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Submission + - Astronomers discover black hole with energy jets spanning 23 million light years (nytimes.com)

fahrbot-bot writes: The New York Times reports that Astronomers announced last week that they had discovered a black hole spitting energy across 23 million light-years of intergalactic space. Two jets, shooting in opposite directions, compose the biggest lightning bolt ever seen in the sky — about 140 times as long as our own Milky Way galaxy is wide, and more than 10 times the distance from Earth to Andromeda, the nearest large spiral galaxy.

Follow-up observations with optical telescopes traced the eruption to a galaxy 7.5 billion light-years away that existed when the universe was less than half its current age of 14 billion years. At the heart of that galaxy was a black hole spewing energy equivalent to the output of more than a trillion stars.

“The Milky Way would be a little dot in these two giant eruptions,” said Martijn Oei, a postdoctoral researcher at the California Institute of Technology. Dr. Oei led the team that made the discovery, which was reported in Nature on Sept. 18 and announced on the journal’s cover with an illustration reminiscent of a “Star Wars” poster. The astronomers have named the black hole Porphyrion, after a giant in Greek mythology — a son of Gaia — who fought the gods and lost.

The discovery raises new questions of how such black holes could affect the evolution and structure of the universe.

Submission + - SAP under investigation for price fixing (bloomberg.com)

itwbennett writes: Bloomberg reports that the US DOJ is investigating German software provider SAP and reseller Carahsoft for allegedly conspiring to overcharge the US government. "The investigation centers on more than $2 billion worth of SAP technology purchased by US government agencies since 2014," writes Gyana Swain for CIO.com. "This isn’t the first time SAP has faced legal challenges related to its business practices. Earlier this year, the German software developer agreed to pay $222 million to settle allegations of bribery schemes in seven countries."

Submission + - SpaceX Fires Back at FAA Over Alleged Licensing and Safety Violations (teslanorth.com)

schwit1 writes: https://x.com/SpaceX/status/18...

SpaceX’s letter expressed concern that Administrator Whitaker appeared to lack accurate information regarding the company’s compliance with FAA licensing matters. Dunn reiterated SpaceX’s commitment to safety and environmental responsibility, stating: “SpaceX is the safest, most reliable launch provider in the world.”

Whitaker and the FAA need to wake up, as their oversized bureaucracy is slowing down SpaceX and its pace of innovation.

Submission + - James Cameron Joins Board of Stability AI In Coup For Tech Firm (hollywoodreporter.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In a major coup for the artificial intelligence company, Stability AI says that Avatar, Terminator and Titanic director James Cameron will join its board of directors. Stability AI is the firm that developed the Stable Diffusion text-to-image generative AI model, an image- and video-focused model that is among those being closely watched by many in Hollywood, particularly in the visual effects industry. In fact, Stability AI’s CEO, Prem Akkaraju, is no stranger to the business, having previously served as the CEO of visual effects firm WETA Digital. Sean Parker, the former president of Facebook and founder of Napster, also recently joined the AI firm as executive chairman.

As a director, Cameron has long been eager to push the boundaries of what is technologically possible in filmmaking (anyone who has seen the Terminator franchise knows that he is also familiar with the pitfalls of technology run amok). He was among the earliest directors to embrace the potential of computer-generated visual effects, and he continued to use his films (most recently Avatar: The Way of Water) to move the entire field forward.

Security

Samsung Confirms Galaxy Source Code Breach (zdnet.com) 17

Samsung on Monday confirmed that the company recently suffered a cyberattack, but said that it doesn't anticipate any impact on its business or customers. From a report: Last week, South American hacking group Lapsus$ claimed it had stolen 190GB of confidential data, including source code, from the South Korean tech giant's servers. The group also posted snapshots of the alleged data online. Samsung has now confirmed in a statement, without naming the hacking group, that there was a security breach, but it asserted that no personal information of customers was compromised.

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