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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]× 170804844 story [39]Intel [40]Intel's I219-LM Gigabit Ethernet Adapter Ran at 60% Maximum Speed on Linux Since 2020 [41](phoronix.com) [42]3 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday April 23, 2023 @07:34AM from the speed-limited dept. Phoronix reports: If you rely on an Intel I219-LM Gigabit Ethernet adapter, you will want to look forward to upgrading your Linux kernel build soon... A fix was committed Thursday after Intel engineers discovered this particular Ethernet chipset had only been [43]running at around 60% of its maximum speed due to a regression introduced back in 2020... Since the release of Linux 5.8 in mid-2020, this Ethernet adapter had been running at around 60% of its advertised potential due to an e1000e driver regression. apply tags__________ 170809436 story [44]Virtualization [45]QEMU 8.0 Released with More ARM and RISC-V Emulation [46](9to5linux.com) [47]3 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday April 23, 2023 @04:04AM from the Quick-EMUlator dept. There's a major new update of QEMU, the open-source machine emulator, [48]reports 9to5Linux: Coming a year after QEMU 7.0, the QEMU 8.0 release is here to improve support for ARM and RISC-V architectures. - For ARM, it adds emulation support for FEAT_EVT, FEAT_FGT, and AArch32 ARMv8-R, CPU emulation for Cortex-A55 and Cortex-R52, support for a new Olimex STM32 H405 machine type, as well as gdbstub support for M-profile system registers. - For the RISC-V architecture, QEMU 8.0 brings updated machine support for OpenTitan, PolarFire, and OpenSBI, additional ISA and Extension support for smstateen, native debug icount trigger, cache-related PMU events in virtual mode, Zawrs/Svadu/T-Head/Zicond extensions, and ACPI support. Moreover, RISC-V received multiple fixes covering PMP propagation for TLB, mret exceptions, uncompressed instructions, and other emulation/virtualization improvements. Improvements were also made for the s390x (IBM Z) platform, the HP Precision Architecture (HPPA) platform, and x86. apply tags__________ 170809366 story [49]The Almighty Buck [50]Argentina's 'Generacion Zoe' Promised Financial and Spirtual Development. Was it a Ponzi Scheme? [51](restofworld.org) [52]28 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday April 23, 2023 @12:59AM from the having-faith dept. It was a mix of spiritualism and financial education, remembers one patron of Generación Zoe, which "pitched itself as an 'educational and resource-creating community for personal, professional, financial and spiritual development,'" [53]reports Rest of World: Generación Zoe claimed to make money through trading, and promised a 7.5% monthly return on investment for three years for those who put money into its "trust." In Argentina and other countries, other companies with the Zoe name peddled a similar narrative... It included a "university" that offered courses on ontological coaching, a type of philosophical practice popular in some Argentine business circles... Over 2020 and 2021, more than ten thousand people bought into Zoe, investing hundreds of millions of dollars between them. Zoe grew rapidly, hyping new tech innovations including the "robots" and a cryptocurrency called Zoe Cash. Its interests and visibility expanded: The Zoe name appeared on burger joints, car dealerships, a plane rental company, and pet shops, all emblazoned with its name. It sponsored soccer teams and even created three of its own... Zoe also spread beyond Argentina to other countries in Latin America and further afield, including Mexico, Paraguay, Colombia, Spain, and the U.S. Towards the end of 2021, however, the shine began to wear off, as authorities began looking into Zoe's activities... Zoe members reported being unable to withdraw the funds they had put into trusts or "robots," and in early 2022, the value of Zoe Cash plummeted. Angry investors banged on the doors of Zoe's branches, and investigations against Zoe and Cositorto piled up across Latin America, Spain, and the U.S. By March 2022, a handful of high-profile names involved with Zoe in Argentina had been arrested, or were wanted by the authorities... Prosecutors now accuse Zoe of being nothing more than a simple Ponzi scheme. apply tags__________ 170804882 story [54]United States [55]US Department of Homeland Security is Now Studying How to Make Use of AI [56](cnbc.com) [57]35 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @09:34PM from the playing-defense dept. America's Department of Homeland Security "will establish a new task force to [58]examine how the government can use artificial intelligence technology to protect the country," reports CNBC. The task force was announcement by department secretary Alejandro Mayorkas Friday during a speech at a Council on Foreign Relations event: "Our department will lead in the responsible use of AI to secure the homeland," Mayorkas said, while also pledging to defend "against the malicious use of this transformational technology." He added, "As we do this, we will ensure that our use of AI is rigorously tested to avoid bias and disparate impact and is clearly explainable to the people we serve...." Mayorkas gave two examples of how the task force will help determine how AI could be used to fine-tune the agency's work. One is to deploy AI into DHS systems that screen cargo for [59]goods produced by forced labor. The second is to use the technology to better detect fentanyl in shipments to the U.S., as well as identifying and stopping the flow of "precursor chemicals" used to produce the dangerous drug. Mayorkas asked Homeland Security Advisory Council Co-Chair Jamie Gorelick to study "the intersection of AI and homeland security and deliver findings that will help guide our use of it and defense against it." The article also notes that earlier this week [60]America's defense department hired a former Google AI cloud director to serve as its first advisor on AI, robotics, cloud computing and data analytics. apply tags__________ 170808590 story [61]Power [62]Scientists Discover First 'Neutron-Rich' Isotope of Uranium Since 1979 [63](livescience.com) [64]9 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @08:17PM from the in-your-elements dept. An anonymous reader shared this report from LiveScience: Scientists have [65]discovered and synthesized an entirely new isotope of the highly radioactive element uranium. But it might last only 40 minutes before decaying into other elements. The new isotope, uranium-241, has 92 protons (as all uranium isotopes do) and 149 neutrons, making it the first new neutron-rich isotope of uranium discovered since 1979. While atoms of a given element always have the same number of protons, different isotopes, or versions, of those elements may hold different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. To be considered neutron-rich, an isotope must contain more neutrons than is common to that element... "We measured the masses of 19 different actinide isotopes with a high precision of one part per million level, including the discovery and identification of the new uranium isotope," Toshitaka Niwase, a researcher at the High-energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) Wako Nuclear Science Center (WNSC) in Japan, told Live Science in an email. "This is the first new discovery of a uranium isotope on the neutron-rich side in over 40 years." Niwase is the lead author of a study on the new uranium isotope, which was [66]published March 31 in the journal Physical Review Letters... Niwase and colleagues created the uranium-241 by firing a sample of uranium-238 at platinum-198 nuclei at Japan's RIKEN accelerator. The two isotopes then swapped neutrons and protons -- a phenomenon called "multinucleon transfer." The team then measured the mass of the created isotopes by observing the time it took the resulting nuclei to travel a certain distance through a medium. The experiment also generated 18 new isotopes, all of which contained between 143 and 150 neutrons. apply tags__________ 170804758 story [67]Programming [68]New Version of Rust Speeds Compilation With Less Debugging Info By Default [69](phoronix.com) [70]19 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @07:08PM from the quiet-mode dept. The Rust team released a new version Thursday -- Rust 1.69.0 -- [71]boasting over over 3,000 new commits from over 500 contributors. Phoronix [72]highlights two new improvements: In order to speed-up compilation speeds, Rust 1.69 and moving forward debug information is no longer included in build scripts by default. Cargo will avoid emitting debug information in build scripts by default -- leading to less informative backtraces in build scripts when problems arise, but faster build speeds by default. Those wanting the debug information emitted can now set the debug flag in their Cargo.toml configuration. The Cargo build shipped by Rust 1.69 is also now capable of suggesting fixes automatically for some of the generated warnings. Cargo will also suggest using "cargo fix" / "cargo clippy --fix" when it knows the errors can be automatically fixed. apply tags__________ 170808230 story [73]The Almighty Buck [74]Opponents to a US Digital Dollar Include Several US Presidential Hopefuls [75](msn.com) [76]59 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @06:08PM from the bucks-stop-here dept. In the U.S., at least three early candidates for president from both parties "want to make it clear they would not support any proposals for a central bank-backed digital US dollar," [77]reports Bloomberg -- which may be a little premature, because "A central bank digital currency, or CBDC, is far from reality in the U.S." [78]Some officials at the Federal Reserve have expressed doubt over the need for one, especially for use by everyday Americans. The Fed has also said it would want approval from Congress before moving forward with a digital dollar. But that hasn't stopped the relatively niche issue from emerging as a flash point for individuals eyeing a presidential run. The idea of a digital dollar has already faced backlash from Wall Street and other banks, because [79]lenders are worried about it acting as a direct competitor to private bank deposits. Digital-asset companies like Circle Internet Financial LLC that issue stablecoins -- a form of cryptocurrency traditionally tied to reserve assets like the US dollar or gold and that [80]offers similar features to a retail digital dollar -- have also pushed back against certain CBDCs. Circle's Head of Global Policy Dante Disparte said he'd be opposed to a digital dollar if it allows the Fed to control users' access to funds, compromises privacy or disrupts a two-tiered banking and payments system. "I've gone as far as saying that's the version that is un-American," he said in an interview. [81]In a report published last year in response to [82]a Federal Reserve discussion paper, Circle also warned that a digital dollar could "destabilize" the banking sector. In Congress, Republicans on Capitol Hill have introduced legislation to ban such direct-to-consumer CBDCs, saying they could be used by the federal government to surveil US citizens. Proponents of a CBDC have argued that it could offer real benefits, including making payments -- especially cross-border payments -- faster and ensuring the dollar's dominance in the global economy. It could be particularly useful for settling certain financial-market transactions, such as interbank transfers, some Fed officials have said. The government has also indicated it would prefer to have private-sector intermediaries offer accounts and facilitate CBDC payments, rather than taking on that role itself. Supporters have argued it can be tailored in a way to protect consumer privacy, which the Fed has also said is critical if it decides to move forward. Bloomberg also summarized the analysis of one political consultant specializing in cryptocurrency. "In addition to the potential appeal to libertarian voters and to constituents in banking and crypto, pushing back against a U.S. digital dollar can provide a relatively safe avenue for candidates to attract votes from conspiracy theorists who have rallied around the anti-CBDC movement." apply tags__________ 170808014 story [83]Earth [84]CNN: Planet Earth 'Just Failed Its Annual Health Checkup' [85](cnn.com) [86]66 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @04:47PM from the happy-earth-day dept. CNN reports on this year's "State of the Climate" report from the World Meteorological Organization (the UN agency promoting international cooperation on atmospheric science a d climatology). The report "analyzes a series of global climate indicators -- including levels of planet-heating pollution, sea level rise and ocean heat -- to understand how the planet is responding to climate change and the impact it is having on people and nature." CNN's conclusion? "[87]The world just failed its annual health checkup."= - Oceans reached record high temperatures, with nearly 60% experiencing at least one marine heatwave. - Global sea levels climbed [88]to the highest on record due to melting glaciers and warming oceans, which expand as they heat up. - Antarctica's [89]sea ice dropped to 1.92 million square kilometers in February 2022, at the time the lowest level on record (the record was [90]broken again this year). - The European Alps saw a record year for glacier melt, with Switzerland particularly badly affected, losing 6% of its glacier volume between 2021 and 2022. - Levels of planet warming pollution, including methane and carbon dioxide, reached record highs in 2021, the latest year for which there is global data... Last year, climate change-fueled extreme weather "affected tens of millions, drove food insecurity, boosted mass migration, and cost billions of dollars in loss and damage," WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said in a statement. In 2022, China had its most extensive and [91]long-lasting drought on record. Droughts also affected [92]East Africa, with more than 20 million people in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia facing acute food insecurity as of January this year. Many western and southern US states experienced significant [93]drought and Europe's [94]punishing heatwave is estimated to have led to 15,000 excess deaths. In Pakistan, record-breaking rainfall left [95]huge swaths of the country underwater, killing more than 1,700 people, with almost 8 million displaced, and causing $30 billion in damages... Last year is unlikely to be an outlier, as temperatures continue their upwards trajectory. The past eight years were the [96]hottest on record, despite three consecutive years of the [97]La Niña climate phenomenon, which has a global cooling effect. The global average temperature last year climbed to about 1.15 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, according to the report, as the world continues its march towards breaching 1.5 degrees of warming for the first time. With the predicted [98]arrival later in the year of El Niño, which brings warmer global temperatures, scientists are deeply concerned that 2023 and 2024 will continue to smash climate records. The hottest year on record, 2016, was the result of a strong El Niño and climate change, said Baddour. "It is only a matter of time before that record is broken...." "The droughts and level of heatwaves that we saw throughout 2022 were quite remarkable," Samantha Burgess, deputy director of Copernicus, told CNN. "This is really a wake up call that climate change isn't a future problem, it is a current problem. And we need to adapt as quickly as possible," she added. Omar Baddour, head of the Climate Monitoring and Policy Division at the WMO, also told CNN that "Communities and countries which have contributed least to climate change suffer disproportionately." And for more bad news, CNN notes a [99]report from the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service found Europe experienced its [100]hottest summer ever recorded, unprecedented marine heatwaves in the Mediterranean sea, and [101]widespread wildfires. apply tags__________ 170807738 story [102]Medicine [103]Researchers Discover Our 'Motor Cortex' Actually Links to Other Parts of the Brain [104](npr.org) [105]13 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @03:18PM from the getting-cerebral dept. While medical textbooks teach that our movements are controlled solely by the brain's motor cortex -- [106]that may be wrong, reports NPR, with another area keeping track of the entire body. "Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found that previously overlooked areas of the brain's motor cortex appear to [107]link control of specific muscles with information about the entire body and brain." As a result, the act of, say, reaching for a cup of coffee can directly influence blood pressure and heart rate. And the movement is seamlessly integrated into brain systems involved in planning, goals and emotion. Textbooks, though, still portray a motor cortex in which "the region that controls your finger is not going to be connected to a region [that asks], 'what am I going to do today?' " says Dr. Nico Dosenbach, an author of the study and an associate professor of neurology and radiology. But the MRI data leaves little doubt that "there is this interconnected system," says Evan Gordon, an assistant professor of radiology and the study's first author. "It always was there, but we had not perceived it because of our training, because of the things we learned in the first neuroscience class that we ever took...." There's two interleaved systems," Dosenbach says. So right below an area controlling the fingers, for example, the team would find an area involved in "whole body integrative action...." The new view of primary motor cortex may help explain how the brain solves a difficult problem, says Peter Strick, chair of neurobiology at the University of Pittsburgh. "Even simple movements require nuanced control of all organ systems," he says. "You have to control heart rate. You have to control blood pressure. You have to control so called fight and flight responses...." A system that weaves together movement and mental states also could explain why our posture changes with our mood, or why exercise tends to make us feel better. "How you move can have an impact on how you feel. And how you feel is going to have an impact on how you move," Strick says. "You know, my mother would tell me, 'stand up straight, you'll feel better.' And maybe that's true." Thanks to Slashdot reader [108]Tony Isaac for sharing the article. apply tags__________ 170807436 story [109]The Almighty Buck [110]Cory Doctorow's New Thriller Dramatizes 'Cryptocurrency Shenanigans' and 'Financial Rot' [111](macmillan.com) [112]24 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @01:43PM from the Red-Team-Blues dept. Cory Doctorow just wrote [113]a new thriller "about cryptocurrency shenanigans that will awaken you to how the world really works," according to his publisher. Doctorow calls Red Team Blues "a book about the financial rot at the center of Silicon Valley... a kind of anti-finance finance thriller." The publisher describes the book's hero as "a self-employed forensic accountant, a veteran of the long guerilla war between people who want to hide money, and people who want to find it. " He knows computer hardware and software alike, including the ins and outs of high-end databases and the kinds of spreadsheets that are designed to conceal rather than reveal. He's as comfortable with social media as people a quarter his age, and he's a world-level expert on the kind of international money-laundering and shell-company chicanery used by Fortune 500 companies, mid-divorce billionaires, and international drug gangs alike. He also knows the Valley like the back of his hand, all the secret histories of charismatic company founders and Sand Hill Road VCs. Because he was there at all the beginnings. He's not famous, except to the people who matter. He's made some pretty powerful people happy in his time, and he's been paid pretty well. It's been a good life. Now he's been roped into a job that's more dangerous than anything he's ever agreed to before -- and it will take every ounce of his skill to get out alive. "I write when I'm anxious, and right now these are anxious times," Doctorow explained last month [114]in Publisher's Weekly, describing what he'd learned about selling audiobooks without going through Amazon's service Audible. This time Cory got 4,080 backers to [115]pledge $152,735 to fund an audiobook for Red Team Blues read by Wil Wheaton that his Kickstarter campaign stressed would be DRM-free. ("Every audiobook sold on Audible be wrapped in Amazon's Digital Rights Management technology, which is a felony for you to remove, even if the copyright holder asks you to. It's punishable by a five-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine!") Red Team Blues is the first book in a new trilogy, and Cory is now [116]making in-person appearances to promote the book -- starting today (and tomorrow) at the LA Times Festival of Books at the University of Southern California. Tuesday he'll be in San Diego, and a week from Sunday he's appearing in San Francisco, before heading to Portland, Mountain View, Berkeley, and Gaithersburg Maryland. apply tags__________ 170804648 story [117]Social Networks [118]Can Consumers Break Free of the Tech Industry's Hold on Their Messaging History? [119](msn.com) [120]52 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @12:34PM from the free-associating dept. The Washington Post reports on "a relatively young app called [121]Beeper that pulls all [122]your chats into one place." This is significant, the Post argues, because "we're better off if we have [123]the freedom to pick up our digital lives and move on. Tech companies should feel terrified that you'll walk if they disappoint you..." If different people send you messages in Apple's Messages (a.k.a., iMessage), WhatsApp, LinkedIn and Slack, you don't have to check multiple apps to read and reply. Maybe the best promise of Beeper is that you can ditch your iPhone or Samsung phone for another company's device and keep your text messages... Eric Migicovsky, Beeper's co-founder, told me that if you're pulling Apple Messages into Beeper, you need a Mac computer to upload a digital file. All chat apps have different limits on how much history you can access in the app. There's also a wait list of about 170,000 people for Beeper. (Add yourself to the list [124]here.) The app is [125]free, but Beeper says it will start charging for a version with extra features. To put this all in context, the Post's reporter remembers the hassle of using a cable to transfer a long history of iPhone messages [126]to a new Google Pixel phone, complaining that Apple makes it more difficult than other companies to switch to a different kind of system. "Many of you are happy to live in Apple's world. Great! But if you want the option to leave at some point, try to limit your use of Apple apps when possible..." They look ahead to next year, when the EU "[127]will require large tech companies to make their products compatible with those of competitors" -- though it's [128]not clear how much change that will bring. In the meantime, the existence of a small company like Beeper "gives me hope that we don't have to rely on the kindness of technology giants to make it easier to move to a different phone or computer system... You deserve the option of a no-hassle tech divorce at a moment's notice." apply tags__________ 170804536 story [129]The Military [130]Leaker of US Documents Shared More Secrets Earlier in a Discord Group with 600 Members [131](japantimes.co.jp) [132]75 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @11:34AM from the showing-Discord dept. Remember that U.S. Air National Guardsman who's suspected of leaking classified documents? The New York Times has [133]discovered "a previously undisclosed chat group on Discord" where the same airman apparently also posted "sensitive information" including "secret intelligence on the Russian war effort," this time to a group with 600 members -- and "months earlier than previously known," in February of 2022. The case against Airman [134]Teixeira, 21, who was arrested on April 13, pertains to the leaking of classified documents on another Discord group of about 50 members, called Thug Shaker Central. There, he began posting sensitive information in October 2022, members of the group told The Times. His job as an information technology specialist at an Air Force base in Massachusetts gave him top secret clearance... The user claimed to be posting information from the National Security Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies. The additional information raises questions about why authorities did not discover the leaks sooner, particularly since hundreds more people would have been able to see the posts... The exposure of some of America's most closely guarded secrets has prompted criticism about how the Pentagon and intelligence agencies protect classified data, and whether there are weaknesses in both vetting people for security clearances and enforcing the mantra that access to secrets should only be given to [135]people with a "need to know." Unlike Thug Shaker Central, the second chat room was publicly listed on a YouTube channel and was easily accessed in seconds... Apparently eager to impress others in the group who questioned his analysis, he said: "I have a little more than open source info. Perks of being in a USAF intel unit," referring to the United States Air Force... At times, he appeared to be posting from the military base where he was stationed... Airman Teixeira also claimed that he was actively combing classified computer networks for material on the Ukraine war. When one of the Discord users urged him not to abuse his access to classified intelligence, Teixeira replied: "too late...." The Times says they learned about the larger chat room "from another Discord user." apply tags__________ 170804268 story [136]Programming [137]Rust Foundation Apologizes For Proposed Trademark Changes, Promises Improvement [138](theregister.com) [139]34 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday April 22, 2023 @10:34AM from the Rust-never-sleeps dept. "The Rust Foundation on Monday apologized for confusion caused by the organization's proposed trademark policy changes," reports the Register. The Foundation now says their proposed policy "[140]clearly needs improvement" and "there are many valid critiques of the initial draft," promising to address them and adopt a more transparent process (with a report summarizing the feedback soon). From the Register's report: The foundation, which provides financial and legal support for the memory-safe programming language, had proposed fresh rules on the use of the word Rust and its logo, which included the recommendation that people not use 'Rust' in their Rust crate names, eg: vulture-rs would be preferred over vulture-rust. These draft changes triggered a backlash... Over the weekend, Rust creator Graydon Hoare [141]voiced support for the community's objections in a Reddit discussion thread, in response to [142]a post by programmer Andrew Gallant, a former member of the Rust moderation team, who argued the new policy was not all that different from the old one. "Open them up side by side -- [143]old and [144]new -- and look at what they each say about, specifically, package names, project names, repos or websites using the word 'rust', or modified versions of the logo used for small groups or projects," wrote Hoare. "These are specifically the things people are upset about, because they all changed from 'acceptable' to 'prohibited' when 'clarifying' the policy. And those are specifically things that everyone in the community does, and has done, for years. There are zillions of packages, projects, repos, websites and groups using the names and logo this way, as the old policy said they could. The new policy tells them all to stop." Long-time open source advocate Bruce Perens told the Register that Rust's trademark policy "goes far awry of fair use which is legally permitted. Books on Rust will always have its name in their title, commercial products will be advertised as being written in Rust, being compatible with Rust, or compiling Rust. But the policy attempts to deny permission for these things. A proper trademark policy prevents others from representing that their product is Rust or is endorsed by the trademark holder of Rust. That's really as much as you can ever enforce, so there's no sense in a policy that asks for more." The Register also spoke to Ashley Williams, a former member of the Rust core team and the original executive director and founder of the Rust Foundation, who argued upheaval in Rust's governance over the past year led to a team with less experience dealing with the Rust community. "I think a couple of very passionate people participated in the trademark working group and they didn't involve a lot of people who have even basic experience interacting with the community. So really classic community behaviors ended up getting prohibited in that [draft] policy. And that's really why everybody got upset. The policy ultimately said, 'a thing that you do all the time as a way of contributing to the Rust community is now against our policy.'" apply tags__________ 170804182 story [145]AI [146]Snapchat's AI Chatbot Is Now Free For All Global Users [147](techcrunch.com) [148]11 Posted by [149]BeauHD on Saturday April 22, 2023 @09:00AM from the powered-by-ChatGPT dept. An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Snapchat's AI chatbot is [150]now opening up to a global audience, the company announced today at its Snap Partner Summit. Initially launched in February, the feature originally allowed Snapchat's paid subscribers to chat with an AI chatbot powered by OpenAI's GPT technology directly in its app. Now it will be available for free. To date, users have sent nearly 2 million messages per day using the chatbot, Snap noted. With today's global expansion, the feature is also being upgraded with new functionality, including the ability to add My AI to group chats, get recommendations for places on Snap Map and Lenses, and share Snaps with My AI and receive chat replies. Later, My AI will be able to respond with unique "generative" Snaps back, instead of just chat replies, the company also said, to keep the visual conversation going. The idea to integrate AI into the Snapchat app was originally intended to give users another way to engage in the app while taking advantage of the growing consumer demand for ChatGPT-like experiences. The company suggested the feature could be used to do things like suggest birthday gift ideas for a BFF, plan a hiking trip, suggest dinner recipes or write a poem for a friend, among other things. [...] The feature, before today, was available only to Snapchat+ $3.99 per month subscription holders, which could be helping drive upgrades. apply tags__________ 170804142 story [151]Earth [152]'Devastating' Melt of Greenland, Antarctic Ice Sheets Found [153]93 Posted by [154]BeauHD on Saturday April 22, 2023 @06:00AM from the devastating-trajectory dept. The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are now [155]losing more than three times as much ice a year as they were 30 years ago, according to a new comprehensive international study. Phys.Org reports: Using 50 different satellite estimates, researchers found that Greenland's melt has gone into hyperdrive in the last few years. Greenland's average annual melt from 2017 to 2020 was 20% more a year than at the beginning of the decade and more than seven times higher than its annual shrinkage in the early 1990s. From 1992 to 1996, the two ice sheets -- which hold 99% of the world's freshwater ice -- were shrinking by 116 billion tons (105 billion metric tons) a year, two-thirds of it from Antarctica. But from 2017 to 2020, the newest data available, the combined melt soared to 410 billion tons (372 billion metric tons) a year, more than two-thirds of it from Greenland, said the study in Thursday's journal [156]Earth System Science Data. Since 1992, Earth has lost 8.3 trillion tons (7.6 trillion metric tons) of ice from the two ice sheets, the study found. That's enough to flood the entire United States with 33.6 inches (almost 0.9 meters) of water or submerge France in 49 feet (nearly 15 meters). But because the world's oceans are so huge, the melt just from the ice sheets since 1992 still only adds up to a little less than inch (21 millimeters) of sea level rise, on average. Globally sea level rise is accelerating and melt from ice sheets has gone from contributing 5% of the sea level rise to now accounting for more than one-quarter of it, the study said. The rest of the sea rise comes from warmer water expanding and melt from glaciers. apply tags__________ [157]« Newer [158]Older » Slashdot Top Deals Slashdot Top Deals [159]Slashdot Deals Slashdot Poll Recently, an open letter signed by tech leaders, researchers proposes delaying AI development. Do you agree that AI development should be temporarily halted? (*) Yes ( ) No (BUTTON) vote now [160]Read the 60 comments | 9364 votes Looks like someone has already voted from this IP. If you would like to vote please login and try again. Recently, an open letter signed by tech leaders, researchers proposes delaying AI development. Do you agree that AI development should be temporarily halted? 0 Percentage of others that also voted for: * [161]view results * Or * * [162]view more [163]Read the 60 comments | 9364 voted Most Discussed * 232 comments [164]Cities Keep Building Luxury Apartments Almost No One Can Afford * 176 comments [165]Smart Gun Operating On Facial Recognition Goes On Sale In US * 104 comments [166]The EARN IT Act Will Be Introduced To Congress For the Third Time * 93 comments [167]'Devastating' Melt of Greenland, Antarctic Ice Sheets Found * 77 comments [168]ChatGPT Creates Mostly Insecure Code, But Won't Tell You Unless You Ask [169]Firehose * [170]The Impact of the Artificial Intelligence Revolution on Programming Work * [171]China Building Cyberweapons To Hijack Enemy Satellites, Says US Leak * [172]"My Pillow Guy" must pay $5m to engineer who answered election data challenge * [173]Scientists Finally Solved the Mystery of How the Mayan Calendar Works * [174]Man Battling Google Wins $500K For Search Result Links Calling Him a Pedophile [175]This Day on Slashdot 2012 [176]In Nothing We Trust 910 comments 2010 [177]HDTV Has Ruined the LCD Market 952 comments 2003 [178]How Would You Move Mount Fuji? 1247 comments 2002 [179]Apple Deals with Devil, Communists 965 comments 1999 [180]Why Kids Kill 1087 comments [181]Sourceforge Top Downloads * [182]TrueType core fonts 2.2B downloads * [183]Notepad++ Plugin Mgr 1.5B downloads * [184]VLC media player 899M downloads * [185]eMule 686M downloads * [186]MinGW 631M downloads Powered By [187]sf [188]Slashdot * [189]Today * [190]Saturday * [191]Friday * [192]Thursday * [193]Wednesday * [194]Tuesday * [195]Monday * [196]Sunday * [197]Submit Story America has been discovered before, but it has always been hushed up. - Oscar Wilde * [198]FAQ * [199]Story Archive * [200]Hall of Fame * [201]Advertising * [202]Terms * [203]Privacy Statement * [204]About * [205]Feedback * [206]Mobile View * [207]Blog * * (BUTTON) Icon Do Not Sell My Personal Information Trademarks property of their respective owners. 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