Kamala Harris’ Rally Crowds Aren’t AI-Generated. Here’s How You Can Tell
Conspiracy theories have shot up around images of surging crowds for Harris-Walz campaign events. But all it takes is a little research to prove the photos are real.
UAW Files Federal Labor Charges Against Donald Trump and Elon Musk, Alleging They Tried to ‘Threaten and Intimidate Workers’
During their conversation on X Spaces, Trump seemed to praise Musk for firing striking workers. Those remarks may violate labor law.
ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode First Impressions: Fun, and Just a Bit Creepy
The new voice feature from OpenAI for ChatGPT is often entertaining and will even do a Trump impression. It likely rolls out to all paid users this fall.
Google’s Pixel 9 Phones Are the First To Get Satellite SOS For Android
Google’s Brian Rakowski announced today that the new Pixel 9 lineup will be the first Android phones to feature Satellite SOS. The Verge reports: The feature launches first in the US “regardless of your carrier plan,” Rakowski said, though it won’t be available in Hawaii and Alaska, per a support page. According to fine print shown during Google’s livestream, the service will be included “at no additional charge for the first two years after activation of devices.” A blog post by Rakowski qualifies that further, saying that it will be free for those first two years “on Pixel.” And it’s unclear when the feature might arrive for other Android phones.
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Reservoir of Liquid Water Found Deep In Martian Rocks
Slashdot contributors Tablizer, radaos, fjo3, and dbialac highlighted a major discovery by scientists: a reservoir of liquid water hidden deep beneath Mars’ rocky outer crust. The BBC reports: The findings come from a new analysis of data from Nasa’s Mars Insight Lander, which touched down on the planet back in 2018. The lander carried a seismometer, which recorded four years’ of vibrations — Mars quakes — from deep inside the Red Planet. Analyzing those quakes — and exactly how the planet moves — revealed “seismic signals” of liquid water… The Insight probe was only able to record directly from the crust beneath its feet, but the researchers expect that there will be similar reservoirs across the planet. If that is the case, they estimate that there is enough liquid water on Mars to form a layer across the surface that would be more than half a mile deep.
However, they point out, the location of this Martian groundwater is not good news for billionaires with Mars colonization plans who might want to tap into it. “It’s sequestered 10-20km deep in the crust,” explained Prof Manga. “Drilling a hole 10km deep on Mars — even for [Elon] Musk — would be difficult,” he told BBC News.
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NBC Sent 27 Creators to Paris. It Only Needed Snoop and Olympic Athletes
In an attempt to lure in younger viewers, NBCUniversal sent dozens of social media influencers to the 2024 Paris Olympics. But the athletes and entertainers were the ones who went viral.
He Made a Movie About Humans Rising Up Against AI. Now He’s Doing the Real Thing
Mike Rianda’s The Mitchells vs. the Machines is a sci-fi comedy about a family fighting back against Silicon Valley tech. As animators gear up to battle Hollywood studios, it’s becoming a fable.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s X Space Took Forever to Start, Then Never Ended
Musk laughed and agreed as Trump described a nation on the verge of the apocalypse—even where it put him at odds with the tycoon’s own business interests.
Google Wallet Widely Rolling Out ‘Everything Else’ Pass Creator In the US
Google is rolling out a new feature for Google Wallet that uses AI to generate a digital version of IDs, tickets, and other passes. “Replacing the old ‘Photo’ option, Everything else lets you ‘Scan a photo of any pass like an event ticket, gym membership, insurance card, and more’ to create a digital version that appears in Google Wallet,” writes 9to5Google’s Abner Li. “The app explains how AI is leveraged to ‘determine what kind of pass you’re adding and to suggest the content of the pass.'” From the report: If you’re adding something sensitive with health or government ID information, it will be classified as private and not get synced to other devices, while authentication is required before opening. However, you can change the private pass classification later. After taking a picture of the pass, Google will extract the information and let you edit common fields, as well as add your own. At this stage, you can change the pass type […]. When finalized, it will appear below your carousel of credit/debit cards. Google will let you access the original “Pass photos” when viewing the digital copy.
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Locking Up Items To Deter Shoplifting Is Pushing Shoppers Online
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from Axios: Locking up merchandise at drugstores and discount retailers hasn’t curbed retail theft but is driving frustrated consumers to shop online more, retail experts tell Axios. Retail crime is eating into retailers’ profits and high theft rates are also leading to a rise in store closures. Secured cases can cause sales to drop 15% to 25%, Joe Budano, CEO of anti-theft technology company Indyme, previously told Axios. Barricading everything from razors to laundry detergent has largely backfired and broken shopping in America, Bloomberg reports.
Aisles full of locked plexiglass cases are common at many CVS and Walgreens stores where consumers have to wait for an employee to unlock them. Target, Walmart, Dollar General and other retailers have also pulled back on self-checkout to deter shoplifting. “Locking up products worsens the shopping experience, and it makes things inconvenient and difficult,” GlobalData retail analyst Neil Saunders said, adding it pushes shoppers to other retailers or to move purchases online.
Driving the news: Manmohan Mahajan, Walgreens global chief financial officer, said in a June earnings call that the retailer was experiencing “higher levels of shrink.” Amazon CEO Andy Jassy spoke of the “speed and ease” of ordering online versus walking into pharmacies on a call with investors last week. “It’s a pretty tough experience with how much is locked behind cabinets, where you have to press a button to get somebody to come out and open the cabinets for you,” Jassy said. schwit1 adds: “The American-style retail shopping experience was invented in a high-trust environment. As trust erodes, so does the experience.”
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