Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from October, 2022

Slashdot: White House Invites Dozens of Nations For Ransomware Summit

White House Invites Dozens of Nations For Ransomware Summit Published on November 01, 2022 at 03:30AM An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: The White House is bringing together three dozen nations, the European Union and a slew of private-sector companies for a two-day summit starting Monday that looks at how best to combat ransomware attacks. The second International Counter Ransomware Summit will focus on priorities such as ensuring systems are more resilient to better withstand attacks and disrupt bad actors planning such assaults. A senior Biden administration official cited recent attacks such as one that targeted the Los Angeles school district last month to underscore the urgency of the issue and the summit. The official previewed the event on the condition of anonymity. Among the administration officials planning to participate in the event are FBI Director Christopher Wray, national security adviser Jake Sullivan, Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adey...

Slashdot: Microsoft Promises Eternal Support for Call of Duty on PlayStation

Microsoft Promises Eternal Support for Call of Duty on PlayStation Published on November 01, 2022 at 02:51AM Microsoft Xbox chief Phil Spencer said he intends to continue to ship Call of Duty games on PlayStation "as long as there's a PlayStation out there to ship to." From a report: The new promise comes weeks after Sony lambasted an "inadequate" offer to extend Call of Duty's cross-platform access for three years past the current agreement and as Microsoft faces continuing scrutiny from international governments over its proposed $69 billion purchase of Activision Blizzard. "We're not taking Call of Duty from PlayStation," Spencer said directly in an interview with the Same Brain podcast. "That's not our intent." Instead, Spencer said Microsoft's plan for Call of Duty is "similar to what we've done with Minecraft," which has remained a cross-platform staple since Microsoft's $2.5 billion purchase of devel...

Slashdot: Discord Bans 68,000 Servers, 55 Million Accounts

Discord Bans 68,000 Servers, 55 Million Accounts Published on November 01, 2022 at 02:11AM The social media platform Discord recently published its quarterly safety report which notes that some 55,573,411 accounts and 68,379 servers were "disabled" between January and June, 2022. From a report: According to the company, the vast majority of these were taken offline for "spam or spam-related offenses." The number of accounts that were disabled for reasons other than spam definitely pales in comparison, amounting to a mere 1,821,721. The bans in this category were mostly handed out for issues relating to "child safety" or "exploitative and unsolicited content." Discord seems to be justified in disabling these accounts and closing the affected servers, at least broadly speaking. Successful appeals came to only two percent in the first quarter and less than one percent in the second quarter of this year, meaning that of the 235,945 users who called...

Slashdot: New York Could Become First State With a 'Right To Repair' Law for Electronic Devices

New York Could Become First State With a 'Right To Repair' Law for Electronic Devices Published on November 01, 2022 at 01:31AM After passing with near unanimous support in both houses of the state Legislature, a bill that would allow New Yorkers to repair their electronic devices is all ready to become law as it awaits Gov. Kathy Hochul's signature. From a report: The bill's sponsor in the Assembly, Assemblywoman Pat Fahy of Albany, said the bill would create a system that we use for cars but for the electronic devices we use each day. The bill, known as "Right to Repair," would force companies to provide tools and parts for independent repair shops or individuals to repair devices like cell phones. Opponents of the legislation have cited safety and cybersecurity threats as their issues with the legislation. Supporters of the bill, including Fahy, said the bill will allow for economic growth in this sector and could help the "tinkerers of today" b...

Slashdot: Apple Gears Up To Launch Its Next Crop of Macs Early Next Year

Apple Gears Up To Launch Its Next Crop of Macs Early Next Year Published on November 01, 2022 at 12:52AM Apple's next group of Macs probably won't launch until early next year, Bloomberg News reports, which means it will have fewer new devices to sell in the holiday quarter. From the report: Apple has been gearing up to launch a slew of new Macs, and now we have a clearer idea of when that will occur: early next year. I'm told that Apple is aiming to introduce the upgraded models -- including M2-based versions of the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros -- in the first quarter of calendar 2023 and has tied the launches to the upcoming macOS Ventura 13.3 and iOS 16.3. Those software updates are expected to debut between early February and the beginning of March. [...] The new MacBook Pros will continue to look like the current models, but they'll trade their M1 Pro and M1 Max chips for the first M2 Pro and M2 Max processors. The M2 Max will go to 12 CPU cores, up from 10, ...

Slashdot: US Workers Have Gotten Way Less Productive

US Workers Have Gotten Way Less Productive Published on November 01, 2022 at 12:14AM Employers across the country are worried that workers are getting less done -- and there's evidence they're right to be spooked. From a report: In the first half of 2022, productivity -- the measure of how much output in goods and services an employee can produce in an hour -- plunged by the sharpest rate on record going back to 1947, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The productivity plunge is perplexing, because productivity took off to levels not seen in decades when the coronavirus pandemic forced an overnight switch to remote work, leading some economists to suggest that the pandemic might spark longer-term growth. It also raises new questions about the shift to hybrid schedules and remote work, as employees have made the case that flexibility helped them work more efficiently. And it comes at a time when "quiet quitting" -- doing only what's expected a...

Slashdot: Apple's $100 Million 'Small Developer Assistance Fund' Surprises Developers With Payouts

Apple's $100 Million 'Small Developer Assistance Fund' Surprises Developers With Payouts Published on October 31, 2022 at 08:29AM Developer Dan Leveille received "a sketchy voicemail from a random number about a class action lawsuit settlement..." he posted on TwitterI thought it was a scam and almost ignored it." But he didn't — and ended up with $8,064.88 in his Venmo account. Back in 2019 a lawsuit by U.S. developers accused Apple of "profit-killing" App Store commissions, reports TechForge Media. Apple settled that suit by agreeing to create a $100 million Small Developer Assistance Fund (for developers who sold in Apple's app store between June of 2015 and April of 2021). And this month Apple has finally started sending out those payments, Apple Insider reports: Developers had until May 20 to submit a request to an independent administrator to become a "Settlement Class Member." If they met the criteria, the developers stood...

Slashdot: 'Science Has a Nasty Photoshopping Problem'

'Science Has a Nasty Photoshopping Problem' Published on October 31, 2022 at 06:22AM Dr. Bik is a microbiologist who has worked at Stanford University and for the Dutch National Institute for Health who is "blessed" with "what I'm told is a better-than-average ability to spot repeating patterns," according to their new Op-Ed in the New York Times. In 2014 they'd spotted the same photo "being used in two different papers to represent results from three entirely different experiments...." Although this was eight years ago, I distinctly recall how angry it made me. This was cheating, pure and simple. By editing an image to produce a desired result, a scientist can manufacture proof for a favored hypothesis, or create a signal out of noise. Scientists must rely on and build on one another's work. Cheating is a transgression against everything that science should be. If scientific papers contain errors or — much worse — fraudulent data and...

Slashdot: Can Talking to Strangers Make Us Smarter?

Can Talking to Strangers Make Us Smarter? Published on October 31, 2022 at 04:11AM Smartphones "have made it easier than ever to avoid interacting with the people in our immediate environment, writes New York City-based author Joe Keohane. But is that always good? "Some social scientists believe teaching kids that literally everyone in the world they hadn't met is dangerous may have been actively harmful." For several years, I researched why we don't talk to strangers and what happens when we do for my book, The Power of Strangers: The Benefits of Connecting in a Suspicious World. This effort put me in the company of anthropologists, psychologists, sociologists, political scientists, archeologists, urban designers, activists, philosophers, and theologians, plus hundreds of random strangers I talked to wherever I went. What I learned was this: we miss a lot by being afraid of strangers. Talking to strangers — under the right conditions — is good for us, good for...

Slashdot: Fires from Exploding E-Bike Batteries Nearly Doubled This Year in New York City

Fires from Exploding E-Bike Batteries Nearly Doubled This Year in New York City Published on October 31, 2022 at 02:45AM "Four times a week on average, an e-bike or e-scooter battery catches fire in New York City," reports NPR: Sometimes, it does so on the street, but more often, it happens when the owner is recharging the lithium ion battery. A mismatched charger won't always turn off automatically when the battery's fully charged, and keeps heating up. Or, the highly flammable electrolyte inside the battery's cells leaks out of its casing and ignites, setting off a chain reaction. "These bikes when they fail, they fail like a blowtorch," said Dan Flynn, the chief fire marshal at the New York Fire Department. "We've seen incidents where people have described them as explosive — incidents where they actually have so much power, they're actually blowing walls down in between rooms and apartments." And these fires are getting more frequ...

Slashdot: How Privacy-Enhancing Technologies Are Fulfilling Cryptography's Potential

How Privacy-Enhancing Technologies Are Fulfilling Cryptography's Potential Published on October 31, 2022 at 01:45AM Here's the Guardian's report on new cryptographic techniques where "you can share data while keeping that data private" — known by the umbrella term "privacy-enhancing technologies" (or "Pets). They offer opportunities for data holders to pool their data in new and useful ways. In the health sector, for example, strict rules prohibit hospitals from sharing patients' medical data. Yet if hospitals were able to combine their data into larger datasets, doctors would have more information, which would enable them to make better decisions on treatments. Indeed, a project in Switzerland using Pets has since June allowed medical researchers at four independent teaching hospitals to conduct analysis on their combined data of about 250,000 patients, with no loss of privacy between institutions. Juan Troncoso, co-founder and CEO of Tune In...

Slashdot: The World Is Running Out of Helium. Why Doctors are Worried

The World Is Running Out of Helium. Why Doctors are Worried Published on October 31, 2022 at 12:45AM NBC News reports: A global helium shortage has doctors worried about one of the natural gas's most essential, and perhaps unexpected, uses: MRIs. Strange as it sounds, the lighter-than-air element that gives balloons their buoyancy also powers the vital medical diagnostic machines. An MRI can't function without some 2,000 liters of ultra-cold liquid helium keeping its magnets cool enough to work. But helium — a nonrenewable element found deep within the Earth's crust — is running low, leaving hospitals wondering how to plan for a future with a much scarcer supply.... [F]our of five major U.S. helium suppliers are rationing the element, said Phil Kornbluth, president of Kornbluth Helium Consulting. These suppliers are prioritizing the health care industry by reducing helium allotments to less essential customers. Hospitals haven't canceled patients' MRIs or shut dow...

Slashdot: Dogecoin Surges 70% After Elon Musk's Twitter Deal

Dogecoin Surges 70% After Elon Musk's Twitter Deal Published on October 30, 2022 at 10:04AM Noting that Elon Musk once called Dogecoin "the people's crypto," Reuters reports that on Saturday the price of Dogecoin surged more than 70%, "extending this week's gains after Elon Musk sealed a $44-billion deal to take over Twitter..." Cryptocurrency exchange Binance which has invested $500 million into Musk's buyout of Twitter, said it is brainstorming strategies on how blockchain and crypto could be helpful to Twitter.... Musk tweeted this month that he is buying Twitter to create an "everything app". The idea of an everything app originated in Asia with companies like WeChat, which lets users not only send messages but also make payments, shop online or hail a taxi. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot: Computing Pioneer Who Invented the First Assembly Language Dies at Age 100

Computing Pioneer Who Invented the First Assembly Language Dies at Age 100 Published on October 30, 2022 at 07:04AM "Kathleen Booth, who has died aged 100, co-designed of one of the world's first operational computers and wrote two of the earliest books on computer design and programming," the Telegraph wrote this week. "She was also credited with the invention of the first assembly language, a programming language designed to be readable by users." In 1946 she joined a team of mathematicians under Andrew Booth at Birkbeck College undertaking calculations for the scientists working on the X-ray crystallography images which contributed to the discovery of the double helix shape of DNA.... To help the number-crunching involved Booth had embarked on building a computing machine called the Automatic Relay Calculator or ARC, and in 1947 Kathleen accompanied him on a six-month visit to Princeton University, where they consulted John von Neumann, who had developed th...

Slashdot: Developer Proposes New (and Compatible) 'Extended Flavor' of Go

Developer Proposes New (and Compatible) 'Extended Flavor' of Go Published on October 30, 2022 at 04:04AM While listening to a podcast about the Go programming language, backend architect Aviv Carmi heard some loose talk about forking the language to keep its original design while also allowing the evolution of an "extended flavor." If such a fork takes place, Carmi writes on Medium, he hopes the two languages could interact and share the same runtime environment, libraries, and ecosystem — citing lessons learned from the popularity of other language forks: There are well-known, hugely successful precedents for such a move. Unarguably, the JVM ecosystem will last longer and keep on gaining popularity thanks to Scala and Kotlin (a decrease in Java's popularity is overtaken by an increase in Scala's, during the previous decade, and in Kotlin's, during this one). All three languages contribute to a stronger, single community and gain stronger libraries and i...

Slashdot: A Space Rock Smashed Into Mars' Equator - and Revealed Chunks of Ice

A Space Rock Smashed Into Mars' Equator - and Revealed Chunks of Ice Published on October 30, 2022 at 03:04AM The mission of NASA's robotic lander InSight "is nearing an end as dust obscures its solar panels," reports CNN. "In a matter of weeks, the lander won't be able to send a beep to show it's OK anymore." "Before it bids farewell, though, the spacecraft still has some surprises in store." When Mars rumbled beneath InSight's feet on December 24, NASA scientists thought it was just another marsquake. The magnitude 4 quake was actually caused by a space rock slamming into the Martian surface a couple thousand miles away. The meteoroid left quite a crater on the red planet, and it revealed glimmering chunks of ice in an entirely unexpected place — near the warm Martian equator. The chunks of ice — the size of boulders — "were found buried closer to the warm Martian equator than any ice that has ever been detected on the planet,...

Slashdot: Vanilla OS: More Than Just Vanilla GNOME With Ubuntu

Vanilla OS: More Than Just Vanilla GNOME With Ubuntu Published on October 30, 2022 at 02:04AM Slashdot reader Soul_Predator writes: Vanilla OS is Ubuntu on stock GNOME, with on-demand immutability and package selection freedom. It is currently a beta project, with a stable release planned for the next month. "The first-time setup process is a breeze to experience," writes It's FOSS News, applauding how it lets uses choose and enable Flatpak/Snap/AppImage. Overall, a package manager that installs applications utilizing a container, getting the ability to choose your package managers, on-demand immutability, and vanilla GNOME make it seem like a good deal to keep an eye on... I'd say it is a project that I believe a lot of users will appreciate. You can download the ISO by joining its Discord channel for now. The ISO is not yet publicly available to all. Take a look at its documentation if you are curious. However, as per the roadmap, they plan to have a release candi...

Slashdot: New 'Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi' Animated Series Begins Streaming on Disney+

New 'Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi' Animated Series Begins Streaming on Disney+ Published on October 30, 2022 at 01:04AM The animated series "Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi" premiered this week on Disney+, witih all six 15-minute episodes released on Wednesday. CNN calls it a slick and well-produced "kind of super-service for the Star Wars faithful, rekindling old flames, and comfortably submerging them in the past." But they also add that animation "has also become a vehicle for greater experimentation, as witnessed in the Star Wars: Visions anime shorts that premiered last year." It's hardly a surprise that this latest addition to the mythology comes courtesy of producer Dave Filoni, who oversaw such series as The Clone Wars and Rebels before throwing his fertile mind for all things Star Wars into The Mandalorian and other live-action fare. Filoni wrote five of the six shorts, which are split between Ahsoka Tano (again voiced by Ashley Eckstei...

Slashdot: Why Is My Cat Using Baidu? And Other IoT DNS Oddities

Why Is My Cat Using Baidu? And Other IoT DNS Oddities Published on October 30, 2022 at 12:04AM Long-time Slashdot reader UnderAttack writes: IoT devices are often stitched together from various odd libraries and features. The SANS Internet Storm Center has a story about a cat feeder that not only appears to reach out to Baidu.com every five minutes but also uses a vulnerable DNS library that uses repeating query ids allowing for simple spoofing not seen since the early dark years of DNS The article, by a SANS.edu dean of research, concludes that "Some networking libraries use 'baidu.com' for internet connectivity checks. Even if the DNS lookup succeeds, there is no actual outbound connection in this case. The device is happy as long as an IP address is returned." Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot: You're Going To Have To Pay To Use Some Fancy Colors In Photoshop Now

You're Going To Have To Pay To Use Some Fancy Colors In Photoshop Now Published on October 29, 2022 at 03:32AM An anonymous reader quotes a report from Kotaku: It's very likely you don't give a great deal of thought to where the digital colors you use originally came from. Nor, probably, have you wondered who might "own" a particular color, when you picked it when creating something in Photoshop. But a lot of people are about to give this a huge amount of their attention, as their collection of PSD files gets filled with unwanted black, due to a licensing change between Adobe and Pantone. As of now, widely used Adobe apps like Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign will no longer support Pantone-owned colors for free, and those wishing for those colors to appear in their saved files will need to pay for a separate license. And this is real life. The removal of Pantone's colors from Adobe's software was meant to happen March 31 this year, but that date came...

Slashdot: Intel To Cut Jobs in Cost-Savings Drive as PC Slump Weighs on Earnings

Intel To Cut Jobs in Cost-Savings Drive as PC Slump Weighs on Earnings Published on October 29, 2022 at 02:55AM Intel has embarked on an aggressive cost-cutting push and is considering divestitures as the chip maker tries to navigate a sharp plunge in demand for PCs that has weighed on the company's earnings. From a report: Intel posted a 20% drop in third-quarter sales, issued a forecast for even weaker revenue in the current quarter and lowered its full-year outlook. The company is beginning targeted job cuts and making other adjustments including reducing factory hours to cope with the economic downturn, Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger said in an interview Thursday. He wouldn't specify how many of Intel's more than 120,000 employees would be affected. "We are aggressively addressing costs and driving efficiencies across the business," he said. He added that the company was looking at possible divestitures, among other moves. Intel said it was working to deliver...

Slashdot: How a Redditor Ended Up With an Industrial-Grade Netflix Server

How a Redditor Ended Up With an Industrial-Grade Netflix Server Published on October 29, 2022 at 02:10AM A Redditor says they've managed to get a hold of an old Netflix server for free, and has posted a detailed online look at the once mysterious hardware. The devices were part of Netflix's Open Connect Content Delivery Network (CDN), and can often be found embedded within major ISP networks to ensure your Netflix streams don't suck. From a report: Reddit user PoisonWaffle3 said the ISP he currently works for has been offloading old Netflix servers as they upgrade to more modern equipment. In a Reddit thread titled "So I got a Netflix cache server..." he posted a photo of the server, which is bright Netflix red, and explained how he was curious about what's inside the boxes given how little public information was available. "All I could find online was overviews, installation/config guides for their proprietary software, etc.," he said. "No sp...

Slashdot: EU Reaches Deal To Ban Sale of New Combustion-Engine Cars By 2035

EU Reaches Deal To Ban Sale of New Combustion-Engine Cars By 2035 Published on October 29, 2022 at 01:35AM The European Parliament and EU member countries have reached a deal to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars and vans by 2035. From a report: European Union negotiators sealed on Thursday night the first agreement of the bloc's "Fit for 55" package set up by the Commission to achieve the EU's climate goals of cutting emissions of the gases that cause global warming by 55 percent over this decade. The European Parliament said the deal is a "clear signal ahead of the UN COP27 Climate Change Conference that the EU is serious about adopting concrete laws to reach the more ambitious targets set out in the EU Climate Law." According to the bloc's data, transport is the only sector where greenhouse gas emissions have increased in the past 30 years, rising 33.5 percent between 1990 and 2019. Passenger cars are a significant polluter, accounting for 6...

Slashdot: India Sets Up Panels With Veto Power Over Social Media Content Moderation

India Sets Up Panels With Veto Power Over Social Media Content Moderation Published on October 29, 2022 at 12:55AM India will set up one or more grievance committees with the veto power to oversee content moderation decisions of social media firms, it said today, moving ahead with a proposal that has rattled Meta, Google and Twitter in the key overseas market. From a report: The panels, called Grievance Appellate Committee, will be created within three months, it said. In an amendment to the nation's new IT law that went into effect last year, the Indian government said any individual aggrieved by the social media's appointed grievance officer may appeal to the Grievance Appellate Committee, which will comprise a chairperson and two whole time members appointed by the government. (In compliance with the IT rules, social media firms last year appointed grievance and other officers in India to hear feedback and complaints from their users.) The Grievance Appellate Committee wil...

Slashdot: 'Miracle' Baby Opens Debate Over Possible Use of Centuries-old Sperm

'Miracle' Baby Opens Debate Over Possible Use of Centuries-old Sperm Published on October 29, 2022 at 12:15AM Technology allows sperm to be frozen longer than legal 50-year limit but poses medical and ethical questions. From a report: A change of law has paved the way for more babies to be born from sperm frozen up to 50 years ago, but experts say there is no scientific reason why sperm hundreds of years old cannot be used. This week, a boy was born using sperm frozen in 1996, collected when his father was diagnosed, aged 21, with Hodgkin lymphoma, in case his treatment caused infertility. Described as a "miracle" by his now 47-year-old father, Peter Hickles, the baby is close to holding the record for the longest gap between sperm collection and birth -- he was beaten by a baby born in the US using a 27-year-old sample. When Hickles' sperm was frozen, he thought it would only be viable for 10 years. Although experts say the technology for freezing sperm has bee...