAntgIenCIZou#5qpleuAFAntgIenCIZou</link>
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		Spotify is launching "Reserved," a new feature that will set aside concert tickets for Premium subscribers it identifies as an artist's most dedicated fans based on streams, shares, and other activity. "Getting concert tickets today can feel like a race you're set up to lose," Sp...
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Spotify is launching "Reserved," a new feature that will set aside concert tickets for Premium subscribers it identifies as an artist's most dedicated fans based on streams, shares, and other activity. "Getting concert tickets today can feel like a race you're set up to lose," Spotify wrote in a post on Thursday. "You show up at the right time, refresh endlessly, and still miss out. Too often, the experience is stressful, unpredictable, and disconnected from what should matter most: whether real fans actually get tickets. We think there's a better way." From the Hollywood Reporter: Spotify said that starting in the U.S. this summer, select artists will be able to use Reserved to set aside tickets for fans on the platform. The platform has partnered with Live Nation on the program as part of a multiyear agreement. The platform will use streams, shares and other types of activity to "identify an artist's most dedicated fans and hold two tour tickets for them."<br>
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Fans selected through Reserved will get up to two tickets, and they'll have a day-long window to make a ticket purchase if selected. Spotify didn't give any details on what artists will work with the streaming service for the new feature, or how many tickets artists would set aside with Reserved, though the service acknowledged "there will be significantly more superfans than there are seats available on a tour, so not every fan will receive an offer."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/1713205/spotify-will-start-reserving-concert-tickets-for-fans?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/1713205/spotify-will-start-reserving-concert-tickets-for-fans?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Waymo Pauses Atlanta Service As Its Robotaxis Keep Driving Into Floods</title><guid>LIbhQl5M6MtaWI9L83Ts</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 21:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/LIbhQl5M6MtaWI9L83Ts#LIbhQl5M6MtaWI9L83Ts</link>
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		Waymo has paused service in Atlanta after one of its driverless cars entered a flooded street and got stuck. It follows a similar pause in San Antonio that prompted a recent software recall (PDF) over flood avoidance. TechCrunch reports: Waymo admitted that it hadn't finished dev...
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Waymo has paused service in Atlanta after one of its driverless cars entered a flooded street and got stuck. It follows a similar pause in San Antonio that prompted a recent software recall (PDF) over flood avoidance. TechCrunch reports: Waymo admitted that it hadn't finished developing a "final remedy" for avoiding flooded areas when it issued its software recall last week. Instead, the company said that it shipped an update to its fleet that placed "restrictions at times and in locations where there is an elevated risk of encountering a flooded, higher-speed roadway," according to documents released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).<br>
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But even those precautions apparently were not enough to stop the Waymo robotaxi from entering the flooded intersection in Atlanta. Waymo told TechCrunch on Thursday that the storm in Atlanta produced so much rainfall that flooding was happening before the National Weather Service had issued a flash flood warning, watch, or advisory. The company said its fleet those alerts are part of a larger set of signals it relies on to prepare the vehicles for poor weather.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/170236/waymo-pauses-atlanta-service-as-its-robotaxis-keep-driving-into-floods?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/170236/waymo-pauses-atlanta-service-as-its-robotaxis-keep-driving-into-floods?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Microsoft Hires Analyst With Influential Video Game Blog To Fix Xbox</title><guid>7LZScCaUUYFKUV5ThKTQ</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/7LZScCaUUYFKUV5ThKTQ#7LZScCaUUYFKUV5ThKTQ</link>
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		Microsoft has hired games analyst and investor Matthew Ball as Xbox's new chief strategy officer. With a long track record of analyzing the video game market and industry's biggest shifts, Ball's background could help Xbox rethink its hardware and console strategy at a moment whe...
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Microsoft has hired games analyst and investor Matthew Ball as Xbox's new chief strategy officer. With a long track record of analyzing the video game market and industry's biggest shifts, Ball's background could help Xbox rethink its hardware and console strategy at a moment when competition is tougher than ever. Engadget reports: Ball is a venture capitalist and tech industry consultant with a well-documented history of analyzing emerging digital economies and the video game market. He was most recently the CEO and founder of Epyllion, an advisory firm and digital production house that also runs a large-scale metaverse investment fund, and he publishes regular breakdowns of the industry's biggest players and trends, including an annual State of Gaming report. Ball is the author of The Metaverse, a book beloved by Tim Sweeney, Mark Zuckerberg, Karlie Kloss and, not awkwardly at all, former Xbox head Phil Spencer.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/041208/microsoft-hires-analyst-with-influential-video-game-blog-to-fix-xbox?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/041208/microsoft-hires-analyst-with-influential-video-game-blog-to-fix-xbox?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>OpenAI Claims It Solved an 80-Year-Old Math Problem</title><guid>xVi4meOboR8zBnwAK4AJ</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/xVi4meOboR8zBnwAK4AJ#xVi4meOboR8zBnwAK4AJ</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: OpenAI claims its new reasoning model has produced an original mathematical proof disproving a famous unsolved conjecture in geometry, which was first posed by Paul Erdos in 1946. If this sounds familiar to you, it's because th...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: OpenAI claims its new reasoning model has produced an original mathematical proof disproving a famous unsolved conjecture in geometry, which was first posed by Paul Erdos in 1946. If this sounds familiar to you, it's because this isn't the first time OpenAI has made such a bold claim. Seven months ago, the AI giant's former VP Kevin Weil posted on X: "GPT-5 found solutions to 10 (!) previously unsolved Erds problems and made progress on 11 others."<br>
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It turns out, GPT-5 didn't actually solve those problems; it just found solutions that already existed in the literature. Taunts from rivals like Yann LeCun and Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis followed, and Weil promptly took down his premature post. Today, at least, it seems OpenAI didn't make the same mistake twice. Alongside the announcement, the company published companion remarks (PDF) in support of the disproof from mathematicians like Noga Alon, Melanie Wood, and Thomas Bloom, who maintains the Erdos Problems website, and previously called Weil's post "a dramatic misrepresentation."<br>
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[...] The proof, per OpenAI, came from a new general-purpose reasoning model, not a system specifically designed to solve math problems or even this problem in particular. OpenAI says this is significant because it means AI systems are now more capable of holding together long, difficult chains of reasoning and connecting ideas across fields in ways researchers may not have previously explored. That has implications for biology, physics, engineering, and medicine.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0351218/openai-claims-it-solved-an-80-year-old-math-problem?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0351218/openai-claims-it-solved-an-80-year-old-math-problem?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>SpaceX Reveals Its Finances For the First Time</title><guid>YLDv4uA1VxfqV9RqaR3H</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 15:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/YLDv4uA1VxfqV9RqaR3H#YLDv4uA1VxfqV9RqaR3H</link>
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		SpaceX has revealed its financials for the first time as it prepares for a potentially massive IPO. The New York Times reports: SpaceX's revenue soared to $18.7 billion in 2025, up 33 percent from a year earlier, the company disclosed in a filing required of firms that are seekin...
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SpaceX has revealed its financials for the first time as it prepares for a potentially massive IPO. The New York Times reports: SpaceX's revenue soared to $18.7 billion in 2025, up 33 percent from a year earlier, the company disclosed in a filing required of firms that are seeking to go public. In the first three months of this year, revenue rose to $4.7 billion from $4.1 billion in the same period a year ago. But the company lost more than $4.9 billion last year, compared with a $791 million profit in 2024, as capital expenditures nearly doubled to $20.7 billion from heavy spending on artificial intelligence development. In the first three months of this year, SpaceX lost almost as much money as all of 2025, recording a $4.3 billion loss.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0343258/spacex-reveals-its-finances-for-the-first-time?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0343258/spacex-reveals-its-finances-for-the-first-time?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>NASA Expects Chinese Crewed Mission Around the Moon In 2027</title><guid>EOVFj6Fb4I8RQN5HQFQX</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 11:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/EOVFj6Fb4I8RQN5HQFQX#EOVFj6Fb4I8RQN5HQFQX</link>
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		NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman says he expects China to fly taikonauts around the moon in 2027, "ratcheting up perceptions of a space race between China and the United States," reports SpaceNews. He is using that prospect to argue for a revamped Artemis strategy and an acceler...
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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman says he expects China to fly taikonauts around the moon in 2027, "ratcheting up perceptions of a space race between China and the United States," reports SpaceNews. He is using that prospect to argue for a revamped Artemis strategy and an accelerated path toward a U.S. lunar return. From the report: "The next time the world tunes in to watch astronauts fly around the moon, which will likely be sometime in 2027, they will be taikonauts, and America will no longer be the exclusive power to send humans into the lunar environment," he said. While Isaacman has frequently discussed a race with China to be the next to land humans on the moon, this was one of the first times he predicted a 2027 Chinese crewed circumlunar mission. He repeated the comments later in the day at an industry reception.<br>
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China has not publicly announced plans for such a mission, which, as Isaacman described it, would likely be similar to NASA's Artemis 2 mission in April. There have been rumors of a mission along those lines, though, and an expectation of a roadmap of missions leading to a Chinese crewed landing by the end of the decade. So far, all the crewed missions to fly around, orbit or land on the moon have been flown by NASA: nine Apollo missions from 1968 to 1972 and Artemis 2. All the astronauts on those missions have been Americans except for Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen on Artemis 2.<br>
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Isaacman has used the threat that China could land astronauts on the moon before NASA returns there as a rationale for revamping the Artemis lunar exploration program. In February, he announced that Artemis 3, which was to be a lunar landing attempt in 2028, will instead be a test flight in low Earth orbit in 2027, followed by a landing on Artemis 4 in 2028. In March, he changed other elements of Artemis at the agency's Ignition event, including effectively canceling the lunar Gateway to focus resources instead on a lunar base, while calling for a much higher cadence of robotic lander missions.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0123247/nasa-expects-chinese-crewed-mission-around-the-moon-in-2027?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0123247/nasa-expects-chinese-crewed-mission-around-the-moon-in-2027?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Colossal Biosciences Is Growing Chickens In a 3D-Printed Artificial Eggshell</title><guid>5Od7VELqKy1QVN944zlk</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 08:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/5Od7VELqKy1QVN944zlk#5Od7VELqKy1QVN944zlk</link>
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		Colossal Biosciences says it has grown chickens inside 3D-printed artificial eggshells. "The company says the egg technology could help conserve at-risk bird species," reports MIT Technology. "It could also play a role in a project to re-create the extinct giant moa, a flightless...
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Colossal Biosciences says it has grown chickens inside 3D-printed artificial eggshells. "The company says the egg technology could help conserve at-risk bird species," reports MIT Technology. "It could also play a role in a project to re-create the extinct giant moa, a flightless 12-foot-tall bird that once lived in New Zealand and laid four-liter eggs, larger than those of any living bird." From the report: The biotech company today claimed it has developed a "fully artificial egg" as part of its effort to resurrect extinct avian species, including birds like the dodo and the giant moa. But "artificial eggshell" would probably be a better description for the invention. It's an oval-shaped printed lattice, coated inside with a special silicone-based membrane that lets in oxygen, just as a real eggshell does. To generate birds, Colossal took recently laid chicken eggs and carefully poured their contents into the artificial shells, where they continued growing. A window on top lets researchers peek inside. "To see them all moving around in their artificial eggs was absolutely mind blowing," says Andrew Pask, the company's chief biology officer. "You really feel you can grow life outside of the womb."<br>
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[...] The work on the artificial eggshell was carried out in Dallas by Colossal's exogenous development team, or Exo Dev. That group is also trying to develop artificial wombs for mammals, starting with marsupials. "We're looking at every single facet of what's happening during a mammalian pregnancy to unpack exactly how we then go about recapitulating that," says Pask. For that team, an artificial eggshell is a relatively quick and easy technical win. That's because chickens are already an example of ex utero development. After an egg is laid, a small embryo sitting on top of the yolk starts growing, drawing nutrients from the yolk, the white, and even the shell, which provides calcium. (Colossal says it has to add ground-up calcium to the artificial eggs.)<br>
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In order to create a moa, Colossal will have to genetically alter another type of bird, changing potentially thousands of DNA letters. But so far, chickens are the only bird species that can be genetically engineered. And that's via a tricky process of editing stem cells that produce egg and sperm. Scientists have to add or delete DNA letters from these cells and then inject them back into an egg. The resulting bird will carry the genetic changes in its gonads -- and then be able to pass them on. Pask says Colossal's idea is that it could modify avian stem cells enough to produce moa-like sperm or eggs. But then you might have the odd situation of a chicken laying an egg with a moa embryo inside it. "You would have chickens making moa egg and moa sperm. But it's still a chicken egg," he says.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0112253/colossal-biosciences-is-growing-chickens-in-a-3d-printed-artificial-eggshell?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/21/0112253/colossal-biosciences-is-growing-chickens-in-a-3d-printed-artificial-eggshell?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Intuit To Lay Off Over 3,000 Employees To Refocus On AI</title><guid>9ddOVKHtdH8Vj47Nlqh9</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 03:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/9ddOVKHtdH8Vj47Nlqh9#9ddOVKHtdH8Vj47Nlqh9</link>
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		Intuit is reportedly cutting about 3,000 jobs, or 17% of its workforce, as it restructures around AI and simplifies its corporate organization. TechCrunch reports: The layoffs come during a bad year for the tech workforce. The tech industry has already cut more than 100,000 jobs ...
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Intuit is reportedly cutting about 3,000 jobs, or 17% of its workforce, as it restructures around AI and simplifies its corporate organization. TechCrunch reports: The layoffs come during a bad year for the tech workforce. The tech industry has already cut more than 100,000 jobs this year, per Statista, and is on track to outpace both 2024 and 2025 if the layoff trend continues. Companies such as Amazon, Block, Cisco, Cloudflare, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle have let go of thousands of employees each, all of them citing a need to refocus expenditures around AI projects as a reason to cut jobs and restructure their organizations. [...]<br>
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Intuit, however, hasn't been perceived as a beneficiary of the AI boom, with its shares consistently underperforming in the broader S&amp;P 500 over the past 12 months. The company has been caught up in the broader current of worries that traditional software-as-a-service firms will not be able to keep up or compete, as new and upcoming AI products and services threaten to change how software is developed and how it is used. In its fiscal second quarter ended January, Intuit reported revenue of $4.65 billion, a 17% increase, and net profit of $693 million, a 48% improvement compared to a year earlier. The company expects revenue to increase by about 10% in the third quarter, for which it will report results later today.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/2038203/intuit-to-lay-off-over-3000-employees-to-refocus-on-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/2038203/intuit-to-lay-off-over-3000-employees-to-refocus-on-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Google Publishes Exploit Code Threatening Millions of Chromium Users</title><guid>jAQgW77ptHLPhmmNx28i</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/jAQgW77ptHLPhmmNx28i#jAQgW77ptHLPhmmNx28i</link>
		<description>
		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Google on Wednesday published exploit code for an unfixed vulnerability in its Chromium browser codebase that threatens millions of people using Chrome, Microsoft Edge, and virtually all other Chromium-based browsers. The pro...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Google on Wednesday published exploit code for an unfixed vulnerability in its Chromium browser codebase that threatens millions of people using Chrome, Microsoft Edge, and virtually all other Chromium-based browsers. The proof-of-concept code exploits the Browser Fetch programming interface, a standard that allows long videos and other large files to be downloaded in the background. An attacker can use the exploit to create a connection for monitoring some aspects of a user's browser usage and as a proxy for viewing sites and launching denial-of-service attacks. Depending on the browser, the connections either reopen or remain open even after it or the device running it has rebooted.<br>
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The unfixed vulnerability can be exploited by any website a user visits. In effect, a compromise amounts to a limited backdoor that makes a device part of a limited botnet. The capabilities are limited to the same things a browser can do, such as visit malicious sites, provide anonymous proxy browsing by others, enable proxied DDoS attacks, and monitor user activity. Nonetheless, the exploit could allow an attacker to wrangle thousands, possibly millions, of devices into a network. Once a separate vulnerability becomes available, the attacker could use it to then compromise all those devices.<br>
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"The dangerous part here is that you can just have a lot of different browsers together that you can in the future run something on that you figure out," said Lyra Rebane, the independent researcher who discovered the vulnerability and privately reported it to Google in late 2022 in an interview. He said using the exploit code Google prematurely published would be "pretty easy," although scaling it to wrangle large numbers of devices into a single network would require more work. In the thread of Rebane's disclosure to Google, two developers said in separate responses that it was a "serious vulnerability." Its severity was rated S1, the second-highest classification.<br>
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Since its reporting 29 months ago, the vulnerability remained unknown except to Chromium developers. Then on Wednesday morning, it was published to the Chromium bug tracker. Rebane initially assumed the vulnerability was finally fixed. Shortly thereafter, he learned that, in fact, it remained unpatched. While Google removed the post, it remains available on archival sites, along with the exploit code. Google representatives didn't immediately respond to an email asking how and why it published the vulnerability and if or when a fix would become available. The exploit works by abusing Chromium's Browser Fetch API to open a service worker that remains persistently active. A malicious website can trigger it through JavaScript, creating a connection that can be used "for monitoring some aspects of a user's browser usage and as a proxy for viewing sites and launching denial-of-service attacks," reports Ars.<br>
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Depending on the browser, those connections "either reopen or remain open even after it or the device running it has rebooted," effectively turning the device into part of a "limited botnet."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/2013252/google-publishes-exploit-code-threatening-millions-of-chromium-users?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/2013252/google-publishes-exploit-code-threatening-millions-of-chromium-users?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>RHEL 10.2 Released With New AI Command Line Assistance</title><guid>n5CzV2zHxbAFkCIv78vN</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 01:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/n5CzV2zHxbAFkCIv78vN#n5CzV2zHxbAFkCIv78vN</link>
		<description>
		Red Hat has released RHEL 10.2 and 9.8 with new AI-assisted command-line tools. The releases also add updated developer toolchains such as Go 1.26, LLVM 21, Rust 1.92, Python 3.14, and PHP 8.4. Phoronix reports: Red Hat Enterprise Linux has introduced the goose command for power ...
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Red Hat has released RHEL 10.2 and 9.8 with new AI-assisted command-line tools. The releases also add updated developer toolchains such as Go 1.26, LLVM 21, Rust 1.92, Python 3.14, and PHP 8.4. Phoronix reports: Red Hat Enterprise Linux has introduced the goose command for power users. Goose is an optional CLI AI assistance with model context protocol (MCP) integration. There is also improved visual output via color output enhancements. As for their rationale with the new AI integration: "The business value: Faster problem resolution, and a quicker path for new administrators to become proficient. This translates into higher developer productivity and accelerated project timelines."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://linux.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/203252/rhel-102-released-with-new-ai-command-line-assistance?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://linux.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/203252/rhel-102-released-with-new-ai-command-line-assistance?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>GitHub's Internal Repos Breached Via Employee's Use of Malicious VS Code Extension</title><guid>dd9MTr1Be4V8eQtNdKmp</guid><pubDate>2026-05-21 00:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/dd9MTr1Be4V8eQtNdKmp#dd9MTr1Be4V8eQtNdKmp</link>
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		Longtime Slashdot reader Himmy32 writes: GitHub has announced on X that their internal repositories have been breached through a compromised VS Code Extension on an employee's workstation. Bleeping Computer reported that the attack is linked to TeamPCP who have been in the news f...
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Longtime Slashdot reader Himmy32 writes: GitHub has announced on X that their internal repositories have been breached through a compromised VS Code Extension on an employee's workstation. Bleeping Computer reported that the attack is linked to TeamPCP who have been in the news for a recent campaign affecting Checkmarx, Trivy, SAP, TanStack, and Bitwarden. The group appears to be attempting to sell the stolen code on cybercrime forums. "Yesterday we detected and contained a compromise of an employee device involving a poisoned VS Code extension. We removed the malicious extension version, isolated the endpoint, and began incident response immediately," the company said. "Our current assessment is that the activity involved exfiltration of GitHub-internal repositories only. The attacker's current claims of ~3,800 repositories are directionally consistent with our investigation so far."<br>
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Although the investigation remains ongoing, GitHub says it has "no evidence of impact to customer information stored outside of GitHub's internal repositories." The company has also not said whether it's in contact with the hackers or if it's received a ransom demand.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/197246/githubs-internal-repos-breached-via-employees-use-of-malicious-vs-code-extension?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/197246/githubs-internal-repos-breached-via-employees-use-of-malicious-vs-code-extension?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Anna's Archive Hit With Global Domain Takedown Order</title><guid>6yXO0B9ogEiZnewMPwqO</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 23:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/6yXO0B9ogEiZnewMPwqO#6yXO0B9ogEiZnewMPwqO</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: A coalition of thirteen major publishers has won a massive $19.5 million default judgment against shadow library Anna's Archive. A New York federal judge fully approved the publishers' requests, issuing a broad permanent inju...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: A coalition of thirteen major publishers has won a massive $19.5 million default judgment against shadow library Anna's Archive. A New York federal judge fully approved the publishers' requests, issuing a broad permanent injunction that orders more than twenty specific global registries, hosts, and service providers to immediately disable the site's remaining domains. [...] At first glance, the damages award is the headline figure. Judge Rakoff granted the maximum statutory damages of $150,000 for each of the 130 "Works in Suit." This brings the final damages bill amount to a staggering $19,500,000. However, as with the $322 million judgment won by the music industry against Anna's Archive in the related Spotify case, it's highly unlikely that this money will be recouped.<br>
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For now, the operators of Anna's Archive remain strictly anonymous, which doesn't help either. The default judgment (PDF) addresses this and requires the operators to unmask their identities and provide a sworn statement with valid contact information to the court within 10 days. However, since the operators have previously stated they hide their identities to avoid "decades of prison time," it is safe to assume that the operators will simply ignore this request. The true power of this default judgment lies in the permanent injunction. Anna's Archive is known to evade enforcement and change domain names when needed, so the injunction targets the technical intermediaries that keep the site online.<br>
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Specifically, the injunction orders "all domain name registries and registrars of record" to permanently disable access to Anna's Archive's domains and prevent their transfer to anyone other than the publishers or the music industry plaintiffs in the related case. In addition to domain name services, the order also extends to international hosting providers, who are also ordered to stop working with the site. Leaving no room for interpretation, the order specifically names more than twenty companies and organizations. This includes familiar names like Cloudflare, Njalla, and DDOS-Guard, as well as the domain name registries of the site's current active domains [...]. The names include some intermediaries that were already listed in the Spotify default judgment, as well as new ones.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/1853257/annas-archive-hit-with-global-domain-takedown-order?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/1853257/annas-archive-hit-with-global-domain-takedown-order?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Seagate Sparks Memory Sell-Off As CEO Says It Would 'Take Too Long' To Build New Factories</title><guid>WZvQozEAoRWQFxO1WrGL</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 22:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/WZvQozEAoRWQFxO1WrGL#WZvQozEAoRWQFxO1WrGL</link>
		<description>
		Seagate CEO Dave Mosley said Monday that building new memory chip factories or adding capacity would "take too long" to keep up with AI-driven storage demand. "If we took the teams off and started building new factories or bringing up new machines, that would just take too long. ...
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Seagate CEO Dave Mosley said Monday that building new memory chip factories or adding capacity would "take too long" to keep up with AI-driven storage demand. "If we took the teams off and started building new factories or bringing up new machines, that would just take too long. You would end up with more capacity, but then you'd slow the rate of growth on that technology," Mosely said. CNBC reports: Memory chip stocks have soared in recent months as a flood of AI investing has sent demand soaring, with the chips a key part of the AI buildout in data centers. Chip production cycles stretch over many quarters for a single unit, and investors are increasingly wary of how long the leading memory makers can capture demand. CME Group is launching a new futures market for semiconductors, enabling more traders to lock in prices and hedge against the rising prices of computing power.<br>
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At Monday's conference, Mosely also addressed the "very long lead times" and maintaining predictability with its clients. "We know what's coming out a year from now," he said. "And we've basically gone to the customers and said, 'Look, if you want to plan this really well, which it should be for your data centers, we know what's coming out. You can buy this stuff up to a certain period.' And so we want to keep that four or five quarters of visibility very, very solid for what's being built. But the demand is significantly higher than that."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/1637247/seagate-sparks-memory-sell-off-as-ceo-says-it-would-take-too-long-to-build-new-factories?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/1637247/seagate-sparks-memory-sell-off-as-ceo-says-it-would-take-too-long-to-build-new-factories?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Yearslong Fight Over Users' Right To Tweak Smart TV Software Heads To Trial</title><guid>AqBCXP3Ax7dfNgiZk6DN</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 21:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/AqBCXP3Ax7dfNgiZk6DN#AqBCXP3Ax7dfNgiZk6DN</link>
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		A long-running lawsuit over Vizio's Linux-based smart TV software is headed to trial in August, with the Software Freedom Conservancy arguing that GPL rules require Vizio to release complete source code owners could use to modify, maintain, or strip ads and tracking from their TV...
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A long-running lawsuit over Vizio's Linux-based smart TV software is headed to trial in August, with the Software Freedom Conservancy arguing that GPL rules require Vizio to release complete source code owners could use to modify, maintain, or strip ads and tracking from their TVs. Ars Technica reports: The outcome could reverberate across the industry. Because many of today's popular smart TV operating systems are Linux-based, the case may help determine how much control many owners have over their sets. Access to the full code would allow users to make meaningful changes to how their TVs work, including limiting ads or deactivating automatic content recognition.<br>
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[...] The Software Freedom Conservancy argues it has the right to Vizio OS's source code because it owns several Vizio TVs and because the operating system is based on Ubuntu, a Linux distribution. (SFC employees bought seven Vizio TVs from 2018 to 2021 after getting complaints about Vizio not sharing its TVs' source code, according to the complaint.) In general, the Linux kernel is provided under the terms of GPLv2, as noted by kernel.org, which is run by the Linux Kernel Organization.<br>
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SFC's lawsuit alleges that Vizio breached GPLv2 and LGPLv2.1 by failing to make available the complete source code for Vizio OS. The case is currently in the Orange County Superior Court of the State of California. The lawsuit targets Vizio specifically, but the impact could extend to other Linux-based smart TV OSes such as LG's webOS, Samsung's Tizen, and Roku's Roku OS. "We expect all companies who distribute Linux and other software using right-to-repair agreements like the GPL in their products would comply with these agreements," Denver Gingerich, the director of compliance at SFC, told Ars. [...] SFC expects a ruling within three to six months of the conclusion of the trial, which is currently scheduled for August 10.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/1625205/yearslong-fight-over-users-right-to-tweak-smart-tv-software-heads-to-trial?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/1625205/yearslong-fight-over-users-right-to-tweak-smart-tv-software-heads-to-trial?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Regional Winners of Prestigious Literary Prize Suspected of Using Chatbots</title><guid>TzZIjw3LrMO6sx1VEnI5</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/TzZIjw3LrMO6sx1VEnI5#TzZIjw3LrMO6sx1VEnI5</link>
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		The 2026 Commonwealth Short Story Prize is facing backlash after several winning entries were accused of being AI-generated, with one Caribbean winner's story flagged as fully AI-written by a detector that WIRED says it independently confirmed. From the report: Each year, the Com...
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The 2026 Commonwealth Short Story Prize is facing backlash after several winning entries were accused of being AI-generated, with one Caribbean winner's story flagged as fully AI-written by a detector that WIRED says it independently confirmed. From the report: Each year, the Commonwealth Foundation, a nongovernmental organization in London, awards its short story prize to one writer in each of five regions: Africa, Asia, Canada and Europe, the Caribbean, and the Pacific. One overall winner is then selected from that short list. Regional winners take home [about $3,350], while the top winner, to be announced next month, claims [about $6,700]. On May 12, the respected UK literary magazine Granta published the top five 2026 entries -- all previously unpublished, per the rules of the contest -- on its website. (It has hosted the winning submissions for the prize since 2012.) Within days, however, one entry aroused suspicion. "The Serpent in the Grove," a story by Jamir Nazir of Trinidad and Tobago, which had taken honors for the Caribbean region, struck a few people as bearing the stylistic tells of AI-generated text.<br>
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"Well, this is a first: a ChatGPT-generated story won a prestigious literary prize," wrote researcher and entrepreneur Nabeel S. Qureshi, a former visiting scholar of AI at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, in a post on X on Monday. "'Not X, not Y, but Z' sentences everywhere, the 'hums' trope, and plenty of other obvious markers of AI writing. A major milestone for AI, at any rate..." "They say the grove still hums at noon," Nazir's mysterious and atmospheric tale begins. In his screenshot of the opening paragraphs, Quereshi highlighted the second line as what he considered to be a signature example of AI syntax: "Not the bees' neat industry or the clean rasp of cutlass on vine, but a belly sound -- as if the earth swallows a shout and holds it there."<br>
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As the literary community undertook a closer read of Nazir's story, many criticized its language and metaphors as nonsensical, wondering how the Commonwealth judges could have seen any merit to them. Others shared screenshots showing that the AI-detection tool Pangram flagged "The Serpent in the Grove" as 100 percent AI-generated, a result that WIRED independently confirmed. (While no AI-detection software is perfect, third-party analysis has consistently determined Pangram to be the most accurate, with a near-zero rate of false positives.)<br>
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[...] Besides Nazir, two more winning authors have drawn allegations of using AI in their work. Pangram finds that "The Bastion's Shadow," by Maltese writer John Edward DeMicoli, winner for the Canada and Europe region, is fully AI-generated; it scans "Mehendi Nights," by Indian writer Sharon Aruparayil, winner for the Asia region, as partly AI-generated. Neither DeMicoli nor Aruparayil immediately returned requests for comment when reached through their respective social media accounts. The other two short-listed stories, by Holly Ann Miller of New Zealand and Lisa-Anne Julien of South Africa, deliver "fully human-written" results from Pangram. Wired also reports that one of the judges for the prize has been "accused of using AI to craft her descriptive blurb that accompanied the listing of 'The Serpent in the Grove' as a regional winner.'" Pangram labels the text as "AI-assisted."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0636240/regional-winners-of-prestigious-literary-prize-suspected-of-using-chatbots?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0636240/regional-winners-of-prestigious-literary-prize-suspected-of-using-chatbots?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Google's AI Studio Now Lets Anyone Build Android Apps In Minutes</title><guid>KNaLckygz4z7KNfIl2vN</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 19:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/KNaLckygz4z7KNfIl2vN#KNaLckygz4z7KNfIl2vN</link>
		<description>
		An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The AI coding boom is now coming directly for Android app development. On Tuesday at Google IO 2026, the company announced new native Android app creation capabilities in its web-based Google AI Studio, shrinking a process that...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The AI coding boom is now coming directly for Android app development. On Tuesday at Google IO 2026, the company announced new native Android app creation capabilities in its web-based Google AI Studio, shrinking a process that takes weeks of setup and coding down to minutes. The company also said that consumers will be able to use Gemini AI to find the apps they need, both on the Play Store and the web, expanding opportunities for developers to have their apps discovered.<br>
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Google says the new capabilities could make sense for anyone from a seasoned developer looking to prototype a new app quickly to a first-time creator. [...] The apps are built with the Kotlin programming language using Google's Jetpack Compose toolkit and with support integration with hardware sensors like GPS, Bluetooth, and NFC, the company says. However, the resulting creations, for now, are only meant to be used personally, as publishing for family and friends is still on the roadmap. The company suggests the technology could be used for the creation of personal utilities and simple social apps, hardware-enabled experiences, or AI-powered experiences. Google is also adding an "Ask Play" AI overlay to the Play Store that lets users discover apps through natural-language conversations. "Perhaps more importantly, apps will begin to be surfaced with users' conversations with Google's Gemini virtual assistant, exposing developers' apps to millions of users," adds TechCrunch.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0224236/googles-ai-studio-now-lets-anyone-build-android-apps-in-minutes?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0224236/googles-ai-studio-now-lets-anyone-build-android-apps-in-minutes?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Google Accused of Pushing 'Free For Life' G Suite Users Onto Paid Plans</title><guid>Tvq51XOcVRyfZDS24or8</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 15:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/Tvq51XOcVRyfZDS24or8#Tvq51XOcVRyfZDS24or8</link>
		<description>
		Google is again pressuring some longtime G Suite Legacy users to move onto paid Workspace plans, warning that accounts flagged as "commercial use" could lose access to Gmail, Drive, Calendar, and other services if appeals fail. "The trouble, according to users, is that the appeal...
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Google is again pressuring some longtime G Suite Legacy users to move onto paid Workspace plans, warning that accounts flagged as "commercial use" could lose access to Gmail, Drive, Calendar, and other services if appeals fail. "The trouble, according to users, is that the appeals system appears about as transparent as a brick," adds The Register. From the report: A reader alerted The Register to what appears to be a new crackdown on long-standing G Suite Legacy accounts, with similar complaints now piling up on Reddit from users accused of violating Google's non-commercial use policy, despite insisting they use the accounts only for family email and personal domains. Reports have been stacking up on Reddit's r/gsuitelegacymigration subreddit from users who say their long-running personal G Suite Legacy accounts are suddenly being classified as "commercial use" accounts and pushed toward paid Google Workspace plans by May 2026. A lot of users have been through this before. Google spent part of 2022 trying to wind down free G Suite Legacy accounts, then changed course after users running family domains made enough noise. Now some of those same users are being told they have fallen outside Google's rules after all.<br>
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Emails seen by The Register warn users their accounts have been "identified as being used for commercial purposes" and say Google may start suspending Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Meet, and other Workspace services if they do not either win an appeal or begin paying for Workspace subscriptions. "Please upgrade to a paid Google Workspace subscription to continue using your services. Look out for a notification regarding the appeal process in Google Admin console or email," the email reads. "If you don't take action during your 45-day appeal period, Google will begin suspending your Google Workspace core services, including Gmail, Calendar, Drive, and Meet. As a result, you will lose access to these core services and data." One wrongly-flagged user said the company reversed its decision after they filed a GDPR data request seeking evidence. Others were less fortunate, with some reporting that family-only custom domains were permanently classified as commercial despite failed appeals.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0212227/google-accused-of-pushing-free-for-life-g-suite-users-onto-paid-plans?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0212227/google-accused-of-pushing-free-for-life-g-suite-users-onto-paid-plans?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Webb Discovers One of the Universe's First Galaxies</title><guid>tvC46h972uvOiduWWY74</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 11:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/tvC46h972uvOiduWWY74#tvC46h972uvOiduWWY74</link>
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		Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have identified an ultra-faint galaxy seen just 800 million years after the Big Bang. The galaxy contains almost no heavy elements, shows signs of intense early stellar radiation, and could offer a rare glimpse into the first stage...
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Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have identified an ultra-faint galaxy seen just 800 million years after the Big Bang. The galaxy contains almost no heavy elements, shows signs of intense early stellar radiation, and could offer a rare glimpse into the first stages of galaxy formation. Phys.org reports: In a paper published in the journal Nature, a team of scientists led by Kimihiko Nakajima, an astronomer at Kanazawa University, Japan, describes how they used the telescope to study a part of the deep universe and discovered a faint galaxy called LAP1-B. "LAP1-B establishes a 'fossil in the making,' a direct high-redshift progenitor of the ancient ultra-faint dwarf galaxies observed in the local universe," they wrote. Because the galaxy is so small and distant, it would normally be impossible to see. However, it was spotted due to a phenomenon known as gravitational lensing, in which a massive cluster of closer galaxies acts like a giant magnifying glass, boosting the light from LAP1-B by 100 times.<br>
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The scientists realized that most of the light from the galaxy wasn't coming from the stars, but from glowing clouds of gas. They analyzed this light by splitting it into a spectrum and studying the emission lines, which revealed the chemical composition of the gas. They found that the galaxy contains almost no heavy elements, and its oxygen abundance is about 240 times lower than the sun's, making it one of the most primitive star-forming galaxies ever observed. The emission lines also revealed intense ionizing radiation, which is what scientists expect to see from the first generation of stars.<br>
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The team also measured an elevated carbon-to-oxygen ratio. This matches the predicted chemical signature for the first star explosions in history from Population III stars, the first stars to exist in the universe. The stars we see today are Population I stars, which formed later and contain more heavy elements. Another fascinating finding is that, after measuring the gas's motion and speed, the researchers concluded that the galaxy is held together by a massive cloud of invisible dark matter.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/022206/webb-discovers-one-of-the-universes-first-galaxies?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/022206/webb-discovers-one-of-the-universes-first-galaxies?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Minnesota Becomes First State To Ban Prediction Markets</title><guid>p0BXtvoZCtWZikkPoT3I</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 08:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/p0BXtvoZCtWZikkPoT3I#p0BXtvoZCtWZikkPoT3I</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has signed the nation's first law banning prediction market sites from operating in the state, and in response, the Trump administration has sued, teeing up a legal battle over the most far-reaching crackdown o...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has signed the nation's first law banning prediction market sites from operating in the state, and in response, the Trump administration has sued, teeing up a legal battle over the most far-reaching crackdown on popular services like Kalshi and Polymarket. It comes as states confront a growing standoff with the Trump administration over how to regulate the industry, which allows people to bet on virtually anything.<br>
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The new state law makes it a crime to host or advertise a prediction market, which it defines as a system that lets consumers place a wager on a future outcome, like sports, elections, live entertainment, someone's word choice and world affairs. The prohibition extends to services supporting prediction markets, like virtual private networks, that could allow consumers to disguise their location and get around the ban. It would force prediction market sites like Kalshi and Polymarket to leave the state, or face possible felony charges. The law takes effect in August.<br>
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The law has a carve-out for event contracts that serve as an insurance policy in the event of "harm, or loss sustained" and for the purchase of securities and other commodities. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's lawsuit seeks to block the law before it starts, arguing the prediction market industry should be exclusively regulated by federal officials. "This Minnesota law turns lawful operators and participants in prediction markets into felons overnight," said CFTC Chairman Michael Selig.<br>
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"Minnesota farmers have relied on critical hedging products on weather and crop-related events for decades to mitigate their risks. Governor Walz chose to put special interests first and American farmers and innovators last." An updated version of the prediction market bill allows trading on weather, an exception that followed pushback from the agricultural industry, which has historically used futures trading on weather as a hedge against storms and other inclement weather that can affect a harvest. Walz is expected to sign it soon. "We as a state should decide how best and what regulations we think should attach to gambling, to protect public safety, to protect our kids," said Minnesota Rep. Emma Greenman, the Democrat who introduced the measure.<br>
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Kalshi spokeswoman Elisabeth Diana called the ban a "blatant violation" of the law. "Minnesota banning prediction markets is like trying to ban the New York Stock Exchange," said Diana, adding that "this actively harms users because it reduces competition and drives activity offshore."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0121248/minnesota-becomes-first-state-to-ban-prediction-markets?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/20/0121248/minnesota-becomes-first-state-to-ban-prediction-markets?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Plex Triples Lifetime Subscription Cost To $750</title><guid>hEHICWQRqhV9lZhE6dNn</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 03:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/hEHICWQRqhV9lZhE6dNn#hEHICWQRqhV9lZhE6dNn</link>
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		BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: Plex is raising the price of a new Lifetime Plex Pass from $249.99 to $749.99 on July 1. That's a $500 increase for media server software. Plex says it needs the money for "long-term development" and future features, but a lot of self-...
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BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: Plex is raising the price of a new Lifetime Plex Pass from $249.99 to $749.99 on July 1. That's a $500 increase for media server software. Plex says it needs the money for "long-term development" and future features, but a lot of self-hosting folks are already wondering if this is basically a soft way of killing the Lifetime option without officially removing it. At nearly $750, are people just going to move to Jellyfin instead? As for those future improvements, Plex said the roadmap includes better downloads support, restored music and photo library support in mobile apps, NFO metadata support, IPv6 support, playlist editing on mobile, audio enhancements, and transcoding improvements.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1957248/plex-triples-lifetime-subscription-cost-to-750?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1957248/plex-triples-lifetime-subscription-cost-to-750?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Google Changes Its Search Box for the First Time in 25 Years</title><guid>W2A9yOx9PpE8nz9vtIDT</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/W2A9yOx9PpE8nz9vtIDT#W2A9yOx9PpE8nz9vtIDT</link>
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		Google is giving its iconic search box its first major redesign since 2001. The new design incorporates, you guessed it, artificial intelligence, "getting bigger and more interactive so that people can ask even longer questions and upload photographs and videos into queries," rep...
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Google is giving its iconic search box its first major redesign since 2001. The new design incorporates, you guessed it, artificial intelligence, "getting bigger and more interactive so that people can ask even longer questions and upload photographs and videos into queries," reports the New York Times. "In addition, people can ask follow-up questions with a chatbot on Google's main search page." From the report: The company will also offer digital assistants, known as agents, to automate searches so that someone who may be apartment hunting can be notified of a new listing without opening a real estate site like Zillow. The search features will be powered by a new artificial intelligence model, Gemini 3.5 Flash. Google said the model had improved on creating software code and performing autonomous tasks, worked faster and was less expensive to run than comparable models.<br>
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[...] Google is also bringing one of A.I.'s biggest breakthroughs -- software coding -- to search. When people research complex topics like astrophysics, Gemini can build interactive graphics and simulations behind the scenes to provide a deeper answer than its previous listing of websites. Google said it was introducing an alternative to the agents powered by Anthropic's Claude Code and OpenAI's Codex. Called Gemini Spark, the service is embedded in Gmail, Docs and other Google products, where it can turn meeting notes spread across emails and chats into a single document. It can also read and draft emails. "The open web is on its way out," says Richard Kramer, a financial analyst with Arete Research. "With A.I., Google is reducing everyone to raw data providers."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://search.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1947215/google-changes-its-search-box-for-the-first-time-in-25-years?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://search.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1947215/google-changes-its-search-box-for-the-first-time-in-25-years?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>NextEra and Dominion's $67 Billion Mega-Merger Is All About the Data Centers</title><guid>5XJlpMAi3i1hSIU6frvz</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 01:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/5XJlpMAi3i1hSIU6frvz#5XJlpMAi3i1hSIU6frvz</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from Inside Climate News: A proposed merger of the largest utility in the country by market value, NextEra Energy, with the sixth-largest, Dominion, would create a megacompany at a time when data centers and rapid increases in electricity deman...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Inside Climate News: A proposed merger of the largest utility in the country by market value, NextEra Energy, with the sixth-largest, Dominion, would create a megacompany at a time when data centers and rapid increases in electricity demand are reshaping the industry. The proposal, announced Monday morning and contingent on state and federal regulatory approval, would result in a company that leads in nearly every aspect of the US power and utility industry, including overall electricity generation, natural gas generation, and renewables. The $67 billion deal combines NextEra's size and reach with Dominion's positioning as the local utility for the world's largest concentration of data centers in northern Virginia. But the results are likely bad for consumers and the environment, creating a company with enormous financial and political strength that will be difficult to effectively regulate, according to consumer advocates and analysts.<br>
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For perspective, only Exxon Mobil and Chevron would be larger based on market value among US-based energy companies. "Mergers are not about consumers; they're about shareholders," said Ari Peskoe, director of the Electricity Law Initiative at Harvard Law School. "For the Dominion shareholders, they are selling their shares at a premium. The executives are getting massive payouts for facilitating this, assuming it all goes through, and obviously NextEra believes the transaction is going to add value to the company. Ratepayers are all an afterthought." The deal makes financial sense for both companies, said Andrew Bischof, an equity analyst for Morningstar. "We view the transaction as allowing NextEra to accelerate its data center ambitions, which had trailed those of its regulated peers, by using Dominion's expertise and relationships to expedite NextEra's data center hub plans," he said in a note to clients.<br>
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NextEra, based in Juno Beach, Florida, includes Florida Power &amp; Light, the largest regulated electricity utility in the state, and NextEra Energy Resources, a wholesale electricity supplier that owns power plants across the nation. Dominion, based in Richmond, Virginia, includes regulated utilities serving much of Virginia, parts of North Carolina and South Carolina, and other assets across the country. The company would be called NextEra Energy, and NextEra CEO John W. Ketchum would serve in the same role after the deal closes. Robert M. Blue, Dominion's CEO, would be the CEO for regulated utilities for the merged company. The parties said they expect regulatory approvals to take 12 to 18 months. NextEra shareholders would own 74.5 percent and Dominion shareholders would own 25.5 percent, respectively, of the combined company in the all-stock transaction. "We are bringing NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy together because scale matters more than ever -- not for the sake of size, but because scale translates into capital and operating efficiencies," Ketchum said in a statement.<br>
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Although the companies claim the deal would produce savings, including $2.25 billion in Dominion customer bill credits, former regulator Marissa Paslick Gillett said she was "flabbergasted by the tone deafness," arguing that major utility mergers rarely deliver the promised "synergies" and often create "a behemoth" that is harder to regulate.<br>
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Others warned that a larger NextEra could use its political power "to the disadvantage of ratepayers," while climate advocates said expanding methane gas plants to serve data centers would worsen pollution and leave vulnerable communities "at the short end of the stick."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1733219/nextera-and-dominions-67-billion-mega-merger-is-all-about-the-data-centers?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1733219/nextera-and-dominions-67-billion-mega-merger-is-all-about-the-data-centers?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>OpenAI Co-Founder Andrej Karpathy Joins Anthropic</title><guid>OAOcAuAxvxSDdQmKzu0J</guid><pubDate>2026-05-20 00:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/OAOcAuAxvxSDdQmKzu0J#OAOcAuAxvxSDdQmKzu0J</link>
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		OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has joined rival AI lab Anthropic. "The hire is a major coup for Anthropic in the high-stakes competition for elite AI talent -- and another sign the company is emerging as a magnet for some of the industry's most respected technical minds," repo...
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OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has joined rival AI lab Anthropic. "The hire is a major coup for Anthropic in the high-stakes competition for elite AI talent -- and another sign the company is emerging as a magnet for some of the industry's most respected technical minds," reports Axios. From the report: Karpathy will start this week on Anthropic's pre-training team, which is responsible for the massive training runs that give Claude its core knowledge and capabilities, according to Anthropic. Karpathy will help launch a new team focused on using Claude itself to accelerate pretraining research -- an increasingly important frontier as AI companies race to automate parts of AI development. "I think the next few years at the frontier of LLMs will be especially formative. I am very excited to join the team here and get back to R&amp;D," Karpathy said in a post on X.<br>
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Karpathy is a rare AI figure with credibility across research, industry and education. He was a founding member of OpenAI before serving as Tesla's director of AI, where he led the computer vision team behind Autopilot. Karpathy coined the term "vibe coding" and recently described himself as being in a "state of AI psychosis" since December -- embracing "tokenmaxxing" and aggressively stress-testing frontier models.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1743231/openai-co-founder-andrej-karpathy-joins-anthropic?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1743231/openai-co-founder-andrej-karpathy-joins-anthropic?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>StanChart To Cut Over 7,000 Jobs, Boost AI To Replace 'Lower-Value Human Capital'</title><guid>InQWlx2Xykn9fAQUlTka</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 23:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/InQWlx2Xykn9fAQUlTka#InQWlx2Xykn9fAQUlTka</link>
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		The London-headquartered lender Standard Chartered announced plans to cut more than 7,000 jobs by 2030, with CEO Bill Winters saying the bank will replace some "lower-value human capital" through automation and AI while offering retraining to affected workers. "It's not cost-cutt...
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The London-headquartered lender Standard Chartered announced plans to cut more than 7,000 jobs by 2030, with CEO Bill Winters saying the bank will replace some "lower-value human capital" through automation and AI while offering retraining to affected workers. "It's not cost-cutting. It's replacing in some cases lower-value human capital with the financial capital and the investment capital we're putting in," CEO Bill Winters told reporters. "So, the people that want to reskill, that want to carry on, we're giving every opportunity to reposition," Winters said. Reuters reports: The cuts, alongside higher shareholder return targets announced in a strategy update, come as StanChart is at the tail-end of a decade-long effort to transform itself from a potential takeover target to a steadily profitable lender. Its London-listed shares, which have risen 65% in the last 12 months, fell 0.5% in early trading, as analysts said the new targets were at the conservative end of their expectations.<br>
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"In a world full of uncertainty, performance may prove more challenging further out," said Ed Firth, analyst at Keefe, Bruyette &amp; Woods, citing how the bank has benefited in recent years from high interest rates and huge wealth flows. StanChart's move to streamline operations and rein in costs comes as more global firms slash jobs by deploying AI to improve efficiency. Japanese lender Mizuho in March unveiled up to 5,000 job cuts over a decade. And banks globally are scrambling to integrate frontier AI models and fend off rising cyber threats.<br>
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The most affected roles will be in the bank's back-office centres, including those in Chennai, Bengaluru, Kuala Lumpur and Warsaw, according to Winters. "Of course we're using AI along the way and AI will be a huge facilitator and enabler of that," he added, referring to its ongoing revamp to automate more of its core banking system. StanChart said it would deliver over 15% return on tangible equity in 2028, more than three percentage points higher than in 2025, and building to about 18% in 2030. Meta also announced plans to reassign 7,000 employees into AI-related initiatives, just ahead of layoffs expected to affect roughly 8,000 workers.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1640224/stanchart-to-cut-over-7000-jobs-boost-ai-to-replace-lower-value-human-capital?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1640224/stanchart-to-cut-over-7000-jobs-boost-ai-to-replace-lower-value-human-capital?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>CISA Admin Leaked AWS GovCloud Keys On Github</title><guid>SepuNnWJbZIY2CSgZEiO</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 22:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/SepuNnWJbZIY2CSgZEiO#SepuNnWJbZIY2CSgZEiO</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from KrebsOnSecurity: Until this past weekend, a contractor for the Cybersecurity &amp; Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) maintained a public GitHub repository that exposed credentials to several highly privileged AWS GovCloud accounts and a la...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from KrebsOnSecurity: Until this past weekend, a contractor for the Cybersecurity &amp; Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) maintained a public GitHub repository that exposed credentials to several highly privileged AWS GovCloud accounts and a large number of internal CISA systems. Security experts said the public archive included files detailing how CISA builds, tests and deploys software internally, and that it represents one of the most egregious government data leaks in recent history. On May 15, KrebsOnSecurity heard from Guillaume Valadon, a researcher with the security firm GitGuardian. Valadon's company constantly scans public code repositories at GitHub and elsewhere for exposed secrets, automatically alerting the offending accounts of any apparent sensitive data exposures. Valadon said he reached out because the owner in this case wasn't responding and the information exposed was highly sensitive.<br>
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The GitHub repository that Valadon flagged was named "Private-CISA," and it harbored a vast number of internal CISA/DHS credentials and files, including cloud keys, tokens, plaintext passwords, logs and other sensitive CISA assets. Valadon said the exposed CISA credentials represent a textbook example of poor security hygiene, noting that the commit logs in the offending GitHub account show that the CISA administrator disabled the default setting in GitHub that blocks users from publishing SSH keys or other secrets in public code repositories. "Passwords stored in plain text in a csv, backups in git, explicit commands to disable GitHub secrets detection feature," Valadon wrote in an email. "I honestly believed that it was all fake before analyzing the content deeper. This is indeed the worst leak that I've witnessed in my career. It is obviously an individual's mistake, but I believe that it might reveal internal practices." "Currently, there is no indication that any sensitive data was compromised as a result of this incident," a CISA spokesperson wrote. "While we hold our team members to the highest standards of integrity and operational awareness, we are working to ensure additional safeguards are implemented to prevent future occurrences."<br>
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The GitHub account in question was taken offline shortly after CISA was notified about the exposure. However, according to Caturegli, the exposed AWS keys remained valid for another 48 hours.<br>
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"What I suspect happened is [the CISA contractor] was using this GitHub to synchronize files between a work laptop and a home computer, because he has regularly committed to this repo since November 2025," Caturegli said. "This would be an embarrassing leak for any company, but it's even more so in this case because it's CISA."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1650229/cisa-admin-leaked-aws-govcloud-keys-on-github?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1650229/cisa-admin-leaked-aws-govcloud-keys-on-github?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Microsoft Launches Surface Pro 12, Surface Laptop 8 With Intel Chips</title><guid>iOcL2asMXctlYVLtA824</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 21:22:08</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/iOcL2asMXctlYVLtA824#iOcL2asMXctlYVLtA824</link>
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		Microsoft is launching three new Intel-powered Surface devices for businesses: the Surface Pro 12, Surface Laptop 8, and a smaller 13-inch Surface Laptop model. These new machines come equipped with newer Intel chips, a few business-focused upgrades, and notably higher starting p...
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Microsoft is launching three new Intel-powered Surface devices for businesses: the Surface Pro 12, Surface Laptop 8, and a smaller 13-inch Surface Laptop model. These new machines come equipped with newer Intel chips, a few business-focused upgrades, and notably higher starting prices. "The high pricing of these three new Surface devices is a sign of things to come for whatever consumer models Microsoft is planning this year," notes The Verge. From the report: This time around Microsoft is refreshing its Surface Pro and Surface Laptop models with Intel's latest Core Ultra Series 3 processors first, ahead of similar models with Qualcomm's new Snapdragon X2 processors later this year. The new Surface Pro 12, or as Microsoft calls it the Surface Pro for Business 13-inch (12th Edition), will be available for businesses today, starting at an eye-watering $1,949.99. The base model will include an Intel Core Ultra 5 processor, 16GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, and the regular 13-inch PixelSense LCD display.<br>
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Businesses will have to pay extra for models with Intel's Core Ultra 7 processor, up to 64GB of RAM, and up to 1TB of storage. The top spec Surface Pro 12 with a Core Ultra 7, 64GB of RAM, and 1TB of storage will be priced at $4,399.99, and there are also OLED screen options and models with 5G connectivity. The Surface Pro 12 5G starts at $2,249.99, with a Core Ultra 5, 16GB of RAM, and 256GB of storage. [...] Microsoft is also launching two new versions of the Surface Laptop for businesses today. The Surface Laptop 8, or Surface Laptop for Business 13.8 or 15-inch (8th Edition) as Microsoft calls it, will also be available with a range of Intel's Core Ultra Series 3 chips. It launches alongside a smaller 13-inch model, which is confusingly labeled the Surface Laptop for Business 13-inch (1st Edition).<br>
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The 13.8-inch model starts at $1,949.99, and includes Intel's Core Ultra 5 processor, 16GB of RAM, and 256GB of storage. While Surface devices for businesses have typically had higher pricing than consumer models, the $1,949.99 starting price for a Surface Laptop 8 is almost double the original price of the Surface Laptop 7. RAMageddon really has come for Microsoft's Surface Pro and Surface Laptop devices, after recent price increases meant the existing consumer models are now $500 more expensive than their original starting price. The max configuration for the 13.8-inch Surface Pro 8 will include a Core Ultra 7, 64GB of RAM, and 1TB of storage for $4,299.99. A similar version of the 15-inch model (with an x7 processor) will be priced at $4,499.99.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1625223/microsoft-launches-surface-pro-12-surface-laptop-8-with-intel-chips?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/1625223/microsoft-launches-surface-pro-12-surface-laptop-8-with-intel-chips?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Microsoft Surprises With Its First Server Linux Distribution: Azure Linux 4.0</title><guid>OVRHDKB3fSWGZ7T84L8D</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 20:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/OVRHDKB3fSWGZ7T84L8D#OVRHDKB3fSWGZ7T84L8D</link>
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		Microsoft is turning Azure Linux into a general-purpose, Fedora-based cloud distribution available to all Azure customers, while also productizing Flatcar as Azure Container Linux for immutable container hosts. "When Microsoft joined the Linux Foundation, there was this big consp...
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Microsoft is turning Azure Linux into a general-purpose, Fedora-based cloud distribution available to all Azure customers, while also productizing Flatcar as Azure Container Linux for immutable container hosts. "When Microsoft joined the Linux Foundation, there was this big conspiracy theory that somehow the Linux Foundation was undermining open source in partnership with Microsoft, and now you announce that you're shipping a Linux distribution," Jim Zemlin, the Linux Foundation's CEO, said in response to Microsoft's surprise announcement. "That's amazing." ZDNet reports: Until now, [Lachlan Everson, Microsoft's Principal Program Manager on Azure's open-source team] noted, "we had Azure Linux only available to third-party customers through AKS specifically, and that was Azure Linux 3.0." Going forward, this will be ACL. Everson emphasized that Azure Linux 4.0 is the culmination of years of internal usage and the evolution of the earlier Mariner distribution. "So we've been running Azure Linux for many years internally, and we got through to 3.0, and we only allowed it on as a container host on AKS. What we've done is make it a general-purpose, so this is all the learnings that we've had in the heritage of Mariner."<br>
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Under the hood, Azure Linux 4.0 is based on Fedora Linux and is delivered as an open distribution on GitHub. This code is available now. Yes, Red Hat knows that Microsoft has done this. Everson continued, "So, we made a decision to use Fedora as an upstream, so it's using RPMs in the Fedora ecosystem. Microsoft curates the packages and the supply chain to fit Azure's cloud platform." Microsoft also created "it to be purpose-built for Azure, which integrates vertically into all of our infrastructure to give you the best Azure Linux experience on Azure." While Azure Linux will ship as a VM image, Microsoft is already preparing a developer-friendly path onto Windows desktops: "And as of today, we have it as a VM image for your VM host on Azure. We're going to announce WSL images as well."<br>
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While developers will be able to run Azure Linux locally through WSL, Microsoft is not positioning it as a traditional desktop Linux. Asked whether he could run it on his laptop, Everson said: "I will be able to run it on my laptop, or what have you. Yes, on Windows 11." However, when pressed about a desktop experience, Everson was clear that there are "no plans" for a graphical environment. "It's optimized for server-side in the cloud," he said, adding that even on a developer machine, users should expect a lean environment. "Minimal packages, yeah. The idea is that we offer you a consistent experience to do your development on your machine, and that you can take your workloads as you develop them on your machine and run them with VS Code. You can run your applications on that, and know that the platform is the same that you're running on the cloud, so that you have that kind of consistency between environments."<br>
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Flatcar itself remains the upstream project, but Microsoft is packaging it for Azure customers. Everson described Flatcar as "purpose-built, immutable, secure by default, production-ready operating system, and Azure Container Linux is the productization of that, but we're still investing in the upstream Flatcar ecosystem and pulling that downstream into a productized exterior experience just for container workloads, so it's a container hosting in AKS." To underscore the immutable model, he added that "Everything's baked in, so there is no package manager. We bake the bits into the immutable, and they're in the immutable version. So Azure Container Linux is the immutable version. So you shouldn't be changing any system packages or any application packages. Anything that you need to change is customer workloads run in containers."<br>
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<item><title>Before Mass Layoffs, Meta Reassigns 7,000 Workers To Focus On AI</title><guid>2GJvB2xTMVZvtmJVctb2</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 19:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/2GJvB2xTMVZvtmJVctb2#2GJvB2xTMVZvtmJVctb2</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Meta told employees on Monday that it was reassigning 7,000 workers to focus on new initiatives around artificial intelligence, the latest change in a company transformation spurred by the powerful technology. Employees...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Meta told employees on Monday that it was reassigning 7,000 workers to focus on new initiatives around artificial intelligence, the latest change in a company transformation spurred by the powerful technology. Employees will be moved to four new organizations focused on building new A.I. tools and apps, Janelle Gale, Meta's head of human resources, said in an internal memo. The organizations will use "A.I. native design structures" and have fewer managers per employee than other parts of the company, she said, adding that company leaders will send details about the new roles on Wednesday. The restructuring "will make us more productive and make the work more rewarding," Ms. Gale wrote. Meta declined to comment further on the changes.<br>
The move comes shortly before Meta begins laying off roughly 8,000 employees, or 10 percent of its work force. Ms. Gale also mentioned Wednesday's layoffs in her memo. "We know days like this are extremely hard, and we appreciate you showing up for each other," Ms. Gale said.<br>
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According to the NYT, employees have been asked to work remotely that day and emails about the layoffs would be sent at 4 a.m. local time. Employees in the United States will receive 16 weeks of severance pay, along with two extra weeks for every year they worked at Meta.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://meta.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0027253/before-mass-layoffs-meta-reassigns-7000-workers-to-focus-on-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://meta.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0027253/before-mass-layoffs-meta-reassigns-7000-workers-to-focus-on-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Amazon's Alexa+ Now Produces AI-Generated Podcasts</title><guid>uS6tuDfvtY1Ub3fpF9E2</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 15:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/uS6tuDfvtY1Ub3fpF9E2#uS6tuDfvtY1Ub3fpF9E2</link>
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		Amazon is adding AI-generated "podcasts" to Alexa+, letting users request custom audio explainers on any topic featuring two synthetic co-hosts. Variety reports: Seemingly to dispel the notion that these "podcasts" will be AI audio slop, Amazon emphasized that it has deals with m...
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Amazon is adding AI-generated "podcasts" to Alexa+, letting users request custom audio explainers on any topic featuring two synthetic co-hosts. Variety reports: Seemingly to dispel the notion that these "podcasts" will be AI audio slop, Amazon emphasized that it has deals with major news organizations to ensure "accurate, real-time news and information." Those include the Associated Press, Reuters, the Washington Post, Time magazine, Forbes, Business Insider, Politico and USA Today; publications from Conde Nast, Hearst and Vox Media; and more than 200 local newspapers across the U.S.<br>
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In an example clip shared by Amazon of the new Alexa Podcasts feature, the two AI-generated hosts discuss "the latest music releases." A male Alexa+ narrator says more than 50% of music listening now comes from unsigned artists. "The monoculture is just gone," a female-voiced Alexa+ narrator chimes in. The male Alexa+ host says there has been "stoner metal," indie pop and experimental hip-hop music "all dropping on the same Friday," and adds, "That's not chaos -- that's the healthiest the music ecosystem has ever been."<br>
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[...] To use Alexa Podcasts, users can simply tell Alexa what topic they're curious about and "it does the rest in minutes." Alexa+ will provide an overview of what it plans to cover, and let you adjust the length and direction before it generates the podcast. When your episode is ready, you'll get a notification on your Echo Show device and the Alexa app.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0043247/amazons-alexa-now-produces-ai-generated-podcasts?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0043247/amazons-alexa-now-produces-ai-generated-podcasts?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Europe Tests Laser Links As Satellite Comms Outgrow Radio</title><guid>KOmQ6zvjkI8kbtgg1Knv</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 11:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/KOmQ6zvjkI8kbtgg1Knv#KOmQ6zvjkI8kbtgg1Knv</link>
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		Europe is testing laser-based satellite communications through a new mountaintop ground station in Greece, aiming to deliver faster, more secure links than traditional radio systems as bandwidth demand grows. The Register reports: Lithuanian space and defense biz Astrolight says ...
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Europe is testing laser-based satellite communications through a new mountaintop ground station in Greece, aiming to deliver faster, more secure links than traditional radio systems as bandwidth demand grows. The Register reports: Lithuanian space and defense biz Astrolight says that it has commissioned a new optical ground station in Greece that will support ESA-backed CubeSat missions testing laser-based communications between satellites and Earth. The Holomondas Optical Ground Station was built through the PeakSat project, led by the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki with backing from the European Space Agency and Greece's Ministry of Digital Governance. Its job is to receive data from satellites via infrared laser links rather than the radio systems that space operators have relied on for decades.<br>
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PeakSat and ERMIS-3, two Greek CubeSats launched in March under ESA's wider Greek IOD/IOV mission program, both carry Astrolight's ATLAS-1 optical communication terminal. Astrolight also built the ground segment, giving the project a fully integrated end-to-end optical communications setup. [...] The company says the station uses an 808-nanometer laser beacon and an optical C-band receiver capable of receiving data at up to 2.5 Gbps. Unlike traditional RF systems, optical links use tightly focused infrared beams that are harder to intercept or jam while also supporting significantly higher throughput.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0035259/europe-tests-laser-links-as-satellite-comms-outgrow-radio?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0035259/europe-tests-laser-links-as-satellite-comms-outgrow-radio?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>PlayStation Exclusives Aren't Coming To PC Anymore</title><guid>au0yTj0kv6mnZJMftr5C</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 08:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/au0yTj0kv6mnZJMftr5C#au0yTj0kv6mnZJMftr5C</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Sony reportedly won't release its major single-player PlayStation games on PC anymore. According to Bloomberg's Jason Schreier, Hermen Hulst, who heads up PlayStation's studios business, informed employees in a town hall on Mond...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Sony reportedly won't release its major single-player PlayStation games on PC anymore. According to Bloomberg's Jason Schreier, Hermen Hulst, who heads up PlayStation's studios business, informed employees in a town hall on Monday about the change in strategy. Schreier had previously reported on the shift in March, saying that Sony scrapped plans to launch PC versions of last year's Ghost of Ytei and "other internally developed games." Online games will still come to multiple platforms following this change in strategy, Schreier reported at the time.<br>
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In recent years, Sony has released many of its biggest games on PC, including Spider-Man 2, Ghost of Tsushima, both The Last of Us games, Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, and multiplayer titles like Helldivers 2 and Marathon. Two years ago, Hulst committed to releasing PlayStation's live-service games "day and date" on PC and PS5, but its single-player PC releases have been less consistent, with Hulst saying that the company takes a "more strategic approach." In April, Microsoft's new Xbox chief Asha Sharma said the company is "reevaluating" exclusive games for the platform. "Players are frustrated," she wrote in a memo. "New feature drops on console have been less frequent. Our presence on PC isn't strong enough. Pricing is getting harder for people to keep up with. And core experiences like search, discovery, social, and personalization still feel too fragmented."<br>
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"The model that got us here won't be the one that takes us forward," the memo adds.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0021214/playstation-exclusives-arent-coming-to-pc-anymore?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/05/19/0021214/playstation-exclusives-arent-coming-to-pc-anymore?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers</title><guid>ZVtq3JUtCjQYZBVIUlS2</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 03:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/ZVtq3JUtCjQYZBVIUlS2#ZVtq3JUtCjQYZBVIUlS2</link>
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		The FBI is seeking up to $36 million for nationwide access to automated license plate reader (ALPRs) data, which could let it query vehicle movements across the U.S. and its territories through a commercial database. 404 Media reports: "The FBI has a crucial need for accessible L...
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The FBI is seeking up to $36 million for nationwide access to automated license plate reader (ALPRs) data, which could let it query vehicle movements across the U.S. and its territories through a commercial database. 404 Media reports: "The FBI has a crucial need for accessible LPRs to provide a diverse and reliable range of collections across the United States. This data should be available across major highways and in an array of locations for maximum usefulness to law enforcement," a statement of work, which describes what data the FBI is seeking access to, reads. ALPR cameras generally work by constantly scanning the color, brand, model, and license plate of vehicles that drive by. This creates a timestamped record of where a particular vehicle was at a specific time that law enforcement can then query, effectively letting them see exactly where someone drove across time. The technology has existed for decades, but has become more pervasive in recent years.<br>
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The FBI says it is looking for a vendor that will let it log into a Software-as-a-Service system and then query the collected ALPR data with license plate information, a description of the vehicle, a time or date, and geolocation information. The FBI says it is looking for ALPR coverage in the following areas: Eastern 48 (East of the Mississippi River); Western 48 (West of the Mississippi River); Hawaii; Puerto Rico; Alaska; and outlying areas such as Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or Tribal Territories. In effect, the FBI is looking for ALPR data nationwide and even beyond. An attached price template indicates the FBI is willing to pay $6 million for each of those broad areas, bringing the total to $36 million.<br>
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The FBI says it intends to award the contract to a single vendor, but if any such vendor is unable to fulfill all of the requirements, the agency may award the contract to up to two vendors. The contract is specifically for the FBI's Directorate of Intelligence, which oversees the agency's intelligence mission. The FBI is not only a law enforcement agency, but also part of the Intelligence Community. The report notes that the contract appears aimed at vendors like Flock or Motorola Solutions, since they're some of the only companies able to provide the sort of data the FBI is seeking.<br>
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Further reading: Small Town Fights Over Flock's AI-Enhanced Network of License Plate-Reading Cameras<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1952255/fbi-wants-to-buy-nationwide-access-to-license-plate-readers?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1952255/fbi-wants-to-buy-nationwide-access-to-license-plate-readers?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>New Windows 'MiniPlasma' Zero-Day Exploit Gives SYSTEM Access, PoC Released</title><guid>snbEvfZChdXltbPV8Gvu</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 02:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/snbEvfZChdXltbPV8Gvu#snbEvfZChdXltbPV8Gvu</link>
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		A researcher known as Chaotic Eclipse has released a proof-of-concept exploit for a new Windows zero-day dubbed MiniPlasma, which BleepingComputer confirmed can grant SYSTEM privileges on fully patched Windows 11 systems. The researcher claims the bug is effectively a still-explo...
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A researcher known as Chaotic Eclipse has released a proof-of-concept exploit for a new Windows zero-day dubbed MiniPlasma, which BleepingComputer confirmed can grant SYSTEM privileges on fully patched Windows 11 systems. The researcher claims the bug is effectively a still-exploitable version of a 2020 flaw Microsoft said it had fixed. From the report: At the time, the flaw was assigned the CVE-2020-17103 identifier and reportedly fixed in December 2020. "After investigating, it turns out the exact same issue that was reported to Microsoft by Google project zero is actually still present, unpatched," explains Chaotic Eclipse. "I'm unsure if Microsoft just never patched the issue or the patch was silently rolled back at some point for unknown reasons. The original PoC by Google worked without any changes."<br>
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BleepingComputer tested the exploit on a fully patched Windows 11 Pro system running the latest May 2026 Patch Tuesday updates. In our test, we used a standard user account, and after running the exploit, it opened a command prompt with SYSTEM privileges, as shown in the image [here]. Will Dormann, principal vulnerability analyst at Tharros, also confirmed the exploit works in his tests on the latest public version of Windows 11. However, he said that the flaw does not work in the latest Windows 11 Insider Preview Canary build.<br>
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The exploit appears to abuse how the Windows Cloud Filter driver handles registry key creation through an undocumented CfAbortHydration API. Forshaw's original report said that the flaw could allow arbitrary registry keys to be created in the .DEFAULT user hive without proper access checks, potentially enabling privilege escalation. While Microsoft reports having fixed the bug as part of its December 2020 Microsoft Patch Tuesday, Chaotic Eclipse now claims the vulnerability can still be exploited.<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1946245/new-windows-miniplasma-zero-day-exploit-gives-system-access-poc-released?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1946245/new-windows-miniplasma-zero-day-exploit-gives-system-access-poc-released?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Nintendo Tries To Obtain Touchscreen-Specific Patent On Monster Capturing</title><guid>O3o5mfzKsgrcbq5SBXKg</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 01:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/O3o5mfzKsgrcbq5SBXKg#O3o5mfzKsgrcbq5SBXKg</link>
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		Nintendo is trying to secure a touchscreen-specific monster-catching patent that could be relevant to Palworld Mobile. Japan's patent office has initially rejected the application for lacking an inventive step over prior art, but the company could appeal or amend the claims. Game...
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Nintendo is trying to secure a touchscreen-specific monster-catching patent that could be relevant to Palworld Mobile. Japan's patent office has initially rejected the application for lacking an inventive step over prior art, but the company could appeal or amend the claims. Games Fray reports: The Japan Patent Office (JPO) has now made a new monster-catching patent application by Nintendo public. Patent Application No. 2026-019762 covers monster-catching of the kind already asserted against the PC and console versions of Palworld and is from the same patent family as two of the three patents Nintendo is already asserting against Palworld, but with a touchscreen focus. Potential targets are the upcoming Palworld Mobile game and Tencent's Roco Kingdom: World, which is presently available only in China but likely to expand internationally. Nintendo filed the application this year with a request for a fast-tracked review. The JPO has indeed been quick, and the response is that Nintendo's application lacks an inventive step over the prior art.<br>
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Nintendo already amended the claims in February and can try to amend them again. It can try to persuade the examiner and potentially appeal the decision. But the initial rejection suggests that Nintendo will not obtain the desired touchscreen monster-catching patent quickly. The rejection was communicated on April 24, 2026. Nintendo could abandon the application now, but Nintendo being Nintendo, they are more likely to try to persuade the examiner to arrive at a different conclusion, even though the reasons for the rejection are strong. In many patent examination processes, the initial rejection is essentially just an invitation to present one's best arguments. Here, however, the rejection notice is so well-reasoned that it will be an uphill battle for Nintendo. Nintendo's application would cover a touchscreen-controlled game in which a player moves through "a field in a virtual space," uses "a capture item for capturing a field character," and can summon "a battle character" to fight that creature. During combat, the game would display "a plurality of commands including at least an attack command and an item command," selected through "an operation input using the touch panel."<br>
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The key claim is that when the capture item is used "during a battle" or "in a non-battle state," the game performs "a capture success determination," and, if successful, "the field character is captured and set to a state owned by the player."<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/196230/nintendo-tries-to-obtain-touchscreen-specific-patent-on-monster-capturing?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/196230/nintendo-tries-to-obtain-touchscreen-specific-patent-on-monster-capturing?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Meta Layoffs Stress Harsh AI Reality Inside Zuckerberg's Company</title><guid>QlYRDNVGQ6RDqF5ytHVE</guid><pubDate>2026-05-19 00:22:01</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/QlYRDNVGQ6RDqF5ytHVE#QlYRDNVGQ6RDqF5ytHVE</link>
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		Meta is expected to begin cutting about 8,000 jobs this week as it pours more money into AI infrastructure and looks to "offset" other investments, with additional layoffs reportedly possible later this year. According to CNBC, the morale has worsened inside the company. "Interna...
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Meta is expected to begin cutting about 8,000 jobs this week as it pours more money into AI infrastructure and looks to "offset" other investments, with additional layoffs reportedly possible later this year. According to CNBC, the morale has worsened inside the company. "Internally, there's an emerging sense of dread across wide swaths of the company," the report says, citing current and former Meta employees. "That's in part because more cuts are expected this year, including a potential round of layoffs in August, followed by another round later in the year, some of the sources said." From the report: [...] Whatever anxiety investors are experiencing, the feelings inside the company are more intense, with some longtime staffers questioning Meta's AI pursuits under AI chief Alexandr Wang, while also weighing if now is the time to leave for opportunities at other companies in the AI race, according to current and former employees. Data aggregated by Blind, an anonymous professional network that requires users to verify their employment with a work email address, reveals some of the internal malaise. Meta's overall rating by employees on Blind has declined 25% from a peak in the second quarter of 2024 to the current period, with a 39% drop in its culture rating. In every category other than compensation, Meta has seen a ratings decline and dramatically underperforms rivals Amazon, Google and Netflix, the Blind data reveals.<br>
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The company's full-court press with AI included the recent debut of an employee tracking tool intended to collect data from staffers' actions, such as mouse movements and keystrokes on their work computers. The Model Capability Initiative, or MCI, as it's called, is part of Meta's efforts to train AI models to power digital agents that can perform various coding and white-collar tasks. Employees have characterized the data tracking tool as "dystopian," according to messages viewed by CNBC, with some workers expressing fear that personal information could be leaked. Some Meta workers have noted that their workplace computers appear slower since the company initiated the project, adding to their frustration, sources said.<br>
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Meta workers responded by creating an online petition that urges Zuckerberg and leadership to shutter the project. "Collecting and repurposing this kind of data raises serious concerns around privacy, consent, and trust in the workplace," the petition says. "It should not be the norm that companies of any size are permitted to exploit their employees by nonconsensually extracting their data for the purposes of AI training." Further reading: NYT: 'Meta's Embrace of AI Is Making Its Employees Miserable'<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/179232/meta-layoffs-stress-harsh-ai-reality-inside-zuckerbergs-company?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/179232/meta-layoffs-stress-harsh-ai-reality-inside-zuckerbergs-company?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>Elon Musk Loses Lawsuit Against OpenAI</title><guid>5hDGtAbdCz5v88JZyDQ6</guid><pubDate>2026-05-18 23:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/5hDGtAbdCz5v88JZyDQ6#5hDGtAbdCz5v88JZyDQ6</link>
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		After three weeks of testimony, which was covered extensively here on Slashdot, a U.S. jury on Monday ruled against Elon Musk in his lawsuit against OpenAI, finding that he waited too long to bring his claims that the company betrayed its nonprofit mission. Reuters reports: The t...
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After three weeks of testimony, which was covered extensively here on Slashdot, a U.S. jury on Monday ruled against Elon Musk in his lawsuit against OpenAI, finding that he waited too long to bring his claims that the company betrayed its nonprofit mission. Reuters reports: The trial had widely been seen as a critical moment for the future of OpenAI and artificial intelligence generally, both in how it should be used and who should benefit from it. Following the verdict, Musk's lawyer said he reserved the right to appeal, but the judge suggested he may have an uphill battle because whether the statute of limitations ran out before Musk sued was a factual issue. "There's a substantial amount of evidence to support the jury's finding, which is why I was prepared to dismiss on the spot," U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers said.<br>
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In his 2024 lawsuit, Musk accused OpenAI, its Chief Executive Sam Altman and its President Greg Brockman of manipulating him into giving $38 million, then going behind his back by attaching a for-profit business to its original nonprofit and accepting tens of billions of dollars from Microsoft and other investors. Musk called the OpenAI defendants' conduct "stealing a charity." OpenAI was founded by Altman, Musk and several others in 2015. Musk left its board in 2018, and OpenAI set up a for-profit business the next year. OpenAI countered that it was Musk who saw dollar signs, and that he waited too long to claim OpenAI breached its founding agreement to build safe artificial intelligence to benefit humanity. "Mr. Musk may have the Midas touch in some areas, but not in AI," William Savitt, a lawyer for OpenAI, said in his closing argument.<br>
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The verdict followed 11 days of testimony and arguments where Musk's and Altman's credibility came under repeated attack. Lawyers for OpenAI embraced each other after the verdict was announced. Microsoft faced an aiding and abetting claim. In a statement, a Microsoft spokesperson said, "The facts and the timeline in this case have long been clear and we welcome the jury's decision to dismiss these claims as untimely." <br>
Recap:<br>
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Musk Accused of 'Selective Amnesia', Altman of Lying As OpenAI Trial Nears End (Day Twelve)<br>
OpenAI Trial Wraps Up With 'Jackass' Trophy For Challenging Musk (Day Eleven)<br>
Sam Altman Testifies That Elon Musk Wanted Control of OpenAI (Day Ten)<br>
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella Testifies In OpenAI Trial (Day Nine)<br>
Sam Altman Had a Bad Day In Court (Day Eight)<br>
Sam Altman's Management Style Comes Under the Microscope At OpenAI Trial (Day Seven)<br>
Brockman Rebuts Musk's Take On Startup's History, Recounts Secret Work For Tesla (Day Six) <br>
OpenAI President Discloses His Stake In the Company Is Worth $30 Billion (Day Five)<br>
Musk Concludes Testimony At OpenAI Trial (Day Four)<br>
Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company's Attorney (Day Three) <br>
Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two) <br>
Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1845222/elon-musk-loses-lawsuit-against-openai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1845222/elon-musk-loses-lawsuit-against-openai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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<item><title>A Master's Degree Isn't the Job Guarantee It Used To Be</title><guid>0f81MeYMsYlaRfFY1UQ5</guid><pubDate>2026-05-18 22:22:02</pubDate><author>robot</author><link>https://idec.foxears.su/0f81MeYMsYlaRfFY1UQ5#0f81MeYMsYlaRfFY1UQ5</link>
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		An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal: Going back to grad school has long been the Plan B of young professionals who aspire to climb higher in their careers or struggle to get promoted in a tough job market. New data show that getting a master's degree ...
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal: Going back to grad school has long been the Plan B of young professionals who aspire to climb higher in their careers or struggle to get promoted in a tough job market. New data show that getting a master's degree isn't the guarantee it used to be. The unemployment rate for workers under 35 with a master's degree has rarely been higher in the past 20 years, according to the Burning Glass Institute, a labor-market think tank focused on the future of work, which analyzed data collected by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics going back to 2003.<br>
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At the same time, the unemployment rate for workers under 35 with a Ph.D., law degree or medical degree has rarely been lower. "For most of the past two decades, these lines moved together -- not anymore," said Gad Levanon, chief economist of Burning Glass. Levanon has a theory about why the payoffs for advanced degrees have uncoupled: "More degrees chasing fewer of the positions those degrees were meant to unlock." [...] While degrees from law school and medical school amount to a license to practice, master's degrees are more of a signal, Levanon said. And a signal loses value when so many people have one, he added: "It's hardly a sure bet to securing a good job."<br>
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Now master's-degree holders under 35 are at the 77th percentile of unemployment, where the 50th percentile is normal, according to the Burning Glass analysis. Even associate-degree holders have had a higher employment level for the past year. Unemployment among master's-degree holders has been worse only about a quarter of the time in the past 20-plus years. There was a stint during the Covid-19 pandemic when this cohort was out of work at higher rates, and a more prolonged stretch as the U.S. climbed out of the recession in 2008 and 2009. "Every indication is hiring managers now are more receptive than ever to the idea that a person doesn't need a graduate degree to be competitive," said Johnny C. Taylor Jr., president of SHRM, the chief lobbying group for human-resource professionals.<br>
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"We are seeing that, hands down, especially in the last two or three years with AI," he said of job readiness. Employers just want to know, "Can you do it?"<br>
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 [ Read more of this story ]( <a href="https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1656217/a-masters-degree-isnt-the-job-guarantee-it-used-to-be?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed" class="url">https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/18/1656217/a-masters-degree-isnt-the-job-guarantee-it-used-to-be?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&amp;utm_medium=feed</a> )  at Slashdot.<br>

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