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[>] Линус Торвальдс раскритиковал связанное с GPL разбирательство между SFС и Vizio
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2025-12-26 12:44:03


Окружной суд штата Калифорния вынес предварительное решение в инициированном правозащитной организацией Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC) судебном разбирательстве против компании Vizio, обвиняемой в невыполнении требований лицензии GPL при распространении прошивок к умным телевизорам на базе платформы SmartCast. Суд постановил, что компания Vizio обязана предоставить доступ к исходному коду в форме, позволяющей третьим лицам загружать и изменять код. При этом суд принял ходатайство компании Vizio и согласился с тем, что применение лицензий GPLv2 и LGPLv2.1 не даёт оснований требовать у производителя информации, необходимой для установки модифицированного варианта прошивки на принадлежащий пользователю телевизор.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64505

[>] 'Memory is Running Out, and So Are Excuses For Software Bloat'
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2025-12-26 14:22:02


The relentless climb in memory prices driven by the AI boom's insatiable demand for datacenter hardware has renewed an old debate about whether modern software has grown inexcusably fat, a column by the Register argues. The piece points to Windows Task Manager as a case study: the current executable occupies 6MB on disk and demands nearly 70MB of RAM just to display system information, compared to the original's 85KB footprint.

"Its successor is not orders of magnitude more functional," the column notes. The author draws a parallel to the 1970s fuel crisis, when energy shortages spurred efficiency gains, and argues that today's memory crunch could force similar discipline. "Developers should consider precisely how much of a framework they really need and devote effort to efficiency," the column adds. "Managers must ensure they also have the space to do so."

The article acknowledges that "reversing decades of application growth will not happen overnight" but calls for toolchains to be rethought and rewards given "for compactness, both at rest and in operation."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://developers.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/0628235/memory-is-running-out-and-so-are-excuses-for-software-bloat?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Проект Phoenix развивает современный X-сервер, написанный на языке Zig
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2025-12-26 14:44:02


В рамках проекта Phoenix предпринята попытка создания с нуля нового X-сервера, не использующего наработки X.org Server и нацеленного на создание современной альтернативы, расширяющей протокол X11 и предоставляющей возможности для совместимости с Wayland. На текущем этапе развития Phoenix пока не готов к повседневному использованию, но уже позволяет организовать работу с простыми приложениями, использующими для вывода графики GLX, EGL или Vulkan, при вложенном запуске Phoenix поверх существующего X-сервера. Код написан на языке Zig и распространяется под лицензией GPLv3.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64506

[>] China Launches $21 Billion Venture Capital Funds To Invest in 'Hard Technology'
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2025-12-26 17:22:01


An anonymous reader shares a report: China on Friday launched three venture capital funds to invest in "hard technology" areas, state broadcaster CCTV reported. The capital contribution plans for the funds have been finalised, each with more than 50 billion yuan ($7.14 billion), according to the report. The funds will primarily invest in early-stage startups and the targets should be valued at less than 500 million yuan, an official said on Friday, adding that no single investment would amount to more than 50 million yuan.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/0641227/china-launches-21-billion-venture-capital-funds-to-invest-in-hard-technology?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] AI's Hunger For Memory Chips Could Shrink Smartphone and PC Sales in 2026, IDC Says
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2025-12-26 18:22:01


The global smartphone and PC markets face potential contractions of up to 5.2% and 8.9% respectively in 2026, according to downside risk scenarios from IDC that trace the problem to memory chip manufacturers shifting production capacity away from consumer electronics toward AI data centers. Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron Technology have pivoted their limited cleanroom space toward high-bandwidth memory for AI servers, restricting supply of the conventional DRAM and NAND used in phones and laptops.

IDC expects 2026 DRAM supply growth to hit 16% year-on-year, below historical norms. The smartphone industry's decade-long trend of bringing flagship features to affordable devices is reversing. Memory represents 15-20% of the bill of materials for mid-range phones, and thin-margin vendors like Xiaomi, Realme and Transsion will bear the brunt. Apple and Samsung have long-term supply agreements securing components up to 24 months ahead. PC vendors including Lenovo, Dell, HP, Acer and ASUS have warned clients of 15-20% price increases heading into the second half of 2026.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/144228/ais-hunger-for-memory-chips-could-shrink-smartphone-and-pc-sales-in-2026-idc-says?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Retreating From EVs Could Be Hazardous For Western Carmakers
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2025-12-26 19:22:01


Western carmakers retreating from electric vehicles amid softening government mandates could find themselves in a precarious position as Chinese rivals continue gaining ground in the EV market they're choosing to de-prioritize. The EU on December 16th dropped its earlier plan to ban petrol car sales outright from 2035, instead requiring carmakers to cut emissions from new vehicles by 90% from 2021 levels. The day before, Ford announced a $19.5 billion asset writedown as it rethinks its EV strategy and ends sales of the all-electric F-150 pickup.

In the U.S., the Trump administration has rolled back incentives and other measures that supported EVs. But Chinese brands controlled 10.7% of the all-electric car market in western Europe in the first ten months of 2025, up a percentage point from a year earlier, despite EU tariffs on Chinese EVs imposed in October 2024. Sales of Chinese hybrids, which aren't subject to those tariffs, have surged. EVs will eventually become the cheaper option as production expands and costs fall, meaning Western carmakers that slow down now risk giving competitors an unassailable lead.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/158231/retreating-from-evs-could-be-hazardous-for-western-carmakers?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Нашлась единственная уцелевшая копия ОС Unix v4
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2025-12-26 19:44:04


В школе вычислительной техники при Университете Юты (США) нашли и восстановили магнитную ленту, на которой оказалась единственная из известных копий операционной системы Unix v4 — первой, чьё ядро, драйверы и основные утилиты были написаны на новомодном в те времена языке C.

Восстановленные данные заняли всего 40 Мбайт — они доступны для скачивания вместе с инструкцией по запуску ОС. Unix v4 работал на продвинутом по тем временам мини-компьютере DEC PDP-11, который эмулировали при помощи SimH. На момент выпуска система оставалась экспериментальным проектом.

[ Анонс ]( https://archive.org/details/utah_unix_v4_raw )

https://www.linux.org.ru/news/opensource/18179619

[>] The Economic Divide Between Big and Small Companies Is Growing
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2025-12-26 21:22:02


While America's largest corporations are riding a wave of surging profits and AI-fueled stock market enthusiasm to record highs, small businesses across the country are cutting staff and scaling back operations as years of high inflation, cautious consumers and tariff confusion take their toll.

Private firms with fewer than 50 workers have steadily shed jobs over the past six months, according to payroll processor ADP, cutting 120,000 positions in November alone. Midsize and large firms continued adding jobs during the same period. The divergence mirrors what's happening among American consumers.

The Federal Reserve's latest beige book noted that overall consumer spending declined further even as higher-end retail spending remained resilient. Workers at small businesses tend to earn less than those at large companies, and stock market gains from large public company shares flow mostly to wealthier Americans. Small businesses -- those with up to 500 workers -- employ nearly half the American workforce and represent more than 40% of GDP, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. But their profits are slightly lower than a year ago, per a Bank of America Institute analysis. Net income at S&P 500 companies rose 12.9% from a year earlier in the third quarter.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/1623248/the-economic-divide-between-big-and-small-companies-is-growing?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] As AI Companies Borrow Billions, Debt Investors Grow Wary
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2025-12-26 22:22:01


While stock investors have pushed AI-related shares to repeated highs this year, debt markets are telling a more cautious story as newer AI infrastructure companies find themselves paying significantly elevated interest rates to borrow money. Applied Digital, a data center builder, sold $2.35 billion of debt in November at a 9.25% coupon -- roughly 3.75% above similarly rated companies, or about 70% more in interest costs. The pattern has repeated across several deals.

Wulf Compute, a subsidiary of Bitcoin-miner-turned-data-center-operator Terawulf, raised $3.2 billion in mid-October at 7.75%, well above the 5.5% average yield for similarly rated issuers. Cipher Compute sold $1.7 billion in early November at just over 7%. CoreWeave, which rents data centers and installs computing systems for companies like OpenAI and Meta, raised $1.75 billion in July at 9%. The company's bonds have since fallen to around 90 cents on the dollar, pushing the effective yield above 12% -- nearly double the average for companies at its single-B rating level.

"We just have to be much more pessimistic and not buy into the hype," said Will Smith, a portfolio manager at AllianceBernstein. Construction delays and uncertain demand for AI computing power remain key concerns for lenders who, unlike equity investors, have no upside beyond getting their principal back.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/1737240/as-ai-companies-borrow-billions-debt-investors-grow-wary?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Релиз программы для шифрования текста и файлов Stirlitz
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2025-12-26 22:44:02


Состоялся релиз программы для шифрования текста и файлов Stirlitz. Программа написана на языке С++ и распространяется под лицензией GPLv3. Приложение адаптировано для работы в операционных системах семейства Linux, Windows и Android. Для пользователей Arch Linux в AUR доступен сценарий сборки пакета. Для пользователей Windows доступен экспериментальный инсталлятор. Для пользователей Android доступен экспериментальный пакет в формате apk.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64508

[>] Обновление редактора векторной графики Inkscape 1.4.3
lor.opennet
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2025-12-26 22:44:02


Доступно обновление свободного векторного графического редактора Inkscape 1.4.3. Редактор предоставляет гибкие инструменты для рисования и обеспечивает поддержку чтения и сохранения изображений в форматах SVG, OpenDocument Drawing, DXF, WMF, EMF, sk1, PDF, EPS, PostScript и PNG. Готовые сборки Inkscape подготовлены для Linux (AppImage, ожидается публикация Snap и Flatpak), macOS и Windows.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64509

[>] Indian IT Was Supposed To Die From AI. Instead It's Billing for the Cleanup.
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2025-12-26 23:22:01


Two years after generative AI was supposed to render India's $250 billion IT services industry obsolete, the sector is finding that enterprises still need someone to handle the unglamorous plumbing work that large-scale AI deployment demands. Less than 15% of organizations are meaningfully deploying the new technology, according to investment bank UBS, and Indian IT firms are positioning themselves to capture the preparatory work -- data cleanup, cloud migration, system integration -- that channel checks suggest could take two to three years before enterprise-wide AI becomes feasible.

The financials have held up better than the doomsday predictions suggested. Infosys now calls AI-led volume opportunities a bigger tailwind than the deflation threat, a reversal from 2024, and orderbooks held steady in the third quarter even as pricing pressure filtered through renewals. Infosys expects its orderbook to grow more than 50% this quarter, anchored by an NHS deal worth $1.6 billion over 15 years.

The companies have been restructuring accordingly. TCS cut headcount by 2% and invested in a 1GW data-centre network while acquiring Salesforce advisory firm Coastal Cloud. HCLTech reduced margins by 100 basis points and became one of the first large systems integrators to partner with OpenAI; this week it announced acquisitions of Jaspersoft for $240 million and Belgian firm Wobby to expand agentic AI capabilities.

The bear case for the Indian IT sector assumed that AI would work out of the box. Two years in, it does not.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/1756219/indian-it-was-supposed-to-die-from-ai-instead-its-billing-for-the-cleanup?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] FFmpeg Developer Files DMCA Against Rockchip After Two-Year Wait for License Fix
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2025-12-27 00:22:02


GitHub has disabled Rockchip's Media Process Platform repository after an FFmpeg developer filed a DMCA takedown notice, nearly two years after the open-source project first publicly accused the Chinese chipmaker of license violations. The notice, filed December 18, claims Rockchip copied thousands of lines of code from FFmpeg's libavcodec library -- including decoders for H.265, AV1, and VP9 formats -- stripped the original copyright notices, falsely claimed authorship and redistributed the code under Apache's permissive license rather than the original LGPL.

FFmpeg first called out Rockchip in February 2024 for "blatantly copy and pasting FFmpeg code" into its driver, but the chipmaker's last response suggested no intention to resolve the matter. The DMCA notice requests either removal of the infringing files or restoration of proper attribution and an LGPL-compatible license.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/193244/ffmpeg-developer-files-dmca-against-rockchip-after-two-year-wait-for-license-fix?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] GitHub заблокировал репозиторий Rockchip после жалобы о перелицензировании кода FFmpeg
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2025-12-27 10:44:03


GitHub заблокировал официальный репозиторий китайской компании Rockchip, в котором развивался модуль MPP (Media Process Platform) с прослойкой для доступа к возможностям ускорения обработки видео и изображений на чипах Rockchip. Блокировка произведена на основании действующего в США Закона об авторском праве в цифровую эпоху (DMCA) после жалобы от разработчиков проекта FFmpeg.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64512

[>] Выпуск PorteuX 2.5, дистрибутива на основе Slackware
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2025-12-27 11:44:03


Доступен выпуск дистрибутива PorteuX 2.5, основанного на Slackware и развиваемого под впечатлением от проектов Slax и Porteus. Из особенностей.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64511

[>] Разработчики ОС QNX представили QNX Developer Desktop на основе Xfce и Wayland
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2025-12-27 12:44:03


Представлен предварительный выпуск графической среды разработки QNX Developer Desktop, запускаемой в операционной системе QNX 8.0 и поддерживающей сборку программ для QNX без кросс-компиляции. Предполагается, что QNX Developer Desktop упростит работу новых разработчиков, занимающихся сборкой приложений для QNX, а также портированием программ и библиотек из Linux.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64513

[>] New York To Require Social Media Platforms To Display Mental Health Warnings
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


Social media platforms with infinite scrolling, auto-play and algorithmic feeds will be required to display warning labels about their potential harm to young users' mental health under a new law, New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced on Friday. From a report: "Keeping New Yorkers safe has been my top priority since taking office, and that includes protecting our kids from the potential harms of social media features that encourage excessive use," Hochul said in a statement.

This month Australia imposed a social media ban for children under 16. New York joins states like California and Minnesota that have similar social media laws. The New York law includes platforms that offer "addictive feeds," auto play or infinite scroll, according to the legislation. The law applies to conduct occurring partly or wholly in New York but not when the platform is accessed by users physically outside the state.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/237210/new-york-to-require-social-media-platforms-to-display-mental-health-warnings?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] NASA Chief Says US Will Return To Moon Within Trump's Second Term
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, who was confirmed by the Senate just last week after a turbulent nomination process that stretched across most of 2025, said Friday that the United States will return to the moon within President Donald Trump's second term. Isaacman made the comments during an interview on CNBC, calling Trump's recommitment to lunar exploration key to unlocking what he described as an "orbital economy." He said: "We want to have that opportunity to explore and realize the scientific, economic and national security potential on the moon," he said.

The potential opportunities include establishing space data centers and infrastructure on the moon, as well as mining Helium-3, a rare gas embedded in the lunar surface that could serve as fuel for fusion power. NASA is currently working on its Artemis campaign alongside SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Boeing. Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act allocated $9.9 billion to the agency earlier this year.

The Artemis II mission, NASA's first crewed test flight using the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft, is expected to launch in the near future. SpaceX is contracted to build the lunar landing system for the subsequent Artemis III mission. Isaacman was first nominated by Trump in December 2024 but had his nomination pulled in May over unspecified "prior associations." Trump renominated him in November.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/2339234/nasa-chief-says-us-will-return-to-moon-within-trumps-second-term?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Driverless Future Gains Momentum With Global Robotaxi Deployments
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


The global push to put autonomous taxis on public roads is accelerating as ride-hailing companies and technology firms advance from pilot programs toward limited commercial rollouts in cities across China, the United States, Europe and the Middle East.

WeRide and Uber launched Level 4 fully driverless robotaxi operations in Abu Dhabi in November and began offering robotaxi passenger rides on Uber's platform in Dubai the following month. Amazon's Zoox started offering free rides to select early users in parts of San Francisco in November after launching its autonomous ride-hailing service on the Las Vegas Strip in September. Alphabet's Waymo now operates services in Phoenix, San Francisco, and Los Angeles -- the latter two having launched in June and November 2024 respectively.

Baidu's Apollo Go has been operating without safety drivers in Chongqing and Wuhan since securing permits in August 2022 and has since expanded to Shenzhen and Beijing. Pony.ai launched paid robotaxi services in Guangzhou in February and Shanghai in August. Tesla began a limited paid robotaxi rollout in Austin, Texas in June using Model Y SUVs, though the vehicles still require a safety monitor onboard. The expansion will continue in 2026: Waymo plans to launch an autonomous ride-hailing service in London, and Momenta is preparing a luxury robotaxi service in Abu Dhabi through a partnership with Mercedes-Benz and UAE taxi operator Lumo.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/26/2355244/driverless-future-gains-momentum-with-global-robotaxi-deployments?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Mesh Networks Are About To Escape Apple, Amazon and Google Silos
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


After more than two decades of promises and false starts in the mesh networking space, the smart home standards that Apple, Amazon and Google have each championed are finally set to escape their respective brand silos and work together in a single unified network.

Starting January 1, 2026, Thread 1.4 becomes the Thread Group's only certified standard, bringing a crucial new capability called credential sharing. Devices from different manufacturers can now securely join the same mesh network -- an Amazon Echo Show and an Apple HomePod mini in the same house will both be able to control the same Nanoleaf lightbulb. This marks a significant departure from Thread 1.3, released in 2022, where each brand's mesh network connected only to devices from that same brand.

The Thread Group launched in 2014 as a coalition led by Arm, Google's Nest Labs, and Samsung, later welcoming Apple and Amazon into the fold. Thread 1.4 handles low-power smart home devices and sensors, but homes also need high-bandwidth connections for laptops and phones. Wi-Fi 7 mesh serves that purpose and the Matter protocol acts as a translation layer between the two different mesh networks. Both Wi-Fi 7 and Matter arrived in products on store shelves in 2025.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/002258/mesh-networks-are-about-to-escape-apple-amazon-and-google-silos?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Rocket Crashes in Brazil's First Commercial Launch
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


The first-ever commercial rocket launched at Brazil's Alcantara Space Center crashed soon after liftoff late earlier this week, dealing a blow to Brazilian aerospace ambitions and shares of South Korean satellite launch company Innospace. From a report: The rocket began its vertical trajectory as planned after liftoff [Monday] at 10:13 p.m. local time (0113 GMT) but fell to the ground after something went wrong 30 seconds into its flight, Innospace CEO Kim Soo-jong said in a letter to shareholders.

The craft crashed within a pre-designated safety zone and did not harm anyone, he said. Brazil's air force said firefighters were sent to analyze the wreckage and impact zone. "We are deeply sorry that we failed to meet the expectations of our shareholders who supported our first commercial launch," the CEO wrote in the letter, which was posted on the company's website on December 23.
Innospace shares plunged nearly 29% in Seoul in its biggest daily drop and heaviest daily trading volume since its July 2024 listing.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/010236/rocket-crashes-in-brazils-first-commercial-launch?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Toll Roads Are Spreading in America
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


Toll roads are expanding across the U.S. as the traditional gas tax funding model for highways collapses. Indiana became the first state to authorize tolls on all of its existing interstate highways when Governor Mike Braun signed legislation in June.

The federal gas tax hasn't been raised since 1993. In fiscal 2024, the federal government spent $27 billion more on road maintenance than it collected from fuel taxes, and at state and local levels, fuel taxes covered barely a quarter of road spending. Drivers currently pay to access just 6,300 miles of America's roughly 160,000 miles of highway.

Most tolling projects have enjoyed bipartisan support -- Florida has more toll roads by distance than any other state, and Texas is second. But as Republicans embrace populism, the politics are shifting. In New York, almost all state Republicans fought congestion pricing, and President Donald Trump attempted to shut it down after taking office. Some Republicans now want to buy back pay-to-drive roads and make them free.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0224259/toll-roads-are-spreading-in-america?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Taiwan's iPass Releases Floppy Disk Pre-Paid Cash Card
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


Taiwan's iPass has released a limited-edition prepaid payment card shaped exactly like a 3.5-inch floppy disk. The company, perhaps rightly so, felt the need to include a warning on the product listing: "This product only has a card function and does not have a 3.5mm [sic] disk function, please note before purchasing."

The NFC-enabled novelty card went on sale starting Christmas Eve and comes in black or yellow finishes at 1:1 scale. It works across Taiwan's public transport network -- buses, trains, subways, taxis, and bike rentals -- as well as convenience stores like 7-Eleven and FamilyMart, supermarkets, pharmacies, and fast-food chains including McDonald's and Burger King.

The floppy disk joins an increasingly absurd lineup of iPass form factors. Previous releases have included, Tom's Hardware reports, a Motorola DynaTAC replica, model trains, a flip-flop, an LED-lit Godzilla snow globe, and a blood bag. Taiwan's PCHome24 online store currently lists 838 different iPass card designs. A standard card costs NT$100 (about $3.20) and comes without stored value.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0236249/taiwans-ipass-releases-floppy-disk-pre-paid-cash-card?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Video Call Glitches Evoke Uncanniness, Damage Consequential Life Outcomes
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2025-12-27 19:22:01


Those brief freezes and audio hiccups that plague video calls are not the benign nuisances that most people assume them to be, according to a new study published in Nature that found glitches during virtual interactions can meaningfully damage hiring prospects, reduce trust in healthcare providers and even correlate with lower chances of being granted parole.

Researchers from Columbia, Cornell, and the University of Missouri-Kansas City conducted ten studies examining glitches across thousands of participants and real-world parole hearing transcripts. The core finding is that glitches harm interpersonal judgments because they break the illusion of face-to-face contact, triggering what psychologists call "uncanniness" -- a strange, creepy, or eerie feeling typically associated with humanoid robots or CGI characters that look almost but not quite human.

In one experiment, participants watching a telehealth pitch chose to work with a health professional 77% of the time when no glitches occurred, but only 61% when brief freezes were present. The job interview studies found similar patterns, and when researchers examined 472 Kentucky parole hearings conducted over Zoom, they found that inmates were granted parole 60% of the time in glitch-free hearings versus 48% when transcripts indicated technical problems had occurred.

The researchers ruled out simpler explanations like mere disruption or comprehension difficulties. Glitches inserted during natural pauses in speech -- where no information was lost -- still damaged evaluations. And critically, when participants watched presentations where a shared screen froze rather than a human face, glitches had no effect on judgments at all. The uncanniness only emerged when the technology broke the simulation of sitting across from another person.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0142219/video-call-glitches-evoke-uncanniness-damage-consequential-life-outcomes?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Free Software Foundation Receives 'Historic' Donations Worth Nearly $900K - in Monero
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-27 20:22:01


On Wednesday (Christmas Eve), the Free Software Foundation announced it had received two major contributions totaling around $900,000 USD — in the cryptocurrency Monero.

The two donations "are among some of the largest private gifts ever made to the organization," the FSF said in a statement.

"The donors wish to remain anonymous," according to the FSF's statement:

The organization is in its annual winter fundraising drive, currently at three-quarters of its $400,000 USD winter goal, and will now switch its focus to a member drive thanks in part to these donations...
The donation will support the organization's technical team and infrastructure capacity, as well as strengthen its campaigns, education, licensing, and advocacy initiatives, and future opportunities. The FSF is seeking donations until year-end after which they aim to gain 100 associate members through its year-end fundraising ending January 16.

The FSF's executive director said the donations prove "that software freedom is recognized more and more as a principal issue today, at the core of several other social movements people care about like privacy, ownership, and the right to repair...

"We are proudly supported by a large variety of contributors who care about digital rights. All donations matter, whether $5 or $500,000."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/036241/free-software-foundation-receives-historic-donations-worth-nearly-900k---in-monero?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Should Physicists Study the Question: What is Life?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-27 21:22:01


An astrophysicist at the University of Rochester writes that "many" of his colleagues in physics "have come to believe that a mystery is unfolding in every microbe, animal, and human." And it's a mystery that:

- "Challenges basic assumptions physicists have held for centuries"
- "May even help redefine the field for the next generation"
- "Could answer essential questions about AI."

In short, while physicists have favored a "reductionist" philosophy about the fundamental laws controlling the universe (energy, mattery, space, and time), "long-promised 'theories of everything' such as string theory, have not borne significant fruit:

There are, however, ways other than reductionism to think about what's fundamental in the universe. Beginning in the 1980s, physicists (along with researchers in other fields) began developing new mathematical tools to study what's called "complexity" — systems in which the whole is far more than the sum of its parts. The end goal of reductionism was to explain everything in the universe as the result of particles and their interactions. Complexity, by contrast, recognizes that once lots of particles come together to produce macroscopic things — such as organisms — knowing everything about particles isn't enough to understand reality...

Physicists have always been good at capturing the essential aspects of a system and casting those essentials in the language of mathematics... Now those skills must be brought to bear on an age-old question that is only just getting its proper due: What is life? Using these skills, physicists — working together with representatives of all the other disciplines that make up complexity science — may crack open the question of how life formed on Earth billions of years ago and how it might have formed on the distant alien worlds we can now explore with cutting-edge telescopes. Just as important, understanding why life, as an organized system, is different at a fundamental level from all the other stuff in the universe may help astronomers design new strategies for finding it in places bearing little resemblance to Earth. Analyzing life — no matter how alien — as a self-organizing information-driven system may provide the key to detecting biosignatures on planets hundreds of light-years away.

Closer to home, studying the nature of life is likely essential to fully understanding intelligence — and building artificial versions. Throughout the current AI boom, researchers and philosophers have debated whether and when large language models might achieve general intelligence or even become conscious — or whether, in fact, some already have. The only way to properly assess such claims is to study, by any means possible, the sole agreed-upon source of general intelligence: life. Bringing the new physics of life to problems of AI may not only help researchers predict what software engineers can build; it may also reveal the limits of trying to capture life's essential character in silicon.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/042221/should-physicists-study-the-question-what-is-life?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Japan Votes to Restart Fukushima Nuclear Plant 15 Years After Its Meltdown
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-27 22:22:01


The 2011 meltdown at Fukushima's nuclear plant "was the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986," CNN remembers.

But this week Japanese authorities "have approved a decision to restart the world's biggest nuclear power plant," reports CNN, "which has sat dormant for more than a decade following the Fukushima nuclear disaster."

Despite nerves from many local residents, the Niigata prefectural assembly, home to the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, approved a bill on Monday that clears the way for utility company Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) to restart one of the plant's seven reactors. The company plans to bring the No. 6 reactor back online around January 20, Japan's public broadcaster NHK reported...

Following the [2011] disaster, Japan shut down all 54 of its nuclear power stations including Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, which sits in the coastal and port region of Niigata about 320 kilometers (200 miles) north of Tokyo on Japan's main island of Honshu. Japan has since restarted 14 of the 33 nuclear reactors that remain operable, according to the World Nuclear Association. The Niigata plant will be the first to reopen under the operation of TEPCO, the company that ran the Fukushima Daiichi power station. It has been trying to reassure residents of the restart plan is safe...

About 60-70% of Japan's power generation comes from imported fossil fuels, which cost the country about 10.7 trillion yen ($68 billion) last year alone... Japan is the world's fifth-largest emitter of carbon dioxide, after China, the United States, India and Russia, according to the International Energy Agency. But it has committed to reaching net zero emissions by 2050, and renewable energy was at the center of its latest energy plan published earlier this year, with a push for greater investments in solar and wind. The country's energy demands are also expected to increase in the coming years due to a boom in energy-hungry data centers that power AI infrastructure. To achieve its energy and climate goals, Japan aims to double the share of nuclear power in its electricity mix to 20% by 2040...

On its website, TEPCO said Kashiwazaki-Kariwa had undergone multiple inspections and upgrades and that the company had learned "the lessons of Fukushima." The company said new seawalls and watertight doors would provide "stronger protection against tsunamis" and that mobile generators and more fire trucks would be on hand for "cooling support" in an emergency. It also said the plant now had "upgraded filtering systems designed to control the spread of radioactive materials."

A survey published by the prefecture in October "found 60% of residents did not think conditions for the restart had been met," reports Reuters, adding that "Nearly 70% were worried about TEPCO operating the plant."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0510206/japan-votes-to-restart-fukushima-nuclear-plant-15-years-after-its-meltdown?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Japan Votes to Restart World's Biggest Nuclear Plant 15 Years After Fukushima Meltdown
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-27 23:22:01


The 2011 meltdown at Fukushima's nuclear plant "was the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986," CNN remembers.

But this week Japanese authorities "have approved a decision to restart the world's biggest nuclear power plant," reports CNN, "which has sat dormant for more than a decade following the Fukushima nuclear disaster."

Despite nerves from many local residents, the Niigata prefectural assembly, home to the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, approved a bill on Monday that clears the way for utility company Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) to restart one of the plant's seven reactors. The company plans to bring the No. 6 reactor back online around January 20, Japan's public broadcaster NHK reported...

Following the [2011] disaster, Japan shut down all 54 of its nuclear power stations including Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, which sits in the coastal and port region of Niigata about 320 kilometers (200 miles) north of Tokyo on Japan's main island of Honshu. Japan has since restarted 14 of the 33 nuclear reactors that remain operable, according to the World Nuclear Association. The Niigata plant will be the first to reopen under the operation of TEPCO, the company that ran the Fukushima Daiichi power station. It has been trying to reassure residents of the restart plan is safe...

About 60-70% of Japan's power generation comes from imported fossil fuels, which cost the country about 10.7 trillion yen ($68 billion) last year alone... Japan is the world's fifth-largest emitter of carbon dioxide, after China, the United States, India and Russia, according to the International Energy Agency. But it has committed to reaching net zero emissions by 2050, and renewable energy was at the center of its latest energy plan published earlier this year, with a push for greater investments in solar and wind. The country's energy demands are also expected to increase in the coming years due to a boom in energy-hungry data centers that power AI infrastructure. To achieve its energy and climate goals, Japan aims to double the share of nuclear power in its electricity mix to 20% by 2040...

On its website, TEPCO said Kashiwazaki-Kariwa had undergone multiple inspections and upgrades and that the company had learned "the lessons of Fukushima." The company said new seawalls and watertight doors would provide "stronger protection against tsunamis" and that mobile generators and more fire trucks would be on hand for "cooling support" in an emergency. It also said the plant now had "upgraded filtering systems designed to control the spread of radioactive materials."

A survey published by the prefecture in October "found 60% of residents did not think conditions for the restart had been met," reports Reuters, adding that "Nearly 70% were worried about TEPCO operating the plant."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0510206/japan-votes-to-restart-worlds-biggest-nuclear-plant-15-years-after-fukushima-meltdown?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Open Source Initiative Estimates the 'Top Open Source Licenses in 2025'
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-27 23:22:01


The nonprofit Open Source Initiative offers "enriched" license pages with "relevant metadata to provide deeper insights and better support".

So which pages got the most pageviews in 2025? The MIT license, Apache 2.0 license, BSD licenses (3-clause and 2-clause), and GNU General Public license:

mit
(1.5M)
apache-2-0
(344k)
bsd-3-clause
(214k)
bsd-2-clause
(128k)
gpl-2-0
(76k)
gpl-3-0
(55k)
isc-license-txt
(35k)
lgpl-3-0
(34k)
OFL-1.1
(31k)
lgpl-2-1
(24k) . .

From the Open Source Initiative's announcement:

Please note that these are aggregated pageviews from actual humans along the year of 2025... Actual humans (presumably) because the number of requests by bots or crawlers is several orders of magnitude higher (e.g. requests just for the MIT license are on the range of 10M per month).

We do provide an API service that gives access to the canonical list of OSI Approved Licenses — this is a very new service, which hopefully will be adopted by automated requests from CI/CD pipelines. One final observation is that the number of human pageviews is likely higher because we are using Plausible as our data source and a high percentage of our target audience uses Ad blockers, which by design are not accounted by Plausible. Users from China are also likely undercounted by Plausible for the same reason.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0541200/open-source-initiative-estimates-the-top-open-source-licenses-in-2025?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Статистика по языкам программирования, используемым в экосистеме GNOME
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-27 23:44:03


Опубликована статистика о языках программирования, задействованных в GNOME и приложениях для GNOME. Всего проект насчитывает 6.7 млн строк кода, из которых 1.6 млн приходится на приложения, а 5.1 млн на библиотеки и базовые компоненты GNOME.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64516

[>] Waymo Updates Vehicles to Better Handle Power Outages - But Still Faces Criticism
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 00:22:02


Waymo explained this week that its self-driving car technology is already "designed to handle dark traffic signals," and successfully handled over 7,000 last Saturday during San Francisco's long power outage, properly treating those intersections as four-way stops. But while during the long outage their cars sometimes experienced a "backlog" when waiting for confirmation checks (leading them to freeze in intersections), Waymo said Tuesday they're implementing "fleet-wide updates" to provide their self-driving cars "specific power outage context, allowing it to navigate more decisively."

Ironically, two days later Waymo paused their service again in San Francisco. But this time it was due to a warning from the National Weather Service about a powerful storm bringing the possibility of flash flooding and power outages, reports CNBC. They add that Waymo "didn't immediately respond to a request for comment, or say whether regulators required its service pause on Thursday given the flash flood warnings." And they also note Waymo still faces criticism over last Saturday's incident:

The former CEO of San Francisco's Municipal Transit Authority, Jeffrey Tumlin, told CNBC that regulators and robotaxi companies can take valuable lessons away from the chaos that arose with Waymo vehicles during the PG&E power outages last week. "I think we need to be asking 'what is a reasonable number of [autonomous vehicles] to have on city streets, by time of day, by geography and weather?'" Tumlin said. He also suggested regulators may want to set up a staged system that will allow autonomous vehicle companies to rapidly scale their operations, provided they meet specific tests. One of those tests, he said, would be how quickly a company can get their autonomous vehicles safely out of the way of traffic if they encounter something that is confusing like a four-way intersection with no functioning traffic lights.

Cities and regulators should also seek more data from robotaxi companies about the planned or actual performance of their vehicles during expected emergencies such as blackouts, floods or earthquakes, Tumlin said.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0645206/waymo-updates-vehicles-to-better-handle-power-outages---but-still-faces-criticism?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] NVIDIA Drops Pascal Support On Linux, Causing Chaos On Arch Linux
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 01:22:01


NVIDIA has been "gradually dropping support for older videocards," notes Hackaday, "with the Pascal (GTX 10xx) GPUs most recently getting axed."

"What's more surprising is the terrible way that this is being handled by certain Linux distributions, with Arch Linux currently a prime example.?"

On these systems, updating the OS with a Pascal, Maxwell or similarly unsupported GPU will result in the new driver failing to load and thus the user getting kicked back to the CLI to try and sort things back out there. This issue is summarized by [Brodie Robertson] in a recent video.

"Users with GTX 10xx series and older cards must switch to the legacy proprietary branch to maintain support," explains an announcement on the Arch Linux mailing list. But Hackaday points out that using the legacy option "breaks Steam as it relies on official NVIDIA dependencies, which requires an additional series of hacks to hopefully restore this functionality.

"Fortunately the Arch Wiki provides a starting point on what to do."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://linux.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/0744237/nvidia-drops-pascal-support-on-linux-causing-chaos-on-arch-linux?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Is Russia Developing an Anti-Satellite Weapon to Target Starlink?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 02:22:02


An anonymous reader shared this report from the Associated Press:

Two NATO-nation intelligence services suspect Russia is developing a new anti-satellite weapon to target Elon Musk's Starlink constellation with destructive orbiting clouds of shrapnel, with the aim of reining in Western space superiority that has helped Ukraine on the battlefield. Intelligence findings seen by The Associated Press say the so-called "zone-effect" weapon would seek to flood Starlink orbits with hundreds of thousands of high-density pellets, potentially disabling multiple satellites at once but also risking catastrophic collateral damage to other orbiting systems.

Analysts who haven't seen the findings say they doubt such a weapon could work without causing uncontrollable chaos in space for companies and countries, including Russia and its ally China, that rely on thousands of orbiting satellites for communications, defense and other vital needs. Such repercussions, including risks to its own space systems, could steer Moscow away from deploying or using such a weapon, analysts said. "I don't buy it. Like, I really don't," said Victoria Samson, a space-security specialist at the Secure World Foundation who leads the Colorado-based nongovernmental organization's annual study of anti-satellite systems. "I would be very surprised, frankly, if they were to do something like that." [Later they suggested the research might just be experimental.]

But the commander of the Canadian military's Space Division, Brig. Gen. Christopher Horner, said such Russian work cannot be ruled out in light of previous U.S. allegations that Russia also has been pursuing an indiscriminate nuclear, space-based weapon. "I can't say I've been briefed on that type of system. But it's not implausible," he said... The French military's Space Command said in a statement to the AP that it could not comment on the findings but said, "We can inform you that Russia has, in recent years, been multiplying irresponsible, dangerous, and even hostile actions in space."

The article also points out that this month Russia "said it has fielded a new ground-based missile system, the S-500, which is capable of hitting low-orbit targets..."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/2023253/is-russia-developing-an-anti-satellite-weapon-to-target-starlink?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] New Runtime Standby ABI Proposed for Linux Like Microsoft Windows' 'Modern Standby'
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 03:22:01


Phoronix reports on "an exciting post-Christmas patch series out on the Linux kernel mailing list" proposing "a new runtime standby ABI that is similar in nature to the 'Modern Standby' functionality found with Microsoft Windows..."

Modern Standby is a low-power mode on Windows 11 for letting systems remain connected to the network and appear "sleeping" but will allow for instant wake-up for notifications, music playback, and other functionality. The display is off, the network remains online, and background tasks can wake-up the system if needed with Microsoft Modern Standby...

"This series introduces a new runtime standby ABI to allow firing Modern Standby firmware notifications that modify hardware appearance from userspace without suspending the kernel," [according to the email about the proposed patch series]. "This allows userspace to set the inactivity state of the device so that it looks like it is asleep (e.g., flashing the power button) while still being able to perform basic computations..."

Those interested can see the RFC patch series for the work in its current form, in particular the documentation patch outlines the proposed /sys/power/standby interface.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://linux.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/2053239/new-runtime-standby-abi-proposed-for-linux-like-microsoft-windows-modern-standby?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] NVIDIA отказалась от проприетарной лицензии для Tile IR
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 05:44:04


В качестве рождественского подарка сообществу открытого программного обеспечения NVIDIA сделала открытым промежуточное представление CUDA Tile IR, отказавшись от проприетарной лицензии.

( [ читать дальше... ]( https://www.linux.org.ru/news/opensource/18180483#cut ) )

[>] Опубликован эмулятор архитектуры Эльбрус на основе QEMU
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 05:44:04


МЦСТ выпустила эмулятор QEMU для архитектуры E2K. Теперь программы для Эльбруса можно запускать на компьютерах с архитектурой x86‑64. Это откроет платформу для профессионалов, исследователей и энтузиастов, а также упростит разработчикам сборку и тестирование ПО.

Эмулятор qemu-e2k обеспечивает возможность, используя операционную систему семейства Linux запускать прикладные программы для операционных систем семейства Linux в машинных кодах Эльбрус (e2k) на компьютере архитектуры x86-64.

( [ читать дальше... ]( https://www.linux.org.ru/news/development/18180614#cut ) )

[>] Researchers Show Some Robots Can Be Hijacked Just Through Spoken Commands
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 06:22:01


An anonymous Slashdot reader shared this story from Interesting Engineering:

Cybersecurity specialists from the research group DARKNAVY have demonstrated how modern humanoid robots can be compromised and weaponised through weaknesses in their AI-driven control systems.

In a controlled test, the team demonstrated that a commercially available humanoid robot could be hijacked with nothing more than spoken commands, exposing how voice-based interaction can serve as an attack vector rather than a safeguard, reports Yicaiglobal... Using short-range wireless communication, the hijacked machine transmitted the exploit to another robot that was not connected to the network. Within minutes, this second robot was also taken over, demonstrating how a single breach could cascade through a group of machines. To underline the real-world implications, the researchers issued a hostile command during the demonstration. The robot advanced toward a mannequin on stage and struck it, illustrating the potential for physical harm.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/225211/researchers-show-some-robots-can-be-hijacked-just-through-spoken-commands?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] OpenAI is Hiring a New 'Head of Preparedness' to Predict/Mitigate AI's Harms
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 06:22:01


An anonymous reader shared this report from Engadget:

OpenAI is looking for a new Head of Preparedness who can help it anticipate the potential harms of its models and how they can be abused, in order to guide the company's safety strategy.

It comes at the end of a year that's seen OpenAI hit with numerous accusations about ChatGPT's impacts on users' mental health, including a few wrongful death lawsuits. In a post on X about the position, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman acknowledgedthat the "potential impact of models on mental health was something we saw a preview of in 2025," along with other "real challenges" that have arisen alongside models' capabilities. The Head of Preparedness "is a critical role at an important time," he said.

Per the job listing, the Head of Preparedness (who will make $555K, plus equity), "will lead the technical strategy and execution of OpenAI's Preparedness framework, our framework explaining OpenAI's approach to tracking and preparing for frontier capabilities that create new risks of severe harm."

"These questions are hard," Altman posted on X.com, "and there is little precedent; a lot of ideas that sound good have some real edge cases... This will be a stressful job and you'll jump into the deep end pretty much immediately."

The listing says OpenAI's Head of Preparedness "will lead a small, high-impact team to drive core Preparedness research, while partnering broadly across Safety Systems and OpenAI for end-to-end adoption and execution of the framework." They're looking for someone "comfortable making clear, high-stakes technical judgments under uncertainty."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/25/12/27/2347200/openai-is-hiring-a-new-head-of-preparedness-to-predictmitigate-ais-harms?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Military Planners Dread the Arctic, 'Where Drones Drop Dead and GPS Goes Haywire'
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 09:22:02


An anonymous reader shared this report from the Wall Street Journal:

Sending drones and robots into battle, rather than humans, has become a tenet of modern warfare. Nowhere does that make more sense than in the frozen expanses of the Arctic. But the closer you get to the North Pole, the less useful cutting-edge technology becomes. Magnetic storms distort satellite signals; frigid temperatures drain batteries or freeze equipment in minutes; navigation systems lack reference points on snowfields.
During a seven-nation polar exercise in Canada earlier this year to test equipment worth millions of dollars, the U.S. military's all-terrain arctic vehicles broke down after 30 minutes because hydraulic fluids congealed in the cold. Swedish soldiers participating in the exercise were handed $20,000 night-vision optics that broke because the aluminum in the goggles couldn't handle the minus 40 degree Fahrenheit conditions....

An arctic conflict would force war planners back to basics. Extreme cold makes the most common components brittle. Low temperatures alter the physical properties of rubber, causing seals to lose their elasticity and leak. Traces of water or humidity freeze into ice crystals that can scratch pumps and create blockages. Wires should be insulated with silicone rather than PVC, which can crack. Oil and other lubricants thicken and congeal. In most standard hydraulic systems, fluid becomes syrupy and can affect everything from aircraft controls to missile launchers and radar masts. A single freeze-up can knock out an entire weapons platform or immobilize a convoy.

Even the Aurora Borealis interferes with radio communications and satellite-navigation systems, according to the article.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/0040238/military-planners-dread-the-arctic-where-drones-drop-dead-and-gps-goes-haywire?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Sal Khan: Companies Should Give 1% of Profits To Retrain Workers Displaced By AI
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 13:22:02


"I believe artificial intelligence will displace workers at a scale many people don't yet realize," says Sal Kahn (founder/CEO of the nonprofit Khan Academy). But in an op-ed in the New York Times he also proposes a solution that "could change the trajectory of the lives of millions who will be displaced..."

"I believe that every company benefiting from automation — which is most American companies — should... dedicate 1 percent of its profits to help retrain the people who are being displaced."

This isn't charity. It is in the best interest of these companies. If the public sees corporate profits skyrocketing while livelihoods evaporate, backlash will follow — through regulation, taxes or outright bans on automation. Helping retrain workers is common sense, and such a small ask that these companies would barely feel it, while the public benefits could be enormous...

Roughly a dozen of the world's largest corporations now have a combined profit of over a trillion dollars each year. One percent of that would create a $10 billion annual fund that, in part, could create a centralized skill training platform on steroids: online learning, ways to verify skills gained and apprenticeships, coaching and mentorship for tens of millions of people. The fund could be run by an independent nonprofit that would coordinate with corporations to ensure that the skills being developed are exactly what are needed. This is a big task, but it is doable; over the past 15 years, online learning platforms have shown that it can be done for academic learning, and many of the same principles apply for skill training.

"The problem isn't that people can't work," Khan writes in the essay. "It's that we haven't built systems to help them continue learning and connect them to new opportunities as the world changes rapidly."

To meet the challenges, we don't need to send millions back to college. We need to create flexible, free paths to hiring, many of which would start in high school and extend through life. Our economy needs low-cost online mechanisms for letting people demonstrate what they know. Imagine a model where capability, not how many hours students sit in class, is what matters; where demonstrated skills earn them credit and where employers recognize those credits as evidence of readiness to enter an apprenticeship program in the trades, health care, hospitality or new categories of white-collar jobs that might emerge...

There is no shortage of meaningful work — only a shortage of pathways into it.

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

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/023202/sal-khan-companies-should-give-1-of-profits-to-retrain-workers-displaced-by-ai?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Уязвимости в GnuPG, позволяющие обойти верификацию и выполнить свой код
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 14:44:03


На проходящей в Германии конференции 39C3 (Chaos Communication Congress) раскрыты детали о 12 ранее неизвестных и остающихся неисправленными (0-day) уязвимостях в инструментарии GnuPG (GNU Privacy Guard), предоставляющем совместимые со стандартами OpenPGP и S/MIME утилиты для шифрования данных, работы с электронными подписями, управления ключами и доступа к публичным хранилищам ключей. Наиболее опасные уязвимости позволяют обойти проверку по цифровой подписи и добиться выполнения кода при обработке шифрованных данных в ASCII-представлении (ASCII Armor). Рабочие прототипы эксплоитов и патчи обещают опубликовать позднее. CVE-идентификаторы пока не присвоены.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64517

[>] Is Dark Energy Weakening?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 17:22:02


An anonymous reader shared this report from the BBC:

There is growing controversy over recent evidence suggesting that a mysterious force known as dark energy might be changing in a way that challenges our current understanding of time and space. An analysis by a South Korean team has hinted that, rather than the Universe continuing to expand, galaxies could be pulled back together by gravity, ending in what astronomers call a "Big Crunch".

The scientists involved believe that they may be on the verge of one of the biggest discoveries in astronomy for a generation. Other astronomers have questioned these findings, but these critics have not been able to completely dismiss the South Korean team's assertions...

The controversy began in March with unexpected results from an instrument on a telescope in the Arizona desert called the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (Desi)... The data hinted that acceleration of the galaxies had changed over time, something not in line with the standard picture, according to Prof Ofer Lehav of University College London, who is involved with the Desi project. "Now with this changing dark energy going up and then down, again, we need a new mechanism. And this could be a shake up for the whole of physics," he says. Then in November the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) published research from a South Korean team that seems to back the view that the weirdness of dark energy is weirder still.

Prof Young Wook Lee of Yonsei University in Seoul and his team went back to the kind of supernova data that first revealed dark energy 27 years ago. Instead of treating these stellar explosions as having one standard brightness, they adjusted for the ages of the galaxies they came from and worked out how bright the supernovas really were. This adjustment showed that not only had dark energy changed over time, but, shockingly, that the acceleration was slowing down... If, as Prof Lee's results suggest, the force that is pushing galaxies away from each other — dark energy — is weakening, then one possibility is that it becomes so weak that gravity begins to pull the galaxies back together.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/0234206/is-dark-energy-weakening?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Challenges Face European Governments Pursuing 'Digital Sovereignty'
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 20:22:01


The Register reports on challenges facing Europe's pursuit of "digital sovereignty":

The US CLOUD Act of 2018 allows American authorities to compel US-based technology companies to provide requested data, regardless of where that data is stored globally. This places European organizations in a precarious position, as it directly clashes with Europe's own stringent privacy regulation, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)... Furthermore, these warrants often come with a gag order, legally prohibiting the provider from informing their customer that their data has been accessed. This renders any contractual clauses requiring transparency or notification effectively meaningless. While technical measures like encryption are often proposed as a solution, their effectiveness depends entirely on who controls the encryption keys. If the US provider manages the keys, as is common in many standard cloud services, they can be forced to decrypt the data for authorities, making such safeguards moot....

American hyperscalers have recognized the market demand for sovereignty and now aggressively market 'sovereign cloud' solutions, typically by placing datacenters on European soil or partnering with local operators. Critics call this 'sovereignty washing'... [Cristina Caffarra, a competition economistand driving force behind the Eurostack initiative] warns that this does not resolve the fundamental problem. "A company subject to the extraterritorial laws of the United States cannot be considered sovereign for Europe," she says. "That simply doesn't work." Because, as long as the parent company is American, it remains subject to the CLOUD Act...

Even when organizations make deliberate choices in favour of European providers, those decisions can be undone by market forces. A recent acquisition in the Netherlands illustrates this risk. In November 2025, the American IT services giant Kyndryl announced its intention to acquire Solvinity, a Dutch managed cloud provider. This came as an "unpleasant surprise" to several of its government clients, including the municipality of Amsterdam and the Dutch Ministry of Justice and Security. These bodies had specifically chosen Solvinity to reduce their dependence on American firms and mitigate CLOUD Act risks.

Still, The Register provides several examples of government systems that are "taking concrete steps to regain control over their IT."

Austria's Federal Ministry for Economy, Energy and Tourism now has 1,200 employees on the European open-source collaboration platform Nextcloud, leading several other Austrian ministries to also implement Nextcloud. (The Ministry's CISO tells the Register "We can see our input in Nextcloud releases. That is a feeling we never had with Microsoft.")
France's Ministry of Economics and Finance recently completed NUBO (which the Register describes as "an OpenStack-based private cloud initiative designed to handle sensitive data and services.")

In November the International Criminal Court in The Hague announced it was replacing its Microsoft office software with a European alternative.

The German state of Schleswig-Holstein is replacing Microsoft products with open-source alternatives for 30,000 civil servants

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

[ Read more of this story ]( https://yro.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/0642206/challenges-face-european-governments-pursuing-digital-sovereignty?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] How Will Rising RAM Prices Affect Laptop Companies?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 21:22:01


Laptop makers are facing record-setting memory prices next year. The site Notebookcheck catalogs how different companies are responding:

Sources told [Korean business newspaper] Chosun Biz that some manufacturers have signed preliminary contracts with Samsung, Micron, and SK Hynix. Even so, it won't prevent DDR5 RAM prices from soaring 45% higher by the end of 2026.... Before the memory shortage, PC sales had been on the upswing in part because of forced Windows 11 upgrades. That trend will likely reverse in 2026, as buyers avoid Lenovo laptops and alternatives from its rivals.

Realizing a slowdown in purchases is inevitable, postponed launches are one potential outcome. Other manufacturers, including Dell and Framework have already announced impending price hikes... [The article also cites reports that one laptop manufacturer "plans to raise the prices of high-end models by as much as 30%."] U.S.-based Maingear now encourages customers to mail in their own modules to complete custom builds. Yet, without recycling parts from older systems, that won't result in significant savings for consumers.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/0524219/how-will-rising-ram-prices-affect-laptop-companies?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Google's 'AI Overview' Wrongly Accused a Musician of Being a Sex Offender
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 22:22:01


An anonymous reader shared this report from the CBC:

Cape Breton fiddler Ashley MacIsaac says he may have been defamed by Google after it recently produced an AI-generated summary falsely identifying him as a sex offender. The Juno Award-winning musician said he learned of the online misinformation last week after a First Nation north of Halifax confronted him with the summary and cancelled a concert planned for Dec. 19. "You are being put into a less secure situation because of a media company — that's what defamation is," MacIsaac said in a telephone interview with The Canadian Press, adding he was worried about what might have happened had the erroneous content surfaced while he was trying to cross an international border...

The 50-year-old virtuoso fiddler said he later learned the inaccurate claims were taken from online articles regarding a man in Atlantic Canada with the same last name... [W]hen CBC News reached him by phone on Christmas Eve, he said he'd already received queries from law firms across the country interested in taking it on pro bono.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/035234/googles-ai-overview-wrongly-accused-a-musician-of-being-a-sex-offender?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Up Next for Arduino After Qualcomm Acquisition: High-Performance Computing
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-28 23:22:02


Even after its acquisition by Qualcomm, the EFF believes Arduino "isn't imposing any new bans on tinkering with or reverse engineering Arduino boards," (according to Mitch Stoltz, EFF director for competition and IP litigation). While Adafruit's managing editor Phillip Torrone had claimed to 36,000+ followers on LinkedIn that Arduino users were now "explicitly forbidden from reverse engineering," Arduino corrected him in a blog post, noting that clause in their Terms & Conditions was only for Arduino's Software-as-a-Service cloud applications. "Anything that was open, stays open."

And this week EE Times spoke to Guneet Bedi, SVP of Arduino, "who was unequivocal in saying that Arduino's governance structure had remained intact even after the acquisition."
"As a business unit within Qualcomm, Arduino continues to make independent decisions on its product portfolio, with no direction imposed on where it should or should not go," Bedi said. "Everything that Arduino builds will remain open and openly available to developers, with design engineers, students and makers continuing to be the primary focus.... Developers who had mastered basic embedded workflows were now asking how to run large language models at the edge and work with artificial intelligence for vision and voice, with an open source mindset," he said. According to Bedi, this was where Qualcomm's technology became relevant. "Qualcomm's chipsets are high performance while also being very low power, which comes from their mobile and Android phone heritage. Despite being great technology, it is not easily accessible to design engineers because of cost and complexity. That made this a strong fit," he said.

The most visible outcome of this acquisition is Uno Q, which Bedi described as being comparable to a mid-tier Android phone in capability, starting at a price of $44. For Arduino, this marked a shift beyond microcontrollers without abandoning them. "At the end of the day, we have not gone away from our legacy," Bedi said. "You still have a real-time microcontroller, and you still write code the way Arduino developers are used to. What we added is compute, without forcing people to change how they work." Uno Q combines a Linux-based compute system with a real-time microcontroller from the STM32 family. "You do not need two different development environments or two different hardware platforms," Bedi added... Rather than introducing a customized operating system, Arduino chose standard Debian upstream. "We are not locking developers into anything," Bedi said. "It is standard Debian, completely open...." Pre-built models covering tasks like object detection and voice recognition run locally on the board....

While the first reference design uses Qualcomm silicon, Bedi was careful to stress that this does not define the roadmap. "There is zero dependency on Qualcomm silicon," he said. "The architecture is portable. Tomorrow, we can run this on something else." That distinction matters, particularly for developers wary of vendor lock-in following the acquisition. Uno Q does compete directly with platforms like Raspberry Pi and Nvidia Jetson, but Bedi framed the difference less in terms of raw performance and more in flexibility. "When you build on those platforms, you are locked to the board," he said. "Here, you can build a prototype, and if you like it, you can also get access to the chip and design your own hardware." With built-in storage removing the need for external components, Uno Q positions itself less as a faster board and more as a way to simplify what had become an increasingly messy development stack...

Looking a year ahead, Bedi believes developers should experience continuity rather than disruption. The familiar Arduino approach to embedded and real-time systems remains unchanged, while extending naturally into more compute-intensive applications... Taken together, Bedi's comments suggest that Arduino's post-acquisition direction is less about changing what Arduino is, and more about expanding what it can realistically be used for, without abandoning the simplicity that made it relevant in the first place.

"We want to redefine prototyping in the age of physical artificial intelligence," Bedi said...

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/1855208/up-next-for-arduino-after-qualcomm-acquisition-high-performance-computing?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Texas Father Rescues Kidnapped 15-Year-Old Daughter After Tracking Her Phone's Location
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-29 00:22:01


An anonymous reader shared this report from The Guardian:

A Texas father used the parental controls on his teenage daughter's cell phone to find and help rescue her after she was kidnapped at knifepoint while walking her dog on Christmas, authorities allege... Her father subsequently located her phone through the device's parental controls, the agency's statement said. The phone was about 2 miles (3.2km) away from him in a secluded, partly wooded area in neighboring Harris county... She then managed to escape with a hand from her father, who called law enforcement officials, said the statement from the Montgomery sheriff's office.

The suspect has since been
arrested and charged.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/197250/texas-father-rescues-kidnapped-15-year-old-daughter-after-tracking-her-phones-location?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Did Tim Cook Post AI Slop in His Christmas Message Promoting 'Pluribus'?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-29 01:22:02


Artist Keith Thomson is a modern (and whimsical) Edward Hopper. And Apple TV says he created the "festive artwork" shared on X by Apple CEO Tim Cook on Christmas Eve, "made on MacBook Pro."

Its intentionally-off picture of milk and cookies was meant to tease the season finale of Pluribus. ("Merry Christmas Eve, Carol..." Cook had posted.)

But others were convinced that the weird image was AI-generated.

Tech blogger John Gruber was blunt. "Tim Cook posts AI Slop in Christmas message on Twitter/X, ostensibly to promote 'Pluribus'."

As for sloppy details, the carton is labeled both "Whole Milk" and "Lowfat Milk", and the "Cow Fun Puzzle" maze is just goofily wrong. (I can't recall ever seeing a puzzle of any kind on a milk carton, because they're waxy and hard to write on. It's like a conflation of milk cartons and cereal boxes.)

Tech author Ben Kamens — who just days earlier had blogged about generating mazes with AI — said the image showed the "specific quirks" of generative AI mazes (including the way the maze couldn't be solved, expect by going around the maze altogether). Former Google Ventures partner M.G. Siegler even wondered if AI use intentionally echoed the themes of Pluribus — e.g., the creepiness of a collective intelligence — since otherwise "this seems far too obvious to be a mistake/blunder on Apple's part." (Someone on Reddit pointed out that in Pluribus's dystopian world, milk plays a key role — and the open spout of the "natural" milk's carton does touch a suspiciously-shining light on the Christmas tree...)

Slashdot contacted artist Keith Thomson to try to ascertain what happened...

[ Read more of this story ]( https://apple.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/2048225/did-tim-cook-post-ai-slop-in-his-christmas-message-promoting-pluribus?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] 'No Happy Ending for Movie Theatres', Argues WSJ - No Matter Who Wins Warner Bros.
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-29 03:22:01


Regardless of who ends up owning Warners Bros., "the outlook for theatrical movies is dimming," writes a Wall Street Journal tech columnist, noting that this year's U.S. box office of $8.3 billion (as of December 25) "is a bit below last year's and well below prepandemic levels of around $11 billion."

Warner has historically been one of Hollywood's largest producers of theatrical films, averaging about 22 releases annually in the pre-Covid years of 2015 to 2019, according to data from Comscore. Its franchises include "Harry Potter," the DC Comics characters and "Lord of the Rings." But the current bidding war between Netflix and Paramount Skydance means Warner's future will ultimately be in the hands of either a streaming giant with a longstanding distaste for movie theaters, or a rival studio that will carry a sky-high debt load and therefore a need to sharply cut costs... [Though later the article cites a Wedbush analyst's observation that the current theatrical slate has already been negotiated through 2029, "so any buyer would have to honor those contracts" with theatrical releases for Warner films "for at least the next four years."]

Investors seem deeply skeptical. Cinemark shares have shed about 18% of their value over the past month, while rival exhibitor AMC Entertainment is down more than 30%. Morgan Stanley recently downgraded Cinemark to a neutral rating, with analyst Ben Swinburne noting that concern over Netflix's commitment to theatrical distribution and release windows "is likely to cap the multiple" on Cinemark's stock.... [T]ime hasn't been on the side of movie theaters for a while now, and a takeover of Warner Bros. won't turn back that clock.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/2238219/no-happy-ending-for-movie-theatres-argues-wsj---no-matter-who-wins-warner-bros?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] There Was Some Good News on Green Energy in 2025
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2025-12-29 04:22:02


Yes, greenhouse gas emissions kept rising in 2025, writes Bloomberg (alternate URL here). And the pledges of various governments to lower greenhouse gases "are nowhere near where they need to be to avoid catastrophic climate change..."

But in 2025, "there were silver linings too."

The world is decarbonizing faster than was expected 10 years ago and investment into the clean energy transition, including everything from wind and solar to batteries and grids, is expected to have reached a new record of $2.2 trillion globally in 2025, according to research by the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit, a London nonprofit. "Is this enough to keep us safe? No it clearly isn't," said Gareth Redmond-King, international lead at the ECIU. "Is it remarkable progress compared to where we were headed? Clearly it is...." Global investment in clean tech far outpaced what went into polluting industries. For every $1 funding fossil fuel projects, $2 went into clean power, according to the ECIU. For China, the EU, the U.S. and India, the four largest polluters, it was $2.60.

Funds flowing into renewable power set another record in the first half of this year and were up 10% compared to the same period in 2024, to $386 billion, according to the latest available research by BloombergNEF. Solar and wind grew fast enough to meet all new electricity demand globally in the first three quarters of 2025, according to UK-based energy think tank Ember. That means renewable capacity is set to hit a new record globally this year, with Ember forecasting an 11% increase from 2024. Over the last three years, renewable capacity grew by nearly 30% on average. That puts the world within reach of the goal set at COP 28 in Dubai in 2023 to triple clean power by 2030. China is leading the charge, with the world's largest polluter expected to have delivered 66% of new solar capacity, and 69% of new wind globally this year, according to Ember. Renewables also advanced in parts of Asia, Europe and South America.

The explosive power demand from artificial intelligence is also turning the tide on green technology investment, which had soured in recent years. For the first three quarters of this year, global clean tech investment, which was dominated by funding in next-generation nuclear reactors, renewables and other solutions that help power data centers, has already surpassed all of 2024. That marks the sector's first annual increase since the 2022 peak. And despite President Trump's rollback of climate policies, the S&P's main gauge tracking clean energy is up about 50% this year, outperforming most other stock indexes and even gold. That same enthusiasm has also helped channel more capital into developing and upgrading the power grid, a backbone of the global energy transition.

The article also notes that prices per kilowatt-hour of battery capacity "fell by 8% to a record $108 this year and they're expected to decline a further 3% next year, according to BloombergNEF."

And this year the International Court of Justice "determined that countries risk being in violation of international law if they don't work toward keeping global warming to the 1.5C threshold agreed on at the Paris climate conference in 2015."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/28/2329200/there-was-some-good-news-on-green-energy-in-2025?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

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