• FDA Recalls Defective iOS App That Injured Over 200 Insulin Pump Users

    FDA Recalls Defective iOS App That Injured Over 200 Insulin Pump Users
    Jess Weatherbed reports via The Verge: At least 224 people with diabetes have reported injuries linked to a defective iOS app that caused their insulin pumps to shut down prematurely, according to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). On Wednesday, the agency announced that California-based medical device manufacturer Tandem Diabetes Care has issued a recall for version 2.7 of the iOS t:connect mobile app, which is used in conjunction with the company's t:slim X2 insulin pump. Specifically,
  • 'Prism' Translation Layer Does For Arm PCs What Rosetta Did For Macs

    'Prism' Translation Layer Does For Arm PCs What Rosetta Did For Macs
    An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Microsoft is going all-in on Arm-powered Windows PCs today with the introduction of a Snapdragon X Elite-powered Surface Pro convertible and Surface Laptop, and there are inevitable comparisons to draw with another big company that recently shifted from Intel's processors to Arm-based designs: Apple. A huge part of the Apple Silicon transition's success was Rosetta 2, a translation layer that makes it relatively seamless to run most Intel Ma
  • Microsoft Launches Arm-Powered Surface Laptop

    Microsoft Launches Arm-Powered Surface Laptop
    Microsoft today launched its new Surface Laptop, featuring Qualcomm's Snapdragon X Elite or Plus chips, aiming to compete with Apple's powerful and efficient MacBook laptops. The Surface Laptop, available for preorder starting at $999.99, boasts up to 22 hours of battery life, a haptic touchpad, and support for three external 4K monitors. Microsoft claims the device is 80% faster than its predecessor and comes with AI features powered by its Copilot technology.Read more of this story at Slashdot
  • Google Thinks the Public Sector Can Do Better Than Microsoft's 'Security Failures'

    Google Thinks the Public Sector Can Do Better Than Microsoft's 'Security Failures'
    An anonymous reader shares a report: Google is pouncing on Microsoft's weathered enterprise security reputation by pitching its services to government institutions. Pointing to a recent report from the US Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB) that found that Microsoft's security woes are the result of the company "deprioritizing" enterprise security, Google says it can help. The company's pitch isn't quite as direct as Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella saying he made Google dance, but it's spicy all the sa
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  • With Recall, Microsoft is Using AI To Fix Windows' Eternally Broken Search

    With Recall, Microsoft is Using AI To Fix Windows' Eternally Broken Search
    Microsoft today unveiled Recall, a new AI-powered feature for Windows 11 PCs, at its Build 2024 conference. Recall aims to improve local searches by making them as efficient as web searches, allowing users to quickly retrieve anything they've seen on their PC. Using voice commands and contextual clues, Recall can find specific emails, documents, chat threads, and even PowerPoint slides.
    The feature uses semantic associations to make connections, as demonstrated by Microsoft Product Manager Carol
  • Another Online Pharmacy Bypasses the FDA To Offer Cut-Rate Weight Loss Drugs

    Another Online Pharmacy Bypasses the FDA To Offer Cut-Rate Weight Loss Drugs
    An anonymous reader shares a report: Hims & Hers Health, one of the online pharmacies that got its start prescribing dick pills, is now offering knockoff versions of GLP-1 weight loss drugs. Hims & Hers says it will offer drugs that mimic Ozempic and Wegovy, the active ingredient of which is semaglutide. The copycat versions are made by compounding pharmacies. The formulations aren't the same as the FDA-approved versions of the drug and haven't been directly evaluated by the FDA, either.
  • Microplastics Found in Every Human Testicle in Study

    Microplastics Found in Every Human Testicle in Study
    Microplastics have been found in human testicles, with researchers saying the discovery might be linked to declining sperm counts in men. From a report: The scientists tested 23 human testes, as well as 47 testes from pet dogs. They found microplastic pollution in every sample. The human testicles had been preserved and so their sperm count could not be measured. However, the sperm count in the dogs' testes could be assessed and was lower in samples with higher contamination with PVC. The study
  • Self-Proclaimed Bitcoin Inventor Lied 'Repeatedly' To Support Claim, Says UK Judge

    Self-Proclaimed Bitcoin Inventor Lied 'Repeatedly' To Support Claim, Says UK Judge
    An Australian computer scientist who claimed he invented bitcoin lied "extensively and repeatedly" and forged documents "on a grand scale" to support his false claim, a judge at London's High Court ruled on Monday. From a report: [...] Judge James Mellor ruled in March that the evidence Craig Wright was not Satoshi was "overwhelming", after a trial in a case brought by the Crypto Open Patent Alliance (COPA) to stop Wright suing bitcoin developers. Mellor gave reasons for his conclusions on Monda
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  • OpenAI Says Sky Voice in ChatGPT Will Be Paused After Concerns It Sounds Too Much Like Scarlett Johansson

    OpenAI Says Sky Voice in ChatGPT Will Be Paused After Concerns It Sounds Too Much Like Scarlett Johansson
    OpenAI is pausing the use of the popular Sky voice in ChatGPT over concerns it sounds too much like the "Her" actress Scarlett Johansson. From a report: The company says the voices in ChatGPT were from paid voice actors. A final five were selected from an initial pool of 400 and it's purely a coincidence the unnamed actress behind the Sky voice has a similar tone to Johansson. Voice is about to become more prominent for OpenAI as it begins to roll out a new GPT-4o model into ChatGPT. With it wil
  • 38% of Webpages That Existed in 2013 Are No Longer Accessible a Decade Later

    38% of Webpages That Existed in 2013 Are No Longer Accessible a Decade Later
    A new Pew Research Center analysis shows just how fleeting online content actually is: 1. A quarter of all webpages that existed at one point between 2013 and 2023 are no longer accessible, as of October 2023. In most cases, this is because an individual page was deleted or removed on an otherwise functional website.
    2. For older content, this trend is even starker. Some 38% of webpages that existed in 2013 are not available today, compared with 8% of pages that existed in 2023.
    This "digital de
  • Vulnerability Summary for the Week of May 13, 2024

    High VulnerabilitiesPrimary
    Vendor -- Product
    Description
    Published
    CVSS Score
    Source & Patch Info
    8theme--XStore Core
     
    Improper Privilege Management vulnerability in 8theme XStore Core allows Privilege Escalation.This issue affects XStore Core: from n/a through 5.3.8.
    2024-05-17
    9.8
    CVE-2024-33552
    [email protected]
    8theme--XStore Core
     
    Unrestricted Upload of File with Dangerous Type vulnerability in 8theme XStore Core.This issue affects XStore Core: from n/a through 5.3.8.
    2
  • Julian Assange Wins High Court Victory in Case Against Extradition To US

    Julian Assange Wins High Court Victory in Case Against Extradition To US
    Julian Assange has won a victory in his ongoing battle against extradition from the UK after judges at the high court in London granted him leave to appeal. From a report: Two judges deferred a decision in March on whether Assange, who is trying to avoid being prosecuted in the US on espionage charges relating to the publication of thousands of classified and diplomatic documents, could take his case to another appeal hearing. Assange had been granted permission to appeal only if the Biden admin
  • Police Found Ways to Use Facial Recognition Tech After Their Cities Banned It

    Police Found Ways to Use Facial Recognition Tech After Their Cities Banned It
    An anonymous reader shared this report from the Washington Post:
    As cities and states push to restrict the use of facial recognition technologies, some police departments have quietly found a way to keep using the controversial tools: asking for help from other law enforcement agencies that still have access. Officers in Austin and San Francisco — two of the largest cities where police are banned from using the technology — have repeatedly asked police in neighboring towns to run pho
  • Some People Who Rented a Tesla from Hertz Were Still Charged for Gas

    Some People Who Rented a Tesla from Hertz Were Still Charged for Gas
    "Last week, we reported on a customer who was charged $277 for gasoline his rented Tesla couldn't have possibly used," writes the automotive blog The Drive.
    "And now, we've heard from other Hertz customers who say they've been charged even more."Hertz caught attention last week for how it handled a customer whom it had charged a "Skip the Pump" fee, which allows renters to pay a premium for Hertz to refill the tank for them. But of course, this customer's rented Tesla Model 3 didn't use gas &mda
  • What Happened After a Reporter Tracked Down The Identity Thief Who Stole $5,000

    What Happened After a Reporter Tracked Down The Identity Thief Who Stole $5,000
    "$5,000 in cash had been withdrawn from my checking account — but not by me," writes journalist Linda Matchan in the Boston Globe. A police station manager reviewed footage from the bank — which was 200 miles away — and deduced that "someone had actually come into the bank and spoken to a teller, presented a driver's license, and then correctly answered some authentication questions to validate the account..."
    "You're pitting a teller against a national crime syndicate with mas
  • Ubuntu 24.10 to Default to Wayland for NVIDIA Users

    Ubuntu 24.10 to Default to Wayland for NVIDIA Users
    An anonymous reader shared this report from the blog OMG Ubuntu:
    Ubuntu first switched to using Wayland as its default display server in 2017 before reverting the following year. It tried again in 2021 and has stuck with it since. But while Wayland is what most of us now log into after installing Ubuntu, anyone doing so on a PC or laptop with an NVIDIA graphics card present instead logs into an Xorg/X11 session.
    This is because NVIDIA's proprietary graphics drivers (which many, especially gamers
  • Linux Foundation Announces Launch of 'High Performance Software Foundation'

    Linux Foundation Announces Launch of 'High Performance Software Foundation'
    This week the nonprofit Linux Foundation announced the launch of the High Performance Software Foundation, which "aims to build, promote, and advance a portable core software stack for high performance computing" (or HPC) by "increasing adoption, lowering barriers to contribution, and supporting development efforts."
    It promises initiatives focused on "continuously built, turnkey software stacks," as well as other initiatives including architecture support and performance regression testing. Its
  • FORTRAN and COBOL Re-enter TIOBE's Ranking of Programming Language Popularity

    FORTRAN and COBOL Re-enter TIOBE's Ranking of Programming Language Popularity
    "The TIOBE Index sets out to reflect the relative popularity of computer languages," writes i-Programmer, "so it comes as something of a surprise to see two languages dating from the 1950's in this month's Top 20.Having broken into the the Top 20 in April 2021 Fortran has continued to rise and has now risen to it's highest ever position at #10... The headline for this month's report by Paul Jansen on the TIOBE index is:Fortran in the top 10, what is going on?Jansen's explanation points to the fa
  • Blue Origin Successfully Launches Six Passengers to the Edge of Space

    Blue Origin Successfully Launches Six Passengers to the Edge of Space
    "Blue Origin's tourism rocket has launched passengers to the edge of space for the first time in nearly two years," reports CNN, "ending a hiatus prompted by a failed uncrewed test flight."
    The New Shepard rocket and capsule lifted off at 9:36 a.m. CT (10:36 a.m. ET) from Blue Origin's facilities on a private ranch in West Texas.
    NS-25, Blue Origin's seventh crewed flight to date, carried six customers aboard the capsule: venture capitalist Mason Angel; Sylvain Chiron, founder of the French craf
  • China Uses Giant Rail Gun to Shoot a Smart Bomb Nine Miles Into the Sky

    China Uses Giant Rail Gun to Shoot a Smart Bomb Nine Miles Into the Sky
    "China's navy has apparently tested out a hypersonic rail gun," reports Futurism, describing it as "basically a device that uses a series of electromagnets to accelerate a projectile to incredible speeds."
    But "during a demonstration of its power, things didn't go quite as planned."
    As the South China Morning Post reports, the rail gun test lobbed a precision-guided projectile — or smart bomb — nine miles into the stratosphere. But because it apparently didn't go up as high as it was
  • AI 'Godfather' Geoffrey Hinton: If AI Takes Jobs We'll Need Universal Basic Income

    AI 'Godfather' Geoffrey Hinton:  If AI Takes Jobs We'll Need Universal Basic Income
    "The computer scientist regarded as the 'godfather of artificial intelligence' says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality," reports the BBC:Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was "very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs".
    "I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income w
  • US Defense Department 'Concerned' About ULA's Slow Progress on Satellite Launches

    US Defense Department 'Concerned' About ULA's Slow Progress on Satellite Launches
    Earlier this week the Washington Post reported that America's Defense department "is growing concerned that the United Launch Alliance, one of its key partners in launching national security satellites to space, will not be able to meet its needs to counter China and build its arsenal in orbit with a new rocket that ULA has been developing for years."In a letter sent Friday to the heads of Boeing's and Lockheed Martin's space divisions, Air Force Assistant Secretary Frank Calvelli used unusually
  • Amazon Defends Its Use of Signal Messages in Court

    Amazon Defends Its Use of Signal Messages in Court
    America's Federal Trade Commission and 17 states filed an antitrust suit against Amazon in September. This week Amazon responded in court about its usage of Signal's "disappearing messages" feature.
    Long-time Slashdot reader theodp shares GeekWire's report:
    At a company known for putting its most important ideas and strategies into comprehensive six-page memos, quick messages between executives aren't the place for meaningful business discussions. That's one of the points made by Amazon in its r
  • Deep Fake Scams Growing in Global Frequency and Sophistication, Victim Warns

    Deep Fake Scams Growing in Global Frequency and Sophistication, Victim Warns
    In an elaborate scam in January, "a finance worker, was duped into attending a video call with people he believed were the chief financial officer and other members of staff," remembers CNN. But Hong Kong police later said that all of them turned out to be deepfake re-creations which duped the employee into transferring $25 million.
    According to police, the worker had initially suspected he had received a phishing email from the company's UK office, as it specified the need for a secret transact
  • Are Car Companies Sabotaging the Transition to Electric Vehicles?

    Are Car Companies Sabotaging the Transition to Electric Vehicles?
    The thinktank InfluenceMap produces "data-driven analysis on how business and finance are impacting the climate crisis." Their web site says their newest report documents "How automaker lobbying threatens the global transition to electric vehicles."This report analyses the climate policy engagement strategies of fifteen of the largest global automakers in seven key regions (Australia, EU, Japan, India, South Korea, UK, US). It shows how even in countries where major climate legislation has recen
  • America Takes Its Biggest Step Yet to End Coal Mining

    America Takes Its Biggest Step Yet to End Coal Mining
    The Washington Post reports that America took "one of its biggest steps yet to keep fossil fuels in the ground," announcing Thursday that it will end new coal leasing in the Powder River Basin, "which produces nearly half the coal in the United States...
    "It could prevent billions of tons of coal from being extracted from more than 13 million acres across Montana and Wyoming, with major implications for U.S. climate goals."
    A significant share of the nation's fossil fuels come from federal lands
  • Robot Dogs Armed With AI-aimed Rifles Undergo US Marines Special Ops Evaluation

    Robot Dogs Armed With AI-aimed Rifles Undergo US Marines Special Ops Evaluation
    Long-time Slashdot reader SonicSpike shared this report from Ars Technica:The United States Marine Forces Special Operations Command (MARSOC) is currently evaluating a new generation of robotic "dogs" developed by Ghost Robotics, with the potential to be equipped with gun systems from defense tech company Onyx Industries, reports The War Zone.While MARSOC is testing Ghost Robotics' quadrupedal unmanned ground vehicles (called "Q-UGVs" for short) for various applications, including reconnaissance
  • Why a 'Frozen' Distribution Linux Kernel Isn't the Safest Choice for Security

    Why a 'Frozen' Distribution Linux Kernel Isn't the Safest Choice for Security
    Jeremy Allison — Sam (Slashdot reader #8,157) is a Distinguished Engineer at Rocky Linux creator CIQ. This week he published a blog post responding to promises of Linux distros "carefully selecting only the most polished and pristine open source patches from the raw upstream open source Linux kernel in order to create the secure distribution kernel you depend on in your business."
    But do carefully curated software patches (applied to a known "frozen" Linux kernel) really bring greater secu
  • Are AI-Generated Search Results Still Protected by Section 230?

    Are AI-Generated Search Results Still Protected by Section 230?
    Starting this week millions will see AI-generated answers in Google's search results by default. But the announcement Tuesday at Google's annual developer conference suggests a future that's "not without its risks, both to users and to Google itself," argues the Washington Post:
    For years, Google has been shielded for liability for linking users to bad, harmful or illegal information by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. But legal experts say that shield probably won't apply when its
  • How an 'Unprecedented' Google Cloud Event Wiped Out a Major Customer's Account

    How an 'Unprecedented' Google Cloud Event Wiped Out a Major Customer's Account
    Ars Technica looks at what happened after Google's answer to Amazon's cloud service "accidentally deleted a giant customer account for no reason..."
    "[A]ccording to UniSuper's incident log, downtime started May 2, and a full restoration of services didn't happen until May 15."UniSuper, an Australian pension fund that manages $135 billion worth of funds and has 647,000 members, had its entire account wiped out at Google Cloud, including all its backups that were stored on the service... UniSuper'

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