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Submission + - Tesla Cybertrucks are already corroding (businessinsider.com) 7

quonset writes: It's only been three months since Tesla started selling its Cybertruck and already some owners are complaining of corrosion appearing on the stainless steel panels.

In a post on the Cybertruck Owners Club forum, a member with the username Raxar wrote that they'd collected their vehicle on February 1 — and were warned that day that rain could cause it to rust.

“The advisor specifically mentioned the Cybertrucks develop orange rust marks in the rain and that required the vehicle to be buffed out," the forum member wrote. "I know I heard the story of never take out your Delorean in the rain but I just never read anything about rust and Cybertrucks."

In another post, Raxar said the car started developing rust spots after just two days in the rain

The user also shared photos of what they said were small specks of rust on the car's stainless-steel body. The user said the photos were taken after a “dish soap wash.”

In two YouTube videos, the posters claimed to have access to the Cybertruck's owner's manuals (which Tesla hasn't shared publicly). The materials the videos show say the EV doesn't have "a clear coat" on its exterior stainless-steel body.

The videos give a glimpse of the apparent owner’s guide, which says: "To prevent damage to the exterior, immediately remove corrosive substances (such as grease, oil, bird droppings, tree resin, dead insects, tar spots, road salt, industrial fallout, etc.).”

Submission + - Leaked Emails Show Hugo Awards Self-Censoring to Appease China (404media.co) 1

samleecole writes: A trove of leaked emails shows how administrators of one of the most prestigious awards in science fiction censored themselves because the awards ceremony was being held in China.

The emails, which show the process of compiling spreadsheets of the top 10 works in each category and checking them for “sensitive political nature” to see if they were “an issue in China,” were obtained by fan writer Chris M. Barkley and author Jason Sanford, and published on fandom news site File 770 and Sanford’s Patreon, where they uploaded the full PDF of the emails. They were provided to them by Hugo Awards administrator Diane Lacey. Lacey confirmed in an email to 404 Media that she was the source of the emails.

“In addition to the regular technical review, as we are happening in China and the *laws* we operate under are different...we need to highlight anything of a sensitive political nature in the work,” Dave McCarty, head of the 2023 awards jury, directed administrators in an email. “It's not necessary to read everything, but if the work focuses on China, taiwan, tibet, or other topics that may be an issue *in* China...that needs to be highlighted so that we can determine if it is safe to put it on the ballot of if the law will require us to make an administrative decision about it.”

Submission + - Slashdot Newsletter pop-ups (slashdot.org)

ve3oat writes: OK, I get it. Slashdot has a newsletter to which I do not subscribe and you want me to subscribe to it.

But I am already a loyal Slashdot reader and I read Slashdot every day, usually several times a day, usually without logging in, and do not need a newsletter. Besides, my mailbox already gets stuffed with other things.

Please stop putting the pop-up ads for the Newsletter on my browser every time I visit Slashdot, which, as I mentioned above, is fairly often. Thank you.

Submission + - Bloodbath at Paramount claims 800 jobs including CBS News journalists (nypost.com)

An anonymous reader writes:

Catherine Herridge — an award-winning senior correspondent whose First Amendment case is being closely watched by journalists nationwide — was among the hundreds of employees at CBS parent Paramount who got pink slips on Tuesday, sources told The Post.

The carnage provoked outrage from the rank-and-file at CBS, with some focusing their ire on Paramount Global CEO Bob Bakish, who pulled down $32 million in total compensation last year despite the company’s ever-shrinking financial profile.

“Everybody in the newsroom is pissed that Bob Bakish is making over $30 million and he’s making these cuts,” one insider fumed.

Elsewhere, some suspected the layoffs were more than just cost-cutting. Sources said Herridge had clashed with CBS News president Ingrid Ciprian-Matthews — a sharp-elbowed executive who was investigated in 2021 over favoritism and discriminatory hiring and management practices, as revealed by The Post.

Sources said CBS News’ Washington bureau, where Herridge covered national security and intelligence, was hit particularly hard.


Submission + - Hamas data center found literally underneath UNRWA headquarters in Gaza (timesofisrael.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The subterranean data center — complete with an electrical room, industrial battery power banks and living quarters for Hamas terrorists operating the computer servers — was built precisely under the location where Israel would not consider looking initially, let alone target in an airstrike.

The revelation of the server farm comes amid other accusations of UNRWA collusion with the Gaza-ruling terror group and the entanglement of the UN body that provides welfare and humanitarian services for Palestinian refugees from the 1948 and 1967 wars and their descendants.

Israel last month accused 12 staff with the UN Palestinian refugee agency of taking part in the October 7 massacre by Hamas-led terrorists, who killed 1,200 people and took 253 hostages in the murderous rampage.

Submission + - Chernobyl's mutant wolves appear to have developed resistance to cancer (sky.com)

AmiMoJo writes: Mutant wolves roaming the deserted streets of Chernobyl appear to have developed resistance to cancer — raising hopes the findings can help scientists fight the disease in humans. Dr Cara Love, an evolutionary biologist and ecotoxicologist at Princeton University in the US, has been studying how the Chernobyl wolves survive despite generations of exposure to radioactive particles. The researchers discovered that Chernobyl wolves are exposed to upwards of 11.28 millirem of radiation every day for their entire lives — which is more than six times the legal safety limit for a human. Dr Love found the wolves have altered immune systems similar to cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment, but more significantly she also identified specific parts of the animals' genetic information that seemed resilient to increased cancer risk.

Comment Re:Increase reliability, stop subsidizing batterie (Score 1) 382

I live outside of Fort Worth; the public transit system here is terrible, although admittedly better than where I grew up.

It does exist, and there's a TEXRail station less than a mile from my house. The trouble is that to get to anywhere I might need or want to go, it would take so long, and involve so many connections, (TEXRail to TRE to DART train to DART bus, for example,) that it's simply easier to sit in traffic, (or pay the NTTA out the nose and use toll lanes, if I'm in a rush.)

Additionally, the schedules make it so that if I wanted to go into the city for an evening out, I'd need to be very careful to catch the last train, which is stupidly early, otherwise I'm taking an Uber or Lyft home. Again, easier to simply drive in, park in a garage, and leave when I want.

Finally, there is no mass transit connection to my office at all, (service ends ten miles away.) So even commuting using mass-transit is a non-starter. Not to mention what is a two hour drive in rush hour traffic would probably be more like four with mass transit.

Submission + - Communications of the ACM: Computing, You Have Blood on Your Hands! 1

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 Computing, You Have Blood on Your Hands!, noting 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 past columns, one can see the forewarnings. Our obsession with efficiency came at the expense of resilience. In the name of efficiency, we aimed at eliminating all friction. In the name of efficiency, it became desirable to move fast and break things, and we allowed the technology industry to become 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."

So, how did academic and business readers of the prestigious flagship magazine of the ACM respond to Vardi's call-to-action? Crickets.

Submission + - Amazon's Strict Return-to-office Policy Is Pushing More Employees Into Quitting (techspot.com) 1

jjslash writes: Are you among the many individuals strongly opposed to returning to the office, to the point where you would prefer quitting your job rather than going back? It's an issue several companies are facing, but Amazon appears to be particularly prone to losing staff over its RTO policy, though it doesn't seem willing to do anything about it:

Ending a policy of allowing employees to work from home full-time is always a contentious move by companies, but none have faced as much pushback as Amazon. The original announcement resulted in an employee petition in February, which was resoundingly rejected, and it was one of the reasons behind a walkout later in the year.

Adding fuel to the fire is another Amazon policy introduced in July that requires some corporate workers to relocate to other cities near their teams' "hub" offices – central locations assigned to each individual team.


Submission + - Cards Against Humanity's Black Friday Prank: Launching Its Own Social Media Sit (adage.com) 1

destinyland writes: The popular party game "Cards Against Humanity" continued their tradition of practical jokes on Black Friday. They created a new social network where users can perform only one action: posting the word “yowza.”

Then announced it on their official social media accounts on Instagram, Facebook, and X...

Regardless of what words you type into the window, they're replaced with the word yowza. "For just $0.99, you’ll get an exclusive black check by your name," reads an announcement on the site, "and the ability to post a new word: awooga."

It's a magical land where "yowfluencers" keep "reyowzaing" the "yowzas" of other users. And there's also a tab for trending hashtags. (Although, yes, they all seem to be "yowza".) But they've already gotten a write up in the trade industry publication Advertising Age .

“With every bad thing happening in the world, social media is always right there, making it worse,” a spokesperson said.... "[W]e asked ourselves: Is there a way we could make a social network that doesn’t suck? At first, the answer was ‘no.’ The content moderation problem is just too hard. And then we thought, why not solve the content moderation problem by having no content? That’s Yowza....”

When creating your profile on the network there's a dropdown menu for specifying your age and location — although all of the choices are yowza. More details from Advertising Age:

The company said the word “yowza” was the first that came to mind when its creative teams were brainstorming—and it just stuck. “It’s dumb, it’s ridiculous, it means nothing. It’s perfect,” the rep said.

And the service is still evolving, with fresh user upgrades. The official Yowza store will now also sell you the ability to also post the word Shazam — for $29.99. (Also on sale are 100,000 followers — for 99 cents.) But there's also an official FAQ which articulates the service's deep commitment to protecting their users' privacy.

Do you promise you won’t share my private information with the Chinese Communist Party, like TikTok?

Yowza.

Comment Oppenheimer & Star Trek (Score 1) 184

In film, Oppenheimer was very good, but also a typical Christopher Nolan film, which means it won't for everyone. I've got a copy of Sisu on a friend's strong recommendation, but haven't watched it yet.

On TV, as several others have mentioned, SNW is good, but here, I'll say it: Lower Decks is frickin' spectacular.

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