It seems everyone is rushing to get their software on the cloud. The rapid growth of cloud computing has empowered hyperscaler cloud providers to market various technologies to feed the growing demand. Hyperscalers are now providing full-stack capabilities to increase their footprint and further lock-in customers, making the cloud seem more like a threat than an open communal space.
Source: LXer – How are open source and cloud computing compatible?
Monthly Archives: January 2022
Washington State Shuts Down 'Sold By Amazon' Program Nationwide
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Seattle Times: Amazon is shutting down its “Sold by Amazon” program after an investigation from Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson found it was anticompetitive and violated antitrust laws. The company engaged in unlawful price fixing and unreasonably restrained competition in order to maximize its own profits, according to the lawsuit and consent decree filed Wednesday in King County Superior Court. As a result of the investigation, Amazon will shut down the program nationwide and pay $2.25 million to the attorney general’s office, as well as provide annual updates on its compliance with antitrust laws. The funds will go toward antitrust enforcement.
The program ran from 2018 to 2020, when Amazon suspended it for reasons unrelated to the investigation, according to a spokesperson for the company. It was a small program offering another tool to businesses, the spokesperson said, and did not include all of the third-party sellers on the e-commerce platform. Through the program, third-party sellers entered into an agreement with Amazon that set a minimum payment rate for products sold on the platform, according to the lawsuit. If the sales exceeded the agreed upon minimum, Amazon would take a cut of the additional revenue. A spokesperson for Amazon said the company believes the program was legal and good for consumers. Amazon acted as the retailer and purchased products from suppliers to fill a customer order, ensuring low prices for consumers. But, Ferguson’s investigation concluded, the program boosted Amazon’s sales and ensured it didn’t have to compete with third-party sellers. “Consumers lose when corporate giants like Amazon fix prices to increase their profits,” Ferguson said Wednesday. “Today’s action promotes product innovation and consumer choice, and makes the market more competitive for sellers in Washington state and across the country.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Washington State Shuts Down ‘Sold By Amazon’ Program Nationwide
Easily Exploitable Linux Flaw Exposes All Distributions: Qualys
An easily exploited flaw in a program, found by Qualys in every major Linux distribution, is the latest serious security issue that has arisen in the open-source space in recent weeks. Learn more here.
The post Easily Exploitable Linux Flaw Exposes All Distributions: Qualys appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – Easily Exploitable Linux Flaw Exposes All Distributions: Qualys
Giving Cash to Low-Income Mothers Linked to Increased Brain Activity in Their Babies, Study Suggests
New research suggests giving extra cash to low-income mothers can change their infants’ brain development. Time reports: Brain measurements at age 1 showed faster activity in key brain regions in infants whose low-income families received $300-plus monthly for a year, compared with those who got $20 each month, U.S. researchers reported Monday. The same type of brain activity has been linked in older children to learning skills and other development, although it’s unclear whether the differences found will persist or influence the infants’ future. The researchers are investigating whether the payments led to better nutrition, less parent stress or other benefits to the infants. There were no restrictions on how the money was spent.
The results suggest reducing poverty can directly affect infant brain development, said senior author, Dr. Kimberly Noble, a neuroscience and education professor at Teachers College, Columbia University. “The brain changes speak to the remarkable malleability of the brain, especially early in childhood,” she said. While the researchers can’t rule out that differences seen in total brain activity in both groups were due to chance, they did find meaningful differences in the frontal region, linked with learning and thinking skills. Higher-frequency activity was about 20% greater in infants whose families received the larger payments. The study has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Giving Cash to Low-Income Mothers Linked to Increased Brain Activity in Their Babies, Study Suggests
How to Fix Error 404 Not Found on WordPress
When visiting a website, we might ever see an Error 404 Page Not Found message in the web browser. The issue is usually on the webserver, on the server level, or on the application level.
Source: LXer – How to Fix Error 404 Not Found on WordPress
[$] LWN.net Weekly Edition for January 27, 2022
The LWN.net Weekly Edition for January 27, 2022 is available.
Source: LWN.net – [$] LWN.net Weekly Edition for January 27, 2022
Government Demands To Remove Twitter Content Hit Record High
Twitter revealed on Tuesday that governments’ requests for content to be removed from the platform hit a record high in the first six months of 2021. The Hill reports: Governments made 43,387 legal demands for content to be pulled down from 196,878 accounts between January and the end of June. Twitter’s latest transparency report showed that 95 percent of the requests came from Japan, Russia, Turkey, India and South Korea. The platform “withheld” access to content or required accounts to take down posts in response to 54 percent of the demands. Twitter’s transparency report also showed that government requests to preserve account information fell four percent compared to the previous reporting period, the last six months of 2020. The United States accounted for 57 percent of preservation requests.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Government Demands To Remove Twitter Content Hit Record High
4000-Year-Old Board Game Uncovered By Archaeologists

In December 2021, a team of archaeologists working in Oman made the only type of discovery that would get their work covered on a site like this: they dug up a board game dating back approximately 4000 years, and which it’s thought could be an ancient ancestor to Backgammon.
Source: Kotaku – 4000-Year-Old Board Game Uncovered By Archaeologists
Amazon workers in Staten Island reach union vote threshold
Workers at JFK8, an Amazon Fulfillment Center in Staten Island, New York, have reportedly collected enough signatures to proceed with a union election vote. A National Labor Relations Board spokesperson, speaking to Reuters, confirmed that the workers had “reached a sufficient showing of interest,” confirming a tweet from key organizer Chris Smalls.
PSA 🗣‼️ I’ve just confirmed with @NLRB that we officially have met the showing of interest requirement for petition here in Staten Island guess what NYC prepare for an Election congratulations to @amazonlabor Our work continues to break barriers. Now it’s time to Vote YES 🗳
— Christian Smalls (@Shut_downAmazon) January 26, 2022
That threshold of interest, incidentally is 30 percent of a given workforce, which was likely a difficult feat given both the size of JFK8 and the nature of round-the-clock shifts that ensure many coworkers never meet. More impressive is that this facility is seemingly being organized without the help of an established union, but instead by a new independent group endemic to this particular Fulfillment Center, calling itself the Amazon Labor Union (ALU).
ALU had previously submitted a petition for unionization, but withdrew it late last year after being informed by the NLRB that it had not collected enough signatures.
Reached for comment, an Amazon spokesperson told Engadget ““We’re skeptical that there are a sufficient number of legitimate signatures and we’re seeking to understand how these signatures were verified. Our employees have always had a choice of whether or not to join a union, and as we saw just a few months ago, the vast majority of our team in Staten Island did not support the ALU.”
developing…
Source: Engadget – Amazon workers in Staten Island reach union vote threshold
Sway 1.7 Improves Screen Capture and Virtual Reality in Wayland
The post Sway 1.7 Improves Screen Capture and Virtual Reality in Wayland appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – Sway 1.7 Improves Screen Capture and Virtual Reality in Wayland
Boom Supersonic Picks North Carolina To Build and Test Ultra-Fast Planes
Boom Supersonic, which is developing ultra-fast airplanes it believes will lead to the return of commercial supersonic flights, has picked Greensboro, N.C., to build and test those planes. CNBC reports: The Greensboro-based plant, which is expected to employ 1,250 workers by the end of the decade, is the latest example of a new aviation manufacturing facility being built in the region. In the last 11 years, Boeing and Airbus have established new final assembly plants in North Charleston, S.C., and Mobile, Ala., respectively. “This is the right choice for us and we couldn’t be more excited,” Blake Scholl, founder and CEO of Boom Supersonic told CNBC. “Greensboro brings a significant, local skilled labor population and there are more than two hundred aerospace suppliers in the state. Many will be key suppliers for The Overture.”
The Overture is Boom’s first commercial supersonic plane. The company plans to start building the plane in 2024, with the first one rolling off the line in 2025 and the initial test flight set for 2026. If all goes as planned, Boom’s inaugural supersonic jet would enter commercial service by 2029. While Boom is based in Denver and will continue designing aircraft at its headquarters, it chose Greensboro, in part, because of its short distance from the Atlantic coast. “The proximity to the ocean is an important factor,” Scholl said. “The vast majority of our flight tests will be over the water, where the plane can speed up so there is not a sonic boom over populated areas.” Boom says the Overture will fly at a top speed of Mach 1.7, or about 1,300 mph, allowing it to shave hours off of some of the longest international flights.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Boom Supersonic Picks North Carolina To Build and Test Ultra-Fast Planes
Install Brave Browser on elementary OS 6.0/6.1
In the following tutorial, you will learn how to install Brave Browser on elementary OS 6.
The post Install Brave Browser on elementary OS 6.0/6.1 appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – Install Brave Browser on elementary OS 6.0/6.1
No One's Sure If Star Trek: Picard Will End After Season 3… Yet

Star Trek: Picard was never envisioned as a long-legged series in the style of the Treks of the ‘90s—hell, when it was first announced there wasn’t any particular certainty as to whether or not it would be more than one season long. But, as the series looks to second and third times around aboard La Sirena, its future…
Source: Gizmodo – No One’s Sure If Star Trek: Picard Will End After Season 3… Yet
The IRS Needs to Stop Using ID.me's Face Recognition, Privacy Experts Warn

Privacy groups are demanding transparency following news that ID.me—the biometric identity verification system used by the IRS and over 27 states—has failed to be entirely transparent in how its facial recognition technology works.
Source: Gizmodo – The IRS Needs to Stop Using ID.me’s Face Recognition, Privacy Experts Warn
One of Amazon's seller programs has been found to be unlawful
Following an investigation into its Sold By Amazon program, Amazon has agreed to pay the office of Washington State’s attorney general office $2.25 million and provide annual updates on its compliance with antitrust laws. Available between 2018 and June 2020, the program set a pricing floor for certain products, which the Attorney General’s office says “constituted unlawful price-fixing.”
Amazon enrolled a small number of third-party sellers into the program while it was available. The retailer promised sellers they would earn a guaranteed minimum on their products, provided they agreed not to compete with the company. What’s more, merchants could earn additional revenue if Amazon’s algorithm determined consumers were willing to pay extra for their product, with the company splitting the difference between them. “For example, if a seller and Amazon agreed to a $20 minimum payment and the item sold for $25, the seller would receive the $20 minimum price and share the $5 additional profit with Amazon, in addition to any fees,” Attorney General Bob Ferguson wrote.
According to Ferguson, the problem with the system was that it set the minimum price of a product as the floor of what Amazon would offer to consumers. When the price of their goods increased, some sellers saw a “drastic” decrease in sales, in part because some consumers would opt to buy similar but more affordable products from Amazon and its various private labels. The program, according to the AG, was in violation of antitrust laws.
The state opened its probe into Sold By Amazon in March 2020. The program was discontinued in June of that same year but, according to an Amazon spokesperson, for reasons unrelated to the attorney general’s investigation. As part of its agreement with the state, the company won’t offer the Sold By Amazon program again.
“This was a small program to provide another tool to help sellers offer lower prices, much like similar programs common among other retailers, that has since been discontinued,” the company said. “While we strongly believe the program was legal, we’re glad to have this matter resolved.” When pressed, Amazon declined to say why it did not challenge the resolution.
In recent years, Amazon has faced intense scrutiny related to how it operates its online marketplace. In 2020, The Wall Street Journal published a report claiming the company had been using proprietary seller data to help design and price its in-house products. In a Senate hearing, former Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said he couldn’t “guarantee” the company had not misused data from third-party merchants on its platform. Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee advanced the American Innovation and Choice Online Act, legislation that would prevent companies like Amazon from favoring their own products over that of their rivals. Like Apple and Google, the company has aggressively lobbied to prevent the bill from passing.
Source: Engadget – One of Amazon’s seller programs has been found to be unlawful
Amazon Ends Widely Mocked Scheme That Turned Workers Into Twitter 'Ambassadors'
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Amazon has killed a program under which it paid warehouse employees to say nice things about the company on social media. “Amazon quietly shut down and removed all traces of the influence campaign at the end of last year, people with direct knowledge of the decision told the Financial Times,” FT reported today. FT noted that the social media program suffered from “poor reach and embarrassing backfires.”
Amazon began paying workers to tweet in 2018 in a widely mocked effort to counter negative perceptions about the company. As Business Insider reported in August 2018, “The company now has a small army of ‘FC Ambassadors’ saying nice things about the company online and engaging in dialogue with average Twitter users. The ambassadors are full-time employees, according to an Amazon spokesperson, and it is their job to share their experiences working at a fulfillment center.”
“FC” stands for fulfillment centers, and the “ambassadors” worked in the Amazon warehouses before being paid to tweet, and in at least some cases, they split duties between the warehouse and Twitter. “I get paid $15/hr whether I am answering tweets or out on the floor stowing. I do this 2 days a week and 2 days a week I stow,” one Amazon employee explained in 2019, as seen in a Bellingcat report that found 53 Amazon FC Ambassador accounts on Twitter. “The ‘ambassador’ program was always a laughable attempt to minimize the abuses unfolding inside Amazon warehouses,” Warehouse Worker Resource Center Executive Director Sheheryar Kaoosji told the Financial Times.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Amazon Ends Widely Mocked Scheme That Turned Workers Into Twitter ‘Ambassadors’
Crusader Kings III Is About To Officially Support Same-Sex Marriages

The Crusader Kings series has long supported same-sex relationships in certain forms, but thanks to the way so much of the games have been built around historical ideas of marriage and succession, if players wanted gay characters to get hitched, they had to use mods.
Source: Kotaku – Crusader Kings III Is About To Officially Support Same-Sex Marriages
Archinstall 2.3.1 Released With PipeWire App Profile Added, Btrfs Install Improvements
Archinstall as the quick and easy-to-use installer for the Arch Linux distribution is out with a new point release delivering a few worthwhile enhancements to the text-based OS installer…
Source: Phoronix – Archinstall 2.3.1 Released With PipeWire App Profile Added, Btrfs Install Improvements
How to Install Latest 510 NVIDIA Drivers on Debian 11 Bullseye
The following tutorial will teach you how to install the latest bleeding-edge 510 Nvidia Graphic Card Drivers for Debian 11 Bullseye.
Source: LXer – How to Install Latest 510 NVIDIA Drivers on Debian 11 Bullseye
Intel Reports Q4 2021 and FY 2021 Earnings: Ending 2021 On A High Note
Kicking off yet another earnings season, we once again start with Intel. The reigning 800lb gorilla of the chipmaking world is reporting its Q4 2021 and full-year financial results, closing the book on an eventful 2021 for the company. The first full year of the pandemic has seen Intel once again set revenue records, making this the sixth record year in a row, but it’s also clear that headwinds are going to be approaching for the company, both in respect to shifts in product demand and in the sizable investments needed to build the next generation of leading-edge fabs.
Source: AnandTech – Intel Reports Q4 2021 and FY 2021 Earnings: Ending 2021 On A High Note
