Author name: 9u50fv

i-can’t-stop-shooting-oddcore’s-endless-waves-of-weird-little-guys

I can’t stop shooting Oddcore’s endless waves of weird little guys

Every new semi-randomized area you clear increases your total capacity to store souls, but every visit to the portal shop increases the additional “tax” you need to spend on every purchase. This makes the decision of when to warp away to the shop a persistent quandary—do you power up as quickly as possible to increase your chances of survival, or wait until you’ll be able to purchase even more power-ups a little later?

What’s around the corner?

All the while, the enemies keep coming fast and furious, slowly getting faster, tougher, and more capable with each new zone you enter. Through it all, the tight controls, forgiving aim system, and wide variety of weapon and gadget options make every firefight fast, frenetic, and fun.

To keep things from getting too repetitive, you’ll sometimes get thrown into an arena where you have to chase down frolicking golden humanoid flowers or destroy a few giant ambulatory mushrooms—you know, standard tropes of the video game world. You’ll also occasionally get dropped into brief, intentionally off-putting, empty interstitial rooms that seem designed to surprise Twitch viewers more than fit some sort of coherent aesthetic, or “corruptions” that briefly prevent you from gaining health and/or warping away to the convenience shop for a breather.

What’s the worst that could happen?

Credit: Oddcorp

What’s the worst that could happen? Credit: Oddcorp

Between runs, you can move around an ersatz redemption arcade to earn new weapons and gadgets and explore the miniature theme park setting, which is full of hidden crannies and unlockable play spaces. In a few hours of play, I’ve already stumbled on so many secrets by pure accident that I can only imagine unlocking them all will be a real undertaking (and I presume even more will be added as the game moves through Early Access).

The in-game leaderboards and achievements suggest that it is possible to “beat” Oddcore at some point, presumably by combining enough skill and lucky upgrades to power your way through dozens of variants in a single run. Frankly, I’m not sure I’ll ever master the game enough to reach that point. Even so, I’m happy to have a new excuse to take a brain break by shooting a bunch of weird little guys in weird little spaces for a few minutes at a time.

I can’t stop shooting Oddcore’s endless waves of weird little guys Read More »

us-gov’t:-house-sysadmin-stole-200-phones,-caught-by-house-it-desk

US gov’t: House sysadmin stole 200 phones, caught by House IT desk

The US House of Representatives, that glorious and efficient gathering of We the People, has been hit with yet another scandal.

Like most (non-sexual) House scandals, the allegations here involve personal enrichment. Unlike most (non-sexual) House scandals, though, this one involved hundreds of government cell phones being sold on eBay—and some rando member of We the People calling the US House IT help desk, which blew the lid on the whole scheme.

Only sell “in parts”

According to the government’s version of events, 43-year-old Christopher Southerland was working in 2023 as a sysadmin for the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. In his role, Southerland had the authority to order cell phones for committee staffers, of which there are around 80.

But during the early months of 2023, Southerland is said to have ordered 240 brand-new phones—far more than even the total number of staffers—and to have shipped them all to his home address in Maryland.

The government claims that Southerland then sold over 200 of these cell phones to a local pawn shop, which was told to resell the devices only “in parts” as a way to get around the House’s mobile device management software, which could control the devices remotely.

It’s hard to find good help these days, though, even at pawn shops. At some point, at least one of the phones ended up, intact, on eBay, where it was sold to a member of the public.

US gov’t: House sysadmin stole 200 phones, caught by House IT desk Read More »

musk-claims-grok-made-“literally-zero”-naked-child-sex-images-as-probes-begin

Musk claims Grok made “literally zero” naked child sex images as probes begin

However, it seems that when Musk updated Grok to respond to some requests to undress images by refusing the prompts, it was enough for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to claim X had moved to comply with the law, Reuters reported.

Ars connected with a European nonprofit, AI Forensics, which tested to confirm that X had blocked some outputs in the UK. A spokesperson confirmed that their testing did not include probing if harmful outputs could be generated using X’s edit button.

AI Forensics plans to conduct further testing, but its spokesperson noted it would be unethical to test the “edit” button functionality that The Verge confirmed still works.

Last year, the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence published research showing that Congress could “move the needle on model safety” by allowing tech companies to “rigorously test their generative models without fear of prosecution” for any CSAM red-teaming, Tech Policy Press reported. But until there is such a safe harbor carved out, it seems more likely that newly released AI tools could carry risks like those of Grok.

It’s possible that Grok’s outputs, if left unchecked, could eventually put X in violation of the Take It Down Act, which comes into force in May and requires platforms to quickly remove AI revenge porn. One of the mothers of one of Musk’s children, Ashley St. Clair, has described Grok outputs using her images as revenge porn.

While the UK probe continues, Bonta has not yet made clear which laws he suspects X may be violating in the US. However, he emphasized that images with victims depicted in “minimal clothing” crossed a line, as well as images putting children in sexual positions.

As the California probe heats up, Bonta pushed X to take more actions to restrict Grok’s outputs, which one AI researcher suggested to Ars could be done with a few simple updates.

“I urge xAI to take immediate action to ensure this goes no further,” Bonta said. “We have zero tolerance for the AI-based creation and dissemination of nonconsensual intimate images or of child sexual abuse material.”

Musk claims Grok made “literally zero” naked child sex images as probes begin Read More »

civilization-vii-is-headed-to-iphone-and-ipad-with-“arcade-edition”

Civilization VII is headed to iPhone and iPad with “Arcade Edition”

Civilization VII is coming to the iPhone and iPad, Apple and publisher 2K announced today.

Formally titled Sid Meier’s Civilization VII Arcade Edition, it is developed by Behaviour Interactive with input from original developer Firaxis Games.

The game will be available as part of the Apple Arcade service, which offers ad-free games for Apple platforms for $7 per month. Neither announcement makes any mention of a non-Arcade version, so this appears to be exclusively part of the subscription.

That shouldn’t be too much of a surprise; full-priced premium games have struggled on the platform when not bundled in a subscription. For example, Rockstar Games’ Red Dead Redemption came out both as a standalone title on the App Store and as part of Netflix’s subscription. The Netflix version surpassed a staggering 3.3 million downloads, while the $40 direct purchase managed just over 10,000.

The announcement calls this release “the authentic Civilization experience,” which you can probably take to mean that it doesn’t simplify the gameplay in any way. That said, there is some fine print you shouldn’t miss.

The App Store listing for the game says this release will not receive any of the DLC planned for other platforms. It also notes that “post-launch updates that apply to other platforms may be excluded or delayed.” Also, the supported players listed is “1,” suggesting it may not have multiplayer. (The desktop and console versions already lack hotseat multiplayer, but they support online play.)

Civilization VII is headed to iPhone and iPad with “Arcade Edition” Read More »

the-ram-shortage’s-silver-lining:-less-talk-about-“ai-pcs”

The RAM shortage’s silver lining: Less talk about “AI PCs”

RAM prices have soared, which is bad news for people interested in buying, building, or upgrading a computer this year, but it’s likely good news for people exasperated by talk of so-called AI PCs.

As Ars Technica has reported, the growing demands of data centers, fueled by the AI boom, have led to a shortage of RAM and flash memory chips, driving prices to skyrocket.

In an announcement today, Ben Yeh, principal analyst at technology research firm Omdia, said that in 2025, “mainstream PC memory and storage costs rose by 40 percent to 70 percent, resulting in cost increases being passed through to customers.”

Overall, global PC shipments increased in 2025, according to Omdia, (which pegged growth at 9.2 percent compared to 2024), and IDC, (which today reported 9.6 percent growth), but analysts expect PC sales to be more tumultuous in 2026.

“The year ahead is shaping up to be extremely volatile,” Jean Philippe Bouchard, research VP with IDC’s worldwide mobile device trackers, said in a statement.

Both analyst firms expect PC makers to manage the RAM shortage by raising prices and by releasing computers with lower memory specs. IDC expects price hikes of 15 to 20 percent and for PC RAM specs to “be lowered on average to preserve memory inventory on hand,” Bouchard said. Omdia’s Yeh expects “leaner mid to low-tier configurations to protect margins.”

“These RAM shortages will last beyond just 2026, and the cost-conscious part of the market is the one that will be most impacted,” Jitesh Ubrani, research manager for worldwide mobile device trackers at IDC, told Ars via email.

IDC expects vendors to “prioritize midrange and premium systems to offset higher component costs, especially memory.”

The RAM shortage’s silver lining: Less talk about “AI PCs” Read More »

fda-deletes-warning-on-bogus-autism-therapies-touted-by-rfk-jr.‘s-allies

FDA deletes warning on bogus autism therapies touted by RFK Jr.‘s allies

For years, the Food and Drug Administration provided an informational webpage for parents warning them of the dangers of bogus autism treatments, some promoted by anti-vaccine activists and “wellness” companies. The page cited specifics scams and the “significant health risks” they pose.

But, under anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.—who has numerous ties to the wellness industry—that FDA information webpage is now gone. It was quietly deleted at the end of last year, the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed to Ars Technica.

The defunct webpage, titled “Be Aware of Potentially Dangerous Products and Therapies that Claim to Treat Autism,” provided parents and other consumers with an overview of the problem. It began with a short description of autism and some evidence-based, FDA-approved medications that can help manage autism symptoms. Then, the regulatory agency provided a list of some false claims and unproven, potentially dangerous treatments it had been working to combat. “Some of these so-called therapies carry significant health risks,” the FDA wrote.

The list included chelation and hyperbaric oxygen therapy, treatments that those in the anti-vaccine and wellness spheres have championed.

Dangerous detoxes

Chelation is a real treatment for heavy metal poisoning, such as lead poisoning. But it has been co-opted by anti-vaccine activists and wellness gurus, who falsely claim it can treat autism, among other things. These sham treatments can come in a variety of forms, including sprays, suppositories, capsules, and liquid drops. Actual FDA-approved chelation therapy products are prescription only, the agency noted, and chelating certain minerals from the body “can lead to serious and life-threatening outcomes.”

Many anti-vaccine activists promote the false and thoroughly debunked claim that vaccines cause autism, and more specifically, that trace metal components in some vaccines cause the neurological disorder. For years, anti-vaccine activists like Kennedy focused on thimerosal, a vaccine preservative that contains ethylmercury. Thimerosal was largely removed from childhood vaccines by 2001 amid unfounded concerns. The removal made no impact on autism rates, and many studies have continued to show that it is safe and not a cause of autism. Anti-vaccine activists moved on to blame other vaccine components for autism, including aluminum, which is used in some vaccines to help spur protective immune responses. It too has been found to be safe and not linked to autism.

FDA deletes warning on bogus autism therapies touted by RFK Jr.‘s allies Read More »

google-removes-some-ai-health-summaries-after-investigation-finds-“dangerous”-flaws

Google removes some AI health summaries after investigation finds “dangerous” flaws

Why AI Overviews produces errors

The recurring problems with AI Overviews stem from a design flaw in how the system works. As we reported in May 2024, Google built AI Overviews to show information backed up by top web results from its page ranking system. The company designed the feature this way based on the assumption that highly ranked pages contain accurate information.

However, Google’s page ranking algorithm has long struggled with SEO-gamed content and spam. The system now feeds these unreliable results to its AI model, which then summarizes them with an authoritative tone that can mislead users. Even when the AI draws from accurate sources, the language model can still draw incorrect conclusions from the data, producing flawed summaries of otherwise reliable information.

The technology does not inherently provide factual accuracy. Instead, it reflects whatever inaccuracies exist on the websites Google’s algorithm ranks highly, presenting the facts with an authority that makes errors appear trustworthy.

Other examples remain active

The Guardian found that typing slight variations of the original queries into Google, such as “lft reference range” or “lft test reference range,” still prompted AI Overviews. Hebditch said this was a big worry and that the AI Overviews present a list of tests in bold, making it very easy for readers to miss that these numbers might not even be the right ones for their test.

AI Overviews still appear for other examples that The Guardian originally highlighted to Google. When asked why these AI Overviews had not also been removed, Google said they linked to well-known and reputable sources and informed people when it was important to seek out expert advice.

Google said AI Overviews only appear for queries where it has high confidence in the quality of the responses. The company constantly measures and reviews the quality of its summaries across many different categories of information, it added.

This is not the first controversy for AI Overviews. The feature has previously told people to put glue on pizza and eat rocks. It has proven unpopular enough that users have discovered that inserting curse words into search queries disables AI Overviews entirely.

Google removes some AI health summaries after investigation finds “dangerous” flaws Read More »

us-black-hawk-helicopter-trespasses-on-private-montana-ranch-to-grab-elk-antlers

US Black Hawk helicopter trespasses on private Montana ranch to grab elk antlers

The three servicemen on the chopper were eventually charged in Sweet Grass County Court with trespassing. They all pleaded not guilty. This week, pilot Deni Draper changed his plea to “no contest,” allowing sentencing to go forward without a trial (but without actually admitting guilt).

According to local reporting, prosecutors had evidence that “no trespassing signs were posted on McMullen’s property” and that “Draper admitted to Montana game warden Austin Kassner that he piloted the helicopter and decided to land it.” In addition to the neighbor’s testimony, “helicopter tire indentations and exhaust marks in the grass” were present at the site of the alleged landing.

The judge has accepted the change of plea and hit Draper with a $500 fine—the maximum penalty. So long as Draper stays out of trouble for the next six months, he will avoid further fines and jail time.

As for the antlers themselves, they are currently held by Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks but could go back to McMullen once cases against the other two servicemembers are resolved.

Update: According to a report this week in the Livingston Enterprise, this is not the first time Montana National Guard aircraft have stopped to take antlers.

“By way of a thorough inquiry, we can confirm isolated incidents of collecting antlers (with a military aircraft) have occurred previously,” Lt. Col. Thomas Figarelle of the Montana National Guard told the paper.

Figarelle added that the Guard has now explicitly banned this kind of activity. “(The Montana Army National Guard) issued clear directives no antler collecting of any type is authorized,” he added. “This is misuse of government property inconsistent with our standards. We are not going to tolerate it.”

US Black Hawk helicopter trespasses on private Montana ranch to grab elk antlers Read More »

“ungentrified”-craigslist-may-be-the-last-real-place-on-the-internet

“Ungentrified” Craigslist may be the last real place on the Internet


People still use Craigslist to find jobs, love, and even to cast creative projects.

The writer and comedian Megan Koester got her first writing job, reviewing Internet pornography, from a Craigslist ad she responded to more than 15 years ago. Several years after that, she used the listings website to find the rent-controlled apartment where she still lives today. When she wanted to buy property, she scrolled through Craigslist and found a parcel of land in the Mojave Desert. She built a dwelling on it (never mind that she’d later discover it was unpermitted) and furnished it entirely with finds from Craigslist’s free section, right down to the laminate flooring, which had previously been used by a production company.

“There’s so many elements of my life that are suffused with Craigslist,” says Koester, 42, whose Instagram account is dedicated, at least in part, to cataloging screenshots of what she has dubbed “harrowing images” from the site’s free section; on the day we speak, she’s wearing a cashmere sweater that cost her nothing, besides the faith it took to respond to an ad with no pictures. “I’m ride or die.”

Koester is one of untold numbers of Craigslist aficionados, many of them in their thirties and forties, who not only still use the old-school classifieds site but also consider it an essential, if anachronistic, part of their everyday lives. It’s a place where anonymity is still possible, where money doesn’t have to be exchanged, and where strangers can make meaningful connections—for romantic pursuits, straightforward transactions, and even to cast unusual creative projects, including experimental TV shows like The Rehearsal on HBO and Amazon Freevee’s Jury Duty. Unlike flashier online marketplaces such as DePop and its parent company, Etsy, or Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist doesn’t use algorithms to track users’ moves and predict what they want to see next. It doesn’t offer public profiles, rating systems, or “likes” and “shares” to dole out like social currency; as a result, Craigslist effectively disincentivizes clout-chasing and virality-seeking—behaviors that are often rewarded on platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and X. It’s a utopian vision of a much earlier, far more earnest Internet.

“The real freaks come out on Craigslist,” says Koester. “There’s a purity to it.” Even still, the site is a little tamer than it used to be: Craigslist shut down its “casual encounters” ads and took its personals section offline in 2018, after Congress passed legislation that would’ve put the company on the hook for listings from potential sex traffickers. The “missed connections” section, however, remains active.

The site is what Jessa Lingel, an associate professor of communication at the University of Pennsylvania, has called the “ungentrified” Internet. If that’s the case, then online gentrification has only accelerated in recent years, thanks in part to the proliferation of AI. Even Wikipedia and Reddit, visually basic sites created in the early aughts and with an emphasis similar to Craigslist’s on fostering communities, have both incorporated their own versions of AI tools.

Some might argue that Craigslist, by contrast, is outdated; an article published in this magazine more than 15 years ago called it “underdeveloped” and “unpredictable.” But to the site’s most devoted adherents, that’s precisely its appeal.

“ I think Craigslist is having a revival,” says Kat Toledo, an actor and comedian who regularly uses the site to hire cohosts for her LA-based stand-up show, Besitos. “When something is structured so simply and really does serve the community, and it doesn’t ask for much? That’s what survives.”

Toledo started using Craigslist in the 2000s and never stopped. Over the years, she has turned to the site to find romance, housing, and even her current job as an assistant to a forensic psychologist. She’s worked there full-time for nearly two years, defying Craigslist’s reputation as a supplier of potentially sketchy one-off gigs. The stigma of the website, sometimes synonymous with scammers and, in more than one instance, murderers, can be hard to shake. “If I’m not doing a good job,” Toledo says she jokes to her employer, “just remember you found me on Craigslist.”

But for Toledo, the site’s “random factor”—the way it facilitates connection with all kinds of people she might not otherwise interact with—is also what makes it so exciting. Respondents to her ads seeking paid cohosts tend to be “people who almost have nothing to lose, but in a good way, and everything to gain,” she says. There was the born-again Christian who performed a reenactment of her religious awakening and the poet who insisted on doing Toledo’s makeup; others, like the commercial actor who started crying on the phone beforehand, never made it to the stage.

It’s difficult to quantify just how many people actively use Craigslist and how often they click through its listings. The for-profit company is privately owned and doesn’t share data about its users. (Craigslist also didn’t respond to a request for comment.) But according to the Internet data company similarweb, Craigslist draws more than 105 million monthly users, making it the 40th most popular website in the United States—not too shabby for a company that doesn’t spend any money on advertising or marketing. And though Craigslist’s revenue has reportedly plummeted over the past half-dozen years, based on an estimate from an industry analytics firm, it remains enormously profitable. (The company generates revenue by charging a modest fee to publish ads for gigs, certain types of goods, and in some cities, apartments.)

“It’s not a perfect platform by any means, but it does show that you can make a lot of money through an online endeavor that just treats users like they have some autonomy and grants everybody a degree of privacy,” says Lingel. A longtime Craigslist user, she began researching the site after wondering, “Why do all these web 2.0 companies insist that the only way for them to succeed and make money is off the back of user data? There must be other examples out there.”

In her book, Lingel traces the history of the site, which began in 1995 as an email list for a couple hundred San Francisco Bay Area locals to share events, tech news, and job openings. By the end of the decade, engineer Craig Newmark’s humble experiment had evolved into a full-fledged company with an office, a domain name, and a handful of hires. In true Craigslist fashion, Newmark even recruited the company’s CEO, Jim Buckmaster, from an ad he posted to the site, initially seeking a programmer.

The two have gone to great lengths to wrest the company away from corporate interests. When they suspected a looming takeover attempt from eBay, which had purchased a minority stake in Craigslist from a former employee in 2004, Newmark and Buckmaster spent roughly a decade battling the tech behemoth in court. The litigation ended in 2015, with Craigslist buying back its shares and regaining control.

“ They are in lockstep about their early ’90s Internet values,” says Lingel, who credits Newmark and Buckmaster with Craigslist’s long-held aesthetic and ethos: simplicity, privacy, and accessibility. “As long as they’re the major shareholders, that will stay that way.”

Craigslist’s refusal to “sell out,” as Koester puts it, is all the more reason to use it. “Not only is there a purity to the fan base or the user base, there’s a purity to the leadership that they’re uncorruptible basically,” says Koester. “I’m gonna keep looking at Craigslist until I die.” She pauses, then shudders: “Or, until Craig dies, I guess.”

This story originally appeared on wired.com.

Photo of WIRED

Wired.com is your essential daily guide to what’s next, delivering the most original and complete take you’ll find anywhere on innovation’s impact on technology, science, business and culture.

“Ungentrified” Craigslist may be the last real place on the Internet Read More »

advancements-in-self-driving-cars

Advancements In Self-Driving Cars

Waymo goes Full San Francisco West Bay except for SFO:

Jeff Dean: Exciting expansion! @Waymo now serves the whole SF Bay Area Peninsula from SF to San Jose and is taking riders on freeways.

They can serve SJC, and SFO is almost ready, employee rides are in place and public rides are ‘coming soon.’

Brandan: Would be nice if @Waymo comes across the bay to Berkeley!

Jeff Dean: We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it!

Waymo is going to start using freeways in Phoenix, Los Angeles and San Francisco. That’s a big deal for longer rides, but there is still the problem that Waymos have to obey the technical speed limit. On freeways no huamn driver does this, so obeying the technical speed limit is both slower and more dangerous. We are going to need a regulatory solution, ideally that allows you to drive at the average observed speed.

This is all a big unlock, but it depends on having enough cars to take advantage.

At this point, aside from regulatory barriers in some places like my beloved New York City, it all comes down to being able to get enough cars.

Timothy Lee: The big question about Waymo in 2026 is going to be “how do they get enough cars to service all this new territory?” Three options:

• Keep retrofitting expensive and no-longer-produced I-PACES

• Pay 105% tariffs to import Zeekrs

• Speed-run introduction of Hyundai vehicles

The Hyundai option would obviously be the best for them but I doubt they’ll achieve large-scale production before 2027. They only announced the partnership a year ago and just started testing them publicly a couple of weeks ago.

Waymo will be ready for Washington DC in 2026 if legally allowed to proceed, if blocked there will be a Waymo Gap where Baltimore has it but not Washington. Dean Ball notes that councilmember Charles Allen is trying to hold Waymo up over nebulous ‘safety concerns,’ which is the worst possible argument against Waymo. We know for certain that Waymos are vastly safer than human drivers.

Samuel Hammond: I lost a good friend to a human driver in DC. The sooner we allow Waymos in the better.

… Public transit should be autonomous too.

One could say this is cherry picking, but the number of (truthful) such tweets about losing a friend to a Waymo is zero, because it has never happened.

Waymo set to deliver DoorDash orders in Phoenix. That presumably means you’ll have to go out to get the food out of the car, which is slightly annoying but seems fine. My actual concern is whether this will be a little slow? Waymos do not understand that when you have hot food, time is of the essence.

The cars, they are coming to a City Near You pending regulatory barriers.

Timothy Lee and Kai Williams: On Tuesday, Waymo announced driverless testing in five cities: Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Miami, and Orlando. Driverless testing begins immediately in Miami, while the other four cities will begin “over the coming weeks.” Waymo says commercial service will launch in all five cities in 2026.

… And probably several other cities as well. Waymo has previously announced 2026 launch plans in six other US cities — Denver, Detroit, Las Vegas, Nashville, San Diego, and Washington DC — plus London. None of these cities has begun driverless testing yet. But if all goes according to plan, Waymo will be offering service in at least 17 cities by the end of next year — more than triple the number Waymo serves today.

Timothy Lee: Waymo just announced plans to expand to Minneapolis, Tampa, and New Orleans. Here’s an updated map. Waymo didn’t mention 2026 so I put them in the “2027 or later” category. Minneapolis will likely require state legislation so it gets a question mark.

Timothy Lee (December 3): Waymo just announced testing (with safety drivers) in three new cities: Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Baltimore. Legislation will be needed to enable driverless operation in both Baltimore and St. Louis (our first red-state question mark!).

This is not an expanded service area yet, but look at where Waymo is now officially authorized:

Waymo: We’re officially authorized to drive fully autonomously across more of the Golden State.

Next stop: welcoming riders in San Diego in mid-2026! ☀️

It is the state that matters, not the city. That helps.

Timothy Lee: A nuance people are missing here: some of these red-state cities have Democratic mayors. However, AV policy is mostly made at the state level, especially in red states. So city leaders likely couldn’t block Waymo even if they wanted to. That’s certainly the case in California.

Could we do preemption on state laws about self-driving cars? Please?

Peter Wildeford: I wish that even half the energy of “federal pre-emption of all state AI laws” went specifically towards “federal pre-emption of municipal laws banning autonomous vehicles”.

We need to make sure our Waymo future isn’t banned by crazy cities that have no clue what they’re doing.

Neil Chilson: You may know me as a supporter of preemption, but while I think banning autonomous vehicles is absolutely moronic, I think it’s not squarely in the federal domain.

The states preempting the cities was key to getting deployment in California and Texas, but we still have a long way to go.

I actually disagree with Neil, I think this should be in the federal domain.

Then there’s the final boss enemies of all that is good and true, those who would permanently cripple our economy so that people could have permanent entirely fake jobs sitting in trucks:

Senator John Fetterman (D-Penn): I fully agree with @Teamsters.

Self-driving trucks should *alwaysbe supervised by a qualified professional to keep our roads safe. It’s a necessary partnership for America’s highways and economy.

Across the pond, could there be anything more Doomed European than an article that says ‘Europe doesn’t need driverless cars’? As with so many things like air conditioning, free speech and economic growth, the European asks, do we really ‘need’ this? Aren’t European roadways already ‘safer’ than American ones now that we’ve slowed them down to make them thus? Wouldn’t this ‘threaten’ European traditions of bikes and public transportation? Aren’t cars ‘inefficient’? Won’t someone please think of the potential traffic issues?

This emphasizes why I would make the case without emphasizing safety.

When San Francisco had a power outage, there were mistaken initial reports that Waymos came to a halt or ‘bricked,’ causing traffic disruptions. The transition wasn’t perfect, some cars did come to a stop and behavior was more conservative than you would want.

My understanding is that this was overstated. Waymo has now issued a full report.

Waymo successfully identified the situation. The Waymo policy, decided in advance, treated every intersection as a four-way stop sign as per California law while the traffic lights were out, had protocols in place to request additional verification checks, and then as a result Waymo suspended service to avoid slowing traffic.

That seems fine? It’s not even clear it is non-ideal from Waymo’s perspective given their incentives? The risk-reward of using a more aggressive policy seems rather terrible, and worse than a service suspension? What would you have them do here?

Waymo: Navigating an event of this magnitude presented a unique challenge for autonomous technology. While the Waymo Driver is designed to handle dark traffic signals as four-way stops, it may occasionally request a confirmation check to ensure it makes the safest choice.

While we successfully traversed more than 7,000 dark signals on Saturday, the outage created a concentrated spike in these requests. This created a backlog that, in some cases, led to response delays contributing to congestion on already-overwhelmed streets.

We established these confirmation protocols out of an abundance of caution during our early deployment, and we are now refining them to match our current scale. While this strategy was effective during smaller outages, we are now implementing fleet-wide updates that provide the Driver with specific power outage context, allowing it to navigate more decisively.

As the outage persisted and City officials urged residents to stay off the streets to prioritize first responders, we temporarily paused our service in the area. We directed our fleet to pull over and park appropriately so we could return vehicles to our depots in waves. This ensured we did not further add to the congestion or obstruct emergency vehicles during the peak of the recovery effort.

The path forward

We’ve always focused on developing the Waymo Driver for the world as it is, including when infrastructure fails. We are analyzing the event, and are already integrating the lessons from this weekend’s PG&E outage. Here are some of the immediate steps we’re taking:

  • Integrating more information about outages: While our Driver already handles dark traffic signals as four-way stops, we are now rolling out fleet-wide updates that give our vehicles even more context about regional outages, allowing them to navigate these intersections more decisively.

  • Updating our emergency preparedness and response: We will improve our emergency response protocols, incorporating lessons from this event. In San Francisco, we’ll continue to coordinate with Mayor Lurie’s team to identify areas of greater collaboration in our existing emergency preparedness plans.

  • Expanding our first responder engagement: To date, we’ve trained more than 25,000 first responders in the U.S. and around the world on how to interact with Waymo. As we discover learnings from this and other widespread events, we’ll continue updating our first responder training.

This seems exactly right. Waymo has to be risk averse for now given that a single incident could derail their entire program. Over time, as they gain experience, they can act more decisively.

The amount of ‘omg never using a self-driving car again’ or ‘police and fire departments will now fight against self-driving cars to the death’ boggles the mind.

If enough cars on the road were self-driving, then they wouldn’t even need the traffic lights, they could coordinate in other ways, and this would all be moot.

Yes, in the case where the internet goes down entirely or Waymos otherwise systemically fail there will be a bigger problem that might not have a great solution right now, but do you think Waymo hasn’t planned for this?

At most, this says that if we had so many self-driving-only cars that we would be in deep trouble if all the self-driving cars died at once, then we want a solution where the cars are, in such an emergency, something a human could override and drive. That does not seem like such a difficult bar to cross?

The most common crisis scenario where things go haywire is very simple:

  1. There is an evacuation or other reason everyone wants to go from A → B.

  2. The road from A → B becomes completely jammed and stops moving.

Human drivers cannot solve this. Self-driving cars in sufficiently quantities solves this through coordination. Given these are maximally important scenarios where not getting out often risks death, it’s kind of a big deal. Imagine if things were reversed.

Holly Elmore accused me of missing the point here, that it is about all the things that could go wrong with self-driving cars and that haven’t yet occured in the field.

To which I say no, it is Holly that is missing the point. The reason why AGI is different is that if you have such a failure, you could be dead or lose control, and be unable to recover from the failure, or suffer truly catastrophic levels of damage. Thus, you need to get such potential difficulties right on the first try, before an incident happens, and you have to do this generally against a potential adversary more intelligent than you that will be out of distribution.

A self-driving car… is a car. It is a normal technology.

Even if something goes systematically wrong with a fleet of such cars, or all such fleets of cars? This is highly recoverable. The damage even for ‘all the Waymos suddenly floor it and crash’ (or even the pure sci-fi ‘suddenly try to do maximum amounts of damage’) is not so high in the grand scheme of things. There are a finite number of things that could happen that involve things going very wrong, and yes you can list all of them and then hardcode what to do in each case.

That is, indeed, how the cars actually learn to drive under normal circumstances. If the regulators want to provide a list of potential incident types and require Waymo to say how they plan to deal with each, including any combination of loss of internet and loss of power and everyone simultaneously fleeing an oncoming tsunami caused by a neutron bomb, then okay, sure, fine, I guess, let’s be overly paranoid to keep everyone happy, it will in expectation cost lives but whatever it takes.

But I think it’s really important, when arguing for AI safety, to be able to differentiate AGI from self-driving cars, and to not draw metaphors that don’t apply.

The real final boss for self-driving cars is the speed limit.

As everyone knows, the ‘real’ speed limit is by default 10 MPH above the speed limit. You’re highly unlikely to get a ticket, in most places, unless you are both more than 10 MPH and substantially faster than other drivers. If the speed limit is enforced to the letter, that usually involves attempting to trick motorists. We call that a ‘speed trap.’

To be safe, you want to match the speed of other cars around you, so driving the listed speed limit is actively dangerous on many roads.

Ethan Teicher: “The lack of a human driver is no longer the reason [Waymos] stand out most from regular traffic. They do so because they follow the speed limit.

Indeed, cyclists and pedestrians are so used to drivers going 5, 10, or more miles per hour over posted speed limits, that Waymo’s practice of driving by the letter of the law creates a noticeable contrast. So much so that in a recent New York Times article about Zoox entering the autonomous-vehicle fray in San Francisco, the reporters actually had the gall to list law-abiding driving as a downside”

Robin Hanson: Human drivers can block competition from self driving cars by just making traffic laws too onerous to obey, yet insisting that robots (only) must obey them. Seems a robust general strategy for preventing AI competition with humans.

The wrong answer is to enforce current obviously too low numbers, and slow down all cars to the current technical speed limits. That’s profoundly stupid. It’s also scarily plausible that we will end up doing it.

The correct answer is to increase our speed limits across the board to the actual limit, beyond which we can and will ticket you.

This generalizes, as per Levels of Friction.

If AI has to obey the rules and humans don’t, the correct answer wherever possible is to change the rules to what we want both AIs and humans to actually have to follow.

In many other places, this creates a real problem, because the true rules are nebulous and involve social incentives and a willingness to adopt to practical conditions. As Robin Hanson notes, an otherwise highly capable AI that had to formally obey all laws in all ways would find many human tasks impossible or impractical.

I strongly agree that Waymo must pick up the pace. 7% growth per month? That’s it?

CNBC: Waymo crosses 450,000 weekly paid rides as Alphabet robotaxi unit widens lead on Tesla.

Timothy Lee: Weekly driverless Waymo trips:

May 2023: 10,000

May 2024: 50,000 (14% monthly growth)

August 2024: 100,000 (25% monthly)

October 2024: 150,000 (22%)

February: 2025: 200,000 (7%)

April 2025: 250,000 (12%)

December 2025: 450,000 (7%)

Right on track for 1M by December 2026.

FWIW this feels way too slow to me. They should be aiming for the ~15% growth rate they achieved in 2024. Hopefully they’re going to figure out their vehicle supply issues and dramatically accelerate in 2027. Tesla has been growing slowly because their technology doesn’t work yet. But they will figure it out in the next year or two and after that I guarantee you Elon won’t be happy with 7% monthly growth.

Tesla continues to not even apply to operate fully autonomous services in the areas it claims it wants to offer those services, such as California, Arizona and Nevada. Please stop thinking Elon Musk’s timelines are ever meaningful.

The actual global competition is probably Chinese, as one would expect.

Timothy Lee: US media tends to cover robotaxis as a Waymo/Tesla race, but globally Waymo’s strongest competition is likely to be Chinese companies like Baidu, WeRide, and Pony. Rough robotaxi counts today:

Waymo: 2,500

Baidu: 1,000

Pony: 960

WeRide: 750

Tesla: 100

What they have done is made ‘Robotaxi’ service go live in Austin for select rides, but these rides remain supervised with a Tesla employee in the driver’s seat.

Andrej Karpathy reports the new Tesla self-driving on the HW4 Model X is a substantial upgrade.

Delivery via self-driving e-bikes? Brilliant.

If enough people lose their jobs at once, society has a big problem.

Ro Khanna: We need smart regulation to protect 3.5 million truck drivers & 2 million long haul drivers. AI should not be used for mass layoffs that drive up short term profits w/ no productivity gains.

Drivers are needed for safety, oversight, edge cases, & maintenance.

I stand with humans over machines, with @LorenaSGonzalez @TeamsterSOB over short term profits for corporate oligarchs.

Roon: what do you think productivity gains are lol.

It’s amazing how easily those opposed to self-driving throw around ‘safety concerns’ when self-driving vehicles are massively safer, or the idea here that gains are ‘short term’ or that there are ‘no productivity gains.’

Even if we literally require a human to be in each truck at all times ‘in case of emergency’ we would still see massive productivity gains, since the trucks would be able to be on the road 24/7.

Maintenance is another truly silly objection. Yes, when you need to maintain something you’d (for now at least) bring the truck to a human. Okay.

That leaves the ever mysterious and present ‘edge cases.’

Chris Albon: I bike everywhere in SF. I barely ever take a taxi/uber/waymo. But if you want to ban Waymo it means you don’t care about cyclists like me.

Waymos will reliably yield to bikes, use its turn signals and obey the rules. When you are biking, the problem is tail risk can literally kill you, so you have to constantly be paranoid that any given car will do something unexpected or crazy. With a Waymo, you don’t have to worry about that.

Both the young and the old, who cannot drive, will benefit greatly. Self-driving cars will be a very different level of freedom than the ability to summon a Lyft. Tesla will likely offer ‘unsupervised’ self-driving very soon.

If you combine self-driving cars with other new smart products, including basic home robots, suddenly assisted living facilities look pretty terrible. They’re expensive and unpleasant, with the upside being that when you need help you really need help. The need for that forces you to buy this entire package of things you mostly don’t want. But what if most of that help was covered?

PoliMath: Crazy prediction time: I think that nursing homes and assisted living facilities are in trouble long-term.

These businesses are currently massive profit centers. Full time care for the elderly is a huge business & everyone assumes it will get bigger as boomers age

But no one wants to move into an assisted care house. They are good for what they are, but it’s a depressing place. It means moving a whole life into the place where you plan to die. That’s no fun. No one wants that. Most people want to age “in place”. They want to keep their home, keep their space, age and die in a familiar setting. What keeps them from doing this?

1) transportation – if they can’t get around to get their meds, get groceries, go to the movies, go to their favorite restaurant, drive to a park, etc, this severely reduces their quality of life. Assisted care helps solve this

2) household chores – Doing the laundry, cooking simple meals, lawn care, self-care (clipping toenails, bathing), these are important things that are harder to do when you get into your 80’s and 90’s

Unsupervised self-driving solves problem #1. The elderly should not be driving. It’s a brutal reality and one they fight against, but the risk factor is extremely high. An autonomous transportation system allows them enormous mobility and autonomy.

In-home robots solve problem #2. Robots that can aid with difficult self-care and household chores allows the elderly to stay in place for longer. This has enormous cost-savings and (more importantly) they can feel like they are in charge of their own lives for longer.

At that point, the biggest challenge is social interaction. This is where assisted care facilities easily out-class these automated solutions. The logistics problem is being solved in front of our eyes and it’s a miracle. But the social problem is not solved. Not even close.

The social problem requires people who want to interact with you, but note that we’ve solved the transportation problem. That makes it a lot easier.

What will happen when a Waymo finally does kill someone? Waymos are vastly safer than human drivers, but are we always going to be one accident away from disaster? The CEO of Waymo says people will accept it. I think she’s right if Waymo gets enough traction first, the question is when that point comes and whether we have reached it yet.

In the meantime, they’re trying to drum up outrage because a Waymo killed a cat, a ‘one-of-a-kind’ mascot of a bodega, something that happens to 5.3 million cats per year when struck by human drivers. If ‘cat killed by Waymo’ is news then Waymos are absurdly safe.

Rolling Stone: KitKat, known as the “Mayor of 16th Street,” was killed by a Waymo cab last week in San Francisco, sparking calls for more regulation of driverless cars.

Yimbyland: When do you ever see a spread like this about a human driver running over a cat?

You don’t, and yet it happens 15,000 TIMES EVERY DAY.

YES. FIFTEEN THOUSAND CATS ARE RUN OVER EVERY SINGLE DAY.

Mission Loco: A cat ran in front of a car and was run over. This happens 26 MILLION times per year in the US. Now @rachelswan and @JackieFielder_ want to ban vehicles. This is how moronic @Hearst@sfchronicle reporters & @sfbos are.

Matt Popovich:

(The bottom line should also include millions of cats and other pets as well, of course.)

I mean, if they wanted to ban all vehicles that would at least make some sense.

I will note that the 26 million number comes from Merrett Clifton’s extrapolation from 1993 and it’s basically absurd if you think about it, there simply are not enough cats for this to be real. It’s probably more like 2-5 million cats per year. Not that this changes the conclusion that Waymos are obviously vastly safer for cats than human drivers.

The stats are of course in, and if you use reasonable estimates Waymos probably kill on the order of 75x fewer pets, as in a 98%+ reduction in cats killed per mile.

In the meantime, we continue to deal with things like New York Times articles about a Waymo running over this very special cat, in which they bury the fact Waymos are vastly safer than human drivers.

Timothy Lee: NYTimes article quotes someone saying they are “terrified” of Waymo in paragraph 6. Waits until paragraph 33 (out of 44 paragraphs) to mention that they are 91 percent safer than human drivers. How outraged would liberals be if a news outlet covered vaccines like this?

The article does mention that human drivers kill hundreds of cats every year so that’s something.

Even if the rest of AI doesn’t prove that disruptive soon, self-driving will change quite a lot wherever it is allowed to proceed. I too am unreasonably excited.

Andrej Karpathy: I am unreasonably excited about self-driving. It will be the first technology in many decades to visibly terraform outdoor physical spaces and way of life. Less parked cars. Less parking lots. Much greater safety for people in and out of cars. Less noise pollution. More space reclaimed for humans.

Human brain cycles and attention capital freed up from “lane following” to other pursuits. Cheaper, faster, programmable delivery of physical items and goods. It won’t happen overnight but there will be the era before and the era after.

Nikhil: every time I come off a week of taking Waymos in SF:

  1. it feels increasingly strange to return to a non-autonomous city (just as it felt weird to be in cities that didn’t have uber yet in 2014-2016)

  2. I come away feeling like we continue to under-discuss the second order effects of self-driving inevitability + ubiquity

I think the indifference in the air is largely a function of how gradual (relatively) the rollout of AVs has been and will continue to be

The agonizingly slow ramp-up, along with the avalanche of other AI things happening, is definitely taking the focus off of self-driving and making us not realize how much the ground is shifting under our feet. The second order effects are going to be huge. The child mobility and safety improvements are especially neglected.

A no good, very bad take but also why competition is good:

Roon: i strongly prefer uber to waymo. ubers get you where you need to go much faster. they wait for you when you’re running late. they never suffer catastrophic failure and ignominiously getting stuck behind a truck or something. will be kicked out of san francisco for this take.

also i learn so much from uber drivers it’s so high entropy.

To state the obvious I vastly prefer Waymos, and I am confused by the part about catastrophic failures since it seems obvious that rates of ‘things go wrong’ are higher for an Uber. But yeah, if you actively want to talk to drivers and to have another human in the car, and you care more about speed than a smooth ride, I can see it.

Self-driving cars have been proven vastly safer than human drivers, despite many believing the opposite. The question continues to be, how hard do you push on this?

Human drivers have been grandfathered in as an insanely dangerous thing we have accepted as part of life. We’ve destroyed huge other parts of life in the name of far less serious safety concerns, whereas here we have a solution that is life affirming while also preventing most of a leading cause of death.

Dr. Jon Slotkin: I have a guest essay in @nytimes today about autonomous vehicle safety. I wrote it because I’m tired of seeing children die. Done right, we can eliminate car crashes as a leading cause of death in the United States

@Waymo recently released data covering nearly 100 million driverless miles. I spent weeks analyzing it because the results seemed too good to be true. 91% fewer serious-injury crashes. 92% less pedestrians hit. 96% fewer injury crashes at intersections. The list goes on.

39,000 Americans died in crashes last year. More than homicide, plane crashes, and natural disasters combined. The #2 killer of children and young adults. The #1 cause of spinal cord injury. We’ve accepted this as the price of mobility.

We don’t have to.

In medicine, when a treatment shows this level of benefit, we stop the trial early. Continuing to give patients the placebo becomes unethical. When an intervention works this clearly, you change what you do.

In driving, we’re all the control group.

Cities like DC and Boston are blocking deployment. And cities are not the only forces mobilizing to slow this progress.

It’s time we stop treating this like a tech moonshot and start treating it like a public health intervention that will save lives.

Auerlien reports that ‘broken windows theory’ very much applies to cars. If you don’t keep cars fully pristine then people stop respecting the car and things escalate quickly, and also people care quite a lot. Thus, if a Waymo or other self-driving car gets even a little dirty it needs to head back and get cleaned. And thus, every Waymo I’ve ever ridden in has been pristine.

Johnny v5: just realized waymo means i can go to office hours without haste now

Deepfates: that means you can go to Waymo of them!!

Discussion about this post

Advancements In Self-Driving Cars Read More »

evs-remain-a-niche-choice-in-the-us,-according-to-survey

EVs remain a niche choice in the US, according to survey

A graph showing charger location preference for car buyers in the US, Germany, the UK, China, Japan, and South Korea

A graph showing preferred charging locations for car buyers.

Credit: Deloitte

A graph showing preferred charging locations for car buyers. Credit: Deloitte

While reliable charging at one’s workplace—emphasis on reliable—can make up for not being able to charge at home, 77 percent of US car buyers said they would prefer to charge at home (with just 13 percent indicating they would prefer charging at work).

Why pick an EV?

For people who haven’t yet decided to switch, an underappreciated fact is just how much more efficient an electric powertrain is compared to one that burns liquid petroleum. Ford’s experiment putting an electric powertrain into its best-selling F-150 pickup truck might have turned sour, but consider the following: The V6 truck needs more than three times as much energy to travel 300 miles as the one you plug into a wall, when you consider a gallon of gasoline contains 33.7 kWh of energy.

Among the EV-convinced, this is presumably old news. More than half—52 percent of US survey respondents—said lower fuel costs were a reason for choosing an EV, beating out concern for the environment, which ranked second at 38 percent. And between $20,000 and $49,999 appears to be the pricing sweet spot, with 24 percent looking for something in the $20,000–$34,999 band (cars like the new Nissan Leaf or the soon-reborn Chevrolet Bolt) and another 24 percent looking in the $35,000–$49,999 band, which has plenty of EVs to choose from, including Mercedes-Benz’s efficient new CLA.

Just 7 percent of those EV buyers are looking to spend more than $75,000 on their electric car, but luxury EVs abound at this price point.

A graph of reasons given by US car buyers as to why their next car would be electric. Deloitte

Meanwhile, range and charging times remain the foremost concerns among car buyers when discussing EVs, along with the cost premium. Some other fears are ill-founded, however. Thirty-eight percent said they were concerned about the cost of eventually replacing an EV’s battery. But EV batteries are proving more durable on the road than many early adopters once believed. There’s little evidence that EVs will require costly battery replacements with any more frequency than older cars require new engines, a concern that is rarely mentioned when someone wants to buy a gas-powered machine.

The US doesn’t care about software-defined vehicles

One of the biggest shifts in car design and manufacturing over the past few years has been the advent of the software-defined vehicle. Until now, pretty much every electronic function in a car, from an electric window to the antilock brakes, needed its own electronic control unit. Some cars can have up to two hundred discrete ECUs, some with software dating back years.

EVs remain a niche choice in the US, according to survey Read More »

we-have-a-fossil-closer-to-our-split-with-neanderthals-and-denisovans

We have a fossil closer to our split with Neanderthals and Denisovans

The Casablanca fossils are about the same age as hominin fossils from Spain, which belong to a species called Homo antecessor. This species has been suggested to be a likely ancestor of Neanderthals and Denisovans. Overall, it looks like the fossils from Casablanca are a North African counterpart to Homo antecessor, with the Spanish hominins eventually leading to Neanderthals and the North African ones eventually leading to us.

Both groups share some features in their teeth and lower jaws, but they’re also different in some important ways. The teeth and chins in particular share some older features with Homo erectus. But the jaws have more newfangled features in the places where chewing muscles once attached to the bone—features that Neanderthals and our species share. On the other hand, the teeth are missing some other relatively recent features that would later help define Neanderthals (and were already beginning to show up in Homo antecessor).

Altogether, it looks like the Homo erectus populations and the Neanderthals and Denisovans had been separated for a while by the time the hominins at Grotte à Hominidés lived. But not that long. These hominins were probably part of a generation that was fairly close to that big split, near the base of our branch of the hominin family tree.

Here’s looking at you, hominin

Based on ancient DNA, it looks like Neanderthals and Denisovans started evolving into two separate species sometime between 470,000 and 430,000 years ago. Meanwhile, our branch would eventually become recognizable as us sometime around 300,000 years ago, or possibly earlier. At various times and places, all three species would eventually come back together to mingle and swap DNA, leaving traces of those interactions buried deep in each other’s genomes.

And 773,000 years after a predator dragged the remains of a few unfortunate hominins into its den in northern Africa, those hominins’ distant descendants would unearth the gnawed, broken bones and begin piecing together the story.

Nature, 2025 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09914-y  (About DOIs).

We have a fossil closer to our split with Neanderthals and Denisovans Read More »