- 81 Posts
- 108 Comments
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto Politics@beehaw.org•Trump, 79, Called Out for ‘Droopy’ Face at 9/11 Memorial7·9 days agoHe needs to be in a retirement home
along_the_road@beehaw.orgOPto Technology@beehaw.org•Tech CEOs Praise Donald Trump at White House Dinner27·16 days agoThe scene opens confusingly. The camera zooms too close to the president’s face; the table at which the tech executives are seated seems far too long. Mark Zuckerberg is there, and Bill Gates and Tim Cook and Satya Nadella and Sam Altman and on and on, a baker’s dozen or so of Silicon Valley’s most powerful people—cutthroat competitors all—united here to pledge allegiance to Donald Trump.
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto World News@beehaw.org•Men are opening up about mental health to AI instead of humans2·17 days agoSome therapists use AI themselves! Might as well skip the middle man?
Declan would never have found out his therapist was using ChatGPT had it not been for a technical mishap. The connection was patchy during one of their online sessions, so Declan suggested they turn off their video feeds. Instead, his therapist began inadvertently sharing his screen.
“Suddenly, I was watching him use ChatGPT,” says Declan, 31, who lives in Los Angeles. “He was taking what I was saying and putting it into ChatGPT, and then summarizing or cherry-picking answers.”
https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/09/02/1122871/therapists-using-chatgpt-secretly/
!c/antijoke
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto Politics@beehaw.org•Immigration Detention Has Become a Booming Business for Private Prison Giants4·1 month agoWhy do you think the debt is growing? This is one giant grift
along_the_road@beehaw.orgOPto Technology@beehaw.org•Hackers Went Looking for a Backdoor in High-Security Safes—and Now Can Open Them in Seconds44·1 month agoAbout two years ago, security researchers James Rowley and Mark Omo got curious about a scandal in the world of electronic safes: Liberty Safe, which markets itself as “America’s #1 heavy-duty home and gun safe manufacturer,” had apparently given the FBI a code that allowed agents to open a criminal suspect’s safe in response to a warrant related to the January 6, 2021, invasion of the US Capitol building.
Politics aside, Rowley and Omo were taken aback to read that it was so easy for law enforcement to penetrate a locked metal box—not even an internet-connected device—that no one but the owner ought to have the code to open. “How is it possible that there’s this physical security product, and somebody else has the keys to the kingdom?” Omo asks.
So they decided to try to figure out how that backdoor worked. In the process, they’d find something far bigger: another form of backdoor intended to let authorized locksmiths open not just Liberty Safe devices, but the high-security Securam Prologic locks used in many of Liberty’s safes and those of at least seven other brands. More alarmingly, they discovered a way for a hacker to exploit that backdoor—intended to be accessible only with the manufacturer’s help—to open a safe on their own in seconds.
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto Politics@beehaw.org•US Universities Are Deepening Their Ties With ICE and Border Patrol12·2 months agoWhat a disgrace this country has become
I’m sorry that sucks :(
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along_the_road@beehaw.orgOPto Technology@beehaw.org•Travel reporter accuses Hyatt of $500 smoking fee scam43·2 months agoWhen travel reporter Zach Griff checked into The Pell, a JDV by Hyatt property in Rhode Island, he expected a relaxing stay with his wife and 9-month-old daughter. Unfortunately, he left on a sour note after the hotel charged him a $500 smoking fee following his stay.
The problem? Griff says he’s never smoked a day in his life, let alone in a hotel room while staying there with his family.
Griff, a senior reporter at The Points Guy, took his story public on social media after the hotel allegedly charged him the $500 fee based on readings from an air quality sensor. The sensor data was supplied by a third-party company called Rest, which claims hotels can easily collect fees from smoking events.
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto Politics@beehaw.org•Trump complains about Putin’s ‘bullshit’3·2 months agoTrump should just cut the crap and send weapons to Ukraine else be quiet
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto Politics@beehaw.org•SCOTUS Porn Ruling A Boon For Age Verification Companies; 40% Of Americans Now Live Under Anti-Porn Age-Gating Laws3·3 months agoFor the VPN to work there has to be a place without censorship laws. The problem is that there is more more of places with censorship laws and age verification. There is one website in particular that made it mandatory for everyone regardless of where you live to provide age verification - the website did walk it back but still.
Well that’s depressing
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto World News@beehaw.org•Pizza order shows the world is on the brink2·3 months agoReminds me of this skit from please don’t destroy
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto World News@beehaw.org•Romanian president signs law allowing troops to shoot down Russian drones in country’s airspace13·4 months agoThanks Romania! This is smart and sensible law.
along_the_road@beehaw.orgOPto Technology@beehaw.org•Ticketmaster proudly announces it will follow the law and show prices up-front42·4 months agoTicketmaster wants you to know it’s “all in” on up-front pricing. In a blog post published on Monday, the company triumphantly declared that it’s “putting fans first” and including fees in the first price you see for a ticket. Not mentioned in Ticketmaster’s announcement: An FTC rule requiring that exact change just so happened to take effect today.
along_the_road@beehaw.orgto Gaming@beehaw.org•GTA 6's delay doesn't mean the games industry's in trouble - it's already dead11·5 months agoClickbait title, GTA 6 delay has nothing to do with the game industry
Previous titles from rockstar like RDR2 and GTA 5 were also delayed
Make people dumber so they are easier to exploit
MAGA is digging their own grave here