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[32]Close binspamdupenotthebestofftopicslownewsdaystalestupid freshfunnyinsightfulinterestingmaybe offtopicflamebaittrollredundantoverrated insightfulinterestinginformativefunnyunderrated descriptive typodupeerror [33]Sign up for the Slashdot newsletter! OR [34]check out the new Slashdot job board to browse remote jobs or jobs in your area Do you develop on GitHub? You can keep using GitHub but automatically [35]sync your GitHub releases to SourceForge quickly and easily with [36]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! [37]× 172688274 story [38]Linux [39]How Does FreeBSD Compare to Linux on a Raspberry Pi? [40](0x.no) Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday January 07, 2024 @07:34AM from the Pi-fight dept. Klaus Zimmermann (a self-described "friendly hacker") recently posted [41]a "State of the Distro" post, choosing his favorite distributions for things like portable installation from a USB drive (Alpine Linux) and for a desktop OS (Debian Linux or Devuan). But when it comes to a distro fro the Raspberry Pi, (at least until the 4), Zimmerman argues that FreeBSD's performance is "unlike any other Linux distribution I've ever seen, even with cpupower activated and overclocking." Nope, no match — FreeBSD's performance on the Pi is still way better, even without overclocking. You can browse a modern web, have things scroll smoothly, watch videos and even play some 3D games like Quake with it! And if you overclock it a little (2GHz) you can even make it run that gargantua MS Teams. But what about all that lackluster driver support? WiFi drivers still on the 802.11g standard and all? Surely you can't be serious about it when Linux offers all that support out of the box, right? Wrong, actually. For starters, the drivers provided for the Pi's hardware are often half-assed proprietary blobs... I no longer think FreeBSD is really at fault if the driver support for the hardware is not helpful to begin with. Even drivers you find for Linux are shaky at best. So yes, I will keep using FreeBSD on the Pi. As a desktop. With USB WiFi and audio adapters for those services, because the existing hardware is sort of moot even otherwise. And with those USB adapters — and FreeBSD — the Pi works really well, truly desktop-like. I'd be curious to hear from Slashdot's readers about their own experiments with Linux (and FreeBSD) on a Raspberry Pi. Zimmerman's final winner, for the "Server" category, was Debian — though of his two servers, one is just an XMPP server set up on a Raspberry Pi. "I found that using Debian on the Pi is a real joy. Easy and simple to set up, familiar environment and all. So I'm keeping it. "This concept is about to be overshadowed, however, by my growing like of FreeBSD lately..." Thanks to Slashdot reader [42]walterbyrd for sharing the article. apply tags__________ 172687528 story [43]The Almighty Buck [44]'As AI Rises, is Web3 Dead in the Water?' [45](inc.com) [46]25 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday January 07, 2024 @03:34AM from the ask-your-NFT dept. Inc. [47]reports that funding for Web3 startups in 2023 "declined 73% from 2022, according to [48]new data from Crunchbase." In total, Web3 startups netted $7.8 billion in 2023, compared with the [49]$21.5 billion raised in 2022. It's part of a broader and sobering comedown from the stratospheric highs of tech's pandemic boom time, in which investment flowed to startups at historic rates, valuations soared and unicorns emerged seemingly every week. Last year firmly belonged to AI, with $17.8 billion invested in the sector, [50]according to Dealroom. Even as some remain convinced of Web3's future, uncertainty lingers over certain stumbling blocks, including how the technology can be farmed out to a massive user base on par with today's biggest tech firms. "I haven't seen [a company] that screams to me, 'this is what's going to get people on board,'" says Jillian Grennan, a business and law professor at UC Berkeley who studies Web3. Web3 startups are failing to net the investment indicative of revolutionary tech as AI steals the show and the dough. The reasons vary: Many have pointed out that defining Web3 is tricky, and Grennan mentions that appetites for navigating digital worlds may have been dented by pandemic-born Zoom fatigue. Beyond that, there's the question of [51]how to regulate crypto — a marquee aspect of the Web3 universe--which may have given investors some pause. "In this next period, we're going to get some important regulatory clarity that we just haven't had," Richard Dulude, co-founder and partner at Underscore VC tells Inc. "A lot of people sit on the sidelines until they have that...." Interest rate hikes and the bloated startup valuations of 2021 have meant VCs can't throw their weight behind exciting ideas alone, Dulude says. The sector is undergoing "this transition from chasing growth, and trying to grow at all costs to actually investing behind the growth," he says.... All the investment couldn't compensate for one vulnerability: The technology is hard to use... Macroeconomic factors are of course important, but an industry resurgence depends first on whether Web3 can become easier to navigate for average people and provide them with a reason to hang around. "It's still pretty cumbersome to interact with the technology," Dulude explains. "Until it's made usable, it's really hard to break out of the current market environment we're in." apply tags__________ 172686758 story [52]Facebook [53]Blaming Social Media, ACM Publication Argues Computing 'Has Blood On Its Hands' [54](acm.org) [55]31 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday January 07, 2024 @12:34AM from the harsh-words dept. Long-time Slashdot reader [56]theodp writes: In the January 2024 Communications of the ACM, Rice University professor and former CACM Editor-in-Chief Moshe Y. Vardi minces no words in [57]Computing, You Have Blood on Your Hands!. He argues that the unintended consequences of the rise of social media and mobile computing include hate mongering on a global scale and a worldwide youth mental health crisis. "How did the technology that we considered 'cool' just a decade ago become an assault weapon used to hurt, traumatize, and even kill vulnerable people?" Vardi asks. "Looking back at my [58]past columns, one can see the forewarnings. Our obsession with efficiency came [59]at the expense of resilience. In the name of efficiency, we aimed at [60]eliminating all friction. In the name of efficiency, it became desirable to [61]move fast and break things, and we allowed the technology industry to become [62]dominated by a very small number of mega corporations. It is time for all computing professionals to accept responsibility for computing's current state. To use Star Wars metaphors, we once considered computing as the 'Rebels,' but it turns out that computing is the 'Empire.' Admitting we have a problem is a necessary first step toward addressing the problems computing has created." Examples cited in the piece include: * Amnesty International's 2022 accusation that Meta "[63]substantially contributed" to human rights violations of Myanmar's Rohingya people * Internal Meta documents saying "We are [64]not actually doing what we say we do publicly" in policing harmful content. So far the ACM's piece has attracted [65]one comment. "Deep thanks for your long-term commitment to ethics and how you articulate clearly its challenges." apply tags__________ 172687144 story [66]Programming [67]Can AI-Generated Proofs Bring Bug-Free Software One Step Closer? [68](umass.edu) [69]32 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @09:34PM from the machines-learning dept. The University of Massachusetts Amherst [70]has an announcement. A team of computer scientists "recently announced a new method for automatically generating whole proofs that can be used to prevent software bugs and verify that the underlying code is correct." It leverages the AI power of Large Language Models, and the new method, called Baldur, "yields unprecedented efficacy of nearly 66%." The idea behind the machine-checking technique was "to generate a mathematical proof showing that the code does what it is expected to do," according to the announcement, "and then use a theorem prover to make sure that the proof is also correct. But manually writing these proofs is incredibly time-consuming and requires extensive expertise. "These proofs can be many times longer than the software code itself," says Emily First, the paper's lead author who completed this research as part of her doctoral dissertation at UMass Amherst... First, whose team performed its work at Google, used Minerva, an LLM trained on a large corpus of natural-language text, and then fine-tuned it on 118GB of mathematical scientific papers and webpages containing mathematical expressions. Next, she further fine-tuned the LLM on a language, called Isabelle/HOL, in which the mathematical proofs are written. Baldur then generated an entire proof and worked in tandem with the theorem prover to check its work. When the theorem prover caught an error, it fed the proof, as well as information about the error, back into the LLM, so that it can learn from its mistake and generate a new and hopefully error-free proof. This process yields a remarkable increase in accuracy. The state-of-the-art tool for automatically generating proofs is called Thor, which can generate proofs 57% of the time. When Baldur (Thor's brother, according to Norse mythology) is paired with Thor, the two can generate proofs 65.7% of the time. Though there is still a large degree of error, Baldur is by far the most effective and efficient way yet devised to verify software correctness, and as the capabilities of AI are increasingly extended and refined, so should Baldur's effectiveness grow. In addition to First and Brun, the team includes Markus Rabe, who was employed by Google at the time, and Talia Ringer, an assistant professor at the University of Illinois — Urbana Champaign. This work was performed at Google and supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the National Science Foundation. apply tags__________ 172680635 story [71]Power [72]America's First Large-Scale Offshore Wind Project Finally Begins Generating Electricity [73](wbur.org) [74]33 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @06:45PM from the power-to-the-people dept. [75]A year ago the Washington Post reported "there are only seven working offshore wind turbines in the entire United States," adding that a massive wind project south of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts "is years behind schedule amid regulatory delays and litigation from opponents." But this week a local public radio station reported that electricity from America's first large-scale offshore wind project "[76]is officially flowing into Massachusetts and helping to power the New England grid." The [77]Vineyard Wind project achieved "first power" late Tuesday when one operating turbine near Martha's Vineyard delivered approximately five megawatts of electricity to the grid. The company said it expects to have five turbines operating at full capacity in early 2024... Once it's finished sometime in 2024, it will consist of 62 turbines spaced about a mile apart and rising more than 800 feet out of the water. The project will generate up to 800 megawatts of power, or about enough electricity for 400,000 homes in Massachusetts. Another smaller project near Long Island, South Fork Wind, also began [78]producing electricity in early December. When that project is complete, its 12 turbines will generate about 132 megawatts of power... Massachusetts, in partnership with Rhode Island and Connecticut, is currently seeking bids for another 3,600 megawatts of offshore wind power... "This is a historic moment for the American offshore wind industry," wrote Gov. Maura Healey. "This is clean, affordable energy made possible by the many advocates, public servants, union workers, and business leaders who worked for decades to accomplish this achievement. Last year America's seven offshore wind turbines generated "a paltry 42 megawatts," according to the article, "far less than the average natural gas power plant." The CEO of one of the company's behind the project hailed the last 12 months as "a historic year defined by steel in the water and people at work." apply tags__________ 172686300 story [79]Space [80]Neptune Is Much Less Blue Than Depictions [81](seattletimes.com) [82]27 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @05:45PM from the wild-blue-yonder dept. Long-time Slashdot readers [83]necro81 writes: The popular vision of [84]Neptune is azure blue. This comes mostly from the publicly released images from [85]Voyager 2's flyby in 1989 — humanity's only visit to this icy giant at the edge of the solar system. But it turns out that view is a bit distorted — the result of color-enhancing choices made by NASA at the time. A [86]new report from Oxford depicts Neptune's blue color as more muted, with a touch of green, not much different than Uranus. The truer-to-life view comes from re-analyzing the Voyager data, combined with ground-based observations going back decades. (Add'l links [87]here, [88]here, [89]and here.) This is nothing new: most publicity images released by space agencies — of planets, nebulae, or the surface of Mars — have undergone some color-enhancement for visual effect. (They'll also release "true-color" images, which try to best mimic what the human eye would see.) Many images — such as those from the infrared-seeing JWST — need [90]wholesale coloration of their otherwise invisible wavelengths. The new report is a good reminder, though, to remember that scientific cameras are pretty much [91]always black and white; color images come from [92]combining filters in various ways. Also thanks to long-time Slashdot reader [93]Geoffrey.landis for sharing the story. apply tags__________ 172686218 story [94]Open Source [95]Jabber Was Announced on Slashdot 25 Years Ago This Week [96](slashdot.org) [97]22 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @04:45PM from the happy-quarter-of-a-century dept. 25 years ago, Slashdot's CmdrTaco [98]posted an announcement from Slashdot [99]reader #257. "Jabber is a new project I recently started to create a complete open-source platform for Instant Messaging with transparent communication to other Instant Messaging systems (ICQ, AIM, etc). "Most of the initial design and protocol work is done, as well as a working server and a few test clients." You can find the rest of the story [100]on Wikipedia. "Its major outcome proved to be the development of the XMPP protocol." ("Based on XML, it enables the near-real-time exchange of structured data between two or more network entities.") Originally developed by the open-source community, the protocols were formalized as an approved instant messaging standard in 2004 and have been continuously developed with new extensions and features... In addition to these core protocols standardized at the IETF, the XMPP Standards Foundation (formerly the Jabber Software Foundation) is active in developing open XMPP extensions... XMPP features such as federation across domains, publish/subscribe, authentication and its security even for mobile endpoints are being used to implement the Internet of Things. "Designed to be extensible, the protocol offers a multitude of applications beyond traditional IM in the broader realm of message-oriented middleware, including signalling for VoIP, video, file transfer, gaming and other uses..." Slashdot reader #257 turned out to be Jeremie Miller (who at the time was just 23 years old). And according to [101]his own page on Wikipedia, "Currently, Miller sits on the board of directors for Bluesky Social, a social media platform." apply tags__________ 172686398 story [102]United States [103]America's FAA Temporarily Grounds All Boeing 737 Max 9s - After a Window Blows Off In-Flight [104](cnn.com) [105]97 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @03:44PM from the up-in-the-air dept. Today America's Federal Aviation Administration "[106]ordered the temporary grounding of Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft," reports CNN, identifying the aircraft as "the model involved in an Alaska Airlines emergency landing in Oregon on Friday after [107]a section of the plane apparently blew out in midflight." A passenger's [108]video posted to social media shows a side section of the fuselage, where a window would have been, missing — exposing passengers to the outside air. The video, which appears to have been taken from several rows behind the incident, shows oxygen masks deployed throughout the airplane, and least two people sitting near and just behind the missing section... The plane "landed safely back at Portland International Airport with 171 guests and six crew members," the airline [109]said... According to [110]FlightAware, the flight was airborne for about 20 minutes. "There was a really loud bang toward the rear of the plane and a whoosh noise," one passenger [111]told a local news station — and then "all of the masks dropped." Long-time Slashdot reader [112]ArchieBunker shares [113]more details from the BBC: Diego Murillo said the gap was "as wide as a refrigerator". Fellow passenger Elizabeth Lee added: "Part of the plane was missing and the wind was just extremely loud. but everyone was in their seats and had their belt on." Jessica Montoia described the flight as a "trip from hell" adding a phone was taken out of a man's hand by the wind. CNN covers the federal response: The FAA said the planes must be parked until emergency inspections are performed, which will "take around four to eight hours per aircraft." "The FAA is requiring immediate inspections of certain Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes before they can return to flight," FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker said Saturday in a statement. "Safety will continue to drive our decision-making as we assist the (National Transportation Safety Board's) investigation into Alaska Airlines Flight 1282." The order impacts 171 Boeing 737 Max 9 jets, the agency approximates.... Boeing said the company supported the FAA's grounding decision. "Safety is our top priority and we deeply regret the impact this event has had on our customers and their passengers," Boeing said in a statement Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader [114]lsllll for sharing the news. apply tags__________ 172681023 story [115]Verizon [116]Verizon Customers Could Get Up to $100 in $100M Settlement Over 'Administrative Charge' Fees [117](cnn.com) [118]10 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @02:34PM from the event-Verizon dept. CNN reports that some Verizon customers "might have found an unexpected surprise in the mail this week: An opportunity to receive [119]a refund as part of a proposed $100 million settlement from a class-action lawsuit." Eligible customers are receiving postcards or emails alerting them to file a claim by April 15 to receive up to $100, which is the result of the lawsuit accusing Verizon of charging fees that were "unfair and not adequately disclosed." At issue is Verizon's "administrative charge," which the plaintiffs said were "misleading" because that fee wasn't disclosed in their plan's advertised monthly price and were charged in a "deceptive and unfair manner." Verizon has denied the claims and said in a statement that it "clearly identifies and describes its wireless consumer admin charge multiple times during the sales transaction, as well as in its marketing, contracts and billing." A company spokesperson said that the charge "helps our company recover certain regulatory compliance and network related costs." "The payout is at least $15," adds CNN, "and might be more depending on how long the customer used Verizon and the number of customers who file a claim." apply tags__________ 172680737 story [120]Space [121]SpaceX Has Launched Starlink's First Direct-to-Smartphone Satellites [122](spacenews.com) [123]12 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @01:34PM from the long-distance-calling dept. Tuesday's launch was different. "SpaceX launched its [124]first batch of Starlink satellites designed to connect directly to unmodified smartphones..." reports SpaceNews, "after getting a temporary experimental license to start testing the capability in the United States." Six of the 21 Starlink satellites that launched on a Falcon 9 rocket at 10:44 p.m. Eastern from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, carry a payload that the company said could provide connectivity for most 4G LTE devices when in range. SpaceX plans to start enabling texting from space this year in partnership with cellular operators, with voice and data connectivity coming in 2025, although the company still needs regulatory permission to provide the services commercially. Initial direct-to-smartphone tests would use cellular spectrum from SpaceX's U.S. mobile partner T-Mobile. SpaceX has also partnered with mobile operators in Australia, Canada, Chile, Japan, New Zealand, and Switzerland.... Meanwhile, early-stage ventures AST SpaceMobile and Lynk Global are closing in on fundraising deals to expand their dedicated direct-to-device constellations. AST SpaceMobile [125]said January 2 it is seeking to secure funds this month from "multiple parties" ahead of launching its first five commercial satellites early this year on a Falcon 9. Lynk Global, which is currently providing intermittent texting and other low-bandwidth services to phones outside cellular networks in parts of the Solomon Islands, Cook Islands, and Palau, plans to raise funds by [126]merging with a shell company run by former professional baseball player Alex Rodriguez. apply tags__________ 172680247 story [127]Transportation [128]More than a Third of America's EVs Were Bought Within the Last 12 Months [129](energy.gov) [130]121 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @12:34PM from the sing-the-bodies-electric dept. More than 4 million electric vehicles are now on America's roads. And Friday the U.S. Energy announced that [131]more than a third of them (1.4 million) were sold within the last year. That's 50% more than were sold in the previous year — and about the same number sold [132]in the entire five years between 2016 and 2021. But the energy secretary's statement also touts the current administrations efforts at "building out a reliable and interoperable nationwide EV charging network — an undertaking never before seen in the United States." Today, the U.S. has close to 170,000 public EV chargers — a 75% increase since the president took office with nearly 900 new chargers coming online per week. These developments are part of an inevitable shift toward a thriving electric transportation sector — a shift that American automakers and battery manufacturers are already carrying forward. apply tags__________ 172681209 story [133]Google [134]Google's Chrome Begins Purging Third-Party Cookies [135](google.com) [136]15 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @11:34AM from the cookie-cutting dept. "If you have been affected, you will will receive a notification when you open Chrome on either desktop or Android devices," [137]reports Search Engine Land. But they add that "discussions among digital marketers on X indicate that advertisers are still not ready..." An anonymous reader writes: Google [138]started its campaign to phase out of third-party cookies as announced [139]earlier. At the beginning cookies are turned off for 1% of users, and those lucky ones unlock a "tracking protection" in Chrome settings. In [140]agreement with the UK Competitions and Markets Authority, third-party cookies will be completely removed at the end of this year, a move under tight anti-competition scrutiny also in Brussels. Meanwhile, a technology researcher released their privacy audit of Google's third-party cookie [141]replacement, Privacy Sandbox's Protected Audience API, [142]validating its standing against EU data protection, which may even close the ever-present [143]cookie consent popups disliked universally in Europe. apply tags__________ 172680785 story [144]Education [145]After Reports of His Own Wife's Plagiarism, Bill Ackman Threatens Plagiarism Reviews For All MIT Faculty [146](businessinsider.com) [147]242 Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday January 06, 2024 @10:34AM from the defending-your-dissertation dept. This week Harvard's president Claudine Gay [148]resigned "after conservative activists revealed she had plagiarized," writes Business Insider, adding that hedge fund manager/prominent Harvard donor Bill Ackman "helped lead the charge." Then Business Insider "[149]analyzed Ackman's wife's doctoral dissertation and found numerous instances of plagiarism." In most cases Ackman's wife put the author's name and publication date immediately after the material which she used — but did not put quotation marks around it. But [150]according to the Business Insider, "At least 15 passages from her 2010 MIT doctoral dissertation were lifted without any citation from Wikipedia entries." Her husband, Ackman, has taken a hardline stance on plagiarism. On Wednesday, responding to news that Gay is set to remain a part of Harvard's faculty after she resigned as president, he wrote on X that Gay should be fired completely due to "serious plagiarism issues... Students are forced to withdraw for much less," Ackman continued. "Rewarding her with a highly paid faculty position sets a very bad precedent for academic integrity at Harvard." Ackman's wife was a tenured MIT professor from 2017 to 2021, according to the article. "It is unfortunate that my actions to address problems in higher education have led to these attacks on my family," Ackman [151]posted Friday night on Twitter. Then Ackman threatened "a review of the work of all current MIT faculty members. We will begin with a review of the work of all current MIT faculty members, President Kornbluth, other officers of the Corporation, and its board members for plagiarism." Business Insider notes that Ackman "has been vocal about wanting to see MIT's president, Sally Kornbluth, fired since Kornbluth testified on December 5 in front of a congressional panel examining how university presidents handled student protests against Israel's war in Gaza. Kornbluth said in her opening statement that she didn't support 'speech codes' that would restrict what students say during protests." apply tags__________ 172680655 story [152]Security [153]Russian Hackers Were Inside Ukraine Telecoms Giant For Months [154](reuters.com) [155]21 Posted by [156]BeauHD on Saturday January 06, 2024 @08:00AM from the big-warning dept. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Russian hackers were [157]inside Ukrainian telecoms giant Kyivstar's system from at least May last year in a cyberattack that should serve as a "big warning" to the West, Ukraine's cyber spy chief told Reuters. The hack, one of the most dramatic since Russia's full-scale invasion nearly two years ago, [158]knocked out services provided by Ukraine's biggest telecoms operator for some 24 million users for days from Dec. 12. In an interview, Illia Vitiuk, head of the Security Service of Ukraine's (SBU) cybersecurity department, disclosed exclusive details about the hack, which he said caused "disastrous" destruction and aimed to land a psychological blow and gather intelligence. "This attack is a big message, a big warning, not only to Ukraine, but for the whole Western world to understand that no one is actually untouchable," he said. He noted Kyivstar was a wealthy, private company that invested a lot in cybersecurity. The attack wiped "almost everything", including thousands of virtual servers and PCs, he said, describing it as probably the first example of a destructive cyberattack that "completely destroyed the core of a telecoms operator." During its investigation, the SBU found the hackers probably attempted to penetrate Kyivstar in March or earlier, he said in a Zoom interview on Dec. 27. "For now, we can say securely, that they were in the system at least since May 2023," he said. "I cannot say right now, since what time they had ... full access: probably at least since November." The SBU assessed the hackers would have been able to steal personal information, understand the locations of phones, intercept SMS-messages and perhaps steal Telegram accounts with the level of access they gained, he said. A Kyivstar spokesperson said the company was working closely with the SBU to investigate the attack and would take all necessary steps to eliminate future risks, adding: "No facts of leakage of personal and subscriber data have been revealed." Investigating the attack is harder because of the wiping of Kyivstar's infrastructure. Vitiuk said he was "pretty sure" it was carried out by Sandworm, a Russian military intelligence cyberwarfare unit that has been linked to cyberattacks in Ukraine and elsewhere. A year ago, Sandworm penetrated a Ukrainian telecoms operator, but was detected by Kyiv because the SBU had itself been inside Russian systems, Vitiuk said, declining to identify the company. The earlier hack has not been previously reported. Vitiuk said SBU investigators were still working to establish how Kyivstar was penetrated or what type of trojan horse malware could have been used to break in, adding that it could have been phishing, someone helping on the inside or something else. If it was an inside job, the insider who helped the hackers did not have a high level of clearance in the company, as the hackers made use of malware used to steal hashes of passwords, he said. Samples of that malware have been recovered and are being analysed, he added. apply tags__________ 172680597 story [159]Social Networks [160]Is LinkedIn Becoming the Hottest New Dating Site? [161](businessinsider.com) [162]91 Posted by [163]BeauHD on Saturday January 06, 2024 @05:00AM from the shifting-landscape dept. Business Insider's Kelli Maria Korducki reports on a growing trend happening on LinkedIn: [164]some people are using the professional network for personal connections, fielding romantic offers amid job postings. But that leaves the question: Is it a good idea to mix work and love? From the report: Dustin Kidd, a professor of sociology at Temple University who researches social media and pop culture, said that dating via LinkedIn belonged to a long tradition of "dating hacks" -- using online tools designed for other purposes to snag a date. "In the aughts, this happened with Friendster and then Myspace," Kidd said, but has since spread to myriad platforms that are ostensibly romance-free. Even fitness-tracking sites such as Strava are fair game. The common thread for love-hijacked social-media sites is a single feature, Kidd said: DMs. "The design of LinkedIn helps to maintain its focus on the professional, but any platform with a direct-messaging option is likely to also be used to pursue sex and dating," he told me. The ease and relative privacy of direct messaging help explain how some people are using LinkedIn for romance, but it doesn't explain why. In an age with so many dedicated dating platforms -- from giants such as Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge to niche apps including Feeld (for the unconventional), Pure (for the noncommittal), and NUiT (for the astrologically inclined) -- why mix Cupid's arrow with corporate updates? Any type of social media where you can see people's pictures can turn into a dating app. And LinkedIn is even better because it's not just showing people's fake lives. One answer may be the growing number of Americans who have gotten tired of the roulette-like experience that comes with modern dating apps. In a 2023 Pew survey of US adults, nearly one-third of respondents said they had used an online dating site or app at least once. More than half of women who had used the apps reported feeling overwhelmed by the number of messages they had received in the past year, while 64% of men said they felt insecure from the lack of messages they had gotten. Though an overwhelming majority of men and women said they'd felt excited about people they connected with, an even-larger proportion of respondents said they were sometimes or often disappointed by their matches. [...] LinkedIn's appeal as a dating site, according to people who use it that way, is the platform's ability to give back some of that control and boost the caliber of their prospects. Because the professional-networking site asks users to link to their current and former employers' profile pages, it offers an additional layer of credibility that other social-media platforms lack. Many profiles also include first-person references from former colleagues and managers -- real people with real profile pages. [...] Even for those who shy away from using LinkedIn to angle for dates, the site has become a go-to tool for vetting romantic candidates found through conventional dating apps or in-person encounters. "Social media is just one big dating app," [said Samuela John, a 24-year-old personal organizer in New York City who developed chemistry with an oil-industry man on the platform]. "Any type of social media where you can see people's pictures can turn into a dating app. And LinkedIn is even better because it's not just showing people's fake lives." [...] "I don't think you should go into it like, 'All right, I'm going to find my husband on LinkedIn,'" John said. "I think you should go about it as if you were just networking, like in a casual sense. And then if you end up meeting the person, see the vibes and then go from there." apply tags__________ [165]« Newer [166]Older » Slashdot Top Deals Slashdot Top Deals [167]Slashdot Deals Slashdot Poll Do you have a poll idea? (*) Yes, I will post in the comments ( ) No ( ) Cowboy Neal probably does (BUTTON) vote now [168]Read the 81 comments | 5711 votes Looks like someone has already voted from this IP. If you would like to vote please login and try again. Do you have a poll idea? 0 Percentage of others that also voted for: * [169]view results * Or * * [170]view more [171]Read the 81 comments | 5711 voted Most Discussed * 242 comments [172]After Reports of His Own Wife's Plagiarism, Bill Ackman Threatens Plagiarism Reviews For All MIT Faculty * 162 comments [173]Navajo Nation Objects To Landing Human Remains On Moon, Prompting Last-Minute White House Meeting * 119 comments [174]More than a Third of America's EVs Were Bought Within the Last 12 Months * 101 comments [175]US Moves Closer To Filing Sweeping Antitrust Case Against Apple * 97 comments [176]America's FAA Temporarily Grounds All Boeing 737 Max 9s - After a Window Blows Off In-Flight [177]Science * [178]Neptune Is Much Less Blue Than Depictions * [179]SpaceX Has Launched Starlink's First Direct-to-Smartphone Satellites * [180]Navajo Nation Objects To Landing Human Remains On Moon, Prompting Last-Minute White House Meeting * [181]Consumer Reports Finds 'Widespread' Presence of Plastics In Food * [182]Drones Are the New Drug Mules [183]This Day on Slashdot 2015 [184]Gunmen Kill 12, Wound 7 At French Magazine HQ 1350 comments 2013 [185]Petition For Metric In US Halfway To Requiring Response From the White House 1387 comments 2004 [186]U.S. Begins Digital Fingerprinting In Airports 1174 comments 2003 [187]All-New PowerBooks, Web Browser Featured at Macworld 1095 comments 2002 [188]New iMac Announced 1145 comments [189]Sourceforge Top Downloads * [190]TrueType core fonts 2.2B downloads * [191]Notepad++ Plugin Mgr 1.5B downloads * [192]VLC media player 899M downloads * [193]eMule 686M downloads * [194]MinGW 631M downloads Powered By [195]sf [196]Slashdot * [197]Today * [198]Saturday * [199]Friday * [200]Thursday * [201]Wednesday * [202]Tuesday * [203]Monday * [204]Sunday * [205]Submit Story Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced -- even a proverb is no proverb to you till your life has illustrated it. -- John Keats * [206]FAQ * [207]Story Archive * [208]Hall of Fame * [209]Advertising * [210]Terms * [211]Privacy Statement * [212]About * [213]Feedback * [214]Mobile View * [215]Blog * * (BUTTON) Icon Do Not Sell My Personal Information Copyright © 2024 Slashdot Media. 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