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[33]Close binspamdupenotthebestofftopicslownewsdaystalestupid freshfunnyinsightfulinterestingmaybe offtopicflamebaittrollredundantoverrated insightfulinterestinginformativefunnyunderrated descriptive typodupeerror Do you develop on GitHub? You can keep using GitHub but automatically [34]sync your GitHub releases to SourceForge quickly and easily with [35]this tool so your projects have a backup location, and get your project in front of SourceForge's nearly 30 million monthly users. It takes less than a minute. Get new users downloading your project releases today! [36]Sign up for the Slashdot newsletter! or [37]check out the new Slashdot job board to browse remote jobs or jobs in your area. [38]× 170517117 story [39]Programming [40]GitHub Starts Mandatory 2FA Rollout Early for Some Users [41](github.blog) [42]4 Posted by EditorDavid on Monday March 13, 2023 @07:34AM from the accelerating-authentication dept. By the end of 2023, GitHub will require all code contributors to enable two-factor authentication -- part of "a platform-wide effort to secure software development by improving account security." But on Monday they'll start rolling it out, according to [43]a new blog post, reaching out to "smaller" groups of developers and administrators "to notify them of their 2FA enrollment requirement." If your account is selected for enrollment, you will be notified via email and see a banner on GitHub.com, asking you to enroll. You'll have 45 days to configure 2FA on your account -- before that date nothing will change about using GitHub except for the reminders. We'll let you know when your enablement deadline is getting close, and once it has passed you will be required to enable 2FA the first time you access GitHub.com. You'll have the ability to snooze this notification for up to a week, but after that your ability to access your account will be limited. Don't worry: this snooze period only starts once you've signed in after the deadline, so if you're on vacation or out of office, you'll still get that one week period to set up 2FA when you're back at your desk.... Twenty-eight (28) days after you enable 2FA, you'll be asked to perform a 2FA check-up while using GitHub.com, which validates that your 2FA setup is working correctly. Previously signed-in users will be able to reconfigure 2FA if they have misconfigured or misplaced second factors during onboarding. GitHub's blog post says their gradual rollout plan "will let us make sure developers are able to successfully onboard, and make adjustments as needed before we scale to larger groups as the year progresses." InfoWorld [44]summarizes the options: Users can choose between 2FA methods such as TOTP (Time-based One-Time Password), SMS (Short Message Service), security keys, or GitHub Mobile as a preferred 2FA method. GitHub advises using security keys and TOTPs wherever possible; SMS does not provide the same level of protection and is no longer recommended under NIST 800-63B, the company said. Internally GitHub is also testing [45]passkeys, according to their blog post. "Protecting developers and consumers of the open source ecosystem from these types of attacks is the first and most critical step toward [46]securing the supply chain." apply tags__________ 170527795 story [47]Twitter [48]Meta is Exploring Plans to Build a Twitter Rival [49](bbc.com) [50]37 Posted by EditorDavid on Monday March 13, 2023 @03:34AM from the Meta-commentary dept. "Meta, the parent firm of Facebook and Instagram, is working on a standalone, text-based social network app," [51]reports the BBC. BR> "It could rival both Twitter and its decentralised competitor, Mastodon." A spokesperson told the BBC: "We're exploring a standalone decentralized social network for sharing text updates...." According to [52]MoneyControl, the new app is codenamed P92, and will allow users to log in through their existing Instagram credentials. Meta's app will be based on a similar framework to the one that powers Mastodon, a Twitter-like service which was launched in 2016. The new app would be decentralised -- it cannot be run at the whim of a single entity, bought or sold.... It was not immediately clear when Meta would roll out the new app. apply tags__________ 170529537 story [53]Businesses [54]HSBC To Buy UK Arm of Silicon Valley Bank For $1.2 [55](bbc.com) [56]47 Posted by msmash on Monday March 13, 2023 @03:12AM from the breaking-news dept. HSBC, in [57]a stock exchange filing: HSBC Holdings plc announces that its UK ring-fenced subsidiary, HSBC UK Bank plc, is acquiring Silicon Valley Bank UK Limited (SVB UK) for 1 pound ($1.2). As at 10 March 2023, SVB UK had loans of around $6.6 bn and deposits of around $8.1bn. Noel Quinn, HSBC Group CEO, said, "This acquisition makes excellent strategic sense for our business in the UK. It strengthens our commercial banking franchise and enhances our ability to serve innovative and fast-growing firms, including in the technology and life-science sectors, in the UK and internationally. We welcome SVB UK's customers to HSBC and look forward to helping them grow in the UK and around the world. SVB UK customers can continue to bank as usual, safe in the knowledge that their deposits are backed by the strength, safety and security of HSBC. We warmly welcome SVB UK colleagues to HSBC, we are excited to start working with them." apply tags__________ 170528243 story [58]Open Source [59]Stack Overflow Survey Finds Most-Proven Technologies: Open Source, Cloud Computing, Machine Learning [60](stackoverflow.blog) [61]24 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @11:55PM from the trough-of-disillusionment dept. Stack Overflow [62]explored the "hype cycle" by asking thousands of real developers whether nascent tech trends have really proven themselves, and how they feel about them. "With AI-assisted technologies in the news, this survey's aim was to get a baseline for perceived utility and impact" of various technologies, writes Stack Overflow's senior analyst for market research and insights. The results? "Open source is clearly positioned as the north star to all other technologies, lighting the way to the chosen land of future technology prosperity." Technologies such as blockchain or AI may dominate tech media headlines, but are they truly trusted in the eyes of developers and technologists? On a scale of zero (Experimental) to 10 (Proven), the top proven technologies by mean score are open source with 6.9, cloud computing with 6.5, and machine learning with 5.9. The lowest scoring were quantum computing with 3.7, nanotechnology with 4.5, and low code/no code with 4.6.... [When asked for the next technology that everyone will use], AI comes in at the top of the list by a large margin, but our three top proven selections (open source, machine learning, cloud computing) follow after.... It's one thing to believe a technology has a prosperous future, it's another to believe a technology deserves a prosperous future. Alongside the emergent sentiment, respondents also scored the same technologies on a zero (Negative Impact) to 10 (Positive Impact) scale for impact on the world. The top positive mean scoring technologies were open source with 7.2, sustainable technologies with 6.6 and machine learning with 6.5; the top negative mean scoring technologies were low code/no code, InnerSource, and blockchain all with 5.3. Seeing low code/no code and blockchain score so low here makes sense because both could be associated with questionable job security in certain developer careers; however it's surprising that AI is not there with them on the negative end of the spectrum. AI-assisted technology had an above average mean score for positive impact (6.2) and the percent positive score is not that far off from those machine learning and cloud computing (28% vs. 33% or 32%). Possibly what we are seeing here as far as why developers would not rate AI more negatively than technologies like low code/no code or blockchain but do give it a higher emergent score is that they understand the technology better than a typical journalist or think tank analyst. AI-assisted tech is the second highest chosen technology on the list for wanting more hands-on training among respondents, just below machine learning. Developers understand the distinction between media buzz around AI replacing humans in well-paying jobs and the possibility of humans in better quality jobs when AI and machine learning technologies mature. Low code/no code for the same reason probably doesn't deserve to be rated so low, but it's clear that developers are not interested in learning more about it. Open source software is the overall choice for most positive and most proven scores in sentiment compared to the set of technologies we polled our users about. One quadrant of their graph shows three proven technologies which developers still had negative feelings about: biometrics, serverless computing, and rapid prototyping tools. (With "Internet of Things" straddling the line between positive and negative feelings.) And there were two technologies which 10% of respondents thought would never be widely used in the future: low code/no code and blockchain. "Post-FTX scandal, it's clear that most developers do not feel blockchain is positive or proven," the analyst writes. "However there is still desire to learn as more respondents want training with blockchain than cloud computing. There's a reason to believe in the direct positive impact of a given technology when it pays the bills." apply tags__________ 170527885 story [63]Ubuntu [64]New 'Ubuntu Flatpak Remix' Has (Unofficial) Flatpak Support Preinstalled [65](9to5linux.com) [66]29 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @09:54PM from the new-flavors dept. An anonymous reader shares [67]this report from 9to5Linux: After Canonical's [68]announcement that future Ubuntu releases won't include Flatpak support by default, someone already made an unofficial Ubuntu flavor that ships with support for Flatpak apps preinstalled and working out of the box, called Ubuntu Flatpak Remix. Meet [69]Ubuntu Flatpak Remix, an unofficial Ubuntu derivative that doesn't feature support for Snap apps and comes with support for Flatpak apps working out of the box. Several key apps are preinstalled in the Flatpak format rather than as a Snap app, including the Mozilla Firefox web browser, Mozilla Thunderbird email client, and LibreOffice office suite.... Support for the [70]Flathub portal is installed as well, so you'll be able to install more apps with just a few clicks. apply tags__________ 170527657 story [71]AI [72]GM Wants to Bring Microsoft's ChatGPT to Cars [73](reuters.com) [74]60 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @08:20PM from the travelling-companions dept. Reuters reports: [75]General Motors is exploring uses for ChatGPT as part of its broader collaboration with Microsoft, a company executive told Reuters. "ChatGPT is going to be in everything," GM Vice President Scott Miller said in an interview last week. The chatbot could be used to access information on how to use vehicle features normally found in an owners manual, program functions such as a garage door code or integrate schedules from a calendar, Miller said. "This shift is not just about one single capability like the evolution of voice commands, but instead means that customers can expect their future vehicles to be far more capable and fresh overall when it comes to emerging technologies," a GM spokesperson said on Friday. [76]More details from Engadget: According [77]to Semafor, the digital assistant will operate differently from other chatbots like Bing Chat. GM is reportedly working on adding a "car-specific layer" on top of the large language models that power ChatGPT. apply tags__________ 170527285 story [78]United States [79]US Regulators Bail Out SVB Customers, Who Can Access All Their Money Monday [80](cnn.com) [81]151 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @06:48PM from the money-matters dept. [82]Breaking news from CNN: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Sunday instructed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to guarantee Silicon Valley Bank customers will have access to all of their money starting Monday. By guaranteeing all deposits -- even the uninsured money customers kept with the failed SVB bank -- the government can ensure public confidence in America's banking system, said Yellen, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and FDIC Chairman Martin J. Gruenberg in a joint statement.... The FDIC opened an auction Sunday for bids to acquire the bank, the Treasury Department said in a briefing with lawmakers in the California delegation, two sources familiar with the briefing told CNN.... Under Secretary for Domestic Finance Nellie Liang and Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs Jonathan Davidson led the briefing, during which they told members that the FDIC is prepared "to operate the institution" to ensure depositors can maintain payroll for their employees and that more operations will emerge in coming days, one of the sources said. The treasury secretary's [83]statement clarified that "No losses associated with the resolution of Silicon Valley Bank will be borne by the taxpayer." We are also announcing a similar systemic risk exception for Signature Bank, New York, New York, which was closed today by its state chartering authority. All depositors of this institution will be made whole. As with the resolution of Silicon Valley Bank, no losses will be borne by the taxpayer. Shareholders and certain unsecured debtholders will not be protected. Senior management has also been removed. Any losses to the Deposit Insurance Fund to support uninsured depositors will be recovered by a special assessment on banks, as required by law. Finally, the Federal Reserve Board on Sunday announced it will make available additional funding to eligible depository institutions to help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors. Meanwhile, congresswoman Nancy Pelosi said there are multiple potential buyers for SVB, and "What we would hope to see by tomorrow morning is [84]for some other bank to buy the bank." The UK arm of the bank [85]has already received a bid from the Bank of London. From the treasury secretary's statement: The U.S. banking system remains resilient and on a solid foundation, in large part due to reforms that were made after the financial crisis that ensured better safeguards for the banking industry. Those reforms combined with today's actions demonstrate our commitment to take the necessary steps to ensure that depositors' savings remain safe. apply tags__________ 170526911 story [86]Cellphones [87]Is Samsung Faking the AI-Enhanced 'Space Zoom' Photos on Galaxy Smartphones? [88](appleinsider.com) [89]58 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @05:46PM from the moon-shots dept. Samsung's Galaxy smartphones now offer "Space Zoom," writes Apple Insider, a feature augmenting 3x and 10x telephoto cameras with digital zoom "aided by Samsung's AI Super Resolution technology." But the resulting 100X zoom levels "[90]appear to be more a feat of AI trickery than anything else," they conclude, citing [91]an investigation by a Reddit user: That so-called Space Zoom could potentially allow users to photograph the moon, and many do. However, it may be the case that the level of detail in the moon shots may only be higher due to software shenanigans.... The user tested the effect by downloading a high-resolution image of the moon, then downsized it to a 170 by 170-resolution image, and then applied a gaussian blur to obliterate any final details of its surface. They then showed the low-res blurry moon at full screen on their monitor, walked to the other end of their room, zoomed in on the fake celestial body, and took a photograph. After some processing, an image of the moon was produced by the smartphone, but the surface had considerably more detail for the surface than the doctored source. The user reckons Samsung "is leveraging an AI model to put craters and other details on places which were just a blurry mess." They go further to stress that while super resolution processing uses multiple images to recover otherwise-lost detail, this seems to be something different. It is proposed that this is a case "where you have a specific AI model trained on a set of moon images, in order to recognize the moon and slap on the moon texture on it." The Reddit user has now [92]posted an update: I photoshopped one moon next to another (to see if one moon would get the AI treatment, while another would not), and managed to coax the AI to do exactly that.... [O]ne moon got the "AI enhancement", while the other one shows what was actually visible to the sensor -- a blurry mess.... It's literally adding in detail that weren't there. It's not deconvolution, it's not sharpening, it's not super resolution, it's not "multiple frames or exposures". It's generating data. apply tags__________ 170526045 story [93]Businesses [94]Before Hitting Pause On HQ2, Amazon Sent a "You're Welcome" To Area Residents [95](fcnp.com) [96]21 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @04:46PM from the corporate-handouts dept. Long-time Slashdot reader [97]theodp shares a fresh perspective on how the [98]"pause" announced for building Amazon's HQ2 headquarters could impact the local community: The Falls Church News-Press notes that Amazon's [99]pause announcement came just days after a 12-page glossy mass mailing entitled [100]Capital Region Community Impact Report went out to thousands in the region. Beginning with a statement from Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, the report spelled out "Amazon's philanthropic commitments in the Capital Region," including $32M donated to 150+ local organizations in 2021, $990M+ committed to create and preserve 6,245 affordable housing units. 13,700 people supported by Amazon-funded affordable housing investments and 23,000 students who received food, clothing, school supplies, hygiene items and other urgent support through Amazon's [101]Right Now Needs Fund. According to the report, the commitments also included benefits to [102]75,000+ students across 343 schools who received computer science education through the Amazon Future Engineer program, to [103]166,000+ students who participated in the CodeVA K-12 CS education program during the 2021-22 academic year, the 5.3 million free meals delivered to underserved families in partnership with Northern Virginia food banks, 10,000 meals purchased from local restaurants and donated to support Covid-19 first responders, $350,000 contributed to local community theaters and arts-focused non-profits, to 6,000 students who [104]explored cloud computing solutions at the Wakefield H.S. Think Big in the 2021-22 academic year, the 200,000 children and families from underserved communities who received free access to the National Children's Museum through a $250,000 gift from Amazon, and the 16,700+ students served by Amazon's support for local youth sports leagues. Not to look an [105]Amazon philanthropy gift horse in the mouth, but [106]should politicians be reliant on Amazon philanthropy to meet their communities' basic needs? Amazon's 2022 income taxes, by the way, [107]were -$3.217B. apply tags__________ 170526489 story [108]Youtube [109]What Can't You Say on YouTube? Its Content Creators Aren't Sure [110](theatlantic.com) [111]95 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @02:59PM from the overlord-algorithm dept. "Recently, on a YouTube channel, I said something terrible," confesses a staff writer for the Atlantic. "[112]But I don't know what it was." Whatever it was, it was enough to get the interview demonetized, meaning no ads could be placed against it, and my host received no revenue from it. "It does start to drive you mad," says Andrew Gold, whose channel, [113]On the Edge, was the place where I committed my unknowable offense. Like many full-time YouTubers, he relies on the Google-owned site's AdSense program, which gives him a cut of revenues from the advertisements inserted before and during his interviews. When launching a new episode, Gold explained to me, "you get a green dollar sign when it's monetizable, and it goes yellow if it's not." Creators can contest these rulings, but that takes time -- and most videos receive the majority of their views in the first hours after launch. So it's better to avoid the yellow dollar sign in the first place. If you want to make money off of YouTube, you need to watch what you say.... YouTube operates a three-strike policy for infractions: The first strike is a warning; the second prevents creators from making new posts for a week; and the third (if received within 90 days of the second) gets the channel banned.... Although many types of content may never run afoul of the guidelines...political discussions are subject to the whims of algorithms. Absent enough human moderators to deal with the estimated 500 hours of videos uploaded every minute, YouTube uses artificial intelligence to enforce its guidelines. Bots scan auto-generated transcripts and flag individual words and phrases as problematic, hence the problem with saying heroin. Even though "educational" references to drug use are allowed, the word might snag the AI trip wire, forcing a creator to request a time-consuming review.... [T]alk with everyday creators, and they are more than willing to work inside the rules, which they acknowledge are designed to make YouTube safer and more accurate. They just want to know what those rules are, and to see them applied consistently. As it stands, Gold compared his experience of being impersonally notified of unspecified infractions to working for HAL9000, the computer overlord from 2001: A Space Odyssey. ["They don't tell me if it's Nazis, heroin, or anything," Gold says later. "You're just left wondering what it was."] The article notes that YouTube's algorithm seems to flag people who are debunking misinformation as misinformation. (One [114]study found that purveyors of controversial content simply stop worrying about YouTube demonetizing their videos, using them to direct viewers instead to their "affiliate" links offering commissions, or to their content on other still-monetized platforms.) In just the last three months of 2022, YouTube made almost [115]$8 billion in advertising revenue, the article concludes. "There's a very good reason journalism is not as profitable as that: Imagine if YouTube edited its content as diligently as a legacy newspaper or television channel -- even quite a sloppy one. Its great river of videos would slow to a trickle." apply tags__________ 170526137 story [116]The Almighty Buck [117]No Federal Bailout for SVB, Says US. Bank Had Weakened Regulations, Paid Bonuses [118](apnews.com) [119]150 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @01:59PM from the bank-shots dept. Today U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Silicon Valley Bank would not be bailed out by the federal government. But the government is working on helping depositors, Yellen said on the CBS News show Face the Nation. [120]The Associated Press reports that deposits insured by the federal government are supposed to be available by Monday morning... The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insures deposits up to $250,000, but many of the companies and wealthy people who used the bank -- known for its relationships with technology startups and venture capital -- had more than that amount in their account. There are fears that some workers across the country won't receive their paychecks.... [Yellen] emphasized that the situation was much different from the financial crisis almost 15 years ago, which led to bank bailouts to protect the industry. "We're not going to do that again," she said. "But we are concerned about depositors, and we're focused on trying to meet their needs...." Silicon Valley Bank is the nation's 16th-largest bank. It was the second biggest bank failure in U.S. history after the collapse of Washington Mutual in 2008. The bank served mostly technology workers and venture capital-backed companies, including some of the industry's best-known brands.... Yellen said she expected regulators to consider "a wide range of available options," including the acquisition of Silicon Valley Bank by another institution. So far, however, no buyer has stepped forward. CNBC [121]reports that just hours before regulators seized the failing bank -- employees were paid their annual bonuses, "according to people with knowledge of the payments." And the Intercept reports that earlier the bank had [122]successfully lobbied for the rollback of protective rules established [123]in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. "The lobbying effort managed to exempt banks the size of Silicon Valley Bank from more stringent regulations, including stress tests aimed at uncovering the type of weaknesses that led to the bank's implosion Friday." But the Washington Post reported that as dramatic as the seizure is, "one thing it [124]doesn't seem likely to do -- at least for now -- is trigger a wider financial meltdown, banking experts said." Unlike the giant banks that ignited a global crisis in 2008, SVB was heavily dependent upon a single risky sector of the economy for both its depositors and its customers. That concentrated bet proved to be very bad news for the ambitious start-ups that dominate the high-technology world. But it means that the tech-friendly bank lacked the sophisticated financial entanglements with other institutions that can turn one bank's losses into a threat to the entire industry. apply tags__________ 170517541 story [125]The Almighty Buck [126]Head of America's SEC: Crypto Firms Should Comply With US Regulations [127](thehill.com) [128]53 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @11:34AM from the fed-up-Feds dept. "Crypto firms should do their work within the bounds of the law, or they shouldn't do it at all," [129]says the head of America's Securities and Exchange Commission, which regulates US. investment markets. In an editorial published in The Hill, SEC chair Gary Gensler warns that instead cryptocurrency has many "trusted" intermediaries that are in fact non-compliant with U.S. securities law. Today, crypto is dominated by a handful of trading, lending, staking, and other financial intermediaries. The investing public is trusting these entities to be responsible with investors' assets. According to some data, the three largest crypto trading platforms purportedly account for [130]almost three quarters of all trading volume. Crypto entrepreneurs might claim, in their own marketing materials, that they're transparent and regulated. But make no mistake: Very few, if any, are actually registered with the SEC and fully compliant with the federal securities laws. The lack of compliance puts investors' hard-earned assets at risk. Investors lack fundamental disclosures about the crypto assets themselves and the firms who execute their trades and custody their assets: What are firms doing with customer assets? How are they funding their promised returns? Are they putting their hands in investors' pockets? When you buy or sell a token, are you trading against the house? What are the rules to protect against manipulation and fraud? Without disclosure and other investor protections, we simply don't know. In essence, these firms are saying, "trust us." What's more, when firms go bankrupt (as [131]many have of late), they turn to bankruptcy courts to sort out their mess. "[B]ased upon how crypto platforms generally operate, investment advisers cannot rely on them today as qualified custodians," the editorial concludes. Rather than comply with the relevant laws, "it has felt like some have sought a stamp of approval for noncompliant activity, rather than changing a fundamentally non-compliant business model rife with conflicts." Of course, another tool in our toolbox is rooting out noncompliance through investigations and enforcement actions. The SEC has successfully brought or settled [132]more than 100 cases against crypto intermediaries and token issuers, including some who operated Ponzi or pyramid schemes, engaged in unlawful touting, or committed other forms of fraud.... Some have said that we should let the innovation flourish or risk it going overseas. But forsaking investor protection puts real people's life savings at risk. "It's a basic bargain in finance: If you want to raise money from the public, disclose certain facts and figures," Gensler [133]told Politico this week. Their article notes "crypto giants are threatening to [134]move their businesses across the Atlantic" from America to Europe, but with Gensler responding "We lose more if investors get harmed here." Crypto lobbyists have framed Gensler's push to force their industry to comply with 90-year-old securities laws as a war against financial innovation. Whatever changes brought by crypto markets will pale compared to what could come as brokerages and financial data aggregators move to incorporate artificial intelligence into their offerings, Gensler said. "The much more transformative technology right now of our times is predictive data analytics and everything underlying artificial intelligence," he said, adding that he looked forward to working with lawmakers on how those tools could be regulated. apply tags__________ 170522665 story [135]Crime [136]Teens Are Stealing More Cars. They Learn How on Social Media. [137](yahoo.com) [138]85 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @10:34AM from the grand-theft-auto dept. Though Kia and Hyundai represent a tenth of U.S. auto sales, [139]the New York Times reports that "Of the nearly 11,000 cars stolen in Memphis last year -- about twice as many as in 2021 -- roughly a third were late-model Kias and Hyundais, according to the police." "It doesn't take much to rip them off: just a screwdriver, a USB cord and hot-wiring know-how found in videos proliferating on social media." Many of the culprits are teenagers or young adults stealing cars for kicks or to use them for other crimes, such as robberies, the police say. More than half of the 175 people arrested and accused of car theft this year in Memphis were teenagers, who often abandon the vehicles after a joyride.... [A]uto thefts have continued to rise, even as other forms of lawbreaking have leveled out or fallen.... [T]he surge has continued, fueled in part by social media videos that show, step by step, how to steal Kias and Hyundais that are not equipped with an engine immobilizer -- an electronic security device that keeps a car from being started without a key.... [Kia and Hyundai] recently issued [140]statements saying they had fixed the problem that makes their vehicles relatively easy to steal in their latest models, and were introducing free software upgrades for vulnerable cars -- about 4.5 million Kias and 3.8 million Hyundais, the [141]federal government estimated. At the same time, the companies have shipped steering wheel locks to police departments across the country, to be provided free of charge to car owners who drive at-risk models. And executives say they are constantly monitoring TikTok and YouTube for new videos that show how to steal their vehicles, and then alerting the social media companies so those videos can be removed.... Officials say the social media-driven rise in Kia and Hyundai thefts began about two years ago in Milwaukee, and then spread nationwide. City attorneys for Seattle and Columbus recently sued the automakers for not installing anti-theft technology, and other cities, including Cleveland, Milwaukee and St. Louis, have threatened litigation. apply tags__________ 170522153 story [142]Programming [143]Go Finally Returns to Top 10 of Programming Language Popularity List [144](infoworld.com) [145]63 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @07:34AM from the on-the-Go dept. "Google's Go language has re-entered the top 10 of the Tiobe index of programming language popularity, after a nearly six-year absence," [146]reports InfoWorld: Go ranks 10th in the [147]March edition of the index, after placing 11th the [148]previous month. The language last appeared in the top 10 in July 2017. The re-emergence of Go in the March 2023 index is being attributed to its popularity with software engineers and its strength in combining the right features, namely built-in concurrency, garbage collection, static typing, and good performance. Google's backing also helps, improving long-term trust in the language, Tiobe said. The languages Go beat out include "assembly language" at #11, followed by MATLAB, Delphi/Object Pascal, Scratch, and Classic Visual Basic. Here's the complete top-ten most popular programming languages, according to TIOBE: * Python * C * Java * C++ * C# * Visual Basic * JavaScript * SQL * PHP * Go apply tags__________ 170522065 story [149]Government [150]Why Are We Still Observing Daylight Saving Time? [151](thehill.com) [152]199 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 12, 2023 @04:34AM from the springing-forward dept. As millions set their clocks forward one hour, there's pockets of resistance, according to [153]this local news report: - "According to a March 2022 CBS News poll, 46% of Americans prefer permanent daylight saving time, while 33% prefer permanent standard time. The remaining 21% simply favor the status quo." - "Exceptions to this adopted norm include residents of Hawaii and most of Arizona, where standard time is permanent throughout the year." But The Hill notes that America [154]appears to be stuck halfway toward repealing daylight saving time: Earlier this month, Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) introduced [155]the Sunshine Protection Act of 2023, which would make daylight saving time permanent. So far, the bill has received [156]bipartisan support in the Senate and has been referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. If passed, the March 12 changing of the clocks would be the final such event -- we wouldn't "fall back" in November. A similar bill introduced by Rubio [157]last year passed with unanimous support in the Senate, but it wasn't as well-received in the House. So before America can end daylight saving time, that bill would need approval from the U.S. House of Representatives -- and then the president's signature. Meanwhile at least U.S. [158]at least 19 states have already enacted legislation or resolutions to make daylight saving time permanent, the article points out. "But these states can't make the change without congressional approval, or their neighboring states enacting similar legislation." apply tags__________ [159]« Newer [160]Older » Slashdot Top Deals Slashdot Top Deals [161]Slashdot Deals Slashdot Poll With increasing advances in lifespans, health, and medicine, how old will the oldest person who is already alive today live to be? (*) 125 years old or less ( ) Between 126 and 175 years old ( ) Between 176 and 225 years old ( ) Between 225 and 275 years old ( ) Between 276 and 325 years old ( ) Between 326 and 500 years old ( ) Between 500 and 1000 years old ( ) Over 1000 years old (BUTTON) vote now [162]Read the 121 comments | 22861 votes Looks like someone has already voted from this IP. If you would like to vote please login and try again. With increasing advances in lifespans, health, and medicine, how old will the oldest person who is already alive today live to be? 0 Percentage of others that also voted for: * [163]view results * Or * * [164]view more [165]Read the 121 comments | 22861 voted Most Discussed * 204 comments [166]Jaded With Education, More Americans are Skipping College * 198 comments [167]Why Are We Still Observing Daylight Saving Time? * 151 comments [168]US Regulators Bail Out SVB Customers, Who Can Access All Their Money Monday * 150 comments [169]No Federal Bailout for SVB, Says US. Bank Had Weakened Regulations, Paid Bonuses * 116 comments [170]Tech Layoffs Caused by Vain Over-Hiring for 'Fake Work', Argues Former PayPal Executive Hot Comments * [171]Re:Why is this still happening? (5 points, Informative) by Tx on Monday March 13, 2023 @05:17AM attached to [172]HSBC To Buy UK Arm of Silicon Valley Bank For $1.2 * [173]Re:SVB executives also dumped their stocks ahead o (5 points, Informative) by hawk on Sunday March 12, 2023 @03:41PM attached to [174]No Federal Bailout for SVB, Says US. Bank Had Weakened Regulations, Paid Bonuses * [175]Re:Privatize the profit, and nationalize the risk (5 points, Insightful) by larryjoe on Sunday March 12, 2023 @08:04PM attached to [176]US Regulators Bail Out SVB Customers, Who Can Access All Their Money Monday * [177]Re:Ironic (5 points, Insightful) by sg_oneill on Sunday March 12, 2023 @09:22AM attached to [178]Go Finally Returns to Top 10 of Programming Language Popularity List * [179]Re: And feds accept no responsibility, again? (5 points, Insightful) by ScienceBard on Sunday March 12, 2023 @02:56PM attached to [180]No Federal Bailout for SVB, Says US. 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