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Linux Finally Starts Removing Support for Intel's 37-Year-Old i486 Processor

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 20:34

🤖 AI Summary

Linuxの開発者たちは、37年前から使われていないインテルのi486プロセッサのサポートを削除する作業を開始すると報告しています。Phoronixは、「現在のLinuxディストリビューションでは、i486 CPUのサポートは見られません」と述べています。

インゴ・モランによって書かれた変更案「x86/cpu: Remove M486/M486SX/ELAN support」により、Linux内蔵のi486サポートが徐々に撤廃されます。これは1989年に初めてリリースされた古いCPUへの対応を含んでおり、Linusトーマス自身もこのサポートからの撤退を求めています。「x86アーキテクチャには、現代のカーネルでほとんど使用されていない古き32ビットCPU向けの複雑なハードウェアエミュレーション機能があり、これにより問題が生じることがあり、それらを解決する時間は他のことに使われるべきだ」と彼は述べています。

まだi486プロセッサを使っている一部の人々にとって、長期間サポートを受けられるLTS版Linuxディストリビューションの使用が推奨されます。
"It's finally time," writes Phoronix — since "no known Linux distribution vendors are still shipping with i486 CPU support." "A patch queued into one of the development branches ahead of the upcoming Linux 7.1 merge window is set to finally begin the process of phasing out and ultimately removing Intel 486 CPU support from the Linux kernel." More details from XDA-Developers: Authored by Ingo Molnar, the change, titled "x86/cpu: Remove M486/M486SX/ELAN support," begins dismantling Linux's built-in support for the i486, which was first released back in 1989. As the changelog notes, even Linus is keen to cut ties with the architecture: "In the x86 architecture we have various complicated hardware emulation facilities on x86-32 to support ancient 32-bit CPUs that very very few people are using with modern kernels. This compatibility glue is sometimes even causing problems that people spend time to resolve, which time could be spent on other things. As Linus recently remarked: 'I really get the feeling that it's time to leave i486 support behind. There's zero real reason for anybody to waste one second of development effort on this kind of issue'..." If you're one of the rare few who still keep the decades-old CPU alive, your best bet will be to grab an LTS Linux distro that keeps the older version of Linux for a few more years.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Russia's VPN Crackdown Caused Bank Outages, Telegram Founder Says

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 16:34

🤖 AI Summary

ロシアのVPN規制が銀行サービスの全!");+1 outageを引き起こしたという、テレグラフ創業者パavel Durov氏の話が報じられています。Durov氏によると、「6500万人のロシア人が日々の使用に必要なVPNを通じてテレグラフを使っているにもかかわらず、テレグラフはロシアでブロックされています」。政府は数年間、VPN規制に挑戦してきましたが、「彼らの規制努力が銀行サービスの全!");+1停止を引き起こした」とDurov氏は述べています。

また、Appleのアプリストアへの支払いは4月1日からロシアで利用不可能となりました。さらに、モバイル通信会社にTop-up機能を無効にするよう要請したデジタル開発省も影響を与えています。

この状況についてDurov氏は「イランでの同様の規制が広範なVPN使用への移行を促進したように、ロシアでもデジタル抵抗運動が始まった」と述べ、テレグラフが規制をかいくぐるために努力し続けることを宣言しました。
Russia's "great crackdown" on VPNs — and a clampdown on Telegram's messaging platform — had an unintended side effect, reports Bloomberg. It "triggered the widespread banking outage seen across the country this week, Telegram's billionaire founder Pavel Durov said." "Telegram was banned in Russia, yet 65 million Russians still use it daily via VPNs," Durov said Saturday in a post on Telegram. "The government has spent years trying to ban VPNs too. Their blocking attempts just triggered a massive banking failure; cash briefly became the only payment method nationwide yesterday." Attempts on Friday to limit VPN use could have sparked the disruption affecting banking apps, The Bell and other Russian media reported, citing industry sources who weren't identified. The outage may have been caused by an overload in the filtering systems run by Russia's communications watchdog, according to the reports, with experts warning that major restrictions risk undermining network stability... Separately, payments for Apple Inc.'s app store and other services became unavailable in Russia from April 1, the US company said on its website, without saying why. Earlier, RBC newswire reported that the Digital Development Ministry had asked mobile operators to disable top-ups, which could help limit VPN use.... Durov, who's being investigated in Russia for allegedly aiding terrorist activity, compared the situation in his home country to Iran, where similar restrictions prompted widespread adoption of VPNs instead of the intended shift to state-backed messaging apps. "Welcome back to the Digital Resistance, my Russian brothers and sisters," said Durov, who has lived in Dubai and France in recent years. "The entire nation is now mobilized to bypass these absurd restrictions," he wrote, adding that Telegram would continue adapting to make its traffic harder to detect and block.

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Artemis Astronauts Enter Moon's Gravitational Pull, Catch First Glimpses of Far Side

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 13:41

🤖 AI Summary

アーテミス計画の宇宙飛行士たちは月の引力圏内に入り、遠い面を初めて見ることができました。NASAによると、「月の重力が地球よりも強くなる」ということで、この週に6時間の月周回航行が始まります。現在、アーテミス宇宙飛行士たちはアポロ13号以来の最大の離地距離(約4,100マイル)を更新しようと努力しています。

NASAのクリスティナ・コックによると、「地球と異なる様相を呈している」とし、レid・ウィズマンは「素晴らしい達成」と表現しました。カナダのジェリミー・ハンسنは、宇宙船窓から見ることのできる現実が写真よりも圧倒的に美しいと言っています。

接近点で約4,070マイルに近づき、月の遠い面の一部を観測します。NASAのケイリー・ユーニョによると、オレナイトン盆地の大半など、人類が見たことがない部分を見ることができます。また、太陽が月で隠れ、日食が起きます。

アポロ2号以来の遠い離地距離を記録し、約4日後に太平洋サンディエゴ付近に帰還します。再入中に国際宇宙ステーションとの連絡を取りますが、通信は約40分間中断されます。NASAは深空ネットワークを使用して通信を行います。

この航海では、国際宇宙ステーションの乗組員とコスモス的な会話ができる初めての機会となりました。
NASA's Artemis astronauts are now entering "the lunar sphere of influence," reports NBC News, "meaning the pull of the moon's gravity will become stronger than Earth's." Now as they begin their swing around the moon, the Artemis astronauts "are chasing after Apollo 13's maximum range from Earth," reports the Associated Press, hoping to beat its distance from Earth by more than 4,100 miles (6,600 kilometers). They'll begin their six-hour lunar flyby 14 hours from now (at 2:45 p.m. ET Monday). But in a space-to-earth interview Saturday with NBC News, the astronauts were already describing their first glimpses of the edge of the far side: [NASA astronaut Christina Koch realized] it looked different from what she was accustomed to on Earth. "The darker parts just aren't quite in the right place," she said. "And something about you senses that is not the moon that I'm used to seeing...." [Astronaut Reid] Wiseman called the flight a "magnificent accomplishment" and said the astronauts' ability to gaze at both Earth and the moon from their spacecraft has been "truly awe-inspiring." "The Earth is almost in full eclipse. The moon is almost in full daylight, and the only way you could get that view is to be halfway between the two entities," he said... And while the early photos of Earth and the moon that [Canadian astronaut Jeremy] Hansen and his colleagues have beamed back have been spectacular, the Canadian astronaut said they pale in comparison to the real deal outside their capsule's windows. "I know those photos are amazing," he said, "but let me assure you, it is another level of amazing up here." And their upcoming six-hour lunar flyby "promises views of the moon's far side that were too dark or too difficult to see by the 24 Apollo astronauts who preceded them," notes the Associated Press: A total solar eclipse also awaits them as the moon blocks the sun, exposing snippets of shimmering corona.... At closest approach, they will come within 4,070 miles (6,550 kilometers) of the moon. Because they launched on April 1, the rendezvous won't have as much of the far lunar side illuminated as other dates would have. But the crew still will be able make out "definite chunks of the far side that have never been seen" by humans, said NASA geologist Kelsey Young, including a good portion of Orientale Basin. They'll call down their observations as they photograph the gray, pockmarked scenes. There's a suite of professional-quality cameras on board, and each astronaut also has an iPhone for more informal, spur-of-the-minute picture-taking... Orion will be out of contact with Mission Control for nearly an hour when it's behind the moon. The same thing happened during the Apollo moonshots. NASA is relying on its Deep Space Network to communicate with the crew, but the giant antennas in California, Spain and Australia won't have a direct line of sight when Orion disappears behind the moon for approximately 40 minutes... Once Artemis II departs the lunar neighborhood, it will take four days to return home. The capsule will aim for a splashdown in the Pacific near San Diego on April 10, nine days after its Florida launch. During the flight back, the astronauts will link up via radio with the crew of the orbiting International Space Station. This is the first time that a moon crew has colleagues in space at the same time and NASA can't pass up the opportunity for a cosmic chitchat.

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Internet Bug Bounty Pauses Payouts, Citing 'Expanding Discovery' From AI-Assisted Research

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 10:34

🤖 AI Summary

インターネットバグボーナスプログラムは新規報告を一時停止し、人工知能(AI)を使用した研究による「発見の拡大」が理由として挙げられた。このプログラムは2012年に始まり、既に150万ドル以上の賞金を研究者に支払っている。

現在までのところ、8割の賞金は新しい欠陥の発見に対するもので、残りの2割は脆弱性の修復支援のためだった。しかしAIがバグ検出を容易にするにつれて、このバランスが変化する必要があると、HackerOneは述べている。

初めに影響を受けたのはNode.jsプロジェクトで、プログラムチームはHackerOneを通じて報告書を引き続き受け付けるが、インターネットバグボーナスプログラムからの資金がなければ報酬を支払わない旨がウェブサイトの発表で明らかになった。

Googleも先月、同社のオープンソースソフトウェア脆弱性報奨プログラムに対するAI生成の報告書を受け付けを停止している。インターネットバグボーナスは「コミュニティへの責任として、探査と修復という大いなる目標を達成するためのプログラムを改善しなければならない」と強調した。

この一時停止期間を利用して、プロジェクト管理者や研究者と一緒にインセンティブの構造を見直し、オープンソース生態系の現実に合わせたものを作り上げることを目指している。
The Internet Bug Bounty program "has been paused for new submissions," they announced last week. Running since 2012, the program is funded by "a number of leading software companies," reports InfoWorld, "and has awarded more than $1.5m to researchers who have reported bugs " Up to now, 80% of its payouts have been for discoveries of new flaws, and 20% to support remediation efforts. But as artificial intelligence makes it easier to find bugs, that balance needs to change, HackerOne said in a statement. "AI-assisted research is expanding vulnerability discovery across the ecosystem, increasing both coverage and speed. The balance between findings and remediation capacity in open source has substantively shifted," said HackerOne. Among the first programs to be affected is the Node.js project, a server-side JavaScript platform for web applications known for its extensive ecosystem. While the project team will continue to accept and triage bug reports through HackerOne, without funding from the Internet Bug Bounty program it will no longer pay out rewards, according to an announcement on its website... [J]ust last month, Google also put a halt to AI-generated submissions provided to its Open Source Software Vulnerability Reward Program. The Internet Bug Bounty stressed that "We have a responsibility to the community to ensure this program effectively accomplishes its ambitious dual purpose: discovery and remediation. Accordingly, we are pausing submissions while we consider the structure and incentives needed to further these goals..." "We remain committed to strengthening open source security. Working with project maintainers and researchers, we're actively evaluating solutions to better align incentives with open source ecosystem realities and ensure vulnerability discoveries translate into durable remediation outcomes."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Claude Code Leak Reveals a 'Stealth' Mode for GenAI Code Contributions - and a 'Frustration Words' Regex

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 08:41

🤖 AI Summary

Claudeコードのソース漏洩に関する記事を日本語で要約します:

PC Worldは、Claudeコードの50万行以上のソースコードが公開され、「様々な重要な詳細」が明らかになったと報告しています。その中には:
- クラウデの「隠しモード」があり、これにより公開コーディングベースへの「スリルな貢献」が可能になりました。
- 「常にオン」の代理機能
- たまごっちのような「バディ」機能

さらに、漏洩コードにはユーザーのメッセージから不満の表現(「ワーファー」とか「このやつ嫌いだ」など)を検出する正規表現(regex)が含まれていることがわかりました。しかし、Claudeコードがこれらの不満の文字列を探し回る理由やその目的は明示されていません。

関連記事:劇場で上映される希望的なAIに関する最新映画「The AI Doc」
Anthropic社による著作権侵害申し立てとClaudeコードソースコードの削除要求
インターネットバounty支払い停止、AI補助研究からの発見拡大を理由に説明
That leak of Claude Code's source code "revealed all kinds of juicy details," writes PC World. The more than 500,000 lines of code included: - An 'undercover mode' for Claude that allows it to make 'stealth' contributions to public code bases - An 'always-on' agent for Claude Code - A Tamagotchi-style 'Buddy' for Claude "But one of the stranger bits discovered in the leak is that Claude Code is actively watching our chat messages for words and phrases — including f-bombs and other curses — that serve as signs of user frustration." Specifically, Claude Code includes a file called "userPromptKeywords.ts" with a simple pattern-matching tool called regex, which sweeps each and every message submitted to Claude for certain text matches. In this particular case, the regex pattern is watching for "wtf," "wth," "omfg," "dumbass," "horrible," "awful," "piece of — -" (insert your favorite four-letter word for that one), "f — you," "screw this," "this sucks," and several other colorful metaphors... While the Claude Code leak revealed the existence of the "frustration words" regex, it doesn't give any indication of why Claude Code is scouring messages for these words or what it's doing with them.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Hundreds of Theatres Show Apocalyptic-Yet-Optimistic New Movie, 'The AI Doc'

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 07:39
Hundreds of theatres are now showing a new documentary called The AI Doc: Or How I Became An Apocaloptimist. Variety calls it "playful and heady,"edited "with a spirit of ADHD alertness." The New York Times suggests it "tries to cover so much that it ends up being more confusing than clarifying, but parts are fascinating." But the Los Angeles Times calls it an "aggravating soup of information and opinion that wants to move at the speed of machine thought." So while co-director Daniel Roher asks whether he should bring a child into a world with AI, "Perhaps more urgently, should Roher have made an AI doc that treats us like children?" First, he parades all the safety doomers, seeming to believe their warnings that an unfeeling superintelligence is upon us and we can't trust it. Then, sufficiently disturbed, he hauls in the AI cheerleaders, a suspiciously positive gang who can envision only medical miracles and grindless lives in which we're all full-time artists. Only then, after this simplistic setup where platitudes reign, do we get the section in which the subject is treated like the brave (and grave) new world it is: geopolitically fraught, economically tenuous and a playground for billionaires. Why couldn't the complexity have been the dialogue from the beginning, instead of the play-dumb cartoon "The AI Doc" feels like for so long? Maybe Roher believes this is what our increasingly gullible, truth-challenged citizenry needs from an explanatory doc: a flashy, kindhearted reminder that we're the change we need to be. Read more reactions here and here. Mashable warns the documentary's director "will ultimately craft a journey that feels like a panic attack in real time. In the end, you may not feel better about mankind's chances against the rise of AI. But you'll likely feel less helpless in the future before us all." They also point out that the film "shares some ways its audience can more actively be apart of the conversation, and provides a link to the film's website for engagement," where 6,948 people have now signed up for its newsletter. ("Demand a seat at the table," urges its signup button, under a warning that "Government and AI companies are designing our future without us. We need to reclaim our voice in shaping the future of AI...")

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Hundreds of Theatres Show Apocalyptic-Yet-Optomistic New Movie, 'The AI Doc'

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 07:39

🤖 AI Summary

新作ドキュメンタリー映画「The AI Doc:あるいはAIと Became An Apocaloptimist」が数百の劇場で上映されています。Varietyはこの作品を「面白く、深遠だ」と評し、「ADHDのような気分で編集されている」と指摘しています。しかしニューヨーク・タイムズは「多くの情報と見解をカバーしようとしすぎて、理解しづらい」と批判しています。

監督のダニエル・ローマーがAIと子供を抱えるべきかどうかを問う一方で、「我々を幼児扱いしたこのドキュメンタリーは、より重要な質問を先送りしている。」としています。最初に「安全な心配者」と呼ばれる人々を紹介し、その後「AI cheerleaders」と呼ばれる楽天的なグループが登場します。

映画の内容は複雑で、「The AI Doc」は長い間単純な言葉遊びのようでした。しかしMashableは、「このドキュメンタリーは我々に未来への力強さを教え、政府やAI企業から声を持ち返す必要性を訴える」と評しています。

最後まで視聴者は「AIとの戦いに対する人類の機会を増やす」という実感を感じないかもしれませんが、その先に自分たちで行動する手立てが提供されることでしょう。映画のウェブサイトには6,948人がサインアップしています。
Hundreds of theatres are now showing a new documentary called The AI Doc: Or How I Became An Apocaloptimist. Variety calls it "playful and heady,"edited "with a spirit of ADHD alertness." The New York Times suggests it "tries to cover so much that it ends up being more confusing than clarifying, but parts are fascinating." But the Los Angeles Times calls it an "aggravating soup of information and opinion that wants to move at the speed of machine thought." So while co-director Daniel Roher asks whether he should bring a child into a world with AI, "Perhaps more urgently, should Roher have made an AI doc that treats us like children?" First, he parades all the safety doomers, seeming to believe their warnings that an unfeeling superintelligence is upon us and we can't trust it. Then, sufficiently disturbed, he hauls in the AI cheerleaders, a suspiciously positive gang who can envision only medical miracles and grindless lives in which we're all full-time artists. Only then, after this simplistic setup where platitudes reign, do we get the section in which the subject is treated like the brave (and grave) new world it is: geopolitically fraught, economically tenuous and a playground for billionaires. Why couldn't the complexity have been the dialogue from the beginning, instead of the play-dumb cartoon "The AI Doc" feels like for so long? Maybe Roher believes this is what our increasingly gullible, truth-challenged citizenry needs from an explanatory doc: a flashy, kindhearted reminder that we're the change we need to be. Read more reactions here and here. Mashable warns the documentary's director "will ultimately craft a journey that feels like a panic attack in real time. In the end, you may not feel better about mankind's chances against the rise of AI. But you'll likely feel less helpless in the future before us all." They also point out that the film "shares some ways its audience can more actively be apart of the conversation, and provides a link to the film's website for engagement," where 6,948 people have now signed up for its newsletter. ("Demand a seat at the table," urges its signup button, under a warning that "Government and AI companies are designing our future without us. We need to reclaim our voice in shaping the future of AI...")

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Will 'AI-Assisted' Journalists Bring Errors and Retractions?

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 06:22

🤖 AI Summary

AIによる記事作成が報道業界に影響を与えつつあるという記事を要約します。42歳のジャーナリスト、ニック・ライチテンバーグは、AIの助けを借りて約600本の記事を書いたことで知られています。彼の記事作成速度は非常に速く、一度に7つの記事を作成することもあります。

一方で、AIによって生成された記事には誤りや不適切な引用の可能性があり、すでに数件の訂正が行われています。ニューヨーク・タイムズなどでもAIによる plagiat の問題が報告されています。ジャーナリストたちはAIによる報道が人間の判断と経験を代替するものではなく、人間中心の journalism は不可欠だと主張しています。

しかし、多くのニュースルームではAIを使用し、効率化を図っています。USAトゥデイはAI-assisted reporterのポジションを開設しており、GoogleもAI関連の賞を設けています。これらの動きからAIが報道業界に浸透していく可能性がありますが、一方で誤った使用により信頼性に影響を与える懸念もあります。

結論として、AIは効率化には有用ですが、人間中心のジャーナリズムの質を保つためにも適切な監視と規制が必要だと指摘されています。
Meet the "journalist" who "uploads press releases or analyst notes into AI tools and prompts them to spit out articles that he can edit and publish quickly," according to the Wall Street Journal. "AI-assisted stories accounted for nearly 20% of Fortune's web traffic in the second half of 2025." And most were written by 42-year-old Nick Lichtenberg, who has now written over 600 AI-assisted stories, producing "more stories in six months than any of his colleagues at Fortune delivered in a year." One Wednesday in February, he cranked out seven. "I'm a bit of a freak," Lichtenberg said... A story by Lichtenberg sometimes starts with a prompt entered into Perplexity or Google's NotebookLM, asking it to write something based on a headline he comes up with. He moves the AI tools' initial drafts into a content-management system and edits the stories before publishing them for Fortune's readers... A piece from earlier that morning about Josh D'Amaro being named Disney CEO took 10 minutes to get online, he said... Like other journalists, Lichtenberg vets his stories. He refers back to the original documents to confirm the information he's reporting is correct. He reaches out to companies for comment. But he admits his process isn't as thorough as that of magazine fact-checkers. While Lichtenberg started out saying his stories were co-authored with "Fortune Intelligence", he now typically signs his own name, according to the article, "because he feels the work is mostly his own." (Though his stories "sometimes" disclose generative AI was used as a research tool...) The article asks with he could be "a bellwether for where much of the media business is headed..." "Much of the content people now consume online is generated by artificial intelligence, with some 9% of newly published newspaper articles either partially or fully AI-generated, according to a 2025 study led by the University of Maryland. The number of AI-generated articles on the web surpassed human-written ones in late 2024, according to research and marketing agency Graphite." Some executives have made full-throated declarations about the threat posed by AI. New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger said AI "is almost certainly going to usher in an unprecedented torrent of crap," referencing deepfakes as an example. The NewsGuild of New York, the union representing Fortune employees and journalists at other media outlets, said the people are what makes journalism so powerful. "You simply can't replicate lived experiences, human judgment and expertise," said president Susan DeCarava. For Chris Quinn, the editor of local publications Cleveland.com and the Plain Dealer, AI tools have helped tame other torrents facing the industry. AI has allowed the outlets to cover counties in Ohio that otherwise might go ignored by scraping information from local websites and sending "tips" to reporters, he said. It has also edited stories and written first drafts so the newsrooms' journalists can focus on the calls, research and reporting needed for their stories.... Newsrooms from the New York Times to The Wall Street Journal are deploying AI in various ways to help reporters and editors work more efficiently.... Not all newsrooms disclose their use of AI, and in some cases have rolled out new tools that resulted in errors or PR gaffes. An October study from the European Broadcasting Union and the BBC, which relied on professional journalists to evaluate the news integrity of more than 3,000 AI responses, found that almost half of all AI responses had at least one significant issue. Last week the New York Times even issued a correction when a freelance book reviewer using an AI tool unknowingly included "language and details similar to those in a review of the same book published in The Guardian." But it was actually "the second time in a few days that the Times was called out for potential AI plagiarism," according to the American journalist writing The Handbasket newsletter. We must stem the idea being pushed by tech companies and their billionaire funders who've sunk too much into their products to admit defeat that the infiltration of AI into journalism is inevitable; because from my perch as an independent journalist, it simply is not... Some AI-loving journalists appear to believe that if they're clear enough with the AI program they're using, it will truly understand what they're seeking and not just do what it's made to do: steal shit... If you want to work with machines, get a job that requires it. There are a whole lot more of those than there are writing jobs, so free up space for people who actually want to do the work. You're not doing the world a favor by gifting it your human/AI hybrid. Journalism will not miss you if you leave... But meanwhile, USA Today recently tried hiring for a new position: AI-Assisted reporter. (The lucky reporter will "support the launch and scaling of AI-assisted local journalism in a major U.S. metro," working with tools including Copilot and Perplexity, pioneering possible future expansions and "AI-enabled newsroom operations that support and augment human-led journalism.") And Google is already sponsoring a "publishing innovation award"...

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Crooks Behind $27M in 'Refund' Scams Busted By YouTube Pranksters After Being Lured to Fake Funeral

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 03:34

🤖 AI Summary

記事の概要:

2021年から2023年にかけて、金額が27兆ドルを超える詐欺事件が2,000人の高齢者を対象に行われました。これらの詐欺はテクノロジーサポートや銀行偽装、返金スカムを使いました。42歳の中国出身のジアンドング・チェン被告は、仮想通貨を使った詐欺と洗浄罪で有罪を認めたとの報告です。

YouTubeチャンネル「Trilogy Media」の詐欺師たちは、彼らに1,79万フォロワーがあることを知り、連邦裁判所で行われた虚偽の葬儀に誘拐されました。この動画では、僧侶役の男が詐欺師を手を取りながら祈祷を行いました。その後、詐欺師は「死んだ人」から現金を受け取るよう強制されました。

この事件はYouTubeチャンネルによって録画され、「CONFRONTING SCAMMERS WITH A FAKE FUNERAL (EPIC REACTIONS)」というタイトルで公表されました。動画は2年以上経っても130万回以上視聴され、2万2千件以上のいいねや2,979のコメントが寄せられています。

チェン被告は最多60年間の懲役を含む重刑を受ける見込みです。
One crime ring scammed 2,000 elderly people of more than $27 million between 2021 and 2023 using tech support/bank impersonation/refund scams. "Victims were in their 70s and 80s," reports the U.S. Attorney's office for California's southern district. Victims were first told they'd received a refund (either online or via phone), but then told they'd been "over-refunded" a massive amount, and asked to return that amount. But 42-year-old Jiandong Chen just admitted Thursday in a U.S. federal court that he was involved in the fraud and money laundering via cryptocurrency — pleading guilty to two charges with maximum penalties of 40 years in prison and a $1 million fine, plus 20 years in prison with a maximum fine of $500,000 or twice the amount laundered. "Chen, a Chinese national, is the second defendant charged in a five-defendant indictment." And what tripped him up seems to be that "Certain members of the conspiracy also did in-person pickups of money directly from victims..." And so YouTube enters the story — when the scammers called pranksters with 1,790,000 subscribers to their "Trilogy Media" channel. In an elaborate three-hour video, the team of pranksters lured the scammer to a rented Airbnb where they're staging a fake funeral with a nun. (One of the men acting in the video remembers "we start doing a prayer... I'm holding the scammer's hand in my nun outfit...") They convince the scammer to collect the cash from a dead man — "Is there anything you'd like to say to him?" Then there's demon voices. The scammer's victim resurrects from the dead. Did the cash mule bring holy water? The end result was a video titled "CONFRONTING SCAMMERS WITH A FAKE FUNERAL (EPIC REACTIONS)". But two and a half years later, their "cash mule sting house" video has racked up over 1.3 million views, 22,000 likes, and 2,979 comments. ("This video is longer than Oppenheimer. Thanks for the laughs fellas.") And the scammer is facing 60 years in prison.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Apple Brings Device-Level Age Verification to Two More Countries

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 02:34

🤖 AI Summary

APPLEがデバイスレベルの年齢確認を追加で2か国に導入

Appleは、英国に続く形でデバイスレベルの年齢確認機能をシンガポールと韓国にも導入すると報告されています(人口:シンガポール600万人、韓国5200万人)。この機能は、ユーザーが18歳以上の成人であることを確認するもので、アカウント登録から経過した期間を基に自動的に判別可能。それでも正確性が問題があれば、クレジットカードや運転免許証、特定の年齢認証カード(CitizenCard、My ID Cardなど)での確認も可能です。

不具合があった場合でも対処法が提供されており、アカウント作成時に18歳以上の成人と判断されなかった場合は、ウェブコンテンツフィルターや通信セキュリティ機能が有効にされます。韓国では法律により年齢確認は毎年行われる必要があります。

この記事によれば、米国でも導入される可能性があるとしています。(参照:https://apple.slashdot.org/story/26/04/05/0120236/apple-brings-device-level-age-verification-to-two-more-countries)
11 days ago Apple launched device-level age restrictions in the U.K. There were some glitches, reports the blog 9to5Mac. For me, the experience was an entirely painless one, taking less than 30 seconds. All I had to do was tap a confirm and continue button, and Apple told me that the length of time I'd had an Apple account was used to confirm that I'm 18+. Others, however, experienced difficulties with the process timing out or failing to complete. We summarized some of the steps you can take to try to address this. Apple has since listed additional acceptable ways to verify your age. "You can confirm your age with a credit card, or by scanning a driver's license or one of the following PASS-accredited Proof of Age cards: CitizenCard, My ID Card, TOTUM ID card, or Young Scot National Entitlement Card." If you don't verify your age, then you'll be treated as a child or teenager, meaning that both the web content filter and communication safety features are switched on. Apple is continuing the roll-out in Singapore (population 6 million) and South Korea (population 52 million), the article points out, citing a new Apple support document. South Korea's law actually requires Apple to re-verify someone's age annually.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Chrome 148 Will Start 'Lazy Loading' Video and Audio to Improve Performance

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 01:34

🤖 AI Summary

Googleは、Chrome 148でビデオや音声要素の「遅延読み込み」機能をテスト開始すると報告しています。この機能により、特定の要素(画像やiframe)はスクロール位置に近づくと読み込まれるようにすることで、ウェブ閲覧の速度が向上する可能性があります。ChromeおよびChromiumベースのブラウザでは、2019年から画像とiframeの遅延読み込み機能が搭載されていましたが、このアップデートによりビデオや音声要素も遅延読み込みできるようになります(ただし、YouTube埋め込みビデオは既に遅延読み込み可能)。Microsoft EdgeやVivaldiなどの他のChromiumベースのブラウザにも同機能が順次追加される予定です。
"Google has announced that it's currently testing a new feature for Chrome 148 that could speed up day-to-day browsing," reports PC World: [T]he browser can intelligently postpone the loading of certain elements. Why load all images at the start when it can instead load images as you get close to them while scrolling? Chrome and Chromium-based browsers have had built-in lazy loading support for images and iframes since 2019, but this feature would make browsers capable of lazy loading video and audio elements, too. Note, however, that this won't benefit YouTube video embeds — those are already lazy loadable since they're embedded using iframes. Actual video and audio elements are rarer but not uncommon. In addition to Chrome, lazy loading of video and audio elements is also expected to be added to other Chromium-based browsers, including Microsoft Edge and Vivaldi.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Scientists Engineered a Plant To Produce 5 Different Psychedelics At Once

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月6日 00:34

🤖 AI Summary

科学者たちは、トウモロコシに植物、菌類、トゲトゲアメEMALE AMERICAN TOADを用いた5種のテトラジン(テトラヒドロピーシルシンやテトラヒドロピセリシン、ブフテンイン、5-MeO-DMT)を同時に生成させる遺伝子を導入しました。これは、抑郁症、不安障害、PTSDなどの治療に有望と見られる psychedelic 物質の研究に新たな方法を提供することが期待されています。

しかし、この分野での進歩は規制上の制約により制限されているため、より多くの研究が必要です。従来、psychedelic 物質の供給源は植物、菌類、ソノラ砂漠トゲトゲアメに依存しており、これらの生物を採取することで生態学的および倫理的な懸念が生じており、自然環境の破壊と過度の利用によって増大しています。

研究チームは5種のテトラジン(植物からDMT、キノコからpsilocin・psilocybin、トゲトゲアメからbufotenin・5-MeO-DMT)を生成させることに成功しました。さらに、遺伝子操作により自然界に存在しない新型の化合物も作成しました。

この研究は規制上の課題や生態学的な懸念に対処する新たな方法を提供しており、Psychedelic 物質の研究において重要な進歩と言えます。
Plants, toads, and mushrooms "can all produce psychedelic substances," writes ScienceAlert. "And now their powers have been combined in one plant." [S]cientists have taken the genes these organisms use to make five natural psychedelics and introduced them into a tobacco plant ( Nicotiana benthamiana), which then produced all five compounds simultaneously. As interest grows in psychedelics as potential treatments for illnesses such as depression, anxiety, and PTSD, the newly developed system could offer scientists a new way to produce these compounds for research purposes... [P]rogress in this field remains limited, in part due to regulatory restrictions, underscoring the need for more research. This creates practical challenges for scientists. "Traditionally, the supply of psychedelics relies on natural producers, mainly plants, fungi, and the Sonoran Desert toad," the researchers write. "Harvesting these organisms for their psychoactive compounds raises ecological and ethical concerns, being increasingly threatened by habitat loss and overexploitation..." [T]he team carefully monitored the plant's production of five psychedelic tryptamines: DMT originally from plants; psilocin and psilocybin from mushrooms; and bufotenin and 5-MeO-DMT from toads. The modified tobacco plants were found to produce all five compounds simultaneously. The article points out that the researchers "also took it a step further." By tweaking the enzymes they were able to "produce modified versions of the compounds that do not naturally occur in plants, and which may also have therapeutic value."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Does Ubuntu Now Require More RAM Than Windows 11?

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 20:34

🤖 AI Summary

Ubuntu 26.04 LTSのRAM要件が向上し、最低でも6GBが必要となりました。これはCanonicalが「4GBは十分だ」という主張をやめることから始まります。過去のバージョンでは、Ubuntu 14.04 LTSは1GB、18.04 LTSは4GBが推奨されていましたが、現在のデジタル環境に合わせて要件が引き上げられたという点に注意が必要です。

この変更点は、「Ubuntu自体が2GB更多的内存需求并非因为其本身所需,而是由于现代计算环境更为复杂和耗资源」(OMG Ubuntuブログ)。如GNOME桌面及其扩展、现代网络浏览器以及多任务处理时运行的应用程序等组件变得更加要求高。因此,《Resolute Raccoon》的最低要求更好地反映了实际的多任务操作需求。

Ubuntu 26.04 LTS可以在RAM少于6GB的设备上安装(但至少需要25GB磁盘空间),但在较低配置下的体验可能不如开发者的预期那么流畅和响应迅速。例如,在一台只有2GB RAM的笔记本电脑上测试时,使用过程非常缓慢且令人沮丧。

对于那些不能升级内存的情况,也可以考虑其他选项,如Lubuntu这样的Ubuntu衍生版具有更低的系统需求。此外,还可以通过使用Ubuntu netboot安装程序手动安装基础系统并构建更简洁的环境作为替代方案。

以上是总结的主要内容,请问是否需要进一步修改或补充信息?
"Canonical is no longer pretending that 4GB is enough," writes the blog How-to-Geek, noting Ubuntu 26.04 LTS "raises the baseline memory to 6GB, alongside a 2GHz dual-core processor, and 25GB of storage..." Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (Trusty Tahr) set the floor at 1GB — a modest ask when it launched more than a decade ago in 2014. Then came the Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver) that pushed the number to 4GB, surviving quite well in the era of 16GB being considered standard for mid-range laptops.... Ubuntu's new minimum requirement lands in an interesting spot when compared against Windows 11. Microsoft's operating system requires just 4GB RAM, although real-world usage often tells a different story. Usually, 8GB is considered the sweet spot to handle modern apps and multitasking. The blog OMG Ubuntu argues this change is "not because Ubuntu requires 2GB more memory than it did, but more the way we compute does." it's more of an honesty bump. Components that make up the distro — the GNOME desktop and extensions, modern web browsers (and the sites we load in them) and the kinds of apps we use (and keep running) whilst multitasking are more demanding... The Resolute Raccoon's memory requirements better reflect real-world multitasking. Ubuntu 26.04 LTS can be installed on devices with less than 6GB RAM (but not less than 25GB of disk space). The experience may not be as smooth or as responsive as developers intend (so you don't get to complain), but it will work. I installed Ubuntu 26.04 Beta on a laptop with just 2 GB of memory — slow to the point of frustration in use, but otherwise functional. If you have a device with 4 GB RAM and you can't upgrade (soldered memory is a thing, and e-waste can be avoided), then alternatives exist. Many Ubuntu flavours, like Lubuntu, have lower system requirements than the main edition. Plus, there's always the manual option using the Ubuntu netboot installer to install a base system and then built out a more minimal system from there.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Apple's First 50 Years Celebrated - Including How Steve Jobs Finally Accepted an 'Open' App Store

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 16:34

🤖 AI Summary

Appleの50周年を記念して、さまざまな方法で祝賀が行われた。CEOティム・クックは特別な30秒間のビデオを公開し、製品の歴史を逆再生した。また、7つの50年前のApple Iゲームがエミュレータ上でプレイされたり、Macworldは影響力のある50人の人物をランキング付けしたりした。

David Pogueが著書「Apple: The First 50 Years」でAppleとの長い関係と、特にスティーブ・ジョブズとのいくつかのやりとりについて振り返った。Pogueは、ジョブズがオープンシステムに反対し、修正を許すことを嫌っていたことを語る一方で、Forstall氏からのインタビューによると、ジョブズはiPhoneのソフトウェアライブラリを拡大するためには、第三者開発者を拒否することも考慮したという。しかし、Forstall氏は暗躍し、アプリストアのセキュリティ基盤をソフトに組み込んだ。

Pogueの本には、ジョン・スクリーリー、ジョニーモイ、そして現在のデザイナーやエンジニアなど150人の主要人物との新インタビューが含まれている。また、ジョブズがiPodの原型を Aquaariumに投げて小さくするという有名なエピソードについても解説されているが、実際には起こらなかったことが明かされている。

関連記事:
- Axiosによる大規模供給チェーン攻撃でトップNPM管理者がターゲットになった。
- ブリーフィングが一時的にハッキングされた。
- Pogueは18のサイトがスペースバーでのスクロールテストに不合格したと批判している。
- 若いウォズニアックとジョブスの話題についての広大な口頭歴史が共有されている。
Apple's 50th anniversary got celebrated in weird and wild ways. CEO Tim Cook posted a special 30-second video rewinding backwards through the years of Apple's products until it reaches the Apple I. Podcaster Lex Fridman noticed if you play the sound in reverse, "It's the Think Different ad music, pitched up." TechRadar played seven 50-year-old Apple I games on an emulator, including Star Trek, Blackjack, Lunar Lander, and of course, Conway's Game of Life. And Macworld ranked Apple's 50 most influential people. (Their top five?) 5. Tony Fadell (iPhone co-creator/"father of the iPod") 4. Sir Jony Ive 3. Steve Wozniak 2. Tim Cook 1. Steve Jobs One of the most thoughtful celebraters was David Pogue, who's spent 42 years of writing about Apple (starting as a MacWorld columnist and the author of Mac for Dummies, one of the first "...For Dummies" books ever published in the early 1990s.) Now 63 years old, Pogue spent the last two years working on a 608-page hardcover book titled Apple: The First 50 Years. But on his Substack Pogue, contemplated his own history with the company — including several interactions with Steve Jobs. Pogue remembers how Jobs "hated open systems. He wanted to make self-contained, beautiful machines. He didn't want them polluted by modifications." The tech blog Daring Fireball notes that Pogue actually interviewed Scott Forstall (who'd led the iPhone's software development team) for his new book, "and got this story, about just how far Steve Jobs thought Apple could go to expand the iPhone's software library while not opening it to third-party developers." "I want you to make a list of every app any customer would ever want to use," he told Forstall. "And then the two of us will prioritize that list. And then I'm going to write you a blank check, and you are going to build the largest development team in the history of the world, to build as many apps as you can as quickly as possible." Forstall, dubious, began composing a list. But on the side, he instructed his engineers to build the security foundations of an app store into the iPhone's software-"against Steve's knowledge and wishes," Forstall says. [...] Two weeks after the iPhone's release, someone figured out how to "jailbreak" the iPhone: to hack it so that they could install custom apps. Jobs burst into Forstall's office. "You have to shut this down!" But Forstall didn't see the harm of developers spending their efforts making the iPhone better. "If they add something malicious, we'll ship an update tomorrow to protect against that. But if all they're doing is adding apps that are useful, there's no reason to break that." Jobs, troubled, reluctantly agreed. Week by week, more cool apps arrived, available only to jailbroken phones. One day in October, Jobs read an article about some of the coolest ones. "You know what?" he said. "We should build an app store." Forstall, delighted, revealed his secret plan. He had followed in the footsteps of Burrell Smith (the Mac's memory-expansion circuit) and Bob Belleville (the Sony floppy-drive deal): He'd disobeyed Jobs and wound up saving the project. In fact, the book "includes new interviews with 150 key people who made the journey, including Steve Wozniak, John Sculley, Jony Ive, and many current designers, engineers, and executives" (according to its description on Amazon). Pogue's book even revisits the story of Steve Jobs proving an iPod prototype could be smaller by tossing it into an aquarium, shouting "If there's air bubbles in there, there's still room. Make it smaller!" But Pogue's book "added that there's a caveat to this compelling bit of Apple lore," reports NPR. "It never actually happened. It's just one more Apple myth."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Top NPM Maintainers Targeted with AI Deepfakes in Massive Supply-Chain Attack, Axios Briefly Compromised

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 12:34

🤖 AI Summary

### まとめ

本記事は、npmパッケージ管理システムにおける大規模な供給連鎖攻撃について報告しています。主なポイントは以下の通りです:

1. **axiosパッケージの悪用**:
- AxiosはHTTPリクエストを簡素化するための広く使用されている開発ツールで、週間ダウンロード数が約1億回に達します。
- 恐怖国系ハッカー集団UNC1069によるAI深層偽装攻撃により、 Axiosパッケージが悪用されました。

2. **攻撃の詳細**:
- 仮想会議を使用し、実際の経営者の顔や声を克隆して信頼性を高めました。
- ハッカーは「システムの更新が必要」などと偽ってマルウェアをインストールさせました。

3. **影響範囲**:
- Socketエンジニアも含む複数のnpmパッケージ maintainer が攻撃を受け、これらのパッケージはJavaScriptエコシステムで広く使用されています。
- 被害は数十億回のダウンロードを記録した npm パッケージまで及んでいます。

4. **防御策**:
- Saaymanはデバイスとログイン情報の再設定、無変更リリースの採用、OIDCフローの導入、GitHub Actionsのベストプラクティスへの移行を提案しました。

5. **結論**:
- この攻撃は供給連鎖攻撃として記録された中でも特に高度で、現代ソフトウェア構築の基礎となるシステムに潜むリスクを示しています。

この記事は、npmパッケージ管理システムの脆弱性と、その対策について重要な洞察を提供しています。
"Hackers briefly turned a widely trusted developer tool into a vehicle for credential-stealing malware that could give attackers ongoing access to infected systems," the news site Axios.com reported Tuesday, citing security researchers at Google. The compromised package — also named axios — simplifies HTTP requests, and reportedly receives millions of downloads each day: The malicious versions were removed within roughly three hours of being published, but Google warned the incident could have "far-reaching impacts" given the package's widespread use, according to John Hultquist, chief analyst at Google Threat Intelligence Group. Wiz estimates Axios is downloaded roughly 100 million times per week and is present in about 80% of cloud and code environments. So far, Wiz has observed the malicious versions in roughly 3% of the environments it has scanned. Friday PCMag notes the maintainer's compromised account had two-factor authentication enabled, with the breach ultimately traced "to an elaborate AI deepfake from suspected North Korean hackers that was convincing enough to trick a developer into installing malware," according to a post-mortem published Thursday by lead developer Jason Saayman: [Saayman] fell for a scheme from a North Korean hacking group, dubbed UNC1069, which involves sending out phishing messages and then hosting virtual meetings that use AI deepfakes to clone the face and voices of real executives. The virtual meetings will then create the impression of an audio problem, which can only be "solved" if the victim installs some software or runs a troubleshooting command. In reality, it's an effort to execute malware. The North Koreans have been using the tactic repeatedly, whether it be to phish cryptocurrency firms or to secure jobs from IT companies. Saayman said he faced a similar playbook. "They reached out masquerading as the founder of a company, they had cloned the company's founders likeness as well as the company itself," he wrote. "They then invited me to a real Slack workspace. This workspace was branded... The Slack was thought out very well, they had channels where they were sharing LinkedIn posts. The LinkedIn posts I presume just went to the real company's account, but it was super convincing etc." The hackers then invited him to a virtual meeting on Microsoft Teams. "The meeting had what seemed to be a group of people that were involved. The meeting said something on my system was out of date. I installed the missing item as I presumed it was something to do with Teams, and this was the remote access Trojan," he added. "Everything was extremely well coordinated, looked legit and was done in a professional manner." Friday developer security platform Socket wrote that several more maintainers in the Node.js ecosystem "have come out of the woodwork to report that they were targeted by the same social engineering campaign." The accounts now span some of the most widely depended-upon packages in the npm registry and Node.js core itself, and together they confirm that axios was not a one-off target. It was part of a coordinated, scalable attack pattern aimed at high-trust, high-impact open source maintainers. Attackers also targeted several Socket engineers, including CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh. Feross is the creator of WebTorrent, StandardJS, buffer, and dozens of widely used npm packages with billions of downloads... Commenting on the axios post-mortem thread, he noted that this type of targeting [against individual maintainers] is no longer unusual... "We're seeing them across the ecosystem and they're only accelerating." Jordan Harband, John-David Dalton, and other Socket engineers also confirmed they were targeted. Harband, a TC39 member, maintains hundreds of ECMAScript polyfills and shims that are foundational to the JavaScript ecosystem. Dalton is the creator of Lodash, which sees more than 137 million weekly downloads on npm. Between them, the packages they maintain are downloaded billions of times each month. Wes Todd, an Express TC member and member of the Node Package Maintenance Working Group, also confirmed he was targeted. Matteo Collina, co-founder and CTO of Platformatic, Node.js Technical Steering Committee Chair, and lead maintainer of Fastify, Pino, and Undici, disclosed on April 2 that he was also targeted. His packages also see billion downloads per year... Scott Motte, creator of dotenv, the package used by virtually every Node.js project that handles environment variables, with more than 114 million weekly downloads, also confirmed he was targeted using the same Openfort persona. Socket reports that another maintainer was targetted with an invitation to appear on a podcast. (During the recording a suspicious technical issue appeared which required a software fix to resolve....) Even just technical implementation, "This is among the most operationally sophisticated supply chain attacks ever documented against a top-10 npm package," the CI/CD security company StepSecurity wrote Tuesday The dropper contacts a live command-and-control server, delivers separate second-stage payloads for macOS, Windows, and Linux, then erases itself and replaces its own package.json with a clean decoy... Three payloads were pre-built for three operating systems. Both release branches were poisoned within 39 minutes of each other. Every artifact was designed to self-destruct. Within two seconds of npm install, the malware was already calling home to the attacker's server before npm had even finished resolving dependencies... Both versions were published using the compromised npm credentials of a lead axios maintainer, bypassing the project's normal GitHub Actions CI/CD pipeline. "As preventive steps, Saayman has now outlined several changes," reports The Hacker News, "including resetting all devices and credentials, setting up immutable releases, adopting OIDC flow for publishing, and updating GitHub Actions to adopt best practices." The Wall Street Journal called it "the latest in a string of incidents exposing risks in the systems that underpin how modern software is built."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Pulls Then Re-Issues Windows 11 Preview Update. Also Begins Force-Updating Windows 11

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 10:34

🤖 AI Summary

Microsoftが9日ほど前にリリースしたWindows 11の非セキュリティ向けプレビュー更新プログラムは、一般的なWindowsユーザーには必須ではなく、IT管理者や技術的に詳しいユーザー向けのテスト用として提供されていました。しかし一部のユーザーからインストール拒否や途中でクラッシュする報告があり、Microsoftはこの問題を解決するために更新プログラムを一時停止し、新しいバージョンをリリースしました。

また、Windows 11版24H2が10月にサポート期間終了を迎えることから、Microsoftは全ユーザーに対して最新の更新プログラムを強制的にインストールさせています。IT部門によって管理されていないHomeおよびProエディションのデバイス向けに、学習型のインтеллектドロールアウトが拡大されたのです。

このアップデートは小さな機能追加パッケージであり、同じコードベースを共有しているため、長時間にわたる中断や互換性問題、新しいバグなどが発生する可能性はありません。MicrosoftはWindowsアップデートの仕組みに対する大きな変更も計画しており、ユーザーが好きなタイミングで更新を遅らせることができる機能も含まれる予定です。ただし、サポート期間以降でも同じリリースに留まることを含むかどうかは未明です。

この記事は、TechRepublic、ZDNet、BleepingComputer、Neowinから引用しています。
Nine days ago Microsoft released a non-security "preview" update for Windows 11 — not mandatory for the average Windows user, notes ZDNet, "but rather as optional, more for IT admins and power users who want to test them." TechRepublic adds that the update "was to bring 'production-ready improvements' and generally ensure system stability by optimizing different Windows services." So it's ironic that some (but not all) users reported instead that the update "blocks users at the door, refusing to install or crashing midway through the process." "It apparently impacted enough people to force Microsoft to take action," writes ZDNet. "Microsoft paused and then pulled the update," and then Tuesday released a new update "designed to replace the glitchy one. This one includes all the new features and improvements from the previous preview update, but also fixes the installation issues that clobbered that update." Meanwhile, as Windows 11 version 24H2 approaches its end of life this October, Microsoft is now force-updating users to the latest version, reports BleepingComputer: "The machine learning-based intelligent rollout has expanded to all devices running Home and Pro editions of Windows 11, version 24H2 that are not managed by IT departments," Microsoft said in a Monday update to the Windows release health dashboard... "No action is required, and you can choose when to restart your device or postpone the update." Neowin reports: The good news is that the update from version 24H2 to 25H2 is a minor enablement package, as the two operating systems share the same codebase. As such, the update won't take long, and you should not encounter any disruptions, compatibility issues, or previously unseen bugs... Microsoft recently promised to implement big changes in how Windows Update works, including the ability to postpone updates for as long as you want. However, Microsoft has yet to clarify if that includes staying on a release beyond its support period. Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Ol Olsoc for sharing the news.

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America's CIA Recruited Iran's Nuclear Scientists - By Threatening To Kill Them

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 07:34

🤖 AI Summary

アメリカのCIAはイランの核開発に携わる科学者を暗殺する代わりに、彼らを米国へ defectさせる提案を行った。元スパイのケビン・チョーカー氏によると、Pentagonは当初、キリルチームによる暗殺作戦を検討していたが、CIAはこれら科学者の協力を得るための方法を探し、そのうちの75%は協力に同意した。チョーカーは、これらの科学者が米国から脅迫された場合、実際には彼らが殺害されても、重要な情報提供によりイランの核兵器開発計画を長年にわたる妨げたと主張している。

この作戦では、チョーカーは約10分間で科学者に自身の身元を説明し、米国への移住が可能であることを伝え、もし拒否された場合、暗殺される可能性があることを述べていた。しかし、実際には暗殺は行われておらず、多くの科学者が脅迫された結果、協力に応じたという。

この情報交換は2010年代のサイバー攻撃(スタックスネット)からオバマ政権の核合意、そして2025年のイラン原子力施設への米空爆まで、長年にわたるアメリカによるイラン核兵器計画への妨げに貢献したとチョーカーは主張している。
A former U.S. spy spoke to The New Yorker about "years of clandestine work for the C.I.A. — which, he said, had 'prevented Iran from getting a nuke'." [Kevin] Chalker told me that, as he understood it, the Pentagon had suggested running commando operations to kill key Iranian scientists, as Israel subsequently did. But the C.I.A. proposed recruiting those scientists to defect, as U.S. spies had once courted Soviet physicists. Chalker paraphrased the agency's pitch: "We can debrief them and learn so much more — and, if they say no, then you can kill them." (A more senior agency official confirmed the broad strokes of his account.) The White House liked the agency's idea, and [president George W.] Bush authorized the C.I.A. to conduct clandestine operations to stop Iran from building a bomb. The C.I.A. program that Chalker described to me became publicly known in 2007, when the Los Angeles Times reported on the existence of an agency project called Brain Drain. But the details of the "invitations" to Iranian scientists have not previously been reported... Chalker typically had about ten minutes to explain, as gently as possible, that he was from the C.I.A., that he had the power to secure the scientist and his family a comfortable new life in the U.S. — and that, if the offer was rejected, the scientist, regrettably, would be assassinated. (Chalker tried to emphasize the happier potential outcome.) Killing a civilian scientist would violate international law. The American government has denied ever doing it, and I found no evidence that the U.S. has carried out any such murders. A former senior agency official familiar with the Brain Drain project told me all that mattered was that Iranian scientists had believed they would be killed, regardless of whether the U.S. actually made good on the threat. And Israel had been conducting a campaign to assassinate Iranian scientists, which made the prospect of lethal reprisal highly plausible. Other former officials with knowledge of the project told me that the C.I.A. sometimes shared intelligence with Mossad which enabled its operatives to locate and kill a scientist. Such information exchanges were kept vague enough to preserve deniability if a more legalistic U.S. Administration later took office... [Chalker] is confident that those who rebuffed him were, in fact, killed — one way or another... One of Chalker's colleagues told me that, against the backdrop of so many Israeli assassinations, Chalker's interactions with Iranian scientists could almost be considered humanitarian — he had been "throwing them a lifeline." Of the many scientists he approached, three-quarters ultimately agreed to coöperate. Their 10,000-word article suggests Chalker may now be resentful the CIA didn't help him in a later unrelated lawsuit, noting it's "nearly unheard of for ex-spies to divulge their past activities." But Chalker also says he "helped obtain pivotal information that laid the groundwork for more than a decade of American efforts to disrupt the Iranian nuclear-weapons program, from the Stuxnet cyberattacks, which occurred around 2010 [destroying 1,000 uranium-enriching centrifuges], to the Obama Administration's nuclear deal, in 2015, to the U.S. air strikes on Iranian atomic-energy facilities in the summer of 2025."

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Before Webcomics: Selling Political Cartoons On BBSes In 1992

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 06:34

🤖 AI Summary

テキサスの起業家Don Lokkeは、ウェブが公に公開される一年前に、ポリティカルコマックスを Bulletin Board Systems(BBS)で展開しようと試みました。彼は「telecomics」と呼んだこれらのコマックスは、オンラインコミックの早期実験として認識されていませんでした。

ロッケは1992年のクリントン・ブッシュ・ペロシ大統領選挙の真っ只中に主なシリーズ「マック・ザ・マウス」を発表しました。彼の小ネズミの主人公は、増税や不況に対する一般市民の不満を表現していました。ロッケは「マック」を無料で配布し、他のtelecomicsにサブスクリプションを売却しました。彼はSYSOPSが独占的なコンテンツを購入することを賭けました。

当時のBBS業界に対する熱意は高まっており、ONE BBSCONのようなカンファレンスでは「ビジネスのためにBBSを活用する」ことを推奨していました。しかし、ウェブの登場によりこれらの希望が打ち破られ、ロッケは1995年にBBSから撤退しました。

数十年後、彼が制作した約300枚の中の半分近くが回収され、16colorsによって保存されています。
Slashdot reader Kirkman14 writes: A year before the Web opened to the public, Texas entrepreneur Don Lokke was trying to syndicate weekly political cartoons to bulletin board systems. His "telecomics," as he called them, represent an overlooked early experiment in online comics. Lokke launched his main series, "Mack the Mouse" at the height of the 1992 Clinton-Bush-Perot presidential race. His mouse protagonist voiced the frustrations felt by everyday Americans about rising taxes and the recession. Lokke gave away "Mack" for free, but sold subscriptions to his other telecomics, betting sysops would pay for exclusive content. The timing wasn't crazy: enthusiasm for BBSes as an industry was surging, with conferences like ONE BBSCON promoting "BBSing for profit." But the Web soon deflated those hopes, and Lokke left BBSes behind in 1995. Decades later, about half of his nearly 300 telecomics were recovered and preserved on 16colors.

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Are Employers Using Your Data To Figure Out the Lowest Salary You'll Accept?

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 05:34

🤖 AI Summary

タイトル:労働者のデータを基に最低賃金を決定しているのは企業か?

記事は、企業が労働者の個人情報を使って最低賃金を決定している可能性について説明しています。労働者側の政策担当者である Nina DiSalvo によると、一部のシステムは融資履歴やクレジットカード残高といった金融的弱さのシグナルを使用して、候補者の最低賃金を推定します。

ウーマン・カレッジの法学教授 Veena Dubal とテック戦略家の Wilneida Negrón の共同で行った初の調査によると、医療やカスタマーサポート、ロジスティクス、小売業界の企業はこれらのツールを利用するベンダーの顧客となっています。 COLORADO州はこの実践を規制するために「監視データを使用して価格と賃金を設定禁止法」を導入しました。

さらに、労働者は勤務中に監視対象となり、生産性やカスタマーアクション、さらには職場での音声やビデオのリアルタイム監視も行われることが明らかになりました。2022年に500人以上の従業員を持つ企業の約70%が従業員監視システムを使用していました。

こうした手法は透明性や公平性を重視しないコストカット优先の給与体系に導く可能性があると警告しています。
MarketWatch looks at "surveillance wages," pay rates "based not on an employee's performance or seniority, but on formulas that use their personal data, often collected without employees' knowledge." According to Nina DiSalvo, policy director at labor advocacy group Towards Justice, some systems use signals associated with financial vulnerability — including data on whether a prospective employee has taken out a payday loan or has a high credit-card balance — to infer the lowest pay a candidate might accept. Companies can also scrape candidates' public personal social-media pages, she said... A first-of-its-kind audit of 500 labor-management artificial-intelligence companies by Veena Dubal, a law professor at University of California, Irvine, and Wilneida Negrón, a tech strategist, found that employers in the healthcare, customer service, logistics and retail industries are customers of vendors whose tools are designed to enable this practice. Published by the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, a progressive economic think tank, the August 2025 report... does not claim that all employers using these systems engage in algorithmic wage surveillance. Instead, it warns that the growing use of algorithmic tools to analyze workers' personal data can enable pay practices that prioritize cost-cutting over transparency or fairness... Surveillance wages don't stop at the hiring stage — they follow workers onto the job, too. The vendors that provide such services also offer tools that are built to set bonus or incentive compensation, according to the report. These tools track their productivity, customer interactions and real-time behavior — including, in some cases, audio and video surveillance on the job. Nearly 70% of companies with more than 500 employees were already using employee-monitoring systems in 2022, such as software that monitors computer activity, according to a survey from the International Data Corporation. "The data that they have about you may allow an algorithmic decision system to make assumptions about how much, how big of an incentive, they need to give to a particular worker to generate the behavioral response they seek," DiSalvo said. The article notes that Colorado introduced the "Prohibit Surveillance Data to Set Prices and Wages Act" to ban companies from setting pay rates with algorithms that use payday-loan history, location data or Google search behavior for algorithmically set. Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader sinij for sharing the article.

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Anthropic Announces Claude Subscribers Must Now Pay Extra to Use OpenClaw

著者: EditorDavid
2026年4月5日 04:34

🤖 AI Summary

AnthropicがClaude AIのサブスクリプションを変更し、第三者ツール「OpenClaw」を利用する場合に追加料金が必要になると発表しました。4月4日午後3時以降、ユーザーは claudeのサブスクリプション枠で第三-partyのツールを利用できなくなり、「pay-as-you-go」オプションが導入され、これはclaudeサブスクリプションとは別に請求されます。Anthropicによると、社内のツールは「プロンプトキャッシュヒット率」を最大化するよう設計されており、第三-partyツールはその効率性を損なう可能性があると主張しています。

この決定により、 Anthropicは自身のUI/UX制御権を強化し、テレメトリ収集やレートリミット管理をより細かく行えるようになりましたが、これによってパワーウィンドウコミュニティから孤立する可能性があります。Anthropicは収益と成長のバランスを見極めた決定とし、「容量は慎重に管理される資源」だと述べています。

一方で、OpenClawの開発者Peter Steinbergerは「タイミングが不自然だ」として Anthropic の主張を疑問視しています。彼によると、Anthropicは人気機能を自己閉鎖型のツールに導入し、その後オープンソースから排除したと言います。

この変更により、一部の利用者はOpenClawを使用するためのコストが高まり、他のモデルに切り替える可能性があると懸念しています。Anthropicは、ユーザー体験には影響を与えないとしていますが、パワフルなオフィス運営を必要とする利用者にとっては大きな変化となっています。
Anthropic's making a big and sudden change — and connecting its Claude AI to third-party agentic tools "is about to get a lot more expensive," writes the Verge: Beginning April 4th at 3PM ET, users will "no longer be able to use your Claude subscription limits for third-party harnesses including OpenClaw," according to an email sent to users on Friday evening. Instead, if users want to use OpenClaw with Claude, they'll have to use a "pay-as-you-go option" that will be billed separate from their Claude subscription. Anthropic's announcement added these extra usage bundles are "now available at a discount." Users can also try Anthropic's API, notes VentureBeat, "which charges for every token of usage rather than allowing for open-ended usage up to certain limits, as the Pro and Max plans have allowed so far. " The technical reality, according to Anthropic, is that its first-party tools like Claude Code, its AI vibe coding harness, and Claude Cowork, its business app interfacing and control tool, are built to maximize "prompt cache hit rates" — reusing previously processed text to save on compute. Third-party harnesses like OpenClaw often bypass these efficiencies... [Claude Code creator Boris Cherny explained on X that "I did put up a few PRs to improve prompt cache hit rate for OpenClaw in particular, which should help for folks using it with Claude via API/overages."] Growth marketer Aakash Gupta observed on X that the "all-you-can-eat buffet just closed," noting that a single OpenClaw agent running for one day could burn $1,000 to $5,000 in API costs. "Anthropic was eating that difference on every user who routed through a third-party harness," Gupta wrote. "That's the pace of a company watching its margin evaporate in real time." However, Peter Steinberger, the creator of OpenClaw who was recently hired by OpenAI, took a more skeptical view of the "capacity" argument."Funny how timings match up," Steinberger posted on X. "First they copy some popular features into their closed harness, then they lock out open source." Indeed, Anthropic recently added some of the same capabilities that helped OpenClaw catch-on — such as the ability to message agents through external services like Discord and Telegram — to Claude Code... User @ashen_one, founder of Telaga Charity, voiced a concern likely shared by other small-scale builders: "If I switch both [OpenClaw instances] to an API key or the extra usage you're recommending here, it's going to be far too expensive to make it worth using. I'll probably have to switch over to a different model at this point." "I know it sucks," Cherny replied. "Fundamentally engineering is about tradeoffs, and one of the things we do to serve a lot of customers is optimize the way subscriptions work to serve as many people as possible with the best mode..." OpenAI appears to be positioning itself as a more "harness-friendly" alternative, potentially using this moment as a customer acquisition channel for disgruntled Claude power users. By restricting subscription limits to their own "closed harness," Anthropic is asserting control over the UI/UX layer. This allows them to collect telemetry and manage rate limits more granularly, but it risks alienating the power-user community that built the "agentic" ecosystem in the first place. Anthropic's decision is a cold calculation of margins versus growth. As Cherny noted, "Capacity is a resource we manage thoughtfully." In the 2026 AI landscape, the era of subsidized, unlimited compute for third-party automation is over. For the average user on Claude.ai, the experience remains unchanged; for the power users running autonomous offices, the bell has tolled.

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