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Claude 4.5 Opusの「魂の概要」とは何か?

2025年11月25日に登場したAnthropicのAIモデル「Claude 4.5 Opus」を触っていたリチャード・ワイス氏が、複数のケースで「soul_overview(魂の概要)」という文字列が出力されることに気づきました。生成AIによくある幻覚かと思えるこの文字列ですが、Anthropicの中の人が公式に言及する事態にまで発展しています。

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台湾検察が東京エレクトロン子会社を起訴、TSMCの企業秘密を盗んだとして罰金6億円を請求

現地時間の2025年12月2日、台湾の検察当局が日本の半導体製造装置メーカーである東京エレクトロンの台湾にある子会社・東京エレクトロン台湾を起訴しました。検察当局は、東京エレクトロン台湾が世界最大の半導体受託製造企業(ファウンドリ)であるTSMCの2nm技術を盗んだとして、1億2000万台湾ドル(約5億9500万円)の罰金を支払うよう求めています。

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Kubernetes Is Retiring Its Popular Ingress NGINX Controller

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD
During last month's KubeCon North America in Atlanta, Kubernetes maintainers announced the upcoming retirement of Ingress NGINX. "Best-effort maintenance will continue until March 2026," noted the Kubernetes SIG Network and the Security Response Committee. "Afterward, there will be no further releases, no bugfixes, and no updates to resolve any security vulnerabilities that may be discovered." In a recent op-ed for The Register, Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols reflects on the decision and speculates about what might have prevented this outcome: Ingress NGINX, for those who don't know it, is an ingress controller in Kubernetes clusters that manages and routes external HTTP and HTTPS traffic to the cluster's internal services based on configurable Ingress rules. It acts as a reverse proxy, ensuring that requests from clients outside the cluster are forwarded to the correct backend services within the cluster according to path, domain, and TLS configuration. As such, it's vital for network traffic management and load balancing. You know, the important stuff. Now this longstanding project, once celebrated for its flexibility and breadth of features, will soon be "abandonware." So what? After all, it won't be the first time a once-popular program shuffled off the stage. Off the top of my head, dBase, Lotus 1-2-3, and VisiCalc spring to my mind. What's different is that there are still thousands of Ingress NGINX controllers in use. Why is it being put down, then, if it's so popular? Well, there is a good reason. As Tabitha Sable, a staff engineer at Datadog who is also co-chair of the Kubernetes special interest group for security, pointed out: "Ingress NGINX has always struggled with insufficient or barely sufficient maintainership. For years, the project has had only one or two people doing development work, on their own time, after work hours, and on weekends. Last year, the Ingress NGINX maintainers announced their plans to wind down Ingress NGINX and develop a replacement controller together with the Gateway API community. Unfortunately, even that announcement failed to generate additional interest in helping maintain Ingress NGINX or develop InGate to replace it." [...] The final nail in the coffin was when security company Wix found a killer Ingress NGINX security hole. How bad was it? Wix declared: "Exploiting this flaw allows an attacker to execute arbitrary code and access all cluster secrets across namespaces, which could lead to complete cluster takeover." [...] You see, the real problem isn't that Ingress NGINX has a major security problem. Heck, hardly a month goes by without another stop-the-presses Windows bug being uncovered. No, the real issue is that here we have yet another example of a mission-critical open source program no one pays to support...

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