Thursday, June 11
Daily News Stuff 11 June 2026
Reality Bleed Edition
Reality Bleed Edition
Top Story
- Microsoft just released its biggest Patch Tuesday ever, fixing over 200 flows* including three 0-day exploits. (Computer Weekly)
Well, good. I guess that means things are fixed.
* Close enough. See comments.
- A new exploit called RoguePlanet targets Windows Defender - the Windows subsystem that protect the rest of the system from exploits - the grant attackers admin access. (The Register)
Never wrestle with an autistic asshole. Just don't.
Tech News
- AMD claims its upcoming 256 core Zen 6 Venice server processor is 3.3x better than Nvidia's upcoming 88 core Vera Rubin processor when normalised to a full 100kW rack. (Tom's Hardware)
It's impossible to confirm any of this. AMD doesn't have unreleased Nvidia hardware, Nvidia doesn't have unreleased AMD hardware, and anyone who has both has signed away all their major organs in NDAs.
- Seattle has enacted one year moratorium on new AI datacenters. (The Guardian)
I'm not sure anyone was planning to build a datacenter in Seattle, but if they were, they can't.
- Elon Musk has showed off plans for a first generation orbital datacenter. (Tom's Hardware)
150kW of computing power moving at 8km per second. Don't stand underneath when they fly by.
- China is planning to spend $295 billion on a national AI datacenter. (Tom's Hardware)
It is planned to be constructed of at least 80% export-quality tofu dregs.
- Samsung has signed a deal to build 50MW floating datacenters. (Tom's Hardware)
Your move, Seattle.
- If you want to use Claudes new security-oriented Fable and Mythos models, it will track your interactions for a month. (Claude)
And then get hacked.
- Leading firms in the AI waste race are spending $7500 per month per employee. (Tech Crunch)
And I can call spirits from the vasty deep.
- A former xAI engineer has filed suit against the company, claiming he was fired for raising "safety" concerns. (Tech Crunch)
"Safety" in AI rarely has anything to do with safety, so its hard to tell what this is about. The interesting part is that the lawsuit explicitly says that Elon Musk was not at fault and insisted that all applicable laws be followed; the suit places blame on one single, now departed executive.
As in, he left the company. As far as I know he's still alive.
Musical Interlude
Disclaimer: No, I said "allo".
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:25 PM
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1
Hard to see how Mr. Kim expects to win his lawsuit against xAI, given that he alleges that the manager who fired him was specifically *ignoring* orders from the company owner. A lawsuit against Mr. Ba (the manager in question) would have much higher chance of succeeding.
But then, perhaps his plan is to find a judge who will decide against Elon Musk for reasons of personal prejudice. He did file it in California, after all...
P.S. Pixy, I'm being sfleeb'ed again.
Posted by: Robin Munn at Thursday, June 11 2026 06:36 PM (4WDgH)
2
A second page load and the "sfleeb" is gone again. It's intermittent.
P.S. Typo alert: "over 200 flows" should be "over 200 flaws" in that first article, I think.
P.S. Typo alert: "over 200 flows" should be "over 200 flaws" in that first article, I think.
Posted by: Robin Munn at Thursday, June 11 2026 06:44 PM (4WDgH)
3
Over 201 flows, I guess.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Thursday, June 11 2026 09:33 PM (PiXy!)
4
"In particular, Kim was concerned with the possibility that Grok could foment discrimination and help spread information about weapons of mass destruction."
Uh-huh. So, another leftist censor.
Uh-huh. So, another leftist censor.
Posted by: Rick C at Friday, June 12 2026 12:29 AM (9X5u6)
5
I admire the persistent nuttiness of both Elon and the anti-Elon gang. The difference being that mostly Elon does stuff and the anti-Elon gang just whine, and boy do they whine a lot.
Also, I thought one of the biggest probelms about a nice, hard vacuum was that it's quite difficult to cool hot stuff down out there, which is kinda what makes me wonder about data"centres" in space.
Also, I thought one of the biggest probelms about a nice, hard vacuum was that it's quite difficult to cool hot stuff down out there, which is kinda what makes me wonder about data"centres" in space.
Posted by: normal at Friday, June 12 2026 04:49 AM (LDKo5)
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