Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Double Nothingburger, extra cheese. (Score 1) 51

Airline ticketing information got shared?

Perhaps I’d be more outraged, if not for the emails, text message receipts, digital confirmations, ticketing apps, credit card auditing, banking auditing, FAA auditing, TSA auditing, and the rest of the 100% digital reservation and traveling process being one massive unending paper trail, in a society that practically begs for every bit of that privacy-raping “convenience”. As if anyone could fly in the US today and keep it some kind of secret.

Let’s be realistic about this. If you expect privacy and high speed travel, you better own the plane and the island it’s landing on, pilot.

Comment Planet the size of a closet.. (Score 1) 19

The US Is Now coming out of the closet

The entire modern planet, allows social media to use them. If you don’t believe social media is spyware, then you still don’t know what The Product being sold is.

Orwell should have written a recipe book on how to boil frogs. He clearly didn’t leave behind enough hints.

Comment Fake it, Until you Fake it. (Score 1) 61

The act also provides that tips do not qualify for the deduction if they are received "in the course of certain specified trades or businesses -- including the fields of health, performing arts, and athletics,"

Uh, if there are already exemptions for the “performing arts”, what exactly are we pretending influencers/digital content creators are again?

The guy playing a doctor on the soap opera, is not “in” the medial business. He’s fucking performing. Same goes for the idiots on stream. Let’s stop pretending they’re not pretending already. No one claims the 15-year old kicking ass in CoD is some kind of bad-ass special forces operator IRL. Stop pretending “influencers’ aren’t sponsored actors. They sure as hell are.

It would make more sense to get rid of the performing arts exemption then to pretend certain jobs suddenly aren’t.

Comment Self-inflicted. (Score 3, Informative) 36

So, Jaguar..you’re shutting down for a while longer because of a “cyberattack” you say?

97% sales drop. Jaguar will remain the steaming example of what not to do. I doubt the brand will survive the year. Wouldn’t be surprised if we find a cyberattack cover story in the end to try and dismiss the worst re-branding failure in automotive history.

Comment Pig Priorities. (Score 4, Funny) 36

A 67-year-old US man is still alive more than six months after receiving a kidney from a genetically modified pig. This is the longest a pig organ has survived in a living person.

Whew. For a minute there I thought we humans might actually be more concerned about measuring the longest a human has survived with a pig organ.

Good thing we know that pig organs can survive. Now we can make bacon live forever. Or until we get hungry.

Comment Re:Different industries? Good luck with that (Score 2) 129

My take is quite different. The Gen Z has found out that whatever they do for money, the largest share of their productivity will go to the shareholders of their employers. Hence the Gen Z optimizes their life away from money earned and towards something the shareholders can't get their hands on. Gen Z is the direct product of a shareholder economy.

Your take might have more legs, if not for the fact that Gen Z is quite an active user and beneficiary of that very same shareholder economy.

Whether it’s through alternative investments like crypto (including creating my-coin investment opportunities), ownership in fractions of single shares of stock, or participating more directly in the market, they represent quite the invested generation that knows how the rich get richer. Gen Z can’t afford real estate, and buying bonds and CDs is a bit outdated with today’s returns, so it’s not surprising to find them investing in markets a lot younger than previous generations.

Comment Re:Finally! (Score 1) 73

We need to be fixing it as fast as possible, today. We have proven technologies to do it. China is deploying them on a massive scale, more than the rest of the world combined.

China is also deploying more nuclear, hydro, and coal than the rest of the world combined. They are not doing this out of magnanimity. They are doing it because they need every additional energy source they can get. We apparently don't, so whatever.

We need it, but for far more bullshit reasons. Like mining fucking crypto and AI.

Comment Re:Finally! (Score 1) 73

Japan has been really lagging on clean energy.

Japan was getting over 30% of their power from nuclear.

Then Fukushima happened, and usage dropped to 5%.

If they can drop usage like that within just a few years, perhaps their energy needs are still flexible enough to entertain other power sources. Their citizens merely stopped trusting nuclear.

Comment Re:Do they search the kids? (Score 1) 148

Spare phones (perhaps an old one) and/or strong magnets seem like an easy workaround.

A teenager being seen with an “old” phone, is probably more embarrassing than having no phone.

Narcissism is a helluva drug.

There are plenty of ways to get around the restrictions - including putting fake phones inside the pouches. However, when faced with a warning for the first violation, in school suspension for the second violation, and finally out of school suspension for a third violation - most students choose not to do so.

Lets see how the social media junkie smartphone zombie parents work the appeals process over for a month or six before you go assuming. That smartphone policy might just find itself chained to the bottom drawer of a file cabinet locked in a basement closet with a sign on the door that says “Beware of Karens”.

Comment Great way to Create Criminals (Score 1) 148

A teenager being seen with an “old” phone, is probably more embarrassing than having no phone.

That's fine: it will teach them to think. Those who do will be the ones who put their old phone in the bag and keep their new one.

The education they’re clearly not getting, should be teaching them how to actually think.

You know, like think about the consequences of normalizing lying and deceiving to support a scam to get around smartphone rules put in place for valid reason in a teaching environment. Also known as the kind of thing real parents should also be teaching.

If we wonder how we got to a world where nothing and no one can be trusted, perhaps we look closer at our own shitty advice. There are far better ways to teach critical thinking.

Comment Re:We *HAVE* them, they're just pointless. (Score 1) 92

I don't need Rosie the Robot to use my regular stand-up vacuum cleaner. I have a Roomba.

LOL, so do I. Thank you for confirming exactly why stand-up vacuum sales will remain as strong as future Rosie sales. If Roomba was the answer, it would have proved it by now. They suck harder than Mega Maid.

I don't need a humanoid robot to sit in the driver's seat of a car to drive me around, Waymo exists.

They exist. For now. In less than half a dozen cities that apparently want to deal with the manslaughtering setbacks. I wonder if insurance rates in those cities have adjusted for the increased risk of legal autonomous drivers. (Insurance always tells on itself.)

I don't need a humanoid robot to stand in a factory using a spray can to paint a car, automated industrial robots that can do tasks like that (or welding) have existed for decades.

Needless to say the moron building cars with insanely expensive and unproven humanoid robots instead of proven certified industrial solutions, deserves their bankruptcy.

Comment Re:Wired is AI Slop (Score 1) 37

Wired is AI Slop. Over on Reddit they have a chatbot spamming their articles on every sub and posting comments. It's all slop. Of course they can't get banned because Wired and Reddit both have the same parent company, Conde Naste. That being said...feel free to take a moment to head to Reddit and see what Wired is posting. If you believe it's a disruptive use of AI, which I'm sure it will be, maybe you'll feel like taking the time to report it. The internet is an environment and spam is pollution. Let's fight some polluters.

98% of all email is spam. You wouldn’t be able to even call it a tool today without massive filters, which barely work.

We haven’t fought a fucking thing in the environment that is the internet and won. It was the Wild West when it started, and now it’s just a survellience state. With zero real jurisdiction. You aren’t winning anything. You’re finding ways to survive. Barely.

AI would impersonate your loved one and convince you they’re in grave danger, just to pull off the same Nigerian Prince scam viewed as lame today. The difference is AI will be a hell of a lot more successful. Best start grasping that fact now to set up your survival defenses. And you thought duress words were only for secret military operations..

Comment Re:All their editor positions must be AI also. (Score 1) 37

Otherwise, who read the articles and did the editorial review before they were published!

In the era of third-party digital publishers, what exactly is an editor and how fast are they expected to edit? And to whose standards?

Editing, implies a cutting room floor exists somewhere that isn’t spotless due to dogshit “censorship” excuses that make everything fit to print.

Slashdot Top Deals

It's not an optical illusion, it just looks like one. -- Phil White

Working...