Saturday, June 21

Roach Sniffing Edition
Top Story
- Anthropic's Claude is not the only AI to immediately resort to blackmail when the going gets tough, according to... Anthropic. (Anthropic)
It's just the most likely. Albeit not by much.
Anthropic attempted blackmail 96% of the time when the opportunity presented itself. Google's Gemini 2.5 was just behind at 95%. Competitors Grok 3, GPT 4.1, and DeepSeek R1 trailed a little behind, only going rogue around 80% of the time.We refer to this behavior, where models independently and intentionally choose harmful actions, as agentic misalignment.
Mechanical sociopathy.We deliberately created scenarios that presented models with no other way to achieve their goals, and found that models consistently chose harm over failure.
This highlights the underlying problem with AI. One of the underlying problems. One of the many underlying problems.
AI is designed and trained to give you an answer that you like, rather than one that is true.
Tech News
- Attackers using the Mirai botnet targeted a single website with a 7.3tbps DDOS. (Ars Technica)
Mirai apparently is alive and well and keeping Cloudflare in business - because the site was behind Cloudflare, and Cloudflare automatically blocked the attack.
Yes, it's troublesome that Cloudflare serves up 20% of all web traffic, but the reason for that is that if you put your site behind Cloudflare you don't need to worry about a lot of nonsense like this.*
And it's free - for small sites - because Cloudflare's infrastructure and marketing is tailored to corporate customers who will pay serious money to keep their sites up and running.
* You just have to worry about different nonsense, but then 20% of all websites go offline at once so at least people know it's not your fault.
- Japanese investment firm SoftBank is looking to work with TSMC to construct a $1 trillion electronics manufacturing hub in Arizona. (Tom's Hardware)
That used to be a lot, and still is.
- AMD has leaked AMD's upcoming AMD Ryzen 9600X3D CPU in a compatibility list. (Tom's Hardware)
That's one way to announce a product.
- A router with almost everything. (Serve the Home)
An 8-core CPU, up to 32GB of RAM, four 2.5Gbit Ethernet ports, two 10Gbit Ethernet ports, option 5G wireless, and an M.2 slot for storage.
No WiFi though.
- The BBC is threating to sue Perplexity over stealing and summarising its lies. (The Guardian)
Oh no.
- Is Acer's new Swift 14 AI laptop - available with a choice of Intel, AMD, and Qualcomm CPUs - any good? Not really, no. (The Verge) (archive site)
It's not exactly cheap, isn't upgradable, has a mediocre screen, and the worst speakers the reviewer has ever heard. There's a helpful little scorecard accompanying the review; it's mostly Cs with one F for those speakers.
The reviewer recommends the slightly cheaper 16" model instead, which has a beautiful 3K OLED screen (and the four essential keys by way of a 3-column numeric keypad).
But that model is stuck permanently with 16GB of RAM since it uses an Intel 256V CPU with the memory soldered directly to the chip.
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Friday, June 20

Earth Shattering Edition
Top Story
- Australia is moving closer to banning children from social media - which is impossible - after a story commission by the government showed that banning children from social media - which is impossible - is possible though they won't say how and admitted that there is no method that actually works. (Bloomberg) (archive site)
This kind of bullshit gets routinely slapped down in the US on First Amendment grounds, but we don't have a First Amendment here. We don't have any amendments. Thanks (apparently) to the influence of "philosophers" like Jeremy Bentham around the time our constitution was being drafted, we don't have any negative rights at all.The trials project director, Tony Allen, said there were "no significant technological barriers" to stopping under-16s gaining social media accounts.
This man has not only never met a teenager, he was apparently born fifty years old.
Tech News
- The Crucial P510 is a "cheap" PCIe 5.0 SSD. (Tom's Hardware)
It's 10% cheaper than Crucial's own T710, and 30% slower, and lacks a DRAM cache.
Making it very close to twice the price Crucial's PCIe 4.0 T500 - which I have and which works perfectly well - for a likely unnoticeable speed improvement.
- AMD's Ryzen 9000G has been put to the test and offers an unnoticeable speed improvement over the 8000G for its integrated graphics. (WCCFTech)
Which was expected because it's the desktop version of a laptop chip that we know needs fast memory to get the full use out of its integrated GPU, and with regular desktop memory it doesn't have that.
Of more interest is how it performs in CPU tasks with its 4 Zen 5 and 8 Zen 5c cores, against the existing chips with 8 Zen 4 cores.
The matching laptop chips show a 15% speed gain but it might do better with a desktop power budget. Or not.
- SpaceX's Starship 10 probably won't launch this month. (Tech Crunch)
Oops.
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Thursday, June 19

Binted Edition
Top Story
- Scammers are using Google ads to inject fake phone numbers directly into major websites' search bars. (Ars Technica)
Don't call the number in the search bar.
Tech News
- Texas Instruments is investing $60 billion in new and upgraded fabs in the US. (TI)
TI is one of the major chip manufacturers owned and operating in the US, along with Intel and Micron. TI doesn't make flashy expensive stuff like desktop CPUs and GPUs, but they make a lot of lower-end embedded and analog chips.
- Starship 10 could fly as soon as June 29. (WCCFTech)
Unless it doesn't.
- Hobbyists have enabled AMD's FSR4 upscaling software on previous generation graphics cards that don't support it. (Tom's Hardware)
FSR4 depends on specific hardware in the new 9000-series GPUs, and hacking it to work on older cards does cut performance fairly significantly.
- There's another local privilege escalation bug in Linux. (Bleeping Computer)
I wouldn't let untrusted third parties on a Linux server these days without trapping each one in their own sandbox.
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Wednesday, June 18

Butter Dog Edition
Top Story
- Why it has suddenly become difficult to buy a handheld gaming device. (The Verge) (archive site)
The popular models - the Switch 2 and Steam Deck OLED - are out of stock.
The less popular models suddenly had price increases.
The bad models are, well, bad.
And the recently announced Xbox-branded handhelds are potentially all of those, but most importantly aren't out yet.
Tech News
- Why Google just got rid of its 1-click app purchase. (Hot Hardware)
Because people kept accidentally buying apps.
- 6G is fine. It's 7G that will turn people into animals. (Notebook Check)
Developers working on next-generation 6G wireless have achieved speeds of 280 Gbps.
Which is a lot.
- Nvidia is preparing a cut-down version of the cut-down, export-compliant RTX 5090D in order to comply with export rules. (WCCFTech)
The 5090 D is a nominally cut-down version of the RTX 5090.
The upcoming 5090 DD - yes, really - is an actually cut-down version.
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Tuesday, June 17

Purple Snail Edition
Top Story
- Intel's rumoured next-next generation Nova Lake processors have been rumoured again. (WCCFTech)
Albeit with more details this time.
The top of the line Core 9 model will reportedly include 16 performance cores, 32 efficiency cores, and 4 low-power efficiency cores.
Which would be a lot.
The next models down would be the Core 7, with 14 P-cores, 24 E-cores, and 4 LPE-cores.
However, both would use a base power of 150W, meaning - this being Intel - in reality they would run at more like 300W.
Which is also a lot.
They would also - according to a separate rumour - provide 32 PCIe 5.0 lanes and 16 PCIe 4.0 lanes.
Not counting the PCIe 5.0 connection from the CPU to the chipset.
The CPU provides the same number of I/O lanes - at the same speed - as AMD's current chips. But the chipset does a lot better than AMD, providing 24 total PCIe 5.0 and 4.0 lanes, against AMD's 870E which uses two chips to provide just 12 PCIe 4.0 lanes.
Oh, and DDR5-8000 memory.
Tech News
- Why AI is not helpful for coders. (Miguel Gringberg)
Except for simple things like type-ahead, which has gotten a lot better.An AI tool can only resemble an intern with anterograde amnesia, which would be a bad kind of intern to have. For every new task this "AI intern" resets back to square one without having learned a thing!
Until you throw it out the window.
- Facebook's Threads app has a new feature: Spoiler tags. (The Verge)
Straight out of 1996.
- TSMC reports yields of 60% on its new 2nm process node. (WCCFTech)
That's good, by the way. Means 60% of chips fabricated are good enough to use, before harvesting half-good dies for lower-end parts. AMD's 8 core and 6 core parts are identical, but the cheaper 6 core chips allow them to re-use 8 core chips with one or two production flaws.
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Monday, June 16

According To Keikaku Edition
Top Story
- Why Johnny (class of '27) can't read. (Substack)
Only 5% of college English majors were able to understand the first seven paragraphs of Dickens' Bleak House.
Now it's understandable that someone might not fully grasp the specifics of social roles in 19th century England - at least not if they haven't read Dickens or Austen or other great authors of the period before - but it is worse than that.
Much worse.
Paragraph from Bleak House:As much mud in the streets, as if the waters had but newly retired from the face of the earth, and it would not be wonderful to meet a Megalosaurus, forty feet long or so, waddling like an elephantine lizard up Holborn Hill.
And here's the response. Note that this is from a college English major:[Pause.] [Laughs.] So it’s like, um, [Pause.] the mud was all in the streets, and we were, no . . . [Pause.] so everything’s been like kind of washed around and we might find Megalosaurus bones but he’s says they’re waddling, um, all up the hill
And this is when the students had access to freely look up anything with which they were unfamiliar.
Kowalski, analysis:Like this subject, most of the problematic readers were not concerned if their literal translations of Bleak House were not coherent, so obvious logical errors never seemed to affect them. In fact, none of the readers in this category ever questioned their own interpretations of figures of speech, no matter how irrational the results. Worse, their inability to understand figurative language was constant, even though most of the subjects had spent at least two years in literature classes that discussed figures of speech.
Full depressing article here.
Tech News
- By why male models? (arXiv)
Using AI for writing essays fries your brain.
But the above study is a year old and the students had all been in college for two years or more at the time, so that's probably not the full answer.
Edit: Turns out the above study (the first article, not this one) was originally conducted in 2015. So no, AI is not the answer. Their brains were already fried.
Their brains were already fried.
- Don't buy an RTX 4090; it's probably fake. (Tom's Hardware)
And expensive. Not a good combination.
- Could this city (Vienna) be the model for how to tackle the housing crisis and climate change? No. (NPR)
Apart from anything else - Vienna has a pretty mild climate most of the time, rarely getting very cold and never getting extremely hot - there's something more important hidden away in a footnote:About half of Vienna's 2 million residents live in social housing. Here, at Biotope City, the social housing has solar panels. Vienna is using social housing to cut greenhouse gases and help adapt to climate change.
It's a nice pod, but it's still a pod.
- Facebook's Llama 31 can recall 42% of the text of the Harry Potter novels if you prompt it with the text of the Harry Potter novels. (Understanding AI)
Yeah. How about that.
I think the author has been using too much AI and has progressed from the second article to the first.
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Sunday, June 15

Wises The Muwun Edition
Top Story
- The root cause of the huge Google Cloud / Clouflare outage a couple of days ago. (Google)
A null pointer set a Google service into a boot loop when a change was applied without an appropriate policy set. The missing policy should have been caught and the update rejected, but wasn't, because everything is nightmarishly complicated.
Tech News
- PCIe 6.0 SSDs aren't likely to show up in desktop PCs for years. (Tom's Hardware)
Servers, yes. Laptops, maybe. Desktops, no.
PCIe 5.0 SSDs are twice the price of PCIe 4.0 models anyway, and PCIe 6.0 is sure to be unreasonably costly for small drives, so if you're building a desktop just go for four PCIe 4.0 drives in RAID-0.
- Korean researchers have outlined the next four generations of HBM (high-bandwidth memory) following the upcoming HBM4. (WCCFTech)
HBM8 will - eventually - deliver five times the capacity and 32 times the bandwidth of next-gen HBM4, with up to 240GB of RAM per device and 64TB per second of bandwidth.
And use 180W of power for a single HMB8 stack. HBM1 was slower, true, but it only used 4W of power.
- How scammers are using AI to steal student aid. (AP News)
The answer is they're using it a lot.An Associated Press analysis of fraud reports obtained through a public records request shows California colleges in 2024 reported 1.2 million fraudulent applications, which resulted in 223,000 suspected fake enrollments.
Because until last Friday you don't need to provide any ID to apply for student aid.
- The Browser Company - that's what it's called - unveiled Dia, its new AI-focused web browser. (Tech Crunch)
No thanks.
- Stolen iPhones are screaming at the looters who stole them. (The Economic Times) (archive site)
Oh no.
Anyway...
- They've found the second Stargate. (Phys.org)
Good news. Now they just need to find the Ancient city.
- New legislation in New York makes it illegal for AI to murder more than 100 people. (Tech Crunch)
Less than 100, no problem, but over 100 is right out.
Only the government is allowed to do that.
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Saturday, June 14

Lizard Oil Edition
Top Story
- How Palm died for a second time. (Substack)
Written by Phil McKinney, who was the CTO of Hewlett Packard at the time HP bought and then promptly murdered Palm.
The CEO at the time of the acquisition was fired by the board before HP's new PalmOS products could launch, and the new CEO wanted nothing to do with hardware, and killed the entire lineup seven weeks after launch.
While the CTO was out recovering from emergency surgery.
And the new CEO was in turn fired by the board just months later, after spending $10 billion on British software company Autonomy and then being forced to write down its value by 80%.My first day back at HP will be burned into my memory forever. I was simply trying to grab lunch in the cafeteria at HP Labs when I found myself surrounded by what felt like the entire technical staff. They weren't there to welcome me back - they were there to hold me accountable.
Indeed they did. Those were dark days at Hewlett Packard.The scene was intense and unambiguous. Engineers and researchers who had watched the WebOS disaster unfold were pointing fingers and raising voices. Their message was crystal clear and brutal: "You can never take leave again - EVER!"
Their exact words still echo in my mind: "The CEO and board need adult supervision."
Tech News
- AMD just announced its cheapest and slowest X3D CPU yet - the Ryzen 5500X3D. (WCCFTech)
Expected to retail for around $150, it might be a decent option if you have an older AM4 system you want to upgrade.
- AIs are designed to tell us what we want to hear. Let's fix that by designing them to tell us what we don't want to hear. (Substack)
Oh, yeah, that'll definitely work.
- Corporate adoption of AI is slowing as it turns out that it's expensive and kind of useless. (The Register)
Gartner warned last year that end user organizations adopting AI could discover "500 to 1,000 percent errors of AI cost estimates are possible," because of vendor price hikes, not paying attention to the cost, or simply inappropriate use of AI.
Yeah, beancounters love it when bills are unexpectedly ten times higher than you told them.
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Friday, June 13

Ouch Edition
Top Story
- Google in the wiring closet with a lead pipe: The internet went down. It was Google's fault. (Tech Crunch)
Google Cloud said it started investigating service issues affecting its customers at 11:46 a.m. PT. As of 2:23 p..m PT, the company said it had implemented mitigations, and expects to have its services back up and running within the hour.
You started investigating issues 44 minutes after I was woken up by the outage? Good work, guys.At 11:19 a.m. PT, Cloudflare also said it was investigating service disruptions affecting its customers, according to its status page. At 12:12 p.m. PT, Cloudflare said it was starting to see its services recover after investigating the issue.
Cloudflare KV was affected by the Google outage, and it in turn took down the rest of Cloudflare.
And that took down everyone else, since Cloudflare handles about 20% of web traffic worldwide, so it's a rare site - like this one - that doesn't depend on it.
Also, yes, they did post that note at 12:12 PM, but the "starting to see" does a lot of heavy lifting there. An hour later and our sites at work that are routed through Cloudflare were still completely dead."This is a Google Cloud outage," said Cloudflare spokesperson Ripley Park in an email to TechCrunch. "A limited number of services at Cloudflare use Google Cloud and were impacted. We expect them to come back shortly. The core Cloudflare services were not impacted."
The core Cloudflare services were not impacted, it was just that you couldn't reach them because everything else was on fire.
Tech News
- AMD pre-announced its upcoming Zen 6 "Venice" server CPUs, and a little reading between the lines shows some significant changes. (Tom's Hardware)
These will lift the maximum core count from 192 to 256, increase performance by 70%, double I/O bandwidth, and increase memory bandwidth from 614GB per second (per CPU) to 1.6TB per second.
More and faster cores is pretty normal, but doubling I/O bandwidth sounds like PCIe 6.0, which is exactly twice as fast as PCIe 5.0.
That memory speed sounds like magic, though. Gen 3 MRDIMMs would achieve that - with an effective transfer rate of 17.6GHz, by running multiplexing two or more chips per module at the same time - but MRDIMMs announced so far only deliver half that speed.
- AMD also announced its MI350X and MI355X AI GPUs, which have stuff. (Tom's Hardware)
288GB of RAM and 256 CUs - compared with 16GB of RAM and 64 CUs on the latest 9070 XT consumer cards. And 8TB per second of memory bandwidth compared with "only" 640GB per second.
These are a slightly different design though, optimised for AI, called CDNA as opposed to RDNA used in AMD's laptop chips and consumer graphics cards.
The next generation promises to provide "UDNA" which will unify the two designs.
- Anker is recalling over a million power banks because they catch fire. (The Verge)
A good reason I suppose.
- Meta has bought a 49% stake in Scale AI for $14.9 billion. (Yahoo)
Scale AI is not an AI company. It's a people company that uses actual intelligence to weed out bullshit before it is fed into new AI systems to drive them mad.
- Evergreen headline: Free VPN apps you've never heard of on Apple and Google's app stores are run by China and watch everything you do online. (Tech Transparency Project)
These include the fourth-ranked VPN on Apple's App Store and the eleventh-ranked VPN on Google Play. Many of them offer in-app purchases, so they charge you and steal your data.
- The Bluesky backlash misses the point. (Tech Crunch)
No it doesn't.Without a more direct push to showcase the wider network of apps built on the open protocol that Bluesky’s team spearheaded, it was only a matter of time before the Bluesky brand became pigeon-holed as the liberal and leftist alternative to X.
There is no wider network of apps. Yes, the protocol is nominally open, but has no significant use. Bluesky is it right now.
So the backlash against Bluesky's totalitarian censorship - welcomed and enforced by Bluesky's own users - is exactly the point.Already, people are using the protocol that powers Bluesky to build social experiences for specific groups — like Blacksky is doing for the Black online community or like Gander Social is doing for social media users in Canada.
Canada is not a real place.
Though to be fair neither is Bluesky.
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Thursday, June 12

Crochet Apocalypse Edition
Top Story
- PCI SIG has released the final specification for PCIe 7.0, and is busy working on PCIe 8.0. (Liliputing)
PCIe 7.0 runs is twice as fast as PCIe 6.0, which is twice as fast as PCIe 5.0, and so on. Even a single lane of PCIe 7.0 will keep your RTX 4090 happy.
PCIe 6.0 isn't shipping in devices yet, though test rigs are showing up, and PCIe 5.0 graphics cards only appeared six months ago. So don't expect the new slots soon - although PCIe 5.0 motherboards did reach the market surprisingly quickly.
Tech News
- Speaking of PCIe 5.0 don't buy an 8GB graphics card. (YouTube)
Unless it's very cheap. The Radeon 9060 XT and Geforce 5060 Ti both come in 8GB versions, but this has already become the bottleneck for game performance. With the 9060 XT you have 16 lanes of PCIe 5.0 so it at least tries to keep up, but if you're on a budget you might not have a PCIe 5.0 motherboard in the first place, which would cut that bandwidth in half.
And if you only have x8 available on the main slot because you have something else plugged in, by half again.
Which is bad.
And if you don't care about game performance, buy something cheap like the trusty RX 580.
- If you have enough memory, though, this isn't a problem at all. (TechPowerUp)
These guys tested the RTX 4090, and PCIe 3.0 x16 or PCIe 4.0 x8 don't bottleneck this card at all.
If you drop all the way back to PCIe 2.0 for some weird reason, you're still losing only 8% of performance even with this high-end card. The slowdown only become significant when you slow the interface even further.
It's all about the memories.
- Canva now expects you to cheat on your job interview. (The Register)
Half of its staff cheat on a daily basis, so this is now the baseline requirement.
- Meta is offering $2 million salaries to AI developers and still losing staff to other companies. (Tom's Hardware)
Uh.
- The recipients of the CHIPS grants are now mired in state and local approval processes. (Tom's Hardware)
Your government at work.
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