ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

Who Wins Nobel Prizes? (construction-physics.com)

(Thursday March 27, 2025 @06:00AM (msmash) from the numbers-speak dept.)

The United States has won far more Nobel Prizes in physics, chemistry, and medicine than any other nation, with the UK and Germany following in second and third place, according to [1]an analysis of nearly 900 prize-winning publications .

Universities account for roughly three-fourths of Nobel Prize-winning research, with a small number of elite institutions producing a disproportionate share of winners. Cambridge University leads with 32 prizes, followed by Harvard (22) and Columbia (13). While prizes are concentrated among researchers from the US, UK, and Germany, 43 countries have produced at least one scientific Nobel laureate.

Outside Europe and the Anglosphere, Japan leads with 11 prizes, while Argentina, China, and India have only one or two each. The average age of Nobel Prize winners has steadily increased from about 45 in the 1920s to 65 in the 2010s, though the age at which scientists perform their groundbreaking work has remained relatively constant at around 40.



[1] https://www.construction-physics.com/p/who-wins-nobel-prizes



Quitting Your Job Won't Help You Get Paid More Money Right Now (bloomberg.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @11:30PM (msmash) from the closer-look dept.)

Here's one more reason to cling to a steady job: It doesn't pay to quit. From a report:

> Typically workers who snag a new position see higher pay bumps than those holding down the same job. But in February, median wage growth of 4.4% for job stayers [1]surpassed a 4.2% gain for job switchers , according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. The change, as measured by a three-month moving average, is yet another sign of a softening labor market. White collar workers have been clinging to their jobs in the face of widespread layoffs and workplace reductions. Last month, employers announced the fastest pace of job cuts since 2020, when factoring in government job losses. And now an oversupply of job seekers means workers are having to settle for smaller pay bumps, said Peter Cappelli, a professor of management at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

>

> "That certainly sounds like a big slackening of the job market," Cappelli said. It's a major reversal from the "Great Resignation" a few years ago, when workers left their jobs at unprecedented rates, demanding more benefits and higher pay from employers. At a peak in July 2022, workers who got new jobs saw their wages grow by a whopping 8.5% compared to 5.9% for those who stayed loyal to their company, Atlanta Fed data show.



[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-03-26/should-i-quit-my-job-wage-growth-is-better-for-employees-staying-put



Signal President Blasts WhatsApp's Privacy Claims (cybernews.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @11:30PM (msmash) from the closer-look dept.)

Signal president Meredith Whittaker [1]challenged recent assertions by WhatsApp head Will Cathcart that minimal differences exist between the two messaging platforms' privacy protections. "We're amused to see WhatsApp stretching the limits of reality to claim that they are just like Signal," Whittaker said in a statement published Monday, responding to Cathcart's comments to Dutch journalists last week.

While WhatsApp licenses Signal's end-to-end encryption technology, Whittaker said that WhatsApp still collects substantial user metadata, including "location data, contact lists, when they send someone a message, when they stop, what users are in their group chats, their profile picture, and much more." Cathcart had previously stated that WhatsApp doesn't track users' communications or share contact information with other companies, claiming "we strongly believe in private communication."



[1] https://cybernews.com/news/whatsapp-signal-executives-battle/



Streaming Services Are Facing Identity Crisis, Research Shows (advanced-television.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (msmash) from the how-about-that dept.)

Streaming platforms are [1]increasingly indistinguishable to consumers despite high brand awareness, according to Hub Entertainment Research. The annual Evolution of Video Branding report shows major services like Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, and Max experiencing year-over-year declines in viewers' ability to articulate what makes each platform unique.

Fewer consumers (37% in 2025, down from 41% in 2023) report signing up for services to watch specific shows, while many can't correctly identify where signature programs like Game of Thrones or The Bear can be viewed. While 58% know Stranger Things streams on Netflix, less than half can properly place other major titles.



[1] https://www.advanced-television.com/2025/03/17/research-svod-services-struggling-for-identity/



London Bans Most E-Bikes on Public Transport Over Fire Risk (theguardian.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (msmash) from the PSA dept.)

Transport for London will [1]ban most e-bikes across its network from March 31 amid growing safety concerns over battery fires, the transport authority announced on Wednesday. The ban, covering London Underground, Overground, Elizabeth Line and DLR trains, exempts only folding e-bikes, which are considered less likely to have been modified and pose a reduced safety risk.

TfL implemented the measure following union strike threats after several incidents, including an e-bike that exploded into flames at Rayners Lane Underground platform last month. The train drivers' union Aslef said the incident could have caused mass casualties.



[1] https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/mar/26/tfl-to-issue-ban-on-e-bikes-after-concerns-over-igniting-batteries



Apple Barred From Google Antitrust Trial, $20 Billion Search Deal at Risk (arstechnica.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (msmash) from the tough-luck dept.)

A U.S. appeals court has ruled that Apple [1]cannot participate in Google's upcoming antitrust trial, potentially jeopardizing a $20 billion annual deal between the tech giants. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that Apple waited too long to join the proceedings, filing its request 33 days after the government proposed remedies in the case Google lost last August.

"The delay seems difficult to justify," the judges ruled. While Apple can still submit written testimony and file friend-of-court briefs, it cannot present evidence or cross-examine witnesses as it had sought. At stake is Google's practice of paying Apple approximately $20 billion annually to remain the default search engine in Safari browsers across Apple devices. The government's proposed remedies would make such arrangements impermissible.



[1] https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/03/apple-barred-from-google-antitrust-trial-putting-20-billion-search-deal-on-the-line/



Chicago-Sized Iceberg Hid Ancient Ecosystem, Scientists Reveal (gizmodo.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the hide-and-seek dept.)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo:

> Scientists scrutinizing the seafloor beneath a calving iceberg [1]found a remarkable array of living creatures, switching up notions of how the giant chunks of ice affect their immediate environs. The scientists investigated a region of seafloor recently exposed by the calving of a gigantic iceberg -- A-84 -- which is as large as Chicago. The team found a surprisingly vibrant community of critters on the seafloor [2]below where A-84 was once attached to an ice shelf attached to Antarctica .

>

> Without the 197-square-mile (510-square-kilometer) iceberg in the way, the team was able to scrutinize the seafloor at depths of 4,265 feet (1,300 meters) using the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) SuBastian. The team found large corals and sponges supporting other lifeforms, including icefish, giant sea spiders, and octopus. [...] With the icebergs covering the seafloor, organisms below the shelf cannot get nutrients for survival from the surface. The team hypothesized that ocean currents are a critical driver for life beneath the ice sheets. The team also collected data on the larger ice sheet, whose shrinking size spells concern for the animals that live beneath it.



[1] https://www.bas.ac.uk/media-post/thriving-ecosystem-discovered-following-iceberg-calving/

[2] https://gizmodo.com/chicago-sized-iceberg-hid-ancient-ecosystem-scientists-reveal-2000579125



Google Patches Chrome Sandbox Escape Zero-Day Caught By Kaspersky (securityweek.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the time-to-update dept.)

[1]wiredmikey shares a report from SecurityWeek:

> Google late Tuesday rushed out a patch for a sandbox escape vulnerability in its flagship Chrome browser after researchers at Kaspersky [2]caught a professional hacking operation launching drive-by download exploits . The vulnerability, tracked as [3]CVE-2025-2783 , was chained with a second exploit for remote code execution in what appears to be a nation-state sponsored cyberespionage campaign [dubbed [4]Operation ForumTroll ] targeting organizations in Russia.

>

> Kaspersky said it detected a series of infections triggered by phishing emails in the middle of March and traced the incidents to a zero-day that fired when victims simply clicked on a booby-trapped website from a Chrome browser. The Russian anti-malware vendor [5]said victims merely had to click on a personalized, short-lived link, and their systems were compromised when the malicious website was opened in Chrome. Kaspersky said its exploit detection tools picked up on the zero-day, and after reverse-engineering the code, the team reported the bug to Google and coordinated the fix released on Tuesday.



[1] https://slashdot.org/~wiredmikey

[2] https://www.securityweek.com/google-patches-chrome-sandbox-escape-zero-day-caught-by-kaspersky/

[3] https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/2025/03/stable-channel-update-for-desktop_25.html

[4] https://securelist.com/operation-forumtroll/115989/

[5] https://securelist.com/operation-forumtroll/115989/



Ethically Sourced 'Spare' Human Bodies Could Revolutionize Medicine

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the supply-and-demand dept.)

In an op-ed for MIT Technology Review, authors Carsten T. Charlesworth, Henry T. Greely, and Hiromitsu Nakauchi [1]make the case for human "bodyoids " that could reduce animal testing, improve drug development, and alleviate organ shortages:

> Why do we hear about medical breakthroughs in mice, but rarely see them translate into cures for human disease? Why do so few drugs that enter clinical trials receive regulatory approval? And why is the waiting list for organ transplantation so long? These challenges stem in large part from a common root cause: a severe shortage of ethically sourced human bodies. It may be disturbing to characterize human bodies in such commodifying terms, but the unavoidable reality is that human biological materials are an essential commodity in medicine, and persistent shortages of these materials create a major bottleneck to progress.

>

> This imbalance between supply and demand is the underlying cause of the organ shortage crisis, with more than 100,000 patients currently waiting for a solid organ transplant in the US alone. It also forces us to rely heavily on animals in medical research, a practice that can't replicate major aspects of human physiology and makes it necessary to inflict harm on sentient creatures. In addition, the safety and efficacy of any experimental drug must still be confirmed in clinical trials on living human bodies. These costly trials risk harm to patients, can take a decade or longer to complete, and make it through to approval [2]less than 15% of the time.

>

> There might be a way to get out of this moral and scientific deadlock. Recent advances in biotechnology now provide a pathway to producing living human bodies without the neural components that allow us to think, be aware, or feel pain. Many will find this possibility disturbing, but if researchers and policymakers can find a way to pull these technologies together, we may one day be able to create "spare" bodies, both human and nonhuman. These could revolutionize medical research and drug development, greatly reducing the need for animal testing, rescuing many people from organ transplant lists, and allowing us to produce more effective drugs and treatments. All without crossing most people's ethical lines.

>

> Although it may seem like science fiction, recent technological progress has pushed this concept into the realm of plausibility. Pluripotent stem cells, one of the earliest cell types to form during development, can give rise to every type of cell in the adult body. Recently, researchers have used these stem cells to create structures that [3]seem to mimic the early development of actual human embryos . At the same time, artificial uterus technology is rapidly advancing, and other pathways may be opening to allow for the development of fetuses outside of the body. Such technologies, together with established genetic techniques to inhibit brain development, make it possible to envision the creation of "bodyoids" -- a potentially unlimited source of human bodies, developed entirely outside of a human body from stem cells, that lack sentience or the ability to feel pain.



[1] https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/03/25/1113611/ethically-sourced-spare-human-bodies-could-revolutionize-medicine/

[2] https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2762311

[3] https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/jun/14/synthetic-human-embryos-created-in-groundbreaking-advance



Open Source Devs Say AI Crawlers Dominate Traffic, Forcing Blocks On Entire Countries (arstechnica.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the state-of-the-web dept.)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:

> Software developer Xe Iaso [1]reached a breaking point earlier this year when aggressive AI crawler traffic from Amazon overwhelmed their Git repository service, repeatedly causing instability and downtime. Despite configuring standard defensive measures -- adjusting robots.txt, blocking known crawler user-agents, and filtering suspicious traffic -- Iaso found that AI crawlers continued evading all attempts to stop them, spoofing user-agents and cycling through residential IP addresses as proxies. Desperate for a solution, Iaso eventually resorted to moving their server behind a VPN and creating "Anubis," a custom-built proof-of-work challenge system that forces web browsers to solve computational puzzles before accessing the site. "It's futile to block AI crawler bots because they lie, change their user agent, use residential IP addresses as proxies, and more," Iaso wrote in a [2]blog post titled "a desperate cry for help." "I don't want to have to close off my Gitea server to the public, but I will if I have to."

>

> Iaso's story highlights a broader crisis rapidly spreading across the open source community, as what appear to be aggressive AI crawlers increasingly overload community-maintained infrastructure, causing what amounts to persistent distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks on vital public resources. According to a [3]comprehensive recent report from LibreNews, some open source projects now [4]see as much as 97 percent of their traffic originating from AI companies' bots , dramatically increasing bandwidth costs, service instability, and burdening already stretched-thin maintainers.

>

> Kevin Fenzi, a member of the Fedora Pagure project's sysadmin team, [5]reported on his blog that the project had to block all traffic from Brazil after repeated attempts to mitigate bot traffic failed. GNOME GitLab implemented Iaso's "Anubis" system, requiring browsers to solve computational puzzles before accessing content. GNOME sysadmin Bart Piotrowski [6]shared on Mastodon that only about 3.2 percent of requests (2,690 out of 84,056) passed their challenge system, suggesting the vast majority of traffic was automated. KDE's GitLab infrastructure was temporarily knocked offline by crawler traffic originating from Alibaba IP ranges, according to LibreNews, citing a KDE Development chat. While Anubis has proven effective at filtering out bot traffic, it comes with drawbacks for legitimate users. When many people access the same link simultaneously -- such as when a GitLab link is shared in a chat room -- site visitors can face significant delays. Some mobile users have reported waiting up to two minutes for the proof-of-work challenge to complete, according to the news outlet.



[1] https://xeiaso.net/notes/2025/amazon-crawler/

[2] https://xeiaso.net/notes/2025/amazon-crawler/

[3] https://thelibre.news/foss-infrastructure-is-under-attack-by-ai-companies/

[4] https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/03/devs-say-ai-crawlers-dominate-traffic-forcing-blocks-on-entire-countries/

[5] https://www.scrye.com/blogs/nirik/posts/2025/03/15/mid-march-infra-bits-2025/

[6] https://social.treehouse.systems/@barthalion/114190930216801561



GameStop To Invest Corporate Cash In Bitcoin, Following In Footsteps of MicroStrategy

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the HODL dept.)

GameStop announced it will [1]invest part of its corporate cash in bitcoin and stablecoins , following [2]MicroStrategy's lead . The meme stock jumped more than 6% in extended trading Tuesday following the news. CNBC reports:

> The video game retailer said a portion of its cash or future debt and equity issuances may be invested in bitcoin and U.S. dollar-denominated stablecoins. As of Feb. 1, GameStop held nearly $4.8 billion in cash. The firm also said it has not set a ceiling on the amount of bitcoin it may purchase. The company said the move could expose it to volatility associated with cryptocurrency prices.

>

> "Bitcoin, for example, is a highly volatile asset and has experienced significant price fluctuations over time. Our Bitcoin strategy has not been tested and may prove unsuccessful," GameStop said in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.



[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/25/gamestop-says-it-will-add-bitcoin-as-a-treasury-reserve-asset.html

[2] https://slashdot.org/story/24/12/31/204219/microstrategys-big-bet-on-bitcoin-went-stratospheric



Microsoft's Many Outlooks Are Confusing Users

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the too-many-flavors-to-choose dept.)

The Register's Richard Speed reports:

> Baffled by the plethora of Outlook options out there? You aren't alone. Microsoft veteran Scott Hanselman [1]posted a list of some more variants that could be used to do the same thing. It's a problem common to several Microsoft products. A file needs to be opened, but which app should be used? Should it be Outlook New, or Outlook (New)? With tongue firmly in cheek, Hanselman listed some more options: Outlook (Zero Sugar), Outlook (Caffeine Free), and so on. Hanselman, Developer Community veep at Microsoft, also included Outlook '95, although to our mind the peak came with the version of Outlook in Office 97. A happier, more trusting time when security was less important.

>

> While users can create multiple [2]Outlook profiles to store email account details and data locations, Hanselman's post on Bluesky [3]highlights an issue facing many users of Microsoft's software : which incarnation of the application to use. Teams users often find themselves presented with a variety of applications -- Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Teams (Personal), for example, can often appear side by side in the system tray. [...]

>

> There is a cautionary tale about [4]what happened when a soft drinks company tried to replace a well-liked product with a "new" version and renamed the previous preferred version as "classic." The list posted by Hanselman -- who is also [5]notable for tips on managing Microsoft's personal information manager -- is amusing, but also highlights the perils of having multiple, similarly functioning options to do the same thing, and the potential for confusing users.



[1] https://bsky.app/profile/scott.hanselman.com/post/3ll5obc6v5c2j

[2] https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/overview-of-outlook-email-profiles-9073a8ac-c3d6-421d-b5b9-fcedff7642fc

[3] https://www.theregister.com/2025/03/25/too_many_outlooks/

[4] https://www.coca-colacompany.com/about-us/history/new-coke-the-most-memorable-marketing-blunder-ever

[5] https://www.linkedin.com/posts/shanselman_not-enough-people-are-coloring-their-calendar-activity-7304707251548696576-SRfn/



DeepSeek-V3 Now Runs At 20 Tokens Per Second On Mac Studio

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the nightmare-for-OpenAI dept.)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from VentureBeat:

> Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has quietly released a new large language model that's already sending ripples through the artificial intelligence industry -- not just for its capabilities, but for how it's being deployed. The 641-gigabyte model, dubbed DeepSeek-V3-0324, appeared on AI repository Hugging Face today with virtually no announcement (just an empty [1]README file ), continuing the company's pattern of low-key but impactful releases. What makes this launch particularly notable is the model's MIT license -- making it freely available for commercial use -- and early reports that it can run directly on consumer-grade hardware, [2]specifically Apple's Mac Studio with M3 Ultra chip .

>

> "The new DeepSeek-V3-0324 in 4-bit runs at > 20 tokens/second on a 512GB M3 Ultra with mlx-lm!" wrote AI researcher Awni Hannun on social media. While the $9,499 Mac Studio might stretch the definition of "consumer hardware," the ability to run such a massive model locally is a major departure from the data center requirements typically associated with state-of-the-art AI. [...] Simon Willison, a developer tools creator, noted in a blog post that a 4-bit quantized version reduces the storage footprint to 352GB, making it feasible to run on high-end consumer hardware like the Mac Studio with M3 Ultra chip. This represents a potentially significant shift in AI deployment. While traditional AI infrastructure typically relies on multiple Nvidia GPUs consuming several kilowatts of power, the Mac Studio draws less than 200 watts during inference. This efficiency gap suggests the AI industry may need to rethink assumptions about infrastructure requirements for top-tier model performance.

"The implications of an advanced open-source reasoning model cannot be overstated," reports VentureBeat. "Current reasoning models like OpenAI's o1 and DeepSeek's R1 represent the cutting edge of AI capabilities, demonstrating unprecedented problem-solving abilities in domains from mathematics to coding. Making this technology freely available would democratize access to AI systems currently limited to those with substantial budgets."

"If DeepSeek-R2 follows the trajectory set by R1, it could present a direct challenge to GPT-5, OpenAI's next flagship model rumored for release in coming months. The contrast between OpenAI's closed, heavily-funded approach and DeepSeek's open, resource-efficient strategy represents two competing visions for AI's future."



[1] https://huggingface.co/deepseek-ai/DeepSeek-V3-0324/tree/main

[2] https://venturebeat.com/ai/deepseek-v3-now-runs-at-20-tokens-per-second-on-mac-studio-and-thats-a-nightmare-for-openai/



Trump's Crypto Venture Introduces a Stabelcoin

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the latest-development dept.)

World Liberty Financial, a crypto venture backed by Donald Trump and his family, has [1]launched a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin called USD1 . The token is [2]backed by U.S. Treasuries and cash equivalents and will soon go live on the Ethereum and Binance Smart Chain networks. CNBC reports:

> The development comes as the market cap for dollar-backed stablecoins -- cryptocurrencies that promise a fixed value peg to another asset -- has been climbing to new all-time-highs this year and has grown more than 46% in the past year, according to CryptoQuant. The market has long been dominated by Tether (USDT) and, more recently, Circle's USDC.

"USD1 provides what algorithmic and anonymous crypto projects cannot -- access to the power of DeFi underpinned by the credibility and safeguards of the most respected names in traditional finance," said World Liberty Financial co-founder Zach Witkoff. "We're offering a digital dollar stablecoin that sovereign investors and major institutions can confidently integrate into their strategies for seamless, secure cross-border transactions."

Alex Thorn is head of firmwide research at Galaxy Digital, said at the Digital Asset Summit: "Stablecoins are seen as more politically easy to do in Congress but actually will be dramatically more impactful to the United States and the world than market structure [legislation]. Who regulates who is important ... if you're one of the people that's going to be regulated, but the stablecoin bill could solidify dollar dominance for 100 years."



[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/25/trumps-world-liberty-financial-jumps-into-stablecoin-game-with-usd1-reveal.html

[2] https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250325773694/en/World-Liberty-Financial-Plans-to-Launch-USD1-the-Institutional-Ready-Stablecoin



Lisa Su Says Radeon RX 9000 Series Is AMD's Most Successful GPU Launch Ever (techspot.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the record-breaking dept.)

"In a conversation with Tony Yu from Asus China, AMD CEO Lisa Su shared that the Radeon RX 9000 series graphics cards have quickly become a huge hit, [1]breaking records as AMD's top-selling GPUs within just a week of release ," writes Slashdot reader [2]jjslash . TechSpot reports:

> AMD CEO Lisa Su has confirmed that the company's new Radeon RX 9000 graphics cards have been a massive success, selling 10 times more units than their predecessors in just one week on the market. Su also stated that more RDNA 4 cards are on the way, but did not confirm whether the lineup will include the rumored Radeon RX 9060. When asked about the limited availability of the new cards, Su said that AMD is ramping up production to ensure greater supply at retailers worldwide. She also expressed hope that increased availability would help stabilize pricing by discouraging scalping and price gouging.



[1] https://www.techspot.com/news/107280-lisa-su-calls-radeon-rx-9000-amd-most.html

[2] https://slashdot.org/~jjslash



Nearly Half of Canadians Have Cut Cable Entirely (mobilesyrup.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @12:45PM (BeauHD) from the no-more-loonie-toonies dept.)

According to Convergence Research, an estimated 46% of Canadian households [1]didn't have a TV subscription with a cable, satellite, or telecom-based provider in 2024 . MobileSyrup reports:

> In its latest annual " [2]Couch Potato" report (PDF) on the streaming market, the firm notes that this was a four per cent increase from 2023 and that the number is expected to continue to rise to 54 per cent by 2027. Convergence notes that this marks a greater shift towards subscription video on demand services (SVOD) like Netflix and Disney+. To that point, the firm found that Canadian streaming subscription revenue grew 15 per cent year-over-year to $4.2 billion in 2024. At the same time, linear TV subscription revenue dropped five per cent to around $6.5 billion.

>

> Some other interesting findings from the report:

> - The 10 leading streaming providers raised prices in Canada by an average of six percent last year

> - Ad-enabled memberships are cost 39 percent less on average compared to ad-free options

> - Canadians subscribe to an average of 2.6 streaming platforms per household



[1] https://mobilesyrup.com/2025/03/24/canadian-streaming-report-convergence-research/

[2] http://www.convergenceonline.com/downloads/2025OTT.pdf



After DDOS Attacks, Blizzard Rolls Back Hardcore WoW Deaths For the First Time (arstechnica.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @06:00AM (BeauHD) from the second-chance dept.)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:

> World of Warcraft Classic's Hardcore mode has set itself apart from the average MMO experience simply by [1]making character death permanent across the entire in-game realm. For years, Blizzard has [2]not allowed any appeals or rollbacks for these Hardcore mode character deaths, even when such deaths came as the direct result of a server disconnection or gameplay bug. Now, Blizzard says it's modifying that policy somewhat in response to a series of "unprecedented distributed-denial-of-service (DDOS) attacks" undertaken "with the singular goal of disrupting players' experiences." The World of Warcraft developer says it [3]may now resurrect Classic Hardcore characters "at our sole discretion " when those deaths come "in a mass event which we deem inconsistent with the integrity of the game."

WoW's Classic Hardcore made it a hotspot for streamers, especially members of the OnlyFangs Guild, who embraced the challenge that one mistake could end a character's run. However, as Ars Technica reports, a series of DDOS attacks timed with their major livestreamed raids led to character deaths and widespread frustration, prompting streamer sodapoppin to [4]declare the guild's end.

Blizzard responded by updating its Hardcore policy to resurrect characters lost specifically to DDOS attacks. "Recently, we have experienced unprecedented distributed-denial-of-service (DDOS) attacks that impacted many Blizzard game services, including Hardcore realms, with the singular goal of disrupting players' experiences," WoW Classic Associate Production Director Clay Stone [5]wrote in a public message . "As we continue our work to further strengthen the resilience of WoW realms and our rapid response time, we're taking steps to resurrect player-characters that were lost as a result of these attacks."



[1] https://worldofwarcraft.blizzard.com/en-us/news/23973734/rules-of-engagement-classic-hardcore-is-coming-to-world-of-warcraft

[2] https://www.shacknews.com/article/136780/world-of-warcraft-classic-hardcore-realms-interview

[3] https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2025/03/not-so-permadeath-blizzard-revives-hardcore-wow-characters-killed-by-ddos-attacks/

[4] https://www.reddit.com/r/wowclassic/comments/1ji81w2/sodapoppin_declares_the_end_of_onlyfangs/

[5] https://us.forums.blizzard.com/en/wow/t/in-response-to-the-ddos-attacks/2082423



Google Unveils Gemini 2.5 Pro, Its Latest AI Reasoning Model With Significant Benchmark Gains (blog.google)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @06:00AM (msmash) from the moving-forward dept.)

Google DeepMind has [1]launched Gemini 2.5 , a new family of AI models designed to "think" before responding to queries. The initial release, Gemini 2.5 Pro Experimental, tops the LMArena leaderboard by what Google claims is a "significant margin" and demonstrates enhanced reasoning capabilities across technical tasks. The model achieved 18.8% on Humanity's Last Exam without tools, outperforming most competing flagship models. In mathematics, it scored 86.7% on AIME 2025 and 92.0% on AIME 2024 in single attempts, while reaching 84.0% on GPQA's diamond benchmark for scientific reasoning.

For developers, Gemini 2.5 Pro demonstrates improved coding abilities with 63.8% on SWE-Bench Verified using a custom agent setup, though this falls short of Anthropic's Claude 3.7 Sonnet score of 70.3%. On Aider Polyglot for code editing, it scores 68.6%, which Google claims surpasses competing models. The reasoning approach builds on Google's previous experiments with reinforcement learning and chain-of-thought prompting. These techniques allow the model to analyze information, incorporate context, and draw conclusions before delivering responses. Gemini 2.5 Pro ships with a 1 million token context window (approximately 750,000 words). The model is available immediately in Google AI Studio and for Gemini Advanced subscribers, with Vertex AI integration planned in the coming weeks.



[1] https://blog.google/technology/google-deepmind/gemini-model-thinking-updates-march-2025/#gemini-2-5-thinking



'I Won't Connect My Dishwasher To Your Stupid Cloud' (jeffgeerling.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @06:00AM (msmash) from the yelling-at-cloud dept.)

A software engineer discovered that his newly purchased Bosch 500 series dishwasher [1]locks basic functionality behind cloud connectivity , reigniting concerns about internet-dependent home appliances. Jeff Geerling found that features like rinse cycle, delayed start and eco mode on his $1,000 dishwasher require connecting to WiFi and creating an account with "Home Connect," Bosch's cloud service.

Geerling criticized the approach as potentially part of planned obsolescence, noting that without a current subscription fee, the company will likely either shutter the service or introduce payments for previously standard features.



[1] https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2025/i-wont-connect-my-dishwasher-your-stupid-cloud



Boeing Is Pushing To Withdraw Guilty Plea Agreement (msn.com)

(Wednesday March 26, 2025 @06:00AM (msmash) from the new-world-order dept.)

Boeing is [1]seeking to withdraw an earlier agreement to plead guilty in a long-running criminal case that blamed the company for deceiving regulators before two deadly crashes of 737 MAX jets, WSJ is reporting, citing people familiar with the matter. From the report:

> The aerospace giant is seeking more lenient treatment from the Justice Department, which under the Trump administration is reviewing numerous pending criminal cases that haven't yet gone to trial or been approved by courts. Boeing nearly sealed its fate last year, agreeing in July to plead guilty to defrauding the Federal Aviation Administration. But a federal judge in Texas rejected the proposed deal in December, pushing the resolution beyond the Biden administration.

>

> Now Boeing stands to benefit from fresh eyes at Trump's Justice Department, which is inclined to at least modify parts of the agreement, some of the people said. Allowing Boeing to rescind its plea agreement, or lightening the company's punishment, would mark one of the most prominent examples of the Trump administration's lighter-touch approach to some white-collar enforcement. There were 346 people [2]killed in the two 737 MAX crashes , in 2018 and 2019. The two sides are still negotiating how to propose changes to the deal, expected by April 11, to U.S. District Judge Reed O'Connor, who oversees the case. One possible change under discussion: whether Boeing can forgo hiring an outside monitor to ensure its compliance with the law, the people said.



[1] https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/boeing-is-pushing-to-withdraw-guilty-plea-agreement/ar-AA1BzBQd

[2] https://tech.slashdot.org/story/20/09/12/1923211/is-boeings-737-max-safe-now



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Let your conscience be your guide.
-- Pope