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Category Archives: Slashdot
Is npm Enough? Why Startups Are Coming After This JavaScript Package Registry
Many developers feel GitHub has left npm to stagnate since its 2020 acquisition, doing just enough to keep it running while neglecting innovations. Security problems and package spam have only intensified these frustrations. Yet these newcomers face the same harsh reality that pushed npm into GitHub’s arms: running a package registry costs serious money — not just for servers, but for lawyers handling trademark fights and content moderation.
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Australia Bans All Kaspersky Products on Government Systems Citing ‘Unacceptable Security Risk’
“I have also considered the important need for a strong policy signal to critical infrastructure and other Australian governments regarding the unacceptable security risk associated with the use of Kaspersky Lab, Inc. products and web services.”
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Microsoft Urges Trump To Overhaul Curbs on AI Chip Exports
Microsoft says the unintended consequence of that proposed system would be that allies facing limited U.S. chip supply would turn to China to get the tech infrastructure they need. China is using the proposed rule to argue to other countries that it would be a better long-term partner for AI infrastructure than the U.S., Microsoft President Brad Smith said in an interview. “Their message is these countries can’t rely on the U.S., but China is willing to provide what they need,” he said. “That is not good for American business or American foreign policy.”
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Electronic Devices Used For Car Thefts Set To Be Banned in England
Until now, police could only bring a prosecution if they could prove a device had been used to commit a specific offence, but under new laws in the Crime and Policing Bill the onus will be on someone in possession of a device to show they had it for a legitimate purpose. Making or selling a signal jammer could lead to up to five years in prison or an unlimited fine.
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Amazon Unveils Its First Quantum Computing Chip
Unlike conventional approaches that add error correction after designing the architecture, AWS built Ocelot with quantum error correction as the primary requirement. The chip consists of two stacked 1cm2 silicon microchips containing 14 core components: five data qubits, five buffer circuits for stabilization, and four qubits dedicated to error detection.
Quantum computers are notoriously sensitive to environmental noise — including vibrations, heat, and electromagnetic interference — which disturbs qubits and generates computational errors. These errors multiply as quantum systems scale up, creating a significant barrier to practical quantum computing. Ocelot’s high-quality oscillators, made from a thin film of superconducting Tantalum processed using specialized techniques developed by AWS material scientists, generate the repetitive electrical signals that maintain quantum states.
“We’re just getting started and we believe we have several more stages of scaling to go through,” said Oskar Painter, AWS director of Quantum Hardware, whose team published their findings in Nature. Industry analyst Heather West of IDC was more measured, categorizing Ocelot as “much more of an advancement and less of a breakthrough,” noting that superconducting qubits designed to resist certain error types aren’t completely novel.
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Jensen Huang: AI Has To Do ‘100 Times More’ Computation Now Than When ChatGPT Was Released
Huang pushed back on that idea in the interview on Wednesday, saying DeepSeek popularized reasoning models that will need more chips. “DeepSeek was fantastic,” Huang said. “It was fantastic because it open sourced a reasoning model that’s absolutely world class.” Huang said that company’s percentage of revenue in China has fallen by about half due to the export restrictions, adding that there are other competitive pressures in the country, including from Huawei.
Developers will likely search for ways around export controls through software, whether it be for a supercomputer, a personal computer, a phone or a game console, Huang said. “Ultimately, software finds a way,” he said. “You ultimately make that software work on whatever system that you’re targeting, and you create great software.” Huang said that Nvidia’s GB200, which is sold in the United States, can generate AI content 60 times faster than the versions of the company’s chips that it sells to China under export controls.
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German Startup Wins Accolade For Its Fusion Reactor Design
Proxima published its findings in Fusion Engineering and Design, choosing to share this information publicly to support open-source science. “Our American friends can see it. Our Chinese friends can see it. Our claim is that we can execute on this faster than anyone else, and we do that by creating a framework for integrated physics, engineering, and economics. So we’re not a science project anymore,” Sciortino told TechCrunch over a call. “We started out as a group of founders saying it’s going to take us two years to get to the Stellaris design … We actually finished after one year. So we’ve accelerated by a year,” he added.
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Tokyo Is Turning To a 4-Day Workweek To Shed ‘World’s Oldest Population’ Title
Moving to a four-day workweek could help address some of the core issues associated with Japan’s heavy work culture, which can especially weigh on working women. The gap between men and women when it comes to housework is one of the largest among OECD countries, with women in Japan engaging in five times more unpaid work, such as childcare and elder care, than men, according to the International Monetary Fund. More than half of women who had fewer children than they would have preferred said they had fewer children because of the increased housework that another child would bring, according to the IMF. In some cases, moving to a four-day workweek has been shown to improve housework equity. Men reported spending 22% more time on childcare and 23% more time on housework during a four-day workweek trial conducted across six countries by 4 Day Week Global, which advocates for the issue.
It would take a major societal change for the four-day workweek to catch on more broadly, but years of experiments have shown that working one day less a week improves employee productivity and well-being, said Peter Miscovich, the global future of work leader at real estate services company JLL. “The upside from all of that has been less stress, less burnout, better rest, better sleep, less cost to the employee, higher levels of focus and concentration during the working hours, and in some cases, greater commitment to the organization as a result,” Miscovich told Fortune.
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Lucid CEO Steps Down As EV Maker Plans To Double Production
The CEO change and production target were announced in conjunction with the automaker’s fourth-quarter financial results. For the period ended Dec. 31, the company reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders of $636.9 million, or a loss of 22 cents per share, on revenue of $234.5 million. Analysts surveyed by LSEG expected a loss of 25 cents per share on revenue of $214 million. During the same period last year, Lucid reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders of $653.8 million, or a loss of 29 cents per share, on revenue of $157.2 million. The production target for 2025 announced Tuesday is compared with production of 9,029 vehicles and deliveries of 10,241 reported for 2024. Winterhoff said production of the Gravity SUV will gradually build during the year. He declined to speculate on what percentage of the 20,000-unit production target the vehicle would represent.
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Pixel Watch 3 Gets FDA Clearance For Loss of Pulse Alerts
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Inception Emerges From Stealth With a New Type of AI Model
“What we found is that our models can leverage the GPUs much more efficiently,” Ermon said, referring to the computer chips commonly used to run models in production. “I think this is a big deal. This is going to change the way people build language models.” Inception offers an API as well as on-premises and edge device deployment options, support for model fine-tuning, and a suite of out-of-the-box DLMs for various use cases. The company claims its DLMs can run up to 10x faster than traditional LLMs while costing 10x less. “Our ‘small’ coding model is as good as [OpenAI’s] GPT-4o mini while more than 10 times as fast,” a company spokesperson told TechCrunch. “Our ‘mini’ model outperforms small open-source models like [Meta’s] Llama 3.1 8B and achieves more than 1,000 tokens per second.”
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Google Is Making It Easier To Remove Personal Info On Search
The redesign isn’t only for show. You can now submit removal requests directly from Search with fewer actions by clicking or tapping the three dots beside a search result. If you manage to have content about you deleted or changed from a website but Google Search hasn’t caught up, you can refresh the search, which will “recrawl the page and obtain the latest information.” In other words, you can always see the most up-to-date results about you.
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ExpressVPN Gets Faster and More Secure, Thanks To Rust
Without the VPN engaged, I saw 1.6 Gbps speeds, which is about par. With the VPN switched on and using Lightway 2.0, I saw speeds in the 290 to 330 Megabit per second (Mbps) range to Toronto and London, England. Farther afield, I saw speeds around 250 to 280Mbps to Hong Kong and Seoul. That’s about 20% faster than I had seen with earlier Lightway versions. I was impressed. This version of the VPN should also be more secure. As Pete Membrey, ExpressVPN’s chief research officer, said in a statement: “At ExpressVPN, we innovate to solve the challenges of tomorrow. Upgrading Lightway from its previous C code to Rust was a strategic and straightforward decision to enhance performance and security while ensuring longevity.”
The updated Lightway VPN protocol also uses ML-KEM, the newly finalized NIST standard for post-quantum encryption. This feature, wrote Membray in a blog post, “ensures your connection is secured by encryption designed not just for today’s threats but for the quantum-powered challenges of the future.” To ensure the integrity of the recoded Lightway protocol, ExpressVPN commissioned two independent security audits from cybersecurity firms Cure53 and Praetorian. Both audits yielded positive results, with only minor vulnerabilities identified and promptly addressed by ExpressVPN. In short, ExpressVPN is technically about as safe a VPN as they come.
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Cellebrite Suspends Serbia as Customer After Claims Police Used Firm’s Tech To Plant Spyware
In a statement, Cellebrite said that “after a review of the allegations brought forth by the December 2024 Amnesty International report, Cellebrite took precise steps to investigate each claim in accordance with our ethics and integrity policies. We found it appropriate to stop the use of our products by the relevant customers at this time.”
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Who’s Watching What on TV? Who’s To Say?
The scramble to sort out a suitable solution began nearly a decade ago, as Netflix rose to prominence. It has only intensified since. “It is more chaotic than it’s ever been,” said George Ivie, the chief executive of the Media Rating Council, a leading industry measurement watchdog. For decades, there was no dispute — Nielsen’s measurement was the only game in town.
But things started to go sideways after the emergence of streaming services like Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime Video. Nielsen had no ability — at least at first — to measure how many people clicked play on those apps. The streamers, of course, knew exactly how many people were watching on their own service but they either selectively disclosed some data or did not bother releasing it at all.
Over the past two years, as nearly all the major streaming services have introduced advertising, they have released more data. But the data they release makes apples-to-apples comparisons difficult. Netflix discloses what it calls “hours viewed” and “views” for its shows. Prime Video and Max prefer to describe how many million “viewers” watched a hit of their choosing. The disclosures can be helpful to compare one show with another on the same streaming service. Yet those figures, too, can lead to disagreements.
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YouTube Reaches 1 Billion Monthly Podcast Viewers
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US Intelligence Chief Opposes UK Order for Apple Encryption Backdoor
“This would be a clear and egregious violation of Americans’ privacy and civil liberties, and open up a serious vulnerability for cyber exploitation by adversarial actors,” Gabbard wrote. The UK Home Office, under the Investigatory Powers Act, prohibited Apple from disclosing the order to Congress or U.S. regulators. The directive would have forced Apple to compromise its Advanced Data Protection encryption, enabling officials to access individual data. Apple refused compliance, instead withdrawing the secure storage option from UK customers while maintaining it elsewhere globally. Despite Apple’s pullback, the UK demand for backdoor creation remains. Gabbard pledged to ensure UK actions protect American privacy rights “consistent with the CLOUD Act and other applicable laws.”
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A Disney Worker Downloaded an AI Tool. It Led To a Hack That Ruined His Life.
The attackers used the stolen credentials to access Disney’s corporate systems, publishing sensitive information including customer data, employee passport numbers, and revenue figures from Disney’s theme parks and streaming services. The breach also devastated Van Andel personally. Hackers exposed his Social Security number, financial login details, and even credentials for his home’s Ring cameras. Shortly after the incident, Disney fired Van Andel following a forensic analysis of his work computer, citing misconduct he denies. Security researchers believe the attacker, who identified as part of a Russia-based hacktivist group called Nullbulge, is likely an American individual.
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BP Shuns Renewables in Return To Oil and Gas
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