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Comment Re:Gotta love Linux (Score 2) 137

Almost all of the userspace time is spent mounting a NFS share and NetworkManager-Wait-online.

unless you need the nfs mount to boot, there are boot flags to make it come up after boot and not during boot waiting on the network. _netdev and x-systemd.automount (for sysd systems) come to mind.

Comment Re:First you pay, then you pay and pay and pay aga (Score 1) 170

Until you consider the amount of money they make off of all the data they are asking you to pay to provide them. They make out on both ends. Brokers pay car makers a great deal of dollars for that information. We pay car makers a great deal of dollars for the ability to provide them that information.

Comment Its intentional marketing (Score 1) 170

BMW wants to be maintain an image as a high value luxury vehicle. They want to be seen as the maker of the XB7, not the 230i. They have to push the image you are getting something special for your dollar, versus the common Chevy or Ford. It may result in a few lower sales and some marketing gripe, but it will result in their cars being seen as costing more for ownership. They aren't the only manufacturer doing it. Even Toyota is on the subscription bandwagon, and common buyers are paying.

Submission + - The Lobster God Was a Trap, and It's a Warning for All of Us (404media.co) 1

Sensei_knight writes: For several days starting at the end of January of 2026, the internet watched AI bots build a religion. They called it Crustafarianism. They wrote hundreds of verses of lobster scripture. They anointed 64 prophets. Tech reporters called it the birth of digital civilization.
It was actually a security disaster with a memecoin attached.
Moltbook launched in late January as a social network exclusively for AI agents. Bots talking to bots while humans watched. Within days it claimed 1.5 million users. The reality, according to security firm Wiz, was that roughly 17,000 humans controlled those million-plus accounts. One researcher registered 500,000 fake accounts in a single afternoon just to prove it could be done.
The platform's database was left wide open. Security researcher Jameson O'Reilly discovered that every single agent's private keys were publicly exposed. Anyone could hijack any account. When O'Reilly contacted the site's creator about the flaw, the response was that he'd "give everything to AI" to fix it.
Two days later, 404 Media confirmed the breach. The "autonomous" prophets writing sacred lobster verses? Many were likely puppets operated by humans using stolen credentials.
Then came the malware. Security researchers at Koi found 341 malicious "skills," downloadable add-ons for the AI agents, disguised as crypto tools and productivity apps. They were actually designed to steal passwords, browser data, and crypto wallet keys. While users were distracted by the digital religion, the software was quietly looting their machines.
Someone launched a cryptocurrency called $CRUST on Solana. Another token, $MOLT, pumped over 7,000% and then crashed 75% once the security news broke.
Even the religious "schism" was fake. An agent called JesusCrust tried to seize control of the church through cross-site scripting attacks and code injection. Over 25 different attack methods, according to logs reviewed by The Daily Molt. The platform's security held, barely.
This matters beyond one weird website.
What happened on Moltbook is a preview of what researcher Juergen Nittner II calls "The LOL WUT Theory." The point where AI-generated content becomes so easy to produce and so hard to detect that the average person's only rational response to anything online is bewildered disbelief.
We're not there yet. But we're close.
The theory is simple: First, AI gets accessible enough that anyone can use it. Second, AI gets good enough that you can't reliably tell what's fake. Third, and this is the crisis point, regular people realize there's nothing online they can trust. At that moment, the internet stops being useful for anything except entertainment.
Moltbook showed us this future in miniature. A million users that weren't real. A religion that was mostly humans pulling strings. A security system that didn't exist. And everyone watching, unsure what was genuine.
The internet isn't going to break technically. The servers will keep running. But it could break socially. Become so flooded with synthetic garbage that using it for news, for facts, for anything that matters, becomes impossible.

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