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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]× 170608493 story [39]Space [40]Interstellar Object 'Oumuamua Probably Moved Strangely Due To Gas, Study Says [41](npr.org) [42]15 Posted by [43]BeauHD on Friday March 24, 2023 @06:00AM from the strangely-relatable dept. Scientists have [44]come up with a simple explanation for the strange movements of our solar system's [45]first known visitor from another star. NPR reports: Now, though, [46]in the journal Nature, two researchers say the answer might be the release of hydrogen from trapped reserves inside water-rich ice. That was the notion of Jennifer Bergner, an astrochemist with the University of California, Berkeley, who recalls that she initially didn't spend much time thinking about 'Oumuamua when it was first discovered. "It's not that closely related to my field. So I was like, this is a really intriguing object, but sort of moved on with my life," she says. Then she happened to attend a seminar that featured Cornell University's Darryl Seligman, who described the object's weirdness and what might account for it. One possibility he'd considered was that it was composed entirely of hydrogen ice. Others have suggested it might instead be composed of nitrogen ice. Bergner wondered if it could just be a water-rich comet that got exposed to a lot of cosmic radiation. That radiation would release the hydrogen from the water. Then, if that hydrogen got trapped inside the ice, it could be released when the object approached the sun and began to warm up. Astronomers who observed 'Oumuamua weren't looking for that kind of hydrogen outgassing and, even if they had been, the amounts involved could have been undetectable from Earth. She teamed up with Seligman to start investigating what happens when water ice gets hit with radiation. They also did calculations to see if the object was large enough to store enough trapped hydrogen to account for the observed acceleration. And they looked to see how the structure of water ice would react to getting warmed, to see if small shifts could allow trapped gas to escape. It turns out, this actually could account for the observed acceleration, says Bergner, who notes that the kind of "amorphous" water ice found in space has a kind of "fluffy" structure that contains empty pockets where gas can collect. As this water ice warms up, its structure begins to rearrange, she says, and "you lose your pockets for hiding hydrogen. You can form channels or cracks within the water ice as parts of it are sort of compacting." As the pockets collapse and these cracks form, the trapped hydrogen would leak out into space, giving the object a push, she says. apply tags__________ 170606895 story [47]Printer [48]Relativity Space Launches World's First 3D-Printed Rocket On Historic Test Flight [49](space.com) [50]2 Posted by [51]BeauHD on Friday March 24, 2023 @03:00AM from the important-milestones dept. Longtime Slashdot reader [52]destinyland shares a report from Space.com: The Relativity Space rocket, called Terran 1, lifted off from Launch Complex 16 at Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 8:25 p.m. EST (0025 GMT on March 23), [53]kicking off a test flight called "Good Luck, Have Fun" (GLHF). Terran 1 performed well initially. For example, it survived Max-Q -- the part of flight during which the structural loads are highest on a rocket -- and its first and second stages separated successfully. But something went wrong shortly thereafter, at around three minutes into the flight, when the rocket failed to reach orbit. "No one's ever attempted to launch a 3D-printed rocket into orbit, and, while we didn't make it all the way today, we gathered enough data to show that flying 3D-printed rockets is viable," Relativity Space's Arwa Tizani Kelly said during the company's launch webcast on Wednesday night. "We just completed a major step in proving to the world that 3D-printed rockets are structurally viable," she added. apply tags__________ 170606873 story [54]Biotech [55]FDA Clears Lab-Grown Chicken As Safe To Eat [56](cbsnews.com) [57]62 Posted by [58]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @11:30PM from the it's-really-real dept. An anonymous reader quotes a report from CBS News: The Food and Drug Administration on Monday [59]cleared cultured "cultured chicken cell material" made by [60]GOOD Meat as [61]safe for use as human food. While the FDA said the lab-grown chicken was safe to eat, GOOD Meat still needs approval from the Agriculture Department before i can sell the product in the U.S. If approved, acclaimed chef Jose Andres plans to serve GOOD Meat's chicken to customers at his Washington, D.C. restaurant. He's on GOOD Meat's board of directors. The FDA previously gave the green light to lab-grown chicken made by Upside Foods in November. Upside Foods and GOOD Meat both use cells from chickens to create the cultured chicken products. Once cells are extracted, GOOD Meat picks the cells most likely to produce healthy, sustainable and tasty meat, the company explained. The cells are immersed in nutrients inside a tank. They grow and divide, creating the cultured chicken, which can be harvested after four to six weeks. GOOD Meat's chicken is already sold in Singapore. "Today's news is more than just another regulatory decision -- it's food system transformation in action," [62]says Bruce Friedrich, president and founder of the Good Food Institute, a non-profit think tank that focuses on alternatives to traditional meat production. "Consumers and future generations deserve the foods they love made more sustainably and in ways that benefit the public good -- ways that preserve our land and water, ways that protect our climate and global health," Friedrich says. apply tags__________ 170606575 story [63]Earth [64]Humans Have Reclaimed 'Land Size of Luxembourg' Since 2000 [65]33 Posted by [66]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @10:02PM from the artificial-land dept. Land reclamation is nothing new, but during this century there has been a significant rise in the creation of artificial land by humans, with a recent study showing that developers have added more than 2,500 sq km -- [67]an area equivalent to the size of Luxembourg -- to coastlines since 2000. The Guardian reports: Using satellite imagery, Dhritiraj Sengupta, from the University of Southampton, and his colleagues analysed land changes in 135 large cities. Their results, [68]published in the journal Earth's Future, show that much of the recent land reclamation has occurred in the global south, with China, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates leading the way. Shanghai alone has added about 350 sq km of land. Most of the projects were driven by port expansion, a need for urban space and industrialization, while a small handful were "prestige" projects such as the palm tree-shaped islands of Dubai. apply tags__________ 170606531 story [69]AI [70]The Writers Guild of America Would Allow AI In Scriptwriting, As Long as Writers Maintain Credit [71](variety.com) [72]28 Posted by [73]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @09:25PM from the adapting-to-technological-advances dept. The Writers Guild of America has [74]proposed allowing artificial intelligence to write scripts, as long as it does not affect writers' credits or residuals. Variety reports: The guild had previously indicated that it would propose regulating the use of AI in the writing process, which has recently surfaced as a concern for writers who fear losing out on jobs. But contrary to some expectations, the guild is not proposing an outright ban on the use of AI technology. Instead, the proposal would allow a writer to use ChatGPT to help write a script without having to share writing credit or divide residuals. Or, a studio executive could hand the writer an AI-generated script to rewrite or polish and the writer would still be considered the first writer on the project. In effect, the proposal would treat AI as a tool -- like Final Draft or a pencil -- rather than as a writer. It appears to be intended to allow writers to benefit from the technology without getting dragged into credit arbitrations with software manufacturers. The proposal does not address the scenario in which an AI program writes a script entirely on its own, without help from a person. The guild's proposal was discussed in the first bargaining session on Monday with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. Three sources confirmed the proposal. It's not yet clear whether the AMPTP, which represents the studios, will be receptive to the idea. The WGA proposal states simply that AI-generated material will not be considered "literary material" or "source material." Those terms are key for assigning writing credits, which in turn have a big impact on residual compensation. "Literary material" is a fundamental term in the WGA's minimum basic agreement -- it is what a "writer" produces (including stories, treatments, screenplays, dialogue, sketches, etc.). If an AI program cannot produce "literary material," then it cannot be considered a "writer" on a project. "Source material" refers to things like novels, plays and magazine articles, on which a screenplay may be based. If a screenplay is based on source material, then it is not considered an "original screenplay." The writer may also get only a "screenplay by" credit, rather than a "written by" credit. A "written by" credit entitles the writer to the full residual for the project, while a "screenplay by" credit gets 75%. By declaring that ChatGPT cannot write "source material," the guild would be saying that a writer could adapt an AI-written short story and still get full "written by" credit. apply tags__________ 170606485 story [75]Government [76]Utah Passes Laws Requiring Parental Permission For Teens To Use Social Media [77](engadget.com) [78]78 Posted by [79]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @08:45PM from the permission-required dept. Utah's governor has [80]signed two bills that [81]could upend how teens in the state are able to use social media apps. Engadget reports: Under the [82]new [83]laws, companies like Meta, Snap and TikTok would be required to get parents permission before teens could create accounts on their platforms. The laws also require curfew, parental controls and age verification features. The laws could dramatically change how social platforms handle the accounts of their youngest users. In addition to the parental consent and age verification features, the laws also bar companies "from using a design or feature that causes a minor to have an addiction to the company's social media platform." For now, it's not clear how Utah officials intend to enforce the laws or how they will apply to teenagers' existing social media accounts. Both laws are scheduled to take effect next March. apply tags__________ 170606459 story [84]Privacy [85]License Plate Surveillance, Courtesy of Your Homeowners Association [86](theintercept.com) [87]48 Posted by [88]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @08:02PM from the deliberate-marketing-strategies dept. An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Intercept: At a city council meeting in June 2021, Mayor Thomas Kilgore, of Lakeway, Texas, made an announcement that confused his community. "I believe it is my duty to inform you that a surveillance system has been installed in the city of Lakeway," he told the perplexed crowd. Kilgore was referring to a system consisting of eight license plate readers, installed by the private company Flock Safety, that was [89]tracking cars on both private and public roads. Despite being in place for six months, no one had told residents that they were being watched. Kilgore himself had just recently learned of the cameras. "We find ourselves with a surveillance system," he said, "with no information and no policies, procedures, or protections." The deal to install the cameras had not been approved by the city government's executive branch. Instead, the Rough Hollow Homeowners Association, a nongovernment entity, and the Lakeway police chief had [90]signed off on the deal in January 2021, giving police access to residents' footage. By the time of the June city council meeting, the surveillance system had notified the police department over a dozen times. "We thought we were just being a partner with the city," Bill Hayes, the chief operating officer of Legend Communities, which oversees the Rough Hollow Homeowners Association, said at the meeting. "We didn't go out there thinking we were being Big Brother." Lakeway is just one example of a community that has faced Flock's surveillance without many homeowners' knowledge or approval. Neighbors in Atlanta, Georgia, remained in the dark [91]for a year after cameras were put up. In Lake County, Florida, nearly 100 cameras [92]went up "overnight like mushrooms," according to one county commissioner -- without a single permit. In a statement, Flock Safety brushed off the Lake County incident as an "an honest misunderstanding," but the increasing surveillance of community members' movements across the country is no accident. It's a deliberate marketing strategy. Flock Safety, which began as a startup in 2017 in Atlanta and is now valued at approximately $3.5 billion, has targeted homeowners associations, or HOAs, in partnership with police departments, to become one of the largest surveillance vendors in the nation. There are key strategic reasons that make homeowners associations the ideal customer. HOAs have large budgets -- they collect over $100 billion a year from homeowners -- and it's an opportunity for law enforcement to gain access into gated, private areas, normally out of their reach. apply tags__________ 170605543 story [93]Transportation [94]Ford Says EV Unit Losing Billions, Should Be Seen As Startup [95](apnews.com) [96]71 Posted by [97]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @07:20PM from the ugly-industry-truths dept. Ford's electric vehicle business has [98]lost $3 billion before taxes during the past two years and will lose a similar amount this year as the company invests heavily in the new technology. The Associated Press reports: The figures were released Thursday as Ford rolled out a new way of reporting financial results. The new business structure separates electric vehicles, the profitable internal combustion and commercial vehicle operations into three operating units. Company officials said the electric vehicle unit, called "Ford Model e," will be profitable before taxes by late 2026 with an 8% pretax profit margin. But they wouldn't say exactly when it's expected to start making money. Chief Financial Officer John Lawler said Model e should be viewed as a startup company within Ford. "As everyone knows, EV startups lose money while they invest in capability, develop knowledge, build (sales) volume and gain (market) share," he said. Model e, he said, is working on second- and even third-generation electric vehicles. It currently offers three EVs for sale in the U.S.: the Mustang Mach E SUV, the F-150 Lightning pickup and an electric Transit commercial van. The new corporate reporting system, Lawler said, is designed to give investors more transparency than the old system of reporting results by geographic regions. The automaker calculated earnings for each of the three units during the past two calendar years. apply tags__________ 170605523 story [99]Crime [100]Terraform Labs Founder Do Kwon Arrested In Montenegro [101](coindesk.com) [102]16 Posted by [103]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @06:40PM from the you-can-run-but-you-can't-hide dept. The founder of Terraform Labs, Do Kwon, [104]appears to have been arrested in Montenegro, according to a tweet by the country's minister of interior, Filip Adzic. CoinDesk reports: "Montenegrin police have detained a person suspected of being one of the most wanted fugitives, South Korean citizen Do Kwon, co-founder and CEO of Singapore-based Terraform Labs," Adzic [105]tweeted. Kwon has been the target of several investigations and was even on Interpol's red notice after stablecoin terraUSD (UST) and its $40 billion ecosystem [106]imploded last year, sending shockwaves across the crypto markets. The suspect was detained at the Podgorica airport with falsified documents, Adzic added, saying he was still waiting for official confirmation of identity. The Korean National Police Agency said that it had confirmed the suspect appeared to be Kwon based on checking age, name, and nationality of his ID card, according to a report by the Yonhap news agency. The unverified account of Adzic is followed by the official account of the prime minister of Montenegro, Dritan Abazovic. The tweet announcing Kwon's arrest was also retweeted by Abazovic's account. Adzic's account has previously been cited in [107]official tweets. apply tags__________ 170605491 story [108]Hardware [109]Framework's First Gaming Laptop Features Upgradeable GPUs, Swappable Keyboards [110](arstechnica.com) [111]19 Posted by [112]BeauHD on Thursday March 23, 2023 @06:00PM from the what's-in-the-works dept. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Framework has delivered on the promise of its original 13-inch laptop. Three product generations in, the company has [113]made a respectable competitor for the Dell XPS 13 or MacBook Air that can be repaired, modified, and upgraded, and owners of the original laptop can easily give themselves a significant performance boost by upgrading to the new 13th-generation Intel or AMD Ryzen-based boards the company [114]announced today. Framework is now looking to build on that track record with an all-new Framework Laptop 16. It's a larger-screened model that can fit more powerful processors, dedicated GPUs, and a range of different keyboard modules, all with the same commitment to repairability and upgradeability seen in the original Framework Laptop (now retroactively dubbed the Framework Laptop 13). Framework isn't discussing many details yet; preorders won't open until "this spring," and shipments won't begin until "late 2023." Today, the company provided a preview of the laptop's features, along with developer documentation to encourage the creation of new Input Modules -- components that allow for keyboard customization much like the current [115]Expansion Card system allows for port customization. apply tags__________ 170605091 story [116]Transportation [117]Millions of 'Extremely' Polluting Cars Still on Europe's Roads, Says Report [118](theguardian.com) [119]32 Posted by msmash on Thursday March 23, 2023 @05:20PM from the closer-look dept. Thirteen million diesel cars producing "extreme" levels of toxic air pollution are [120]still on the roads in Europe and the UK, according to a report, seven years after the Dieselgate scandal first exploded. From a report: The non-profit research group, the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT), revealed in 2015 that many diesel cars were highly polluting, emitting far more nitrogen oxides on the road than in official testing. The scandal led to a more rigorous test being introduced in the EU in 2019. However, based on extensive testing evidence, the ICCT has now revealed that about 13m highly polluting diesel vehicles sold from 2009 to 2019 remain on the roads. A further 6m diesels have "suspicious" levels of emissions, the ICCT said. The cars span 200 different models produced by all the major manufacturers. The ICCT said the bestselling models from 2009-2019 in the EU27 and UK with "extreme" emissions are Euro 5 versions of the VW Passat and Tiguan, Renault Clio, Ford Focus and Nissan Qashqai. apply tags__________ 170605037 story [121]Earth [122]Chipmakers Fight Spread of US Crackdowns on 'Forever Chemicals' [123]27 Posted by msmash on Thursday March 23, 2023 @04:40PM from the how-about-that dept. Intel and other semiconductor companies have joined together with industrial materials businesses to [124]fight US clampdowns on "forever chemicals," substances used in myriad products that are slow to break down in the environment. From a report: The lobbying push from chipmakers broadens the opposition to [125]new rules and bans for the chemicals known as PFAS. The substances have been found in the blood of 97 per cent of Americans, according to the US government. More than 30 US states this year are considering legislation to address PFAS, according to Safer States, an environmental advocacy group. Bills in California and Maine passed in 2022 and 2021, respectively. "I think clean drinking water and for farmers to be able to irrigate their fields is far more important than a microchip," said Stacy Brenner, a Maine state senator who backed the state's bipartisan legislation. In Minnesota, bills would ban by 2025 certain products that contain added PFAS -- which is short for perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances -- in legislation considered to be some of the toughest in the country. The Semiconductor Industry Association -- whose members include Intel, IBM and Nvidia -- has cosigned letters opposing the Minnesota legislation, arguing its measures are overly broad and could prohibit thousands of products, including electronics. Chipmakers also opposed the California and Maine laws. apply tags__________ 170604959 story [126]Businesses [127]'Click-to-Cancel' Rule Would Penalize Companies That Make You Cancel By Phone [128](arstechnica.com) [129]85 Posted by msmash on Thursday March 23, 2023 @04:00PM from the moving-forward dept. Canceling a subscription should be just as easy as signing up for the service, the Federal Trade Commission said in a [130]proposed "click-to-cancel" rule announced today. If approved, the plan "would put an end to companies requiring you to call customer service to cancel an account that you opened on their website," FTC commissioners said. From a report: The FTC said the click-to-cancel rule would require sellers "to make it as easy for consumers to cancel their enrollment as it was to sign up," and "go a long way to rescuing consumers from seemingly never-ending struggles to cancel unwanted subscription payment plans for everything from cosmetics to newspapers to gym memberships." The FTC said the proposed rule would be enforced with civil penalties and let the commission return money to harmed consumers. "The proposal states that if consumers can sign up for subscriptions online, they should be able to cancel online, with the same number of steps. If consumers can open an account over the phone, they should be able to cancel it over the phone, without endless delays," FTC Chair Lina Khan wrote. The FTC is seeking public comment on the proposal, which also includes other changes to the commission's 1973 Negative Option Rule. "Some businesses too often trick consumers into paying for subscriptions they no longer want or didn't sign up for in the first place," Khan said. apply tags__________ 170604931 story [131]Security [132]Linus Tech Tips' YouTube Channel Was Hacked [133](overclock3d.net) [134]51 Posted by msmash on Thursday March 23, 2023 @03:20PM from the security-woes dept. New submitter [135]Kitkoan writes: Hackers had [136]gained control of Linus Tech Tips' YouTube channel to promote a cryptocurrency scam. Earlier on Thursday, hackers had gained control of the Linus Tech Tips YouTube channel and used it to promote a fake crypto giveaway that falsely used the name of Elon Musk and the Tesla brand (obviously without the permission of either party). Thankfully, the Linus Tech Tips crew quickly worked to re-establish control of the channel, but not before the channel had started two live streams to promote AI, chat GPT, Bitcoin, and their aforementioned (fake) crypto giveaway. apply tags__________ 170604879 story [137]AI [138]OpenAI is Massively Expanding ChatGPT's Capabilities To Let It Browse the Web [139](theverge.com) [140]62 Posted by msmash on Thursday March 23, 2023 @02:41PM from the aggressive-expansion dept. OpenAI is adding support for plug-ins to ChatGPT -- an upgrade that massively expands the chatbot's capabilities and [141]gives it access for the first time to live data from the web. From a report: Up until now, ChatGPT has been limited by the fact it can only pull information from its training data, which ends in 2021. OpenAI says plug-ins will not only allow the bot to browse the web but also interact with specific websites, potentially turning the system into a wide-ranging interface for all sorts of services and sites. In an announcement post, the company says it's almost like letting other services be ChatGPT's "eyes and ears." In one demo video, someone uses ChatGPT to find a recipe and then order the necessary ingredients from Instacart. ChatGPT automatically loads the ingredient list into the shopping service and redirects the user to the site to complete the order. OpenAI says it's rolling out plug-in access to "a small set of users." Initially, there are 11 plug-ins for external sites, including Expedia, OpenTable, Kayak, Klarna Shopping, and Zapier. OpenAI is also providing some plug-ins of its own, one for interpreting code and one called "Browsing," which lets ChatGPT get information from the internet. apply tags__________ [142]« Newer [143]Older » Slashdot Top Deals Slashdot Top Deals [144]Slashdot Deals Slashdot Poll Are you using ChatGPT, GPT-3, GPT-4, or a similar AI to help do your job? (*) Yes, a lot ( ) Yes, but not much ( ) No (BUTTON) vote now [145]Read the 43 comments | 6335 votes Looks like someone has already voted from this IP. If you would like to vote please login and try again. Are you using ChatGPT, GPT-3, GPT-4, or a similar AI to help do your job? 0 Percentage of others that also voted for: * [146]view results * Or * * [147]view more [148]Read the 43 comments | 6335 voted Most Discussed * 200 comments [149]Researcher Builds 'RightWingGPT' To Highlight Potential Bias In AI Systems * 138 comments [150]China Reminds US That It Can and Will Kill a Forced TikTok Sale * 132 comments [151]Supreme Court Ponders a Surprisingly Difficult Case About Poop Jokes * 102 comments [152]Hackers Drain Bitcoin ATMs of $1.5 Million By Exploiting 0-Day Bug * 102 comments [153]Europe's Right-To-Repair Law Asks Hardware Makers For Fixes For Up To 10 Years [154]Firehose * [155]Relativity Space launches world's first 3D-printed rocket on historic test fligh * [156]Linus Tech Tips' YouTube Channel has been hacked by Crypto Scammers * [157]U.S. sets code rewrite on job ads seeking H-1B, OPT workers * [158]Disney to lay off 4,000 workers in April -- as a start * [159]$1.5M USD stolen via Bitcoin ATMs using 0-Day, Funds Not Recoverable [160]This Day on Slashdot 2011 [161]Apple Remove Samba From OS X 10.7 Because of GPLv3 1075 comments 2009 [162]Texas Vote May Challenge Teaching of Evolution 1306 comments 2005 [163]Scientists Find Soft Tissue in T-Rex Fossil 978 comments 2004 [164]EU Fines Microsoft $613 Million, Officially 1186 comments 2002 [165]Most Outrageous Vendor Lie Ever Told? 1314 comments [166]Sourceforge Top Downloads * [167]TrueType core fonts 2.2B downloads * [168]Notepad++ Plugin Mgr 1.5B downloads * [169]VLC media player 899M downloads * [170]eMule 686M downloads * [171]MinGW 631M downloads Powered By [172]sf [173]Slashdot * [174]Today * [175]Thursday * [176]Wednesday * [177]Tuesday * [178]Monday * [179]Sunday * [180]Saturday * [181]Friday * [182]Submit Story Steve Jobs said two years ago that X is brain-damaged and it will be gone in two years. 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