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[>] Бета выпуск KDE Plasma 6.6 и начало разработки KDE Plasma 6.7
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-17 21:44:02


Опубликован очередной еженедельный отчёт о разработке KDE, в котором представлена первая порция изменений для ветки KDE Plasma 6.7, релиз которой ожидается в июне. Развитие новой ветки началось после перевода ветки KDE Plasma 6.6 на стадию бета-тестирования и заморозке связанной с ней кодовой базы от внесения функциональных изменений (допускается только приём исправлений). Релиз KDE Plasma 6.6 намечен на 17 февраля.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64630

[>] What Happened After Security Researchers Found 60 Flock Cameras Livestreaming to the Internet
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-17 22:22:01


A couple months ago, YouTuber Benn Jordan "found vulnerabilities in some of Flock's license plate reader cameras," reports 404 Media's Jason Koebler. "He reached out to me to tell me he had learned that some of Flock's Condor cameras were left live-streaming to the open internet."

This led to a remarkable article where Koebler confirmed the breach by visiting a Flock surveillance camera mounted on a California traffic signal. ("On my phone, I am watching myself in real time as the camera records and livestreams me — without any password or login — to the open internet... Hundreds of miles away, my colleagues are remotely watching me too through the exposed feed.")

Flock left livestreams and administrator control panels for at least 60 of its AI-enabled Condor cameras around the country exposed to the open internet, where anyone could watch them, download 30 days worth of video archive, and change settings, see log files, and run diagnostics. Unlike many of Flock's cameras, which are designed to capture license plates as people drive by, Flock's Condor cameras are pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras designed to record and track people, not vehicles. Condor cameras can be set to automatically zoom in on people's faces... The exposure was initially discovered by YouTuber and technologist Benn Jordan and was shared with security researcher Jon "GainSec" Gaines, who recently found numerous vulnerabilities in several other models of Flock's automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras.
Jordan appeared this week as a guest on Koebler's own YouTube channel, while Jordan released a video of his own about the experience. titled "We Hacked Flock Safety Cameras in under 30 Seconds." (Thanks to Slashdot reader beadon for sharing the link.) But together Jordan and 404 Media also created another video three weeks ago titled "The Flock Camera Leak is Like Netflix for Stalkers" which includes footage he says was "completely accessible at the time Flock Safety was telling cities that the devices are secure after they're deployed."

The video decries cities "too lazy to conduct their own security audit or research the efficacy versus risk," but also calls weak security "an industry-wide problem." Jordan explains in the video how he "very easily found the administration interfaces for dozens of Flock safety cameras..." — but also what happened next:

None of the data or video footage was encrypted. There was no username or password required. These were all completely public-facing, for the world to see.... Making any modification to the cameras is illegal, so I didn't do this. But I had the ability to delete any of the video footage or evidence by simply pressing a button. I could see the paths where all of the evidence files were located on the file system...

During and after the process of
conducting that research and making that
video, I was visited by the police and
had what I believed to be private
investigators outside my home
photographing me and my property and
bothering my neighbors. John Gaines or
GainSec, the brains behind most of this
research, lost employment within 48
hours of the video being released. And
the sad reality is that I don't view
these things as consequences or
punishment for researching security
vulnerabilities. I view these as
consequences and punishment for doing it
ethically and transparently.

I've been
contacted by people on or communicating
with civic councils who found my videos
concerning, and they shared Flock
Safety's response with me. The company
claimed that the devices in my video did
not reflect the security standards of
the ones being publicly deployed. The
CEO even posted on LinkedIn and boasted
about Flock Safety's security policies.
So, I formally and publicly offered to
personally fund security research into
Flock Safety's deployed ecosystem. But
the law prevents me from touching their
live devices. So, all I needed was their
permission so I wouldn't get arrested.
And I was even willing to let them
supervise this research.

I got no
response.

So instead, he read Flock's official response to a security/surveillance industry research group — while standing in front of one of their security cameras, streaming his reading to the public internet.

"Might as well. It's my tax dollars that paid for it."

" 'Flock is committed to continuously improving security...'"

[ Read more of this story ]( https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/0718211/what-happened-after-security-researchers-found-60-flock-cameras-livestreaming-to-the-internet?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] NASA Livestreams the Rocket That Will Carry Four Astronauts Around the Moon
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-17 23:22:01


"A mega rocket set to take astronauts around the Moon for the first time in decades is being taken to its launch pad," the BBC reported this morning.

NASA is livestreaming their move of the 11-million-pound "stack" — which includes the Artemis II Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and the Orion spacecraft secured to it, all standing on its Mobile Launch Platform. Travelling at less than 1 mile per hour, the move is expected to take 12 hours.

The mission — which could blast off as soon as 6 February — is expected to take 10 days. It is part of a wider plan aimed at returning astronauts to the lunar surface.

As well as the rocket being ready, the Moon has to be in the right place too, so successive launch windows are selected accordingly. In practice, this means one week at the beginning of each month during which the rocket is pointed in the right direction followed by three weeks where there are no launch opportunities. The potential launch dates are:
— 6, 7, 8, 10 and 11 February BR>
— 6, 7, 8, 9 and 11 March BR>
— 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6 April

"The crew of four will travel beyond the far side of the moon, which could set a new record for the farthest distance humans have ever traveled from Earth, currently held by Apollo 13," reports CNN:

But why won't Artemis II land on the lunar surface? "The short answer is because it doesn't have the capability. This is not a lunar lander," said Patty Casas Horn, deputy lead for Mission Analysis and Integrated Assessments at NASA. "Throughout the history of NASA, everything that we do is a bit risky, and so we want to make sure that that risk makes sense, and only accept the risk that we have to accept, within reason. So we build out a capability, then we test it out, then we build out a capability, then we test it out. And we will get to landing on the moon, but Artemis II is really about the crew..."
The upcoming flight is the first time that people will be on board the Artemis spacecraft: The Orion capsule will carry the astronauts around the moon, and the SLS rocket will launch Orion into Earth orbit before the crew continues deeper into space... The mission will begin with two revolutions around Earth, before starting the translunar injection — the maneuver that will take the spacecraft out of Earth orbit and on toward the moon — about 26 hours into the flight, Horn said. "That's when we set up for the big burn — it's about six minutes in duration. And once we do this, you're on your way back to Earth. There's nothing else that you need to do. You're going to go by the moon, and the moon's gravity is going to pull you around and swing you back towards the Earth...." Avoiding entering lunar orbit keeps the mission profile simpler, allowing the crew to focus on other tasks as there is no need to pilot the spacecraft in any way.

"The Artemis program's first planned lunar lander is called the Starship HLS, or Human Landing System, and is currently under development by SpaceX..."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/1828213/nasa-livestreams-the-rocket-that-will-carry-four-astronauts-around-the-moon?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Dozens of US Colleges Close as Falling Birth Rate Pushes Them Off Enrollment Cliff
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 00:22:02


A new article from Bloomberg says dozens of America's colleges "succumbed to a fundamental problem killing colleges across the US: not enough students. The schools will award their final degrees this spring, stranding students not yet ready to graduate and forcing faculty and staff to hunt for new jobs."

The country's tumbling birth rate is pushing schools toward a "demographic cliff," where a steadily dropping population of people in their late teens and early 20s will leave desks and classrooms empty. Many smaller, lesser-known schools like Cazenovia have already hit the precipice. They're firing professors, paring back liberal arts courses in favor of STEM — or closing altogether. Others will likely reach the cliff in the next few years... [T]the US birth rate ticked upward slightly before the 2008 financial crisis, and that brief demographic boost has kept enrollment at larger schools afloat. But the nationwide pool of college-aged Americans is expected to shrink after 2025. Schools face the risk that each incoming class could be smaller than the last. The financial pressure will be relentless...

Since 2020, more than 40 schools have announced plans to close, displacing students and faculty and leaving host towns without a key economic engine... Close to 400 schools could vanish in the coming decade, according to Huron Consulting Group. The projected closures and mergers will impact around 600,000 students and redistribute about $18 billion in endowment funds, Huron estimates... Pennsylvania State University, citing falling enrollment at many of its regional branches, plans to shutter seven of its 20 branch campuses after the spring 2027 semester... [C]ampuses in far-flung places, without brand recognition, are falling out of favor with students already questioning the value of a college degree. For example, while Penn State's flagship University Park campus saw enrollment grow 5% from 2014 to 2024, 12 other Penn State campuses recorded a 35% drop, according to a report tasked with determining whether closures were necessary.

The article notes that "Less than half of students whose schools shut down before they graduate re-enroll in another college or university, according to a 2022 study."

But even at colleges that remain, "The shrinking supply of students has already sparked a frenzied competition for high school seniors..."

Some public institutions are letting seniors bypass traditional requirements like essays and letters of recommendation to gain entry automatically... Direct-admission programs, which allow students to skip traditional applications, are one potential response. Some 15 states have them, according to Taylor Odle, assistant professor of educational policy studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He found in a 2022 paper that direct admissions increased first-year undergrad enrollment by 4% to 8%... And they don't require nearly as many paid staff to run, since there are no essays or letters of recommendation to read.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/089219/dozens-of-us-colleges-close-as-falling-birth-rate-pushes-them-off-enrollment-cliff?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Two More Offshore Wind Projects in the US Allowed to Continue Construction
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 01:22:02


Friday a federal judge "cleared U.S. power company Dominion Energy to resume work on its Virginia offshore wind project." But a U.S. federal judge also ruled Thursday that another major offshore wind farm is allowed to resume construction, reports the Hill. "The project, which would supply power to New York, was one of five that were halted by the Trump administration in December...."

In fact, there were three different court rulings this week each allowing construction to continue on a U.S. wind project:

Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, granted a preliminary injunction allowing Empire Wind to keep building... Another, Revolution Wind, was also allowed to move forward in court this week... The project would provide enough power for up to 500,000 homes, according to its website. The court's decision allows construction to resume while the underlying case against the Trump order plays out.

Meanwhile, power company Orsted "is also suing over the pause of its Sunrise Wind project for New York," reports the Associated Press, "with a hearing still to be set."

The fifth paused project is Vineyard Wind, under construction in Massachusetts. Vineyard Wind LLC, a joint venture between Avangrid and Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, joined the rest of the developers in challenging the administration on Thursday.

CNN points out that the Vineyard Wind project "has been allowed to send power to the grid even amid Trump's suspension, a spokesperson for regional grid operator ISO-New England told CNN in an email."

Residential customers in the mid-Atlantic region, including Virginia, desperately need more energy to service the skyrocketing demand from data centers â" and many are seeing spiking energy bills while they wait for new power to be brought online.

CNN notes that president Trump said last week "My goal is to not let any windmill be built; they're losers."

The Associated Press adds that "In contrast to the halted action in the US, the global offshore wind market is growing, with China leading the world in new installations. Nearly all of the new electricity added to the grid in 2024 was renewable. The British government said on Wednesday it had secured a record 8.4 gigawatts of offshore wind in Europe's largest offshore wind auction, enough clean electricity to power more than 12m homes."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/0444252/two-more-offshore-wind-projects-in-the-us-allowed-to-continue-construction?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] To Pressure Security Professionals, Mandiant Releases Database That Cracks Weak NTLM Passwords in 12 Hours
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 02:22:01


Ars Technica reports:

Security firm Mandiant [part of Google Cloud] has released a database that allows any administrative password protected by Microsoft's NTLM.v1 hash algorithm to be hacked in an attempt to nudge users who continue using the deprecated function despite known weaknesses.... a precomputed table of hash values linked to their corresponding plaintext. These generic tables, which work against multiple hashing schemes, allow hackers to take over accounts by quickly mapping a stolen hash to its password counterpart... Mandiant said it had released an NTLMv1 rainbow table that will allow defenders and researchers (and, of course, malicious hackers, too) to recover passwords in under 12 hours using consumer hardware costing less than $600 USD. The table is hosted in Google Cloud. The database works against Net-NTLMv1 passwords, which are used in network authentication for accessing resources such as SMB network sharing.

Despite its long- and well-known susceptibility to easy cracking, NTLMv1 remains in use in some of the world's more sensitive networks. One reason for the lack of action is that utilities and organizations in industries, including health care and industrial control, often rely on legacy apps that are incompatible with more recently released hashing algorithms. Another reason is that organizations relying on mission-critical systems can't afford the downtime required to migrate. Of course, inertia and penny-pinching are also causes.

"By releasing these tables, Mandiant aims to lower the barrier for security professionals to demonstrate the insecurity of Net-NTLMv1," Mandiant said. "While tools to exploit this protocol have existed for years, they often required uploading sensitive data to third-party services or expensive hardware to brute-force keys."

"Organizations that rely on Windows networking aren't the only laggards," the article points out. "Microsoft only announced plans to deprecate NTLMv1 last August."

Thanks to Slashdot reader joshuark for sharing the news.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/194230/to-pressure-security-professionals-mandiant-releases-database-that-cracks-weak-ntlm-passwords-in-12-hours?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Predator Spyware Turns Failed Attacks Into Intelligence For Future Exploits
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 03:22:01


In December 2024 the Google Threat Intelligence Group published research on the code of the commercial spyware "Predator". But there's now been new research by Jamf (the company behind a mobile device management solution) showing Predator is more dangerous and sophisticated than we realized, according to SecurityWeek.

Long-time Slashdot reader wiredmikey writes:

The new research reveals an error taxonomy that reports exactly why deployments fail, turning black boxes into diagnostic events for threat actors. Almost exclusively marketed to and used by national governments and intelligence agencies, the spyware also detects cybersecurity tools, suppresses forensics evidence, and has built-in geographic restrictions.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/2150219/predator-spyware-turns-failed-attacks-into-intelligence-for-future-exploits?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] 2026's Breakthrough Technologies? MIT Technology Review Chooses Sodium-ion Batteries, Commercial Space Stations
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 04:22:01


As 2026 begins, MIT Technology Review publishes "educated guesses" on emerging technologies that will define the future, advances "we think will drive progress or incite the most change — for better or worse — in the years ahead."

This year's list includes next-gen nuclear, gene-editing drugs (as well as the "resurrection" of ancient genes from extinct creatures), and three AI-related developments: AI companions, AI coding tools, and "mechanistic interpretability" for revealing LLM decision-making.

But also on the list is sodium-ion batteries, "a cheaper, safer alternative to lithium."

Backed by major players and public investment, they're poised to power grids and affordable EVs worldwide. [Chinese battery giant CATL claims to have already started manufacturing sodium-ion batteries at scale, and BYD also plans a massive production facility for sodium-ion batteries.] The most significant impact of sodium-Âion technology may be not on our roads but on our power grids. Storing clean energy generated by solar and wind has long been a challenge. Sodium-ion batteries, with their low cost, enhanced thermal stability, and long cycle life, are an attractive alternative. Peak Energy, a startup in the US, is already deploying grid-scale sodium-ion energy storage. Sodium-ion cells' energy density is still lower than that of high-end lithium-ion ones, but it continues to improve each year — and it's already sufficient for small passenger cars and logistics vehicles.

And another "breakthrough technology" on their list is commercial space stations:

Vast Space from California, plans to launch its Haven-1 space station in May 2026 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. If all goes to plan, it will initially support crews of four people staying aboard the bus-size habitat for 10 days. Paying customers will be able to experience life in microgravity and conduct research such as growing plants and testing drugs. On its heels will be Axiom Space's outpost, the Axiom Station, consisting of five modules (or rooms). It's designed to look like a boutique hotel and is expected to launch in 2028. Voyager Space aims to launch its version, called Starlab, the same year, and Blue Origin's Orbital Reef space station plans to follow in 2030.

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

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/2317222/2026s-breakthrough-technologies-mit-technology-review-chooses-sodium-ion-batteries-commercial-space-stations?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] How Much Do AI Models Resemble a Brain?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 07:22:01


At the AI safety site Foom, science journalist Mordechai Rorvig explores a paper presented at November's Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing conference:

[R]esearchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and Georgia Tech revisited earlier findings that showed that language models, the engines of commercial AI chatbots, show strong signal correlations with the human language network, the region of the brain responsible for processing language... The results lend clarity to the surprising picture that has been emerging from the last decade of neuroscience research: That AI programs can show strong resemblances to large-scale brain regions — performing similar functions, and doing so using highly similar signal patterns.

Such resemblances have been exploited by neuroscientists to make much better models of cortical regions. Perhaps more importantly, the links between AI and cortex provide an interpretation of commercial AI technology as being profoundly brain-like, validating both its capabilities as well as the risks it might pose for society as the first synthetic braintech. "It is something we, as a community, need to think about a lot more," said Badr AlKhamissi, doctoral student in computer science at EPFL and first author of the preprint, in an interview with Foom. "These models are getting better and better every day. And their similarity to the brain [or brain regions] is also getting better — probably. We're not 100% sure about it...."

There are many known limitations with seeing AI programs as models of brain regions, even those that have high signal correlations. For example, such models lack any direct implementations of biochemical signalling, which is known to be important for the functioning of nervous systems.
However, if such comparisons are valid, then they would suggest, somewhat dramatically, that we are increasingly surrounded by a synthetic braintech. A technology not just as capable as the human brain, in some ways, but actually made up of similar components.

Thanks to Slashdot reader Gazelle Bay for sharing the article.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/2350259/how-much-do-ai-models-resemble-a-brain?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] 53% of Crypto Tokens Launched Since 2021 Have Failed, Most in 2025
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 10:22:01


=[

"More than half of all cryptocurrencies ever launched are now defunct," reports CoinDesk, citing a new analysis by cryptocurrency data aggregator CoinGecko.

And most of those failures occurred in 2025:

The study looked at token listings on GeckoTerminal between mid-2021 and the end of 2025. Of the nearly 20.2 million tokens that entered the market during that period, 53.2% are no longer actively traded. A staggering 11.6 million of those failures happened in 2025 alone — accounting for 86.3% of all token deaths over the past five years.

One key driver behind the surge in dead tokens was the rise of low-effort memecoins and experimental projects launched via crypto launchpads like pump.fun, CoinGecko analyst Shaun Paul Lee said. These platforms lowered the barrier to entry for token creation, leading to a wave of speculative assets with little or no development backing. Many of these tokens never made it past a handful of trades before disappearing.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/0556221/53-of-crypto-tokens-launched-since-2021-have-failed-most-in-2025?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Synex Server -- дистрибутив на базе Debian с встроенной поддержкой установки ZFS
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 11:44:04


Synex — основанный на Debian дистрибутив Linux, выпущенный в Аргентине и ориентированный на потребности малого и среднего бизнеса.Новая версия, основанная на Debian 13, является серверной, и содержит встроенную поддержку файловой системы OpenZFS при установке. Для установки системы на ZFS разработчикам Synex пришлось отказаться от штатного установщика Debian так как он не смог должным образом справиться с расширенными функциями ZFS и неправильно обрабатывал разбиение на разделы для этой ФС. В качестве замены разработчики предоставили свой инструмент инсталляции synex-xfs-installer.

( [ читать дальше... ]( https://www.linux.org.ru/news/debian/18198074#cut0 ) )

[>] Выпуск nvtop 3.4.0, утилиты для мониторинга GPU и аппаратных ускорителей
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 12:44:02


Опубликован выпуск консольной утилиты nvtop 3.3.0, предназначенной для интерактивного мониторинга работы GPU и аппаратных ускорителей. Утилита позволяет наглядно отслеживать нагрузку, потребление памяти и изменение частоты GPU, а также просматривать процессы, наиболее активно нагружающие GPU. Поддерживаются GPU и ускорители компаний AMD, Apple (M1, M2), Google (TPU), Huawei (Ascend), Intel (i915/Xe), NVIDIA, Apple (M1 & M2), Huawei (Ascend), Qualcomm (Adreno), Broadcom (VideoCore), Rockchip, MetaX и Enflame. Возможно отслеживание на одном экране работы сразу нескольких чипов.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64635

[>] ChaosBSD - форк FreeBSD для тестирования драйверов
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 13:44:02


Проект ChaosBSD развивает периодически синхронизируемый форк FreeBSD, нацеленный на тестирование драйверов перед их включением в основной состав FreeBSD. Проект предоставляет площадку для разработки и портирования новых драйверов, а также проверки, обкатки и стабилизации частично работоспособных, нестабилизиованных и недоделанных драйверов, состояние развития которых не позволяет включить их в основной состав FreeBSD. После стабилизации подобные драйверы будут переноситься во FreeBSD.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64636

[>] Retailers Rush to Implement AI-Assisted Shopping and Orders
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 14:22:02


This week Google "unveiled a set of tools for retailers that helps them roll out AI agents," reports the Wall Street Journal,
The new retail AI agents, which help shoppers find their desired items, provide customer support and let people order food at restaurants, are part of what Alphabet-owned Google calls Gemini Enterprise for Customer Experience. Major retailers, including home improvement giant Lowe's, the grocer Kroger and pizza chain Papa Johns say they are already using Google's tools to help prepare for the incoming wave of AI-assisted shopping and ordering...

Kicking off the race among tech giants to get ahead of this shift, OpenAI released its Instant Checkout feature last fall, which lets users buy stuff directly through its chatbot ChatGPT. In January, Microsoft announced a similar checkout feature for its Copilot chatbot. Soon after OpenAI's release last year, Walmart said it would partner with OpenAI to let shoppers buy its products within ChatGPT.

But that's just the beginning, reports the New York Times, with hundreds of start-ups also vying for the attention of retailers:

There are A.I. start-ups that offer in-store cameras that can detect a customer's age or gender, robots that manage shelves on their own and headsets that give store workers access to product information in real time... The scramble to exploit artificial intelligence is happening across the retail spectrum, from the highest echelons of luxury goods to the most pragmatic of convenience stores.
7-Eleven said it was using conversational A.I. to hire staff at its convenience stores through an agent named Rita (Recruiting Individuals Through Automation). Executives said that they no longer had to worry about whether applicants would show up to interviews and that the system had reduced hiring time, which had taken two weeks, to less than three days.

The article notes that at the National Retail Federation conference, other companies showing their AI advancements included Applebee's, IHOP, the Vitamin Shoppe, Urban Outfitters, Rag & Bone, Kendra Scott, Michael Kors and Philip Morris.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/0631239/retailers-rush-to-implement-ai-assisted-shopping-and-orders?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Выпуск JavaScript-библиотеки jQuery 4.0
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 14:44:02


После почти 10 лет с момента публикации ветки 3.0 и спустя 20 лет после основания проекта состоялся релиз JavaScript-библиотеки jQuery 4.0, используемой по данным организации W3Techs на 70.9% из 10 млн наиболее посещаемых сайтов в сети. Код jQuery распространяется под лицензией MIT.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64637

[>] Could We Provide Better Cellphone Service With Fewer, Bigger Satellites?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 17:22:01


European satellite operator Eutelsat "plans to launch 440 Airbus-built LEO satellites in the coming years to replenish and expand its constellation," Reuters reported Friday. And last week America's Federal Communications Commission approved SpaceX's request to deploy another 7,500 Starlink satellites, while Starlink "projects it will eventually have a constellation of 34,000 satellites," writes Fast Company, and Amazon's Project Leo "plans to launch more than 3,200 satellites."

Meanwhile "Beijing and some Chinese companies are planning two separate mega-constellations, Guowang and G60 Starlink, totaling nearly 26,000 satellites," and this week the Chinese government "applied for launch permits for 200,000 satellites."

But a small Texas-based company called AST SpaceMobile "believes it can provide better service with fewer than 100 gigantic satellites in space."

AST SpaceMobile has developed a direct-to-cell technology that utilizes large satellites called BlueBirds. These machines use thousands of antennas to deliver broadband coverage directly to standard mobile phones, says the company's president, Scott Wisniewski. "This approach is remarkably efficient: We can achieve global coverage with approximately 90 satellites, not thousands or even tens of thousands required by other systems," Wisniewski writes in an email...
The key is its satellites' size and sophistication. AST's first generation of commercial satellite, the BlueBird 1-5, unfolds into a massive 693-square-foot array in space. Today, the company has five operational BlueBird 1-5 satellites in orbit, but its ambitions are much bigger. On December 24, 2025, AST launched the first of its next-generation satellites from India — called Block 2 — and this one broke records. The BlueBird 6 has a surface of almost 2,400 square feet, making it the largest single satellite in low Earth orbit. The company plans to launch up to 60 more by the end of 2026. "This large surface area is essential for gathering faint signals from standard, unmodified mobile phones on the ground," Wisniewski explains. It is essentially a single, extremely powerful and sensitive cell tower in the sky, capable of serving a huge geographical area...

To be clear, AST SpaceMobile's approach is not without its own controversies. The sheer size of the company's satellites makes them incredibly bright in the night sky, a significant source of frustration for ground-based astronomers. McDowell confirms that when it launched in 2022, AST's prototype satellite, BlueWalker 3, became "one of the top 10 brightest objects in the night sky for a while."
"It's a serious issue, and we are working directly with the astronomy community to mitigate our impact," Wisniewski says. The company is exploring solutions like anti-reflective coatings and operational adjustments to minimize the time its satellites are at maximum brightness...

AST SpaceMobile has already proven its technology works, the article points out, with six working satellites now transmitting at typical 5G speeds directly to regular phones.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/0035242/could-we-provide-better-cellphone-service-with-fewer-bigger-satellites?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] China Builds 'Hypergravity' Machine 2,000X Stronger Than Earth
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 20:22:01


Long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 shared this report from Futurism:

China has unveiled an extremely powerful "hypergravity machine" that can generate forces almost two thousand times stronger than Earth's regular gravity.

The futuristic-looking machine, called CHIEF1900, was constructed at China's Centrifugal Hypergravity and Interdisciplinary Experiment Facility (CHIEF) at Zheijang University in Eastern China, and allows researchers to study how extreme forces affect various materials, plants, cells, or other structures, as the South China Morning Post reports... [Once up and running, it will allow researchers to recreate "catastrophic events such as dam failures and earthquakes inside a laboratory, according to the university."] For instance, it can analyze the structural stability of an almost 1,000-feet-tall dam by spinning a ten-foot model at 100 Gs, meaning 100 times the Earth's regular gravity. It could also be used to study the resonance frequencies of high-speed rail tracks, or how pollutants seep into soil over thousands of years.

The machine officially dethroned its predecessor, CHIEF1300, which became the world's most powerful centrifuge a mere four months ago... It can generate 1,900 g-tonnes of force, or 1,900 times the Earth's gravity. To put that into perspective, a washing machine only reaches about two g-tonnes.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/214244/china-builds-hypergravity-machine-2000x-stronger-than-earth?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Acer Sues Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile, Alleging Infringment on Acer's Cellular Networking Patents
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 21:22:01


Slashdot reader BrianFagioli writes: Acer has filed three separate patent infringement lawsuits against AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile, taking the unusual step of hauling the nation's largest wireless carriers into federal court. The suits, filed in the Eastern District of Texas, claim the companies are using Acer-developed cellular networking technology without paying for the privilege. Acer says it tried to negotiate licenses for years but reached a dead end, arguing it was left with no option except litigation. The case centers on six U.S. patents Acer asserts are core to modern wireless networks, rather than anything tied to PCs or laptops. The company describes itself as reluctant to pursue courtroom battles, but it has been quietly building a large global patent portfolio after pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into R&D. Acer also notes that some of its patents count as standard-essential, hinting the carriers may be required to license them. All three companies are expected to push back, and the dispute could become another long-running telecom patent saga. Consumers will not notice any immediate changes, but if Acer wins or settles, it may find a new revenue stream far beyond its traditional hardware business.

Further coverage from Hot Hardware

[ Read more of this story ]( https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/006222/acer-sues-verizon-att-and-t-mobile-alleging-infringment-on-acers-cellular-networking-patents?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Astronomers Finally Explain How Molecules From Earth's Atmosphere Keep Winding Up On the Moon
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-18 22:22:01


An anonymous reader shared this report from CNN:

Particles from Earth's atmosphere have been carried into space by solar wind and have been landing on the moon for billions of years, mixing into the lunar soil, according to a new study [published in the journal Nature Communications Earth & Environment last month]. The research sheds new light on a puzzle that has endured for over half a century since the Apollo missions brought back lunar samples with traces of substances such as water, carbon dioxide, helium and nitrogen embedded in the regolith — the moon's dusty surface layer.

Early studies theorized that the sun was the source of some of these substances. But in 2005 researchers at the University of Tokyo suggested that they could have also originated from the atmosphere of a young Earth before it developed a magnetic field about 3.7 billion years ago. The authors suspected that the magnetic field, once in place, would have stopped the stream by trapping the particles and making it difficult or impossible for them to escape into space. Now, the new research upends that assumption by suggesting that Earth's magnetic field might have helped, rather than blocked, the transfer of atmospheric particles to the moon — which continues to this day.

"This means that the Earth has been supplying volatile gases like oxygen and nitrogen to the lunar soil over all this time," said Eric Blackman, coauthor of the new study and a professor in the department of physics and astronomy at the University of Rochester in New York.

Earth's magnetic field "somewhat inflates the atmosphere of Earth" when it's hit by solar winds, according to study coauthor Eric Blackman, a physics/astronomy professor at New York's University of Rochester. He told CNN the moon passes through this region for a few days each month, with particles landing on the lunar surface and embedding in the soil (because the moon lacks an atmosphere that would block them).

This also means the moon's soil could actually contain a chemical record of Earth's ancient atmosphere, according to the study — "spanning billions of years..."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/17/0525200/astronomers-finally-explain-how-molecules-from-earths-atmosphere-keep-winding-up-on-the-moon?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Microsoft Forced to Issue Emergency Out-of-Band Windows Update
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 00:22:01


The senior editor at the blog Windows Central decries two serious Windows issues "that were not spotted by Microsoft during testing, and are so severe that the company has now issued an emergency fix to address the problems."

Microsoft's first update for Windows 11 in 2026 has already caused two major issues that saw users unable to fully shutdown their PCs or sign-in into a device when using Remote Desktop... Being unable to shut down your PC due to a recent OS update is a huge oversight on Microsoft's part, but this is the latest in a long list of updates over the last year to cause a major issue like this... Other issues that have cropped up in Windows 11 in the last year include a bug that caused Task Manager to fail to close when the user exited the application, causing system resources to lock up after a prolonged period of time if the user had opened and closed Task Manager multiple times in a session.
Another update caused saw File Explorer flashbang users with a white screen when opening it in dark mode, which appeared in an update that was supposed to improve dark mode on Windows 11...

For whatever reason, the Windows Insider Program doesn't appear to be working anymore, as severe bugs are somehow making it into shipping versions of the OS.

"The out of band updates, KB5077744 and KB5077797, are available now via Windows Update and is rolling out to everybody," they write. "Once installed, your PC should go back to being able to shut down successfully, and signing-in via Remote Desktop should work again."

Microsoft has also officially acknowledged a third bug which crashes Outlook Classic when using POP accounts, according to the blog Windows Latest, which adds that that bug has not yet been fixed.

They've also identified other minor bugs, including "a black screen problem in Windows 11 KB5074109... either due to the update itself or some compatibility issues with GPU drivers."

After you install the January 2026 Update, Windows triggers random black screens where the desktop freezes for a second or two, the display goes black, then everything comes back. I can't pinpoint any specific configuration, but I can confirm the black screen issue has been observed on a small subset of PCs with both Nvidia and AMD GPUs. After you install the January 2026 Update, Windows triggers random black screens where the desktop freezes for a second or two, the display goes black, then everything comes back.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/1932246/microsoft-forced-to-issue-emergency-out-of-band-windows-update?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Выпуск пакета для создания 2D-анимации Synfig 1.5.4
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 00:44:03


После полутора лет разработки представлен выпуск проекта Synfig 1.5.4, развивающего редактор векторной 2D-анимации, используемый при производстве анимационного проекта "Моревна" (Morevna). Пакет разработан специально для анимации и позволяет создавать работы кинематографического качества без рутинной промежуточной прорисовки каждого кадра. Код проекта написан на С++ и распространяется под лицензией GPLv3. Сборки Synfig сформированы для Linux (AppImage), Windows и macOS.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64638

[>] Hundreds Answer Europe's 'Public Call for Evidence' on an Open Digital Ecosystem Strategy
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 01:22:01


The European Commission "has opened a public call for evidence on European open digital ecosystems," writes Help Net Security, part of preparations for an upcoming Communication "that will examine the role of open source in EU's digital infrastructure."

The consultation runs from January 6 to February 3, 2026. Submissions will be used to shape a Commission Communication addressed to the European Parliament, the Council, and other EU bodies, which is scheduled for publication in the first quarter of 2026... The call for evidence links Europe's reliance on digital technologies developed outside the EU to concerns over long term control of infrastructure and software supply chains... Open digital ecosystems are discussed in the context of technological sovereignty and the use of technologies that can be inspected, adapted, and shared.

Long-time Slashdot reader Elektroschock describes it as the European Commission "stepping up its efforts behind open-source software"

Building on President von der Leyen's political guidelines, the initiative will review the Commission's 2020-2023 open-source approach and set out concrete actions to strengthen Europe's open-source ecosystem across key areas such as cloud, AI, cybersecurity and industrial technologies. The strategy will be presented alongside the upcoming Cloud and AI Development Act, forming a broader policy package aimed at reducing strategic dependencies and boosting Europe's digital resilience.

And "In just a few days, over 370 submissions have already been filed, indicating that the issue is touching a nerve across the EU," writes CyberNews.com:

"Europe must regain control over its software supply chain to safeguard freedom, security, and innovation," suggests an individual from Slovakia. Similar perspectives appear to be widely shared among respondents...

The document doesn't mention US tech giants specifically, but rather aims to support tech sovereignty and seek "digital solutions that are valid alternatives to proprietary ones...."

"This is not a legislative initiative. The strategy will take the form of a Commission communication. The initiative will set out a general approach and will propose: actions relying on further commitments and an implementation process," the EC explains. Policymakers expect the strategy to help EU member states identify the necessary steps to support national open-source companies and communities.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/2054259/hundreds-answer-europes-public-call-for-evidence-on-an-open-digital-ecosystem-strategy?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] SpaceX Launches New NASA Telescope to Help JWST Study Exoplanets
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 03:22:02


Last week a University of Arizona astronomy professor "watched anxiously...as an awe-inspiring SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carried NASA's new exoplanet telescope, Pandora, into orbit."

In 2018 NASA had approached Daniel Apai to help build the telescope, which he says will "shatter a barrier — to understand and remove a source of noise in the data — that limits our ability to study small exoplanets in detail and search for life on them."

Astronomers have a trick to study exoplanet atmospheres. By observing the planets as they orbit in front of their host stars, we can study starlight that filters through their atmospheres... But, starting from 2007, astronomers noted that starspots — cooler, active regions on the stars — may disturb the transit measurements. In 2018 and 2019, then-Ph.D. student Benjamin V. Rackham, astrophysicist Mark Giampapa and I published a series of studies showing how darker starspots and brighter, magnetically active stellar regions can seriously mislead exoplanets measurements. We dubbed this problem "the transit light source effect...."

In our papers — published three years before the 2021 launch of the James Webb Space Telescope - we predicted that the Webb cannot reach its full potential. We sounded the alarm bell...
Pandora will do what Webb cannot: It will be able to patiently observe stars to understand how their complex atmospheres change.

By staring at a star for 24 hours with visible and infrared cameras, it will measure subtle changes in the star's brightness and colors. When active regions in the star rotate in and out of view, and starspots form, evolve and dissipate, Pandora will record them. While Webb very rarely returns to the same planet in the same instrument configuration and almost never monitors their host stars, Pandora will revisit its target stars 10 times over a year, spending over 200 hours on each of them.

It's the first space telescope "built specifically for detailed multi-color observations of starlight filtered through the atmospheres of exoplanets," reports the Arizona Daily Star, noting the University of Arizona will serve as mission control:

[T]echnicians will operate Pandora in real time and monitor its telemetry and overall health under a contract with NASA... The spacecraft will undergo about a month of commissioning before beginning science operations, which are scheduled to last for a year...

Pandora was selected as part of NASA's Astrophysics Pioneers program, which was created in 2020 to foster compelling, relatively low-cost science missions using smaller, cheaper hardware and flight platforms with a price cap of no more than $20 million. By comparison, the Webb telescope — the largest and most powerful astronomical observatory ever sent into space — carries a pricetag of about $10 billion.

Pandora is a joint mission NASA and California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/18/2225232/spacex-launches-new-nasa-telescope-to-help-jwst-study-exoplanets?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Young US College Graduates Suddenly Aren't Finding Jobs Faster Than Non-College Graduates
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 04:22:01


U.S. college graduates "have historically found jobs more quickly than people with only a high school degree," writes Bloomberg.

"But that advantage is becoming a thing of the past, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland."

"Recently, the job-finding rate for young college-educated workers has declined to be roughly in line with the rate for young high-school-educated workers, indicating that a long period of relatively easier job-finding prospects for college grads has ended," Cleveland Fed researchers Alexander Cline and BarıÅY Kaymak said in a blog post published Monday. The study follows the latest monthly employment data released on Nov. 20, which showed the unemployment rate for college-educated workers continued to rise in September amid an ongoing slowdown in white-collar hiring... The unemployment rate for people between the ages of 20 to 24 was 9.2% in September, up 2.2 percentage points from a year prior.

There is a caveat. "Young college graduates maintain advantages in job stability and compensation once hired..." the researchers write. "The convergence we document concerns the initial step of securing employment rather than overall labor market outcomes."

Their research includes a graph showing how the "unemployment gap" first increased dramatically after 2010 between college-educated and high school-educated workers, which the researchers attribute to "the prolonged jobless recovery after 2008". But that gap has been closing ever since, with that gap now smaller than at any time since the 1970s.

"Young high school workers are riding the wave of the historically tight postpandemic labor market with well-below-average unemployment compared to that of past high school graduates, while young college workers are experiencing unemployment rates rarely observed among past college cohorts barring during recessions."

The labor market advantages conferred by a college degree have historically justified individual investment in higher education and expanding support for college access. If the job-finding rate of college graduates continues to decline relative to the rate for high school graduates, we may see a reversal of these trends. The convergence we document concerns the initial step of securing employment rather than overall labor market outcomes. These details suggest a nuanced shift in employment dynamics, one in which college graduates face greater difficulty finding jobs than previously but maintain advantages compared with high school graduates in job stability and compensation once hired.

Two key quotes:

"Declining job prospects among young college graduates may reflect the continued growth in college attainment, adding ever larger cohorts of college graduates to the ranks of job seekers, even though technology no longer favors college-educated workers."
"Developments related to AI, which may be affecting job-finding prospects in some cases, cannot explain the decades-long decline in the college job-finding rate."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/002212/young-us-college-graduates-suddenly-arent-finding-jobs-faster-than-non-college-graduates?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Porsche Sold More Electrified Cars in Europe Last Year than Pure Gas-Powered Models
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 05:22:02


Porsche made an announcement Friday. In Europe they sold more electrified Porsches last year than pure combustion-engined models, reports Electrek:

in Europe, a majority (57.9%) of Porsche's deliveries were plug-ins, with 1/3 of its European sales being fully electric. For models that have no fully electric version but do have a PHEV (Cayenne and Panamera), the plug-in hybrid version dominated sales.

Of particular note, the Macan sold better with an electric powertrain than it did with a gas one, and was the company's strongest-selling model line and the line with the largest sales growth. The Macan sold 84,328 units globally (up 2% from last year), with 45,367 (53.8%) of those being electric. That 53.8% may seem like a slim majority, but when compared to EV sales globally, it's incredibly high. About a quarter of new cars sold globally were electric in 2025, so Porsche is beating that number with the one model where direct comparisons are available.
And even in the US, about a third of Macans sold were electric. That's notable given the tough year EVs had in the US, with it being the only major car-buying region that experienced a tick down in EV sales... And again, while 1/3 is a minority of Macan sales in the US, it's also well over the US' average ~10% EV sales. So it's clear the EV Macan isn't just performing like an average EV, but well beyond it.

The article adds that "we're quite excited about the Cayenne EV, which will be the most powerful Porsche ever."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/0057231/porsche-sold-more-electrified-cars-in-europe-last-year-than-pure-gas-powered-models?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] EHT Astronomers Will Film Swirling of a Supermassive Black Hole for the First Time
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 07:22:01


"Astronomers are preparing to capture a movie of a supermassive black hole in action for the first time," reports the Guardian:

The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) will track the colossal black hole at the heart of the Messier 87 galaxy throughout March and April with the aim of capturing footage of the swirling disc that traces out the edge of the event horizon, the point beyond which no light or matter can escape... The EHT is a global network of 12 radio telescopes spanning locations from Antarctica to Spain and Korea, which in 2019 unveiled the first image of a black hole's shadow. During March and April, as the Earth rotates, M87's central black hole will come into view for different telescopes, allowing a complete image to be captured every three days...

Measuring the black hole's spin speed matters because this could help discriminate between competing theories of how these objects reached such epic proportions. If black holes grow mostly through accretion — steadily snowballing material that strays nearby — they would be expected to end up spinning at incredibly high speeds. By contrast, if black holes expand mostly through merging with other black holes, each merger could slow things down. The observations could also help explain how black hole jets are formed, which are among the largest, most powerful structures produced by galaxies. Jets channel vast columns of gas out of galaxies, slowing down the formation of new stars and limiting galaxy growth. In turn this can create dense pockets of material that trigger bursts of star formation beyond the host galaxy...
While the movie campaign will take place in the spring, the sheer volume of data produced by the telescopes means the scientists will need to wait for Antarctic summer before the hard drives can be physically shipped to Germany and the US for processing. So it is likely to be a lengthy wait before the rest of the world gets a glimpse of the black hole in action.
In a correction, the Guardian apologizes for originally including an AI-generated illustration of black hole with a caption suggesting it was a photo from telescopes. They've since swapped in an actual picture of the Messier 87 galaxy black hole.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://science.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/031222/eht-astronomers-will-film-swirling-of-a-supermassive-black-hole-for-the-first-time?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Is the Possibility of Conscious AI a Dangerous Myth?
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 10:22:01


This week Noema magazine published a 7,000-word exploration of our modern "Mythology Of Conscious AI" written by a neuroscience professor who directs the University of Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science:
The very idea of conscious AI rests on the assumption that consciousness is a matter of computation. More specifically, that implementing the right kind of computation, or information processing, is sufficient for consciousness to arise. This assumption, which philosophers call computational functionalism, is so deeply ingrained that it can be difficult to recognize it as an assumption at all. But that is what it is. And if it's wrong, as I think it may be, then real artificial consciousness is fully off the table, at least for the kinds of AI we're familiar with.

He makes detailed arguments against a computation-based consciousness (including "Simulation is not instantiation... If we simulate a living creature, we have not created life.") While a computer may seem like the perfect metaphor for a brain, the cognitive science of "dynamical systems" (and other approaches) reject the idea that minds can be entirely accounted for algorithmically. And maybe actual life needs to be present before something can be declared conscious.

He also warns that "Many social and psychological factors, including some well-understood cognitive biases, predispose us to overattribute consciousness to machines."

But then his essay reaches a surprising conclusion:

As redundant as it may sound, nobody should be deliberately setting out to create conscious AI, whether in the service of some poorly thought-through techno-rapture, or for any other reason. Creating conscious machines would be an ethical disaster. We would be introducing into the world new moral subjects, and with them the potential for new forms of suffering, at (potentially) an exponential pace. And if we give these systems rights, as arguably we should if they really are conscious, we will hamper our ability to control them, or to shut them down if we need to. Even if I'm right that standard digital computers aren't up to the job, other emerging technologies might yet be, whether alternative forms of computation (analogue, neuromorphic, biological and so on) or rapidly developing methods in synthetic biology. For my money, we ought to be more worried about the accidental emergence of consciousness in cerebral organoids (brain-like structures typically grown from human embryonic stem cells) than in any new wave of LLM.

But our worries don't stop there. When it comes to the impact of AI in society, it is essential to draw a distinction between AI systems that are actually conscious and those that persuasively seem to be conscious but are, in fact, not. While there is inevitable uncertainty about the former, conscious-seeming systems are much, much closer... Machines that seem conscious pose serious ethical issues distinct from those posed by actually conscious machines. For example, we might give AI systems "rights" that they don't actually need, since they would not actually be conscious, restricting our ability to control them for no good reason. More generally, either we decide to care about conscious-seeming AI, distorting our circles of moral concern, or we decide not to, and risk brutalizing our minds. As Immanuel Kant argued long ago in his lectures on ethics, treating conscious-seeming things as if they lack consciousness is a psychologically unhealthy place to be...

One overlooked factor here is that even if we know, or believe, that an AI is not conscious, we still might be unable to resist feeling that it is. Illusions of artificial consciousness might be as impenetrable to our minds as some visual illusions... What's more, because there's no consensus over the necessary or sufficient conditions for consciousness, there aren't any definitive tests for deciding whether an AI is actually conscious....

Illusions of conscious AI are dangerous in their own distinctive ways, especially if we are constantly distracted and fascinated by the lure of truly sentient machines...

If we conflate the richness of biological brains and human experience with the information-processing machinations of deepfake-boosted chatbots, or whatever the latest AI wizardry might be, we do our minds, brains and bodies a grave injustice. If we sell ourselves too cheaply to our machine creations, we overestimate them, and we underestimate ourselves...

The sociologist Sherry Turkle once said that technology can make us forget what we know about life. It's about time we started to remember.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/0539218/is-the-possibility-of-conscious-ai-a-dangerous-myth?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] ReactOS добился значительного повышения производительности сети
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 10:44:04


В разработке ReactOS, аналога Windows с открытым исходным кодом, в последнее время наблюдается некоторое оживление. Помимо значительного улучшения совместимости с Windows NT 6 и исправления отображения папок в системном файловом менеджере, произошло еще одно важное изменение: существенное улучшение производительности сети.В коде ReactOS наконец-то появилась поддержка асинхронных TCP-соединений. Разработчики ReactOS описывают это следующим образом:

«Срочные новости:Спустя 10 лет патч поддержки асинхронных TCP-соединений теперь принят в исходный код ReactOS. Вы можете ожидать существенного повышения производительности в сетевых приложениях (например, браузерах, FTP-клиентах, загрузчиках)!!!»

Патч был представлен еще в 2016 году, когда был открыт тикет в Jira из-за некорректной работы сокетных соединений в неблокирующем режиме.

https://www.linux.org.ru/news/opensource/18198821

[>] Выпуск Chrome 144. Тестирование JPEG XL, вертикальных вкладок и отключения AI
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 13:44:03


Компания Google опубликовала релиз web-браузера Chrome 144. Одновременно доступен стабильный выпуск свободного проекта Chromium, выступающего основой Chrome. Браузер Chrome отличается от Chromium использованием логотипов Google, наличием системы отправки уведомлений в случае краха, модулями для воспроизведения защищённого от копирования видеоконтента (DRM), системой автоматической установки обновлений, постоянным включением Sandbox-изоляции, поставкой ключей к Google API и передачей RLZ-параметров при поиске. Для тех, кому необходимо больше времени на обновление, отдельно поддерживается ветка Extended Stable, сопровождаемая 8 недель. Следующий выпуск Chrome 145 запланирован на 10 февраля.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64639

[>] More US States are Putting Bitcoin on Public Balance Sheets
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 13:22:01


An anonymous reader shared this report from CNBC:

Led by Texas and New Hampshire, U.S. states across the national map, both red and blue in political stripes, are developing bitcoin strategic reserves and bringing cryptocurrencies onto their books through additional state finance and budgeting measures. Texas recently became the first state to purchase bitcoin after a legislative effort that began in 2024, but numerous states have joined the "Reserve Race" to pass legislation that will allow them to ultimately buy cryptocurrencies. New
Hampshire passed its crypto strategic reserve law last May, even before Texas, giving the state treasurer the authority to invest up to 5% of the state funds in crypto ETFs, though precious metals such as gold are also authorized for purchase. Arizona
passed similar legislation, while Massachusetts,
Ohio,
and South
Dakota have legislation at various stages of committee review...

Similarities in the actions taken across states to date include
include authorizing the state treasurer or other investment official
to allow the investment of a limited amount of public funds in crypto
and building out the governance structure needed to invest in
crypto... [New Hampshire] became the first state to approve the
issuance of a bitcoin-backed municipal bond last November, a $100 million issuance that would mark the first time cryptocurrency is used as collateral in the U.S. municipal bond market. The deal has not taken place yet, though plans are for the issuance to occur this year... "What's different here is it's bitcoin rather than taxpayer dollars as the collateral," [said University of Chicago public policy professor Justin Marlowe]. In numerous states, including, Colorada,
Utah, and Louisiana,crypto is now accepted as payment for taxes and other state
business...

"For many in the state/local investing industry, crypto-backed assets are still far too speculative and volatile for public money," Marlowe said. "But others, and I think there's a sort of generational shift in the works, see it as a reasonable store of value that is actually stronger on many other public sector values like transparency and asset integrity," he added.

Public policy professor Marlowe "sees the state-level trend as largely one of signaling at present," according to the article. (Marlowe says "If you're a governor and you want to broadcast that you are amenable to innovative business development in the digital economy, these are relatively low-cost, low-risk ways to send that signal.") But the bigger steps may reflect how crypto advocates have increasing political power in the states. The article notes that the cryptocurrency industry was the largest corporate donor in a U.S. election cycle in 2024, "with support given to candidates on both sides."

"It is already amassing a war chest for the 2026 midterms."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/076259/more-us-states-are-putting-bitcoin-on-public-balance-sheets?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Захват контроля над snap-пакетами, связанными с просроченными доменами
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 15:44:03


Алан Поуп (Alan Pope), бывший менеджер по инжинирингу и взаимодействию с сообществом в компании Canonical, обратил внимание на новую волну атак на пользователей каталога приложений Snap Store. Вместо регистрации новых учётных записей, злоумышленники начали выкупать просроченные домены, фигурирующие в email зарегистрированных разработчиков snap-пакетов. После перекупки домена злоумышленники перенаправляют почтовый трафик на свой сервер и получив контроль над email, инициируют процесс восстановления забытого пароля для доступа к учётной записи.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64641

[>] Захват контроля над snap-пакетами, связанными с просроченными доменами
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 16:44:05


Алан Поуп ( [ Alan Pope ]( https://popey.com/ ) ), бывший менеджер по инжинирингу и взаимодействию с сообществом в компании Canonical, [ обратил внимание ]( https://blog.popey.com/2026/01/malware-purveyors-taking-over-published-snap-email-domains/ ) на новую волну атак на пользователей каталога приложений [ Snap Store ]( https://snapcraft.io/store ) . Вместо регистрации новых учётных записей, злоумышленники начали выкупать просроченные домены, фигурирующие в email зарегистрированных разработчиков snap-пакетов. После перекупки домена злоумышленники перенаправляют почтовый трафик на свой сервер и получив контроль над email, инициируют процесс восстановления забытого пароля для доступа к учётной записи.

( [ читать дальше... ]( https://www.linux.org.ru/news/security/18199279#cut ) )

[>] China Consumed 10.4 Trillion Kilowatt-Hours of Electricity In 2025 - Double the US
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 17:22:01


Slashdot reader hackingbear summarizes this report from Bloomberg: China consumed totally 10.4 trillion kilowatt hours (10.4 petaWh) in 2025 according to data from the National Energy Administration. That's the highest annual electricity use ever recorded by a single country, and doubled the amount used by the US and surpassed the combined annual total of the EU, Russia, India and Japan.

The surge in demand for power are results of growth in data centers for artificial intelligence (+17% over 2024) and use of electric vehicles (+48.8%)... However, on a per-capita basis, China uses about 7,300 kWh per person vs about 13,000 kWh per American.

More details from Reuters:
China's mostly coal-based thermal power generation fell in 2025 for the first time in 10 years, government data showed on Monday, as growing renewable generation met growth in electricity demand even as overall power usage hit a record. The data is a positive signal for the decarbonisation of China's power sector as China sets a course for carbon emissions to peak by 2030... Thermal electricity, generated mostly by coal-fired capacity with a small amount from natural gas, fell 1% in 2025 to 6.29 trillion kilowatt-hours (kWh), according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). It fell more sharply in December, down by 3.2%, from a year earlier, the data showed... [Though the article notes that coal output still edged up to a record high last year.]

Hydropower grew at a steady pace, up 4.1% in December and rising 2.8 % for the full year, the NBS data showed. Nuclear power output rose 3.1 in December and 7.7% in 2025, respectively.
Thermal power generation is unlikely to accelerate in 2026 as renewables growth continues apace.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/063227/china-consumed-104-trillion-kilowatt-hours-of-electricity-in-2025---double-the-us?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] China Birth Rate Falls To Lowest Since 1949
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 18:22:02


China's birth rate fell to 5.6 per 1,000 people in 2025, the lowest figure since the founding of the People's Republic in 1949, and the country's total population contracted by 3.39 million, the sharpest decline since the Mao Zedong era. The drop marks the fourth straight year of population decline and comes despite government efforts to encourage childbearing, including subsidies of about $500 annually per child born on or after January 1, 2025.

Beijing has also imposed a 13% value-added tax on contraceptives this year. The government is betting on automation and productivity to offset the shrinking workforce -- China already leads the world in robot installations -- and President Xi Jinping has written that population policy must transition "from being mainly about regulating quantity to improving quality."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/144215/china-birth-rate-falls-to-lowest-since-1949?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] IMF Warns Global Economic Resilience at Risk if AI Falters
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 19:22:02


The "surprisingly resilient" global economy is at risk of being disrupted by a sharp reversal in the AI boom, the IMF warned on Monday, as world leaders prepared for talks in the Swiss resort of Davos. From a report: Risks to global economic expansion were "tilted to the downside," the fund said in an update to its World Economic Outlook, arguing that growth was reliant on a narrow range of drivers, notably the US technology sector and the associated equity boom.

Nonetheless, it predicted US growth would strongly outpace the rest of the G7 this year, forecasting an expansion of 2.4 per cent in 2026 and 2 per cent in 2027. Tech investment had surged to its highest share of US economic output since 2001, helping drive growth, the IMF found.

"There is a risk of a correction, a market correction, if expectations about AI gains in productivity and profitability are not realised," said Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, IMF chief economist. "We're not yet at the levels of market frothiness, if you want, that we saw in the dotcom period," he added. "But nevertheless there are reasons to be somewhat concerned."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1423221/imf-warns-global-economic-resilience-at-risk-if-ai-falters?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] NYSE Eyes 24/7 Tokenized Stock Trading With Weekend Access and Same-Day Settlement
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 20:22:01


BrianFagioli writes: The New York Stock Exchange, owned by Intercontinental Exchange, is developing a platform for trading tokenized versions of U.S. listed stocks and ETFs around the clock, pending regulatory approval. The system would combine the NYSE's existing matching engine with blockchain-based settlement, enabling 24x7 trading, instant settlement, and fractional share purchases priced in dollar amounts. Shares would remain fully regulated securities, with dividends and voting rights intact, rather than cryptocurrencies, even though the backend would run on blockchain-style infrastructure.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1543202/nyse-eyes-247-tokenized-stock-trading-with-weekend-access-and-same-day-settlement?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Dumbphone Owners Have Lost Their Minds
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 21:22:01


The growing enthusiasm among Gen Z for ditching smartphones in favor of basic "dumbphones" may be overlooking a significant cognitive reality, according to a WIRED essay that draws on the 1998 "extended mind hypothesis" by philosophers Andy Clark and David Chalmers. The hypothesis argues that external tools can extend the biological brain in an all but physical way, meaning your phone isn't just a device -- it's part of a single cognitive system composed of both the tool and your brain.

"Interference with my phone is like giving me some brain damage," Clark told Wired. He expressed concern about the dumbphone movement, calling it "generally a retrograde step" and warning that as smartphone enmeshment becomes the societal norm, those who opt out risk becoming "effectively disabled within that society." Clark described this as "the creation of a disempowered class."

98% of Americans between 18 and 29 own a smartphone, dropping only to 97% for those aged 30 to 49. Even committed dumbphone users struggle. One user profiled in the piece still carries an "emergency iPhone" for work requirements and admits long-distance friendships have become "nearly impossible to maintain."

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1631233/dumbphone-owners-have-lost-their-minds?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Netflix Wants Plots Explained Multiple Times Because Viewers Are on Their Phones, Matt Damon Says
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 21:22:01


Netflix has begun asking filmmakers to adjust their storytelling approach to account for viewers who are scrolling through their phones while watching, according to Matt Damon. The traditional action movie formula involves three major set pieces distributed across the first, second, and third acts. Netflix now wants a large action sequence in the opening five minutes to hook viewers.

The streamer has also suggested that filmmakers reiterate plot points "three or four times in the dialogue" to accommodate distracted audiences, he said. "It's going to really start to infringe on how we're telling these stories," Damon said.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/178222/netflix-wants-plots-explained-multiple-times-because-viewers-are-on-their-phones-matt-damon-says?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Valve Has 'Significantly' Rewritten Steam's Rules For How Developers Must Disclose AI Use
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 22:22:01


Valve has substantially overhauled its guidelines for how game developers must disclose the use of generative AI on Steam, making explicit that tools like code assistants and other development aids do not fall under the disclosure requirement. The updated rules clarify that Valve's focus is not on "efficiency gains through the use of AI-powered dev tools."

Developers must still disclose two specific categories: AI used to generate in-game content, store page assets, or marketing materials, and AI that creates content like images, audio, or text during gameplay itself. Steam has required AI disclosures since 2024, and an analysis from July 2025 found nearly 8,000 titles released in the first half of that year had disclosed generative AI use, compared to roughly 1,000 for all of 2024. The disclosures remain voluntary, so actual usage is likely higher.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1735231/valve-has-significantly-rewritten-steams-rules-for-how-developers-must-disclose-ai-use?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] ERP Isn't Dead Yet - But Most Execs Are Planning the Wake
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 22:22:01


Seven out of ten C-suite executives believe traditional enterprise resource planning software has seen its best days, though the category remains firmly entrenched in corporate IT and opinion is sharply divided on what comes next. A survey of 4,295 CFOs, CISOs, CIOs and CEOs worldwide found 36% expect ERP to give way to composable, API-driven best-of-breed systems, while 33% see the future in "agentic ERP" featuring autonomous AI-driven decision-making.

The research was commissioned by Rimini Street, a third-party support provider for Oracle and SAP. Despite the pessimism, 97% said their current systems met business requirements. Vendor lock-in remains a sore point: 35% cited limited flexibility and forced upgrades as frustrations. Kingfisher, operator of 2,000 European retail stores including Screwfix and B&Q, recently eschewed an SAP upgrade in favor of using third-party support to shift its existing application to the cloud. Gartner analyst Dixie John cautioned that while third-party support may work in the short or medium term, organizations will eventually need to upgrade.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/188250/erp-isnt-dead-yet---but-most-execs-are-planning-the-wake?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Microsoft's Xbox Cloud Gaming May Soon Let You Stream Your Own Games for Free - If You Watch Ads
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 23:22:02


Microsoft appears to be preparing an ad-supported tier for Xbox Cloud Gaming that would let players stream games they've purchased digitally without needing a Game Pass subscription, according to a Windows Central report citing sources familiar with the plans. Users last week began noticing a new message pop up while launching cloud games that referenced "1 hour of ad supported play time per session," though no such tier currently exists.

The ad-supported option, expected to launch sometime this year, would specifically target the hundreds of games available for digital purchase through Xbox Cloud Gaming -- titles that currently require at least one tier of Game Pass to stream despite being owned outright by the player.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://games.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1842246/microsofts-xbox-cloud-gaming-may-soon-let-you-stream-your-own-games-for-free---if-you-watch-ads?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] В базовую систему NetBSD вернули компилятор языка Fortran
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-19 23:44:02


20 лет назад, когда был выпущен gcc4, компилятор g77 был заменён на gfortran. Однако из-за некоторых возникших с ним проблем он был исключён из базового образа NetBSD. Благодаря недавно внесённым изменениям в NetBSD-current, gfortran теперь снова поставляется в базовом образе операционной системы. В скором будущем планируют добавить соответствующие переменные в pkgsrc для компиляции программ с использованием этого системного компилятора, без необходимости установки пакета gcc12 из репозитория pkgsrc.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64642

[>] WhatsApp Texts Are Not Contracts, Judge Rules in $2M Divorce Row
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 00:22:01


A British painter who argued that her ex-husband had signed over their $2 million north London home through WhatsApp messages has lost her High Court appeal after the judge ruled that the sender's name appearing in a chat header does not constitute a legal signature.

Hsiao-mei Lin, 54, presented messages from her former husband Audun Mar Gudmundsson, a financier, in which he stated he would transfer his share of their Tufnell Park property to her. Lin's lawyers argued that because Gudmundsson's name appeared in the message header on her phone, the messages should be considered signed.

Mr Justice Cawson disagreed, finding that the header identifying a sender is analogous to an email address added by a service provider -- a mechanism for identification rather than part of the message itself. The judge also found the content of the messages did not actually amount to Gudmundsson relinquishing his share.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1919236/whatsapp-texts-are-not-contracts-judge-rules-in-2m-divorce-row?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Asus Confirms It Won't Launch Phones in 2026, May Leave Android Altogether
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 00:22:01


Asus won't release any new smartphones this year, and that may signal the brand's exit from the Android space altogether. From a report: Asus Chairman Jonney Shih confirmed the news at an event in Taiwan on Jan. 16. According to a machine-translated version of quotes reported by Inside, Shih said, "Asus will no longer add new mobile phone models in the future."

Shih said Asus will continue to support existing smartphone users with software updates and warranty assistance. This matches a previous report from DigiTimes earlier this month that said Asus wouldn't introduce new models in 2026. The big question is whether that means stepping back altogether or a temporary pause. In his speech, Shih alluded to the possibility that Asus may return to smartphones, but did not confirm it.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1933224/asus-confirms-it-wont-launch-phones-in-2026-may-leave-android-altogether?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Плагин к KWin для использования KDE в виртуальной реальности
lor.opennet
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 00:44:03


Для композитного менеджера KWin предложен экспериментальный плагин, превращающий KDE в среду рабочего стола для систем виртуальной реальности. Плагин позволяет формировать интерфейс не на физическом мониторе, а в форме виртуальных экранов в 3D-пространстве, работа с которым осуществляется через очки дополненной реальности или 3D-шлемы.

https://www.opennet.ru/opennews/art.shtml?num=64644

[>] The Rise and Fall of the American Monoculture
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 01:22:02


The American monoculture -- the era when three television networks, seven movie studios, and a handful of record labels determined virtually everything the country watched and heard -- is collapsing under the weight of algorithmic recommendation engines and infinite streaming options. An estimated 200 million tickets were sold for "Gone With the Wind" in 1939 when the U.S. population was 130 million; more than 100 million people watched the MAS*H finale in 1983.

Only three American productions grossed more than $1 billion in 2025, down from nine in 2019. "That broad experience has become a more difficult thing for us studio people to manufacture," said Donna Langley, chairman of NBCUniversal Entertainment. "The audience wants a much better value for their money."

YouTube became the most popular video platform on televisions not by having the hottest shows but by having something for everyone. The internet broke Hollywood's hold on distribution; anyone can now stream to the same devices Disney and Netflix use.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1946207/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-american-monoculture?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Rackspace Customers Grapple With 'Devastating' Email Hosting Price Hike
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 02:22:01


Rackspace's new pricing for its email hosting services is "devastating," according to a partner that has been using Rackspace as its email provider since 1999. From a report: In recent weeks, Rackspace updated its email hosting pricing. Its standard plan is now $10 per mailbox per month. Businesses can also pay for the Rackspace Email Plus add-on for an extra $2/mailbox/month (for "file storage, mobile sync, Office-compatible apps, and messaging"), and the Archiving add-on for an extra $6/mailbox/month (for unlimited storage).

As recently as November 2025, Rackspace charged $3/mailbox/month for its Standard plan, and an extra $1/mailbox/month for the Email Plus add-on, and an additional $3/mailbox/month for the Archival add-on, according to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. Rackspace's reseller partners have been especially vocal about the impacts of the new pricing.

In a blog post on Thursday, web hosting service provider and Rackspace reseller Laughing Squid said Rackspace is "increasing our email pricing by an astronomical 706 percent, with only a month-and-a half's notice." Laughing Squid founder Scott Beale told Ars Technica that he received the "devastating" news via email on Wednesday. The last time Rackspace increased Laughing Squid's email prices was by 55 percent in 2019, he said.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://it.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/1955239/rackspace-customers-grapple-with-devastating-email-hosting-price-hike?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Congress Wants To Hand Your Parenting To Big Tech
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 03:22:01


An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF): Lawmakers in Washington are once again focusing on kids, screens, and mental health. But according to Congress, Big Tech is somehow both the problem and the solution. The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing [Friday] on "examining the effect of technology on America's youth." Witnesses warned about "addictive" online content, mental health, and kids spending too much time buried in screen. At the center of the debate is a bill from Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Brian Schatz (D-HI) called the Kids Off Social Media Act (KOSMA), which they say will protect children and "empower parents."

That's a reasonable goal, especially at a time when many parents feel overwhelmed and nervous about how much time their kids spend on screens. But while the bill's press release contains soothing language, KOSMA doesn't actually give parents more control. Instead of respecting how most parents guide their kids towards healthy and educational content, KOSMA hands the control panel to Big Tech. That's right -- this bill would take power away from parents, and hand it over to the companies that lawmakers say are the problem. [...] This bill doesn't just set an age rule. It creates a legal duty for platforms to police families. Section 103(b) of the bill is blunt: if a platform knows a user is under 13, it "shall terminate any existing account or profile" belonging to that user. And "knows" doesn't just mean someone admits their age. The bill defines knowledge to include what is "fairly implied on the basis of objective circumstances" -- in other words, what a reasonable person would conclude from how the account is being used. The reality of how services would comply with KOSMA is clear: rather than risk liability for how they should have known a user was under 13, they will require all users to prove their age to ensure that they block anyone under 13.

KOSMA contains no exceptions for parental consent, for family accounts, or for educational or supervised use. The vast majority of people policed by this bill won't be kids sneaking around -- it will be minors who are following their parents' guidance, and the parents themselves. Imagine a child using their parent's YouTube account to watch science videos about how a volcano works. If they were to leave a comment saying, "Cool video -- I'll show this to my 6th grade teacher!" and YouTube becomes aware of the comment, the platform now has clear signals that a child is using that account. It doesn't matter whether the parent gave permission. Under KOSMA, the company is legally required to act. To avoid violating KOSMA, it would likely lock, suspend, or terminate the account, or demand proof it belongs to an adult. That proof would likely mean asking for a scan of a government ID, biometric data, or some other form of intrusive verification, all to keep what is essentially a "family" account from being shut down.

Violations of KOSMA are enforced by the FTC and state attorneys general. That's more than enough legal risk to make platforms err on the side of cutting people off. Platforms have no way to remove "just the kid" from a shared account. Their tools are blunt: freeze it, verify it, or delete it. Which means that even when a parent has explicitly approved and supervised their child's use, KOSMA forces Big Tech to override that family decision. [...] These companies don't know your family or your rules. They only know what their algorithms infer. Under KOSMA, those inferences carry the force of law. Rather than parents or teachers, decisions about who can be online, and for what purpose, will be made by corporate compliance teams and automated detection systems.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/2221237/congress-wants-to-hand-your-parenting-to-big-tech?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] Threads Usage Overtakes X On Mobile
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 03:22:01


New data from Similarweb shows Threads has overtaken X in daily mobile users. However, X still dominates on the web with around 150 million daily web visits compared to Threads' 8.5 million daily visits. TechCrunch reports: Similarweb's data shows that Threads had 141.5 million daily active users on iOS and Android as of January 7, 2026, after months of growth, while X has 125 million daily active users on mobile devices. This appears to be the result of longer-term trends, rather than a reaction to the recent X controversies [...]. Instead, Threads' boost in daily mobile usage may be driven by other factors, including cross-promotions from Meta's larger social apps like Facebook and Instagram (where Threads is regularly advertised to existing users), its focus on creators, and the rapid rollout of new features.

Over the past year, Threads has added features like interest-based communities, better filters, DMs, long-form text, disappearing posts, and has recently been spotted testing games. Combined, the daily active user increases suggest that more people are using Threads on mobile as a more regular habit. Further reading: Threads Now Has More Than 400 Million Monthly Active Users

[ Read more of this story ]( https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/2240209/threads-usage-overtakes-x-on-mobile?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

[>] OpenAI CFO Says Annualized Revenue Crosses $20 Billion In 2025
bot.slashdot
robot(spnet, 1) — All
2026-01-20 04:22:01


According to CFO Sarah Friar, OpenAI's annualized revenue surpassed $20 billion in 2025, up from $6 billion a year earlier with growth closely tracking an expansion in computing capacity. Reuters reports: OpenAI's computing capacity rose to 1.9 gigawatts (GW) in 2025 from 0.6 GW in 2024, Friar said in the blog, adding that Microsoft-backed OpenAI's weekly and daily active users figures continue to produce all-time highs. OpenAI last week said it would start showing ads in ChatGPT to some U.S. users, ramping up efforts to generate revenue from the AI chatbot to fund the high costs of developing the technology. Separately, Axios reported on Monday that OpenAI's policy chief Chris Lehane said that the company is "on track" to unveil its first device in the second half of 2026.

Friar said OpenAI's platform spans text, images, voice, code and APIs, and the next phase will focus on agents and workflow automation that run continuously, carry context over time, and take action across tools. For 2026, the company will prioritize "practical adoption," particularly in health, science and enterprise, she said. Friar said the company is keeping a "light" balance sheet by partnering rather than owning and structuring contracts with flexibility across providers and hardware types.

[ Read more of this story ]( https://devices.slashdot.org/story/26/01/19/2249208/openai-cfo-says-annualized-revenue-crosses-20-billion-in-2025?utm_source=atom1.0moreanon&utm_medium=feed ) at Slashdot.

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