Author name: DJ Henderson

us-solar-production-soars-by-25-percent-in-just-one-year

US solar production soars by 25 percent in just one year

Solar sailing —

2024 is seeing the inevitable outcome of the building boom in solar farms.

A single construction person set in the midst of a sea of solar panels.

With the plunging price of photovoltaics, the construction of solar plants has boomed in the US. Last year, for example, the US’s Energy Information Agency expected that over half of the new generating capacity would be solar, with a lot of it coming online at the very end of the year for tax reasons. Yesterday, the EIA released electricity generation numbers for the first five months of 2024, and that construction boom has seemingly made itself felt: generation by solar power has shot up by 25 percent compared to just one year earlier.

The EIA breaks down solar production according to the size of the plant. Large grid-scale facilities have their production tracked, giving the EIA hard numbers. For smaller installations, like rooftop solar on residential and commercial buildings, the agency has to estimate the amount produced, since the hardware often resides behind the metering equipment, so only shows up via lower-than-expected consumption.

In terms of utility-scale production, the first five months of 2024 saw it rise by 29 percent compared to the same period in the year prior. Small-scale solar was “only” up by 18 percent, with the combined number rising by 25.3 percent.

Most other generating sources were largely flat, year over year. This includes coal, nuclear, and hydroelectric, all of which changed by 2 percent or less. Wind was up by 4 percent, while natural gas rose by 5 percent. Because natural gas is the largest single source of energy on the grid, however, its 5 percent rise represents a lot of electrons—slightly more than the total increase in wind and solar.

US electricity sources for January through May of 2024. Note that the numbers do not add up to 100 percent due to the omission of minor contributors like geothermal and biomass.

Enlarge / US electricity sources for January through May of 2024. Note that the numbers do not add up to 100 percent due to the omission of minor contributors like geothermal and biomass.

John Timmer

Overall, energy use was up by about 4 percent compared to the same period in 2023. This could simply be a matter of changing weather conditions that require more heating or cooling. But there have been several trends that should increase electricity usage: the rise of bitcoin mining, the growth of data centers, and the electrification of appliances and transport. So far, that hasn’t shown up in the actual electricity usage in the US, which has stayed largely flat for decades. It could be possible that 2024 is the year when usage starts going up again.

More to come

It’s worth noting that this data all comes from before some of the most productive months of the year for solar power; overall, the EIA is predicting that solar production could rise by as much as 42 percent in 2024.

So, where does this leave the US’s efforts to decarbonize? If we combine nuclear, hydro, wind, and solar under the umbrella of carbon-free power sources, then these account for about 45 percent of US electricity production so far this year. Within that category, wind and solar now produce more than three times hydroelectric, and roughly the same amount as nuclear.

Wind and solar have also produced 1.3 times as much electricity as coal so far in 2024, with solar alone now producing about half as much as coal. That said, natural gas still produces twice as much electricity as wind and solar combined, indicating we still have a long way to go to decarbonize our grid.

When you look at the generating facilities that will be built over the next 12 months, it's difficult not to see a pattern.

Enlarge / When you look at the generating facilities that will be built over the next 12 months, it’s difficult not to see a pattern.

Still, we can expect solar’s productivity to climb even before the year is out. That’s in part because we don’t yet have numbers for June, the month that contains the longest day of the year. But it’s also because the construction boom shows no sign of stopping. As noted here, solar and wind deployments are expected to dwarf everything else over the coming year. The items in gray on the map primarily represent battery storage, which will allow us to make better use of those renewables, as well.

By contrast, facilities that are scheduled for retirement over the next year largely consist of coal and natural gas plants.

US solar production soars by 25 percent in just one year Read More »

lawsuit:-t-mobile-must-pay-for-breaking-lifetime-price-guarantee

Lawsuit: T-Mobile must pay for breaking lifetime price guarantee

T-Mobile class action —

Class action filed over price hikes on plans with Un-contract price guarantee.

Then-CEO of T-Mobile John Legere speaking at an event, wearing a sports jacket and T-Mobile t-shirt.

Enlarge / John Legere, then-CEO of T-Mobile, at an event on March 26, 2013, in New York City.

Getty Images | John Moore

Angry T-Mobile customers have filed a class action lawsuit over the carrier’s decision to raise prices on plans that were advertised as having a lifetime price guarantee.

“Based upon T-Mobile’s representations that the rates offered with respect to certain plans were guaranteed to last for life or as long as the customer wanted to remain with that plan, each Plaintiff and the Class Members agreed to these plans for wireless cellphone service from T-Mobile,” said the complaint filed in US District Court for the District of New Jersey. “However, in May 2024, T-Mobile unilaterally did away with these legacy phone plans and switched Plaintiffs and the Class to more expensive plans without their consent.”

The complaint, filed on July 12, has four named plaintiffs who live in New Jersey, Georgia, Nevada, and Pennsylvania. They are seeking to represent a class of all US residents “who entered into a T-Mobile One Plan, Simple Choice plan, Magenta, Magenta Max, Magenta 55+, Magenta Amplified or Magenta Military Plan with T-Mobile which included a promised lifetime price guarantee but had their price increased without their consent and in violation of the promises made by T-Mobile and relied upon by Plaintiffs and the proposed class.”

The complaint seeks “restitution of all amounts obtained by Defendant as a result of its violation,” plus interest. It also seeks statutory and punitive damages, and an injunction to prevent further “wrongful, unlawful, fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair conduct.”

“T-Mobile will never change the price you pay”

The lawsuit’s allegations will be familiar to those who read our previous articles on the recent price hikes of up to $5 per line. In January 2017, T-Mobile issued a press release announcing the “Un-contract” promise for T-Mobile One plans. “Now, T-Mobile One customers keep their price until THEY decide to change it. T-Mobile will never change the price you pay for your T-Mobile One plan,” the company said at the time.

The price guarantee was also hyped by then-CEO John Legere at a press event in Las Vegas. But separately from the announcement, T-Mobile revealed a significant caveat that essentially nullified the promise. T-Mobile said in a FAQ on its website that the only guarantee was T-Mobile would pay your final month’s bill if the carrier raised the price and you decided to cancel.

Many customers saw the prominent lifetime price guarantee but not T-Mobile’s contradiction of that promise and signed up for plans thinking their prices would never be raised. The “Un-contract promise” was offered on certain plans between January 5, 2017, and April 27, 2022.

T-Mobile started offering a different guarantee called Price Lock on April 28, 2022. This was originally more ironclad than the Un-contract, and customers who snagged it were apparently not impacted by this year’s price increases.

But T-Mobile then created a confusing situation with Price Lock. The stronger version of Price Lock was offered from April 28, 2022, to January 17, 2024. It was replaced by a weaker version that is still called Price Lock but is basically the same as the Un-contract. Customers who signed up for Price Lock on or after January 18, 2024, don’t actually have a price lock—but they can get their final month’s bill covered if T-Mobile raises the price and they decide to cancel.

After the price hikes, several T-Mobile customers contacted Ars to express their displeasure. One of those customers said that he canceled and tried to get his final month’s bill covered, but T-Mobile refused to provide the refund. The Federal Communications Commission told us it had received about 1,600 consumer complaints about the price hikes as of late June.

Lawsuit: T-Mobile must pay for breaking lifetime price guarantee Read More »

gaga’s-harley-quinn-joins-the-clown-prince-of-crime-in-joker:-folie-a-deux-trailer

Gaga’s Harley Quinn joins the Clown Prince of Crime in Joker: Folie à Deux trailer

a perfect match —

“For once in my life, I have someone who needs me.”

Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga star in Joker: Folie à Deux.

This weekend will be all about San Diego Comic-Con and the hotly anticipated theatrical release of the summer blockbuster Deadpool and Wolverine, but Warner Bros. is already looking ahead to the fall. The studio dropped the official trailer for Joker: Folie à Deux, the sequel to 2019’s smash hit Joker, starring Joaquin Phoenix. This time, he’s joined by fellow asylum inmate Harley Quinn (Lady Gaga) to bring a comic book criminal partnership for the ages to gritty life.

(Spoilers for 2019’s Joker below.)

Joker was intended to be a standalone film—part of DC Films’ decision to move away from the shared-universe approach of its prior franchise DCEU films. (DC Studios CEO James Gunn is now calling it the “DC Elseworld” project.) It had no relation to the Justice League films that came before, so that freed Phillips to create his own darker, grittier version of this iconic character. He cited Martin Scorsese films like Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and The King of Comedy among his influences. There’s no real origin story for the Joker in the comics—not a definitive one, anyway—so Phillips and screenwriter Scott Silver were able to cherry-pick the canonical elements they needed and make up the rest. (In Batman: The Killing Joke, for instance, the Joker is a failed comedian.)

The sequel was officially announced in 2022. In addition to Phoenix and Gaga, Zazie Beetz returns as Sophie, Arthur’s former neighbor and a single mom, on whom he had a crush, and Leigh Gill and Sharon Washington reprise their roles as Arthur’s therapist and social worker, respectively. The cast also includes Brendan Gleeson, Catherine Keener, Jacob Lofland, Steve Coogan, Ken Leung, and Harry Lawley.

Per the official premise, “Joker: Folie à Deux finds Arthur Fleck institutionalized at Arkham awaiting trial for his crimes as Joker. While struggling with his dual identity, Arthur not only stumbles upon true love but also finds the music that’s always been inside him.” The first teaser was released in April and showed Fleck meeting Gaga’s Dr. Harleen Quinzel, a fellow inmate who becomes increasingly obsessed with Arthur… and vice versa. It was clear the pair fed one another’s particular delusions, right down to show-stopping fantasy musical numbers.

This latest trailer, set to the dulcet tones of Frank Sinatra, mostly offers more of the same, although we do get some new footage of Joker representing himself at his trial: “Look around at all these people!” he exclaims, perhaps referring to the throngs of frenzied admirers cheering him on outside. “I will no longer allow any of you to keep me down.” With Harley by his side, he’s ready to give the people what they want. We’re guessing they’re going to choose violence.

Joker: Folie à Deux hits theaters overseas on October 2, 2024, followed by a US theatrical release on October 4, 2024. The film will make its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival in September.

Listing image by YouTube/Warner Bros.

Gaga’s Harley Quinn joins the Clown Prince of Crime in Joker: Folie à Deux trailer Read More »

meta-risks-sanctions-over-“sneaky”-ad-free-plans-confusing-users,-eu-says

Meta risks sanctions over “sneaky” ad-free plans confusing users, EU says

Under pressure —

Consumer laws may change Meta’s ad-free plans before EU’s digital crackdown does.

Meta risks sanctions over “sneaky” ad-free plans confusing users, EU says

The European Commission (EC) has finally taken action to block Meta’s heavily criticized plan to charge a subscription fee to users who value privacy on its platforms.

Surprisingly, this step wasn’t taken under laws like the Digital Services Act (DSA), the Digital Markets Act (DMA), or the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

Instead, the EC announced Monday that Meta risked sanctions under EU consumer laws if it could not resolve key concerns about Meta’s so-called “pay or consent” model.

Meta’s model is seemingly problematic, the commission said, because Meta “requested consumers overnight to either subscribe to use Facebook and Instagram against a fee or to consent to Meta’s use of their personal data to be shown personalized ads, allowing Meta to make revenue out of it.”

Because users were given such short notice, they may have been “exposed to undue pressure to choose rapidly between the two models, fearing that they would instantly lose access to their accounts and their network of contacts,” the EC said.

To protect consumers, the EC joined national consumer protection authorities, sending a letter to Meta requiring the tech giant to propose solutions to resolve the commission’s biggest concerns by September 1.

That Meta’s “pay or consent” model may be “misleading” is a top concern because it uses the term “free” for ad-based plans, even though Meta “can make revenue from using their personal data to show them personalized ads.” It seems that while Meta does not consider giving away personal information to be a cost to users, the EC’s commissioner for justice, Didier Reynders, apparently does.

“Consumers must not be lured into believing that they would either pay and not be shown any ads anymore, or receive a service for free, when, instead, they would agree that the company used their personal data to make revenue with ads,” Reynders said. “EU consumer protection law is clear in this respect. Traders must inform consumers upfront and in a fully transparent manner on how they use their personal data. This is a fundamental right that we will protect.”

Additionally, the EC is concerned that Meta users might be confused about how “to navigate through different screens in the Facebook/Instagram app or web-version and to click on hyperlinks directing them to different parts of the Terms of Service or Privacy Policy to find out how their preferences, personal data, and user-generated data will be used by Meta to show them personalized ads.” They may also find Meta’s “imprecise terms and language” confusing, such as Meta referring to “your info” instead of clearly referring to consumers’ “personal data.”

To resolve the EC’s concerns, Meta may have to give EU users more time to decide if they want to pay to subscribe or consent to personal data collection for targeted ads. Or Meta may have to take more drastic steps by altering language and screens used when securing consent to collect data or potentially even scrapping its “pay or consent” model entirely, as pressure in the EU mounts.

So far, Meta has defended its model against claims that it violates the DMA, the DSA, and the GDPR, and Meta’s spokesperson told Ars that Meta continues to defend the model while facing down the EC’s latest action.

“Subscriptions as an alternative to advertising are a well-established business model across many industries,” Meta’s spokesperson told Ars. “Subscription for no ads follows the direction of the highest court in Europe and we are confident it complies with European regulation.”

Meta’s model is “sneaky,” EC said

Since last year, the social media company has argued that its “subscription for no ads” model was “endorsed” by the highest court in Europe, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).

However, privacy advocates have noted that this alleged endorsement came following a CJEU case under the GDPR and was only presented as a hypothetical, rather than a formal part of the ruling, as Meta seems to interpret.

What the CJEU said was that “users must be free to refuse individually”—”in the context of” signing up for services—”to give their consent to particular data processing operations not necessary” for Meta to provide such services “without being obliged to refrain entirely from using the service.” That “means that those users are to be offered, if necessary for an appropriate fee, an equivalent alternative not accompanied by such data processing operations,” the CJEU said.

The nuance here may matter when it comes to Meta’s proposed solutions even if the EC accepts the CJEU’s suggestion of an acceptable alternative as setting some sort of legal precedent. Because the consumer protection authorities raised the action due to Meta suddenly changing the consent model for existing users—not “in the context of” signing up for services—Meta may struggle to persuade the EC that existing users weren’t misled and pressured into paying for a subscription or consenting to ads, given how fast Meta’s policy shifted.

Meta risks sanctions if a compromise can’t be reached, the EC said. Under the EU’s Unfair Contract Terms Directive, for example, Meta could be fined up to 4 percent of its annual turnover if consumer protection authorities are unsatisfied with Meta’s proposed solutions.

The EC’s vice president for values and transparency, Věra Jourová, provided a statement in the press release, calling Meta’s abrupt introduction of the “pay or consent” model “sneaky.”

“We are proud of our strong consumer protection laws which empower Europeans to have the right to be accurately informed about changes such as the one proposed by Meta,” Jourová said. “In the EU, consumers are able to make truly informed choices and we now take action to safeguard this right.”

Meta risks sanctions over “sneaky” ad-free plans confusing users, EU says Read More »

on-the-crowdstrike-incident

On the CrowdStrike Incident

Things went very wrong on Friday.

A bugged CrowdStrike update temporarily bricked quite a lot of computers, bringing down such fun things as airlines, hospitals and 911 services.

It was serious out there.

Ryan Peterson: Crowdstrike outage has forced Starbucks to start writing your name on a cup in marker again and I like it.

My understanding it was a rather stupid bug, a NULL pointer from the memory unsafe C++ language.

Zack Vorhies: Memory in your computer is laid out as one giant array of numbers. We represent these numbers here as hexadecimal, which is base 16 (hexadecimal) because it’s easier to work with… for reasons.

The problem area? The computer tried to read memory address 0x9c (aka 156).

Why is this bad?

This is an invalid region of memory for any program. Any program that tries to read from this region WILL IMMEDIATELY GET KILLED BY WINDOWS.

So why is memory address 0x9c trying to be read from? Well because… programmer error.

It turns out that C++, the language crowdstrike is using, likes to use address 0x0 as a special value to mean “there’s nothing here”, don’t try to access it or you’ll die.

And what’s bad about this is that this is a special program called a system driver, which has PRIVLIDGED access to the computer. So the operating system is forced to, out of an abundance of caution, crash immediately.

This is what is causing the blue screen of death. A computer can recover from a crash in non-privileged code by simply terminating the program, but not a system driver. When your computer crashes, 95% of the time it’s because it’s a crash in the system drivers.

If the programmer had done a check for NULL, or if they used modern tooling that checks these sorts of things, it could have been caught. But somehow it made it into production and then got pushed as a forced update by Crowdstrike… OOPS!

Here is another technical breakdown.

A non technical breakdown would be:

  1. CrowdStrike is set up to run whenever you start the computer.

  2. Then someone pushed an update to a ton of computers.

  3. Which is something CrowdStrike was authorized to do.

  4. The update contained a stupid bug, that would have been caught if those involved had used standard practices and tests.

  5. With the bug, it tries to access memory in a way that causes a crash.

  6. Which also crashes the computer.

  7. So you have to do a manual fix to each computer to get around this.

  8. If this had been malicious it could probably have permawiped all the computers, or inserted Trojans, or other neat stuff like that.

  9. So we dodged a bullet.

  10. Also, your AI safety plan needs to take into account that this was the level of security mindset and caution at CrowdStrike, despite CrowdStrike having this level of access and being explicitly in the security mindset business, and that they were given this level of access to billions of computers, and that their stock was only down 11% on the day so they probably keep most of that access and we aren’t going to fine them out of existence either.

Yep.

EDIT, added 11: 30am 7/22/24: Ben Thompson has a post summarizing what happened. It broadly agrees with what is described here, and in particular highlights the EU’s role via the 2009 Microsoft dissent decree that prevents Microsoft from locking down the Windows kernel space. I am convinced that without that decree, Microsoft would probably have done that.

George Kurtz (CEO CrowdStrike): CrowdStrike is actively working with customers impacted by a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts. Mac and Linux hosts are not impacted. This is not a security incident or cyberattack. The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed.

We refer customers to the support portal for the latest updates and will continue to provide complete and continuous updates on our website. We further recommend organizations ensure they’re communicating with CrowdStrike representatives through official channels. Our team is fully mobilized to ensure the security and stability of CrowdStrike customers.

Dan Elton: No apology. Many people have been wounded or killed by this. They are just invisible because we can’t point to them specifically. But think about it though — EMS services were not working. Doctors couldn’t access EMR & hospitals canceled medical scans.

Stock only down 8% [was 11% by closing].

I don’t think the full scope of this disaster has really sunk in. Yes, the problems will be fixed within a few days & everything will go back to normal. However, 911 services are down across the country. Think about that for a second. Hospitals around the world running on paper.

It’s hard to map one’s mind around since all the people who have been killed and will be killed by this — and I’m sure there are many — are largely invisible.

Claude’s median estimate is roughly 1,000 people died due to the outage, when given the hypothetical scenario of an update with this bug being pushed and no other info.

Where Claude got it wrong is it expected a 50%+ drop in share price for CrowdStrike. We should be curious why this did not happen. When told it was 11%, Claude came up with many creative potential explanations, and predicted that this small a drop would become an object of future study.

Then again, perhaps no one cares about reputation these days? You get to have massive security failures and people still let you into their kernels?

Anshel Sag: For those who don’t remember, in 2010, McAfee had a colossal glitch with Windows XP that took down a good part of the internet. The man who was McAfee’s CTO at that time is now the CEO of Crowdstrike. The McAfee incident cost the company so much they ended up selling to Intel.

I mean, sure, it looks bad, now, in hindsight.

At this rate, the third time will be an AGI company.

So do we blame George Kurtz? Or do we blame all of you who let it happen?

Aside from ‘letting a company run by George Kurtz access your kernel,’ that is.

It happened because various actors did not do deeply standard things they should obviously have been doing.

A fun game is to watch everyone say ‘the real problem is X and Y is a distraction’ with various things being both X and Y in different statements. It can all be ‘real’ problems.

Owen Lynch: Everyone is talking about how memory safety would have stopped the crowdstrike thingy. Seems to me that’s a distraction; the real problem is that the windows security model is reactive (try to write software that detects hacks) rather than proactive (run processes in sealed sandboxes with permissions granted by-need instead of by-default). Then there’s little need for antivirus in the same sense.

Of course, the kernel managing these sandboxes needs to be memory safe, but this is a low bar, ideally it should be either exhaustively fuzzed (like SQLite) or actually formally verified.

But most software should be allowed to be horrendously incorrect or actually malicious, but only in its little box.

Here is a thread where they debate whether to blame CrowdStrike or Microsoft.

Luke Parrish: Microsoft designed their OS to run driver files without even a checksum and you say they aren’t responsible? They literally tried to execute a string of zeroes!

Jennifer Marriott: Still the issue is CrowdStrike. If I buy a program and install it on my computer and it bricks my computer I blame the program not the computer.

Luke Parrish: CrowdStrike is absolutely to blame, but so is Microsoft. Microsoft’s software, Windows, is failing to do extremely basic basic checks on driver files before trying to load them and give them full root access to see and do everything on your computer.

This is analogous to the fire safety triangle: Heat, fuel, and oxygen. Any one of those can be removed to prevent combustion. Multiple failures led to this outcome. Microsoft could have prevented this with good engineering practices, just as CrowdStrike could have.

The market did not think Microsoft would suffer especially adverse effects. The Wall Street Journal might say this was the ‘latest woe for Microsoft’ but their stock on Friday was down less than the Nasdaq. That seems right to me. Yes, Microsoft could and should have prevented this, but ultimately it will not cause people to switch.

The Wall Street Journal also attempts to portray this as a failure of Microsoft to have a ‘closed ecosystem’ the way Apple does (in a limited way on a Mac, presumably, this is not a phone). This, they say, is what you let others actually do things for real on your machine, the horrors. There are a minimum of two ways this is Obvious Nonsense, even if you grant a bunch of other absurd assumptions.

  1. Linux exists.

  2. Microsoft is barred from not giving this access by a 2009 EU consent decree.

Did Microsoft massively screw up by not guarding against this particular failure mode? Oh, absolutely, everyone agrees on that. But they failed (as I understand essentially everyone) by not having proper safety checks and failure modes, not by failing to deny access.

There was a clear pattern where ‘critical infrastructure’ that is vitally important to keep online like airlines and banks and hospitals went down, while the software companies providing other non-critical services had no such issues.

‘Too important to improve’ (or ‘too vital to allow?’) is remarkably common.

Where you cannot faround, you cannot find out. And where you cannot do either, it is hard to find good help.

Microsoft Worm: In retrospect it’s pretty ~funny how most shitware SaaS companies & social media companies exclusively run Real Software for Grown-Ups while critical infrastructure (airlines, hospitals, etc.) all uses dotcom-era software from comically incompetent zombie firms with 650 PE ratios.

Gallabytes: We used to explain this bifurcation as a function of size but with most of the biggest companies being tech giants now that explanation has been revealed as cope. what’s the real cause?

Sarah Constantin: My guess would be it’s “do any good software engineers work there or not?” Good software engineers work at both startups and Big Tech cos but I have *onesmart programmer friend who works at a bank, and zero at hospitals, airlines, etc.

Gallabytes: This is downstream I think and not universal – plenty of good programmers in gaming industry but it’s still full of this kind of madness. So far the most accurate classifier I’ve got is actually “does this company run on Windows?”

Scott Leibrand: I think it comes down to whether they hire mostly nerd vs. normie employees.

Illiane: Pretty sure it’s just a result of these tech companies starting out with a « cleaner » blank slate than critical infra that’s been here for decades and relies on mega legacy system which would be very hard and risky to replace. Banks still largely run on COBOL mainframes!

Tech companies at least started out able to find out and hire good help, and built their engineering cultures and software stacks around that. Banks do not have that luxury.

Why else might we have had this stunning display of incompetence?

Lina Khan, head of the FTC, has no sense of irony.

Lina Khan: All too often these days, a single glitch results in a system-wide outage, affecting industries from healthcare and airlines to banks and auto-dealers. Millions of people and businesses pay the price.

These incidents reveal how concentration can create fragile systems.

Concentrating production can concentrate risk, so that a single natural disaster or disruption has cascading effects.

This fragility has contributed to shortages in areas ranging from IV bags to infant formula.

Another area where we may lack resiliency is cloud computing.

In response to @FTC’s inquiry, market participants shared concerns about widespread reliance on a handful of cloud providers, noting that consolidation can create single points of failure.

And we’re continuing to collect public comment on serial acquisitions and roll-up strategies across the economy.

If you’ve encountered an area where a series of deals has consolidated a market, we welcome your input.

Yes. The problem is too much concentration in cloud providers, says Lina Khan. We must Do Something about that. I mean, how could this possibly have happened? That all the major cloud providers went down at the same time over the same software bug?

Must be a lack of regulation.

Except, well, actually, says Mark Atwood.

Mark Atwood: If you are in a regulated industry, you are required to install something like Crowdstrike on all your machines. If you use Crowdstrike, your auditor checks a single line and moves on. If you use anything else, your auditor opens up an expensive new chapter of his book.

The real culprit here is regulatory capture. Notice that everybody getting hit hard by this is in a heavily regulated industry: finance, airlines, healthcare, etc. That’s because those regulations include IT security mandates, and Crowdstrike has positioned themselves as the only game in town for compliance. Hence you get this software monoculture prone to everything getting hit at once like this.

Andres Sandberg: A good point. I saw the same in the old FHI-Amlin systemic risk of risk modelling project: regulators inadvertently reduce model diversity, making model-mediated systemic risk grow. “Sure, you can use a model other than RMS, but it will be painful for both of us…”

Ray Taylor: what if you use Mac / Linux?

Andres Sandberg: You will have to use the right operating system to run the industry standard software. Even if it is Windows XP in 2017.

Some disputed this. I checked with Claude Sonnet 3.5. It looks like there are plenty of functional alternative services, and yes they will work, but CrowdStrike does automated compliance reporting and is widely recognized, and this is actually core to their pitch of why companies should use them – to reduce compliance costs.

I also checked with two friends who know about such things. It seems CrowdStrike did plausibly have a superior product to the alternatives, even discounting the regulatory questions.

It was also pointed out that while a lot of installs were to please auditors, a lot of what the auditors were checking for was not formal government regulations, rather it was largely industry standards without legal enforcement, but that you need to do to get contracts, like SOC 2 or ISO 27001.

In the end, is there a functional difference? In some ways, probably not.

So given the increasing number of requirements Claude was able to list off, and the costs of non-compliance, everyone in these ‘critical infrastructure’ businesses ended up turning to the company whose main differential, and perhaps to them main product offering, was ‘regulatory compliance.’

That then set us up with additional single points of failure. It also meant that the company in charge of those failure points had a culture built around checking off boxes on government forms rather than actual computer security or having a security mindset.

You know who did not use CrowdStrike? Almost anyone who did not face this regulatory burden. It was only in 8.5 million Windows machines.

Byrne Hobart: <1% penetration. This Crowdstrike company seems like it's got a nice TAM to go after, just have to make sure they don't do anything to mess it up.

Another nice bit that I presume is a regulatory compliance issue: Rules around passwords and keys are reliably absurd.

Dan Elton: Many enterprises in healthcare use disk encryption like Bitlocker which complicates #CrowdStrike cleanup.

This is what one IT admin reports:

“We can’t boot into safe mode because our BitLocker keys are stored inside of a service that we can’t login to because our AD is down.”

Another says “Most of our comms are down, most execs’ laptops are in infinite BSOD boot loops, engineers can’t get access to credentials to servers.”

Would it be better if the disaster were worse, such as what likely happens to a crypto project in this spot? Crypto advocate says yes, Gallabytes points out actually no.

Dystopia Breaker: in crypto, when a project has a large incompetence event (hack, insider compromise, whatever), the project loses all of their money and is dead forever in tradtech/bureautech, when a project has a large incompetence event, they do a ‘post mortem’ and maybe get some nastygrams.

Consider for a moment the incentives that this dynamic creates and the outcomes that arise by dialing out these two incentive gradients into the future.

It’s actually worse than ‘they get some nastygrams’, what usually happens is that regulators (who usually know less than nothing about the technosphere) demand band-aid solutions (surveillance, usually) that increase systemic risk [e.g. CrowdStrike itself].

Gallabytes: And that’s a huge downside of crypto!

Most systems will be back to normal by Monday, while in crypto many would be irreversibly broken.

It’d be better still if our institutions learned from this failure but I’m not holding my breath. you basically only see this kind of failure in over regulated oligopolistic markets, so the case for massive deregulation is much clearer than migration to crypto.

As George Carlin famously said, somewhere in the middle, the truth lies. Letting CrowdStrike off the hook because they ‘are the standard’ is insufficiently strong incentives. Taking everything involved down hard is worse.

What about the role of AI?

Andrej Karpathy: What a case study of systemic risk with CrowdStrike outage… that a few bits in the wrong place can brick ~1 billion computers and all the 2nd, 3rd order effects of it. What other single points of instantaneous failure exist in the technosphere and how do we design against it.

Davidad: use LLMs to reimplement all kernel-mode software with formal verification.

How about we use human software engineers to do the rebuild, instead?

It is great that we can use AIs to write code faster, and enable people to skill up. For jobs like ‘rewrite the kernel,’ I am going to go ahead and say I want to stick with the humans. There are many overdetermined reasons.

Patrick Collison (responding to Karpathy): I’ve always thought that we should run scheduled internet outages.

Andrej Karpathy: National bit flip day.

Indomitable American Soul: Its crazy when you think that this could have all been avoided by testing the release on a single sandbox machine.

Andrej Karpathy: I just feel like this is the particular problem but not the *actualdeeper problem. Any part of the system should be allowed to go *crazy*, randomly or even adversarially, and the rest of it should be robust to that. This is what you want, even if robustness is very often at tension with efficiency.

There are two problems.

  1. This error should not have been able to bring down the system.

  2. This error should never have happened even if it couldn’t crash the system.

Either of these on its own should establish that we have a terrible situation that poses catastrophic risks even without AI, and which AI will make a lot worse, and urgently needs fixing.

Together, they are terrifying.

The obvious failure mode is not malicious. It is exactly what happened this time, except in the future, with AI.

  1. AI accidentally outputs buggy code.

  2. Human does not catch it.

  3. What do you mean ‘unit tests’ and ‘canaries’?

  4. Whoops.

Or the bug is more subtle than this, so we do run the standard tests, and it passes. That happens all the time, it is not usually quite this stupid and obvious.

The next failure is that the AI intentionally outputs bugged code, or malicious code, whether or not a human instructed it (explicitly, implicitly or by unfortunate implication) otherwise.

And of course the other failure mode is that the AI, or someone with an AI, intentionally seeks out the attack vector in order to deploy such code.

Shako: A rogue AI could probably brick every computer in the world indefinitely with ongoing zero days to exploit things like we saw today. Probably not too far from the capability either.

Arthur: It won’t need zero days, we’ll have given it root power globally because it’s convenient.

Leo Gao (OpenAI, distinct thread): Thankfully, it’s unimaginable that an AGI could ever compromise a large fraction of internet connected computers.

Jeffrey Ladish: Fortunately there are no single points of failure or over reliances on a single service provider with system level access to a large fraction of the computers that run, uh, everything.

Everyone: “Oh no the AGI will be able to discover 0days in every piece of software, we’ll be totally pwned”

AGI: “Why would I need 0days? 🙄”

Where should we worry about concentration? Is this a reason to want everyone to be using different AIs from different providers, instead of the same AI?

That depends on what constitutes the single point of failure (SPOF).

If the SPOF is ‘all the AIs turn rogue or go crazy or shut off at the same time’ then you want AI diversity.

If the SPOF is ‘every distinct frontier AI is itself an SPOF, because if even one of them goes fully off the rails then that is a catastrophe’ then you do not want AI diversity.

These questions can have very different answers for catastrophic or existential risk, versus mundane risk.

For mundane risk, you by default want your systems to fail at different times in distinct ways, but you need to worry about long dependency chains where you are only as strong as the weakest link. So if you are (for example) combining five different AI systems that each are the best at a particular subtask, and cannot easily swap them out in time, then you are vulnerable if any of them go haywire.

For existential or catastrophic risk, it depends on your threat model.

Any single rogue agent under current conditions, be it human or AI, could potentially have set off the CrowdStrike bug, or a version of it that was far worse. There are doubtless many such cases. So do you think that ‘various good guys with various AIs’ could then defend against that? Would ‘some people defend and some don’t’ be sufficient, or do you need to almost always (or actual always) successfully defend?

I am very skeptical of the ‘good guy with an AI’ proposal, even if such defenses are physically possible (and I am skeptical of that too). Why didn’t a ‘good guy with a test machine or a debugger’ stop the CrowdStrike update? Because even if there was a perfectly viable way to act responsibly, that does not mean we are going to do that if it is trivially inconvenient or is not robustly checked.

Again, yes, if we allow it you are going to give the AI root access and take yourself out of the loop, because not doing so is going to be annoying, and expensive, and you are in competition with people who are willing to do such things. If you don’t, someone else will, and their AIs will end up with the market share and the power.

Indeed, the very fact that these many AIs are allowed to be in this intense competition with each other with rapid iteration will make it all but certain corners will be cut to absurd degrees, especially when it comes to things like collective security.

Another thing that can happen is the one dangerous AI suddenly becomes a lot of dangerous AIs, because it can be copied, or it can scale its resources with similar effect. Or by having many such potentially dangerous AIs, you place authority over it into many hands, and what happens if even one of them chooses to be sufficiently irresponsible or malicious with it?

What about the risk of regulatory capture happening with safety in AI, the way it happened here with mundane computer security and CrowdStrike? What happens if everyone is hiring a company, Acme Safety Compliance (ASC), to handle all their ‘AI safety’ needs, and ASC’s actual product is regulatory compliance?

Well, then we’re in very big trouble. As in dead.

Every time I look at an AI lab’s scaling policy, I say some form of:

  1. If they implement the spirit of a good version of this document, I don’t know if that is good enough, but that would be a big help.

  2. If they implement the letter of even a good version of this document, and game the requirements, then that is worth very little if anything.

  3. If they don’t even implement the letter of it in the breach, it’s totally worthless.

  4. We cannot rely on their word that they will implement even the letter of this.

This is another reason most of the value, right now, is in disclosure and information requirements on the largest frontier models. If you have to tell me what you are doing, then that is not an easy thing to meaningfully ‘capture.’

But yeah, this is going to be tough and a real danger. It always is. And it always needs to be balanced against the alternative options available, and what happens if you do nothing.

It can also be pointed out that this is another logical counter to ‘but you need to tell me exactly what constitutes compliance, and if I technically do that then I should have full safe harbor,’ as many demand for themselves in many contexts. That is a very good way to get exactly what is written down, and no more, to get the letter only and not the spirit. That works if there is a risk that can indeed be taken out of the room by adhering to particular rules. But if the risk is inherent in the system and not so easy to deal with, you cannot make the situation non-risky on one side of a line.

One thing to note is that CrowdStrike was an active menace. It was de facto mandatory that they be given this level of access. If CrowdStrike was (for example) instead a red teaming service that attempted to break into your computers, it would have been much harder (but not, indirectly, impossible) for it to cause this disaster.

Another key insight is that you do not only have to work around things that might go wrong when everyone does their jobs properly, and you face an actually hard problem.

Your solution must also be designed anticipating the stupidest failures.

Because that is what you probably first get.

And saying ‘oh there are like 5 ways someone would take action such that this would obviously not happen’ is a surprisingly weak defense.

Then, later, you also get the failures that happen when the AI is smarter than you.

And again, then, whatever happens, there is a good chance many will say ‘it would have been fine if we hadn’t acted like completely incompetent idiots and followed even a modicum of best practices’ and on this exact set of events they will have been right. But that will also be why that particular set of events happened, rather than something harder to fathom.

Also down were the banks. Anything requiring computer access was stopped cold.

Patrick McKenzie: In “could have come out of a tabletop exercise”, sudden surge by many customers of ATM transactions has them flagging customers as likely being fraud impacted.

Good news: you have an automated loop which allows a customer to recognize a transaction.

Bad news: Turns out that subdomain is running on Windows.

I’m not trying to grind their nose in it. Widespread coordinated outages are terrible and the few things that knock out all the PCs are always going to be nightmares.

I do have to observe that some people who write regulations which effectively mandate a monoculture don’t know what SPOF stands for and our political process is unlikely to put two and two together for them.

Same story at three banks, two GSFIs and one large regional, for anyone wanting a data point. Well I guess I know next week’s Bits about Money topic.

It was only a single point of failure for Windows machines that trusted CrowdStrike. But in a corporate context, that is likely to either be all or none of them.

That created some obvious issues, and offered opportunity for creative solutions.

Patrick McKenzie: Me: *cash*

Tradesman: Wait how did you get that with the banks down?

Me: *explains*

Tradesman: Oh that’s creative.

Me: Nah. Next plan was creative.

Tradesman: What was that?

Me: Going to the church and buying all cash on hand with a check.

Tradesman: What.

Me: I don’t drink.

Tradesman: What.

Me: The traditional business to use in this situation is the local bar, but I don’t drink and so the local bar doesn’t know me, so that’s right out.

Tradesman: What.

Me: Though come to think of it I certainly know someone who knows both me and the bar owner, so I could probably convince them to give me a workweek’s take on a handshake.

Tradesman: This is effed up.

Me: I mean money basically always works like this, in a way.

Called someone who I (accurately) assumed would have sufficient cash on hand and said “I need a favor.”, then he did what I’d do on receiving the same phone call.

Another obvious solution is ‘keep an emergency cash fund around.’ In a world where one’s bank accounts might all get frozen at once, or the banks might go down for a while, it seems sensible to have such a reserve somewhere you can access it in this kind of emergency. You are not giving up much in interest.

This is also a damn good reason to not ban or eliminate physical cash, in general.

On the CrowdStrike Incident Read More »

rocket-report:-firefly’s-ceo-steps-down;-artemis-ii-core-stage-leaves-factory

Rocket Report: Firefly’s CEO steps down; Artemis II core stage leaves factory

Vaya con dios —

Rocket Factory Augsburg completed qualification of its upper stage for a first launch this year.

The core stage for NASA's second Space Launch System rocket rolls aboard a barge that will take it from New Orleans to Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Enlarge / The core stage for NASA’s second Space Launch System rocket rolls aboard a barge that will take it from New Orleans to Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Welcome to Edition 7.03 of the Rocket Report! One week ago, SpaceX suffered a rare failure of its workhorse Falcon 9 rocket. In fact, it was the first time the latest version of the Falcon 9, known as the Block 5, has ever failed on its prime mission after nearly 300 launches. The world’s launch pads have been silent since the grounding of the Falcon 9 fleet after last week’s failure. This isn’t surprising, but it’s noteworthy. After all, the Falcon 9 has flown more this year than all of the world’s other rockets combined and is fundamental to much of what the world does in space.

As always, we welcome reader submissions. If you don’t want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Astra finally goes private, again. A long-simmering deal for Astra’s founders to take the company private has been finalized, the company announced Thursday, capping the rocket launch company’s descent from blank-check darling to delisting in three years, Bloomberg reports. The launch company’s valuation peaked at $3.9 billion in 2021, the year it went public, and was worth about $12.2 million at the end of March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Astra’s chief executive officer, Chris Kemp, and chief technology officer, Adam London, founded the company in 2016 with the goal of essentially commoditizing launch services for small satellites. But Astra’s rockets failed to deliver and fell short of orbit five times in seven tries.

Spiraling … Astra’s stock price tanked after the spate of launch failures, drying up its funding spigot as Kemp tried to pivot toward a slightly larger, more reliable rocket. Astra acquired a company named Apollo Fusion in 2021, entering a new business segment to produce electric thrusters for small satellites. But Astra’s launch business faltered, and last November Kemp and London submitted an offer to retake ownership of the company. Astra announced the closure of the take-private deal Thursday, with Kemp and London acquiring the company’s outstanding shares for 50 cents per share in cash, below the stock’s final listing price of 53 cents. “We will now focus all of our attention on a successful launch of Rocket 4, delivering satellite engines to our customers, and building a company of consequence,” Kemp said. (submitted by EllPeaTea and Ken the Bin)

Firefly chief leaves company. Launch startup Firefly Aerospace parted ways with CEO Bill Weber, Payload reports. The announcement of Weber’s departure late Wednesday came two days after Payload reported Firefly was investigating claims of an alleged inappropriate relationship between him and a female employee. “Firefly Aerospace’s Board of Directors announced that Bill Weber is no longer serving as CEO of the company, effective immediately,” the company said in a statement Wednesday night. Peter Schumacher takes over as interim CEO while Firefly searches for a new permanent chief executive. Schumacher was an interim CEO at Firefly before Weber’s hiring in 2022.

Two days and gone … Payload published the first report of Weber’s alleged improper relationship with a female employee Monday. Two days later, Weber was gone. Payload reported an executive brought his concerns about the alleged relationship to Firefly’s board and resigned because he lost confidence in leadership at the company. Citing four current and former employees, Payload reported Firefly’s culture became “chaotic” since Weber took the helm in 2022 after its acquisition by AE Industrial Partners. The Texas-based company achieved some success during Weber’s tenure, with four orbital launches of its Alpha rocket, although two of the flights ended up in lower-than-planned orbits. (submitted by Ken the Bin)

The easiest way to keep up with Eric Berger’s space reporting is to sign up for his newsletter, we’ll collect his stories in your inbox.

Themis hop tests delayed to next year. The initial hop tests of the European Themis reusable booster, developed by ArianeGroup and funded by ESA, won’t start until next year, European Spaceflight reports. The Swedish Space Corporation, which operates the space center in Sweden where Themis will initially fly, confirmed the schedule change. Once ArianeGroup moves on to higher altitude flights, the testing will be moved to the Guiana Space Center. ESA awarded the first development contract for the Themis booster in 2019, and the first hop tests were then scheduled for 2022. Themis’ hops will be similar to SpaceX’s Grasshopper rocket, which performed a series of up-and-down atmospheric test flights before SpaceX started recovering and reusing Falcon 9 boosters.

Fate of Themis … The Themis booster is powered by the methane-fueled Prometheus engine, also funded by ESA. A large European reusable rocket is unlikely to fly until the 2030s, but a subsidiary of ArianeGroup named MaiaSpace is developing a smaller partially reusable two-stage rocket slated to debut as soon as next year. The Maia rocket will use a modified Themis booster as its first stage. “As a result, for MaiaSpace, the continued and rapid development of the Themis program is essential to ensure it can hit its projected target of an inaugural flight of Maia in 2025,” European Spaceflight reports. (submitted by Ken the Bin)

Rocket Report: Firefly’s CEO steps down; Artemis II core stage leaves factory Read More »

long-covid-rates-have-declined,-especially-among-the-vaccinated,-study-finds

Long COVID rates have declined, especially among the vaccinated, study finds

Good news —

In large study, rates of long COVID fell from 10% to 3.5% for the vaccinated.

Long covid activists attend the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies hearing on the

Enlarge / Long covid activists attend the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies hearing on the “Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Request for the National Institutes of Health,” in Dirksen building on May 23, 2024.

As a summer wave of COVID-19 infections swells once again, a study published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine offers some positive news about the pandemic disease: Rates of long COVID have declined since the beginning of the health crisis, with rates falling from a high of 10.4 percent before vaccines were available to a low of 3.5 percent for those vaccinated during the omicron era, according to the new analysis.

The study, led by Ziyad Al-Aly, chief of research at the VA Saint Louis Health Care System, used data from a wealth of health records in the Department of Veterans Affairs. The researchers ultimately included data from over 440,000 veterans who contracted COVID-19 sometime between March 1, 2020, and January 31, 2022, as well as over 4.7 million uninfected veterans who acted as controls.

Al-Aly and colleagues divided the population into eight groups. People who were infected during the study period were divided into five groupings by the dates of their first infection and their vaccination status. The first group included those infected in the pre-delta era before vaccines were available (March 1, 2020, to June 18, 2021). Then there were vaccinated and unvaccinated groups who were infected in the delta era (June 19, 2021, to December 18, 2021) and the omicron era (December 19, 2021, and January 31, 2022). The uninfected controls made up the final three of eight groups, with the controls assigned to one of the three eras.

On the decline

In the pre-delta/pre-vaccine era, 10.42 out of 100 unvaccinated people infected developed long COVID in the year after their infection, which the researchers referred to as PASC, or postacute sequelae of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. In the delta era, the rate of long COVID among the unvaccinated fell slightly to 9.51 out of 100. But for the vaccinated, the rate fell much further, to 5.35 out of 100. A similar pattern was seen in the omicron era. For the unvaccinated, the rate of long COVID again fell slightly to 7.76 per 100 people, while the vaccinated saw their rate fall to 3.5 per 100.

In a secondary statistical analysis, called a decomposition analysis, the researchers found that vaccines could explain about 72 percent of the cumulative decline in long COVID rates across the eras, while era-related factors explained about 28 percent. Those era-related factors could include differences in the virus, improved treatments, and use of anti-viral medications.

Further, looking at data on the disease categories related to long COVID cases, the researchers also did an analysis finding a shift in symptoms over the eras. The researchers looked at over 10 disease categories: cardiovascular, coagulation and hematologic, fatigue, gastrointestinal, kidney, mental health, metabolic, musculoskeletal, neurologic, and pulmonary. Compared to the two earlier eras, the researchers noted an increase in gastrointestinal, metabolic, and musculoskeletal diseases involved in long COVID cases in the omicron era.

Overall, the study points to a welcomed decline in the rates of long COVID among the infected, particularly for those who are vaccinated. But, it also makes clear that long COVID isn’t a thing of the past: “a substantial residual risk of PASC remains among vaccinated persons who had SARS-CoV-2 infection during the omicron era,” Al-Aly and his colleagues conclude.

The study also has some limitations, leaving lingering questions for further study. One is whether the type or number of vaccines affect the risk of long COVID—that was not included in the study. The study also didn’t allow researchers to assess whether repeat infections increase the burden of long COVID.

Long COVID rates have declined, especially among the vaccinated, study finds Read More »

witness-the-rise-of-the-bene-gesserit-in-new-dune:-prophecy-teaser

Witness the rise of the Bene Gesserit in new Dune: Prophecy teaser

True power begins with control —

“Our hands are poised on the levers of power but yet our grasp on it is still fragile.”

The HBO Original Series Dune: Prophecy will premiere this November.

Fans of director Denis Villeneuve’s epic two-part film adaptation of Frank Herbert’s Dune have no doubt been curious about the upcoming HBO Max series, Dune: Prophecy. It’s a prequel series inspired by the novel Sisterhood of Dune, written by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson, exploring the origins of the Bene Gesserit. The studio just dropped a tantalizing teaser rife with political intrigue, ominous warnings, and a bit of hand-to-hand combat.

The series was first announced in 2019, with Villeneuve serving as an executive producer and Alison Schapker (Alias, Fringe, Altered Carbon) serving as showrunner. The first season will consist of six episodes, and it’s unclear how closely the series will adhere to the source material. Per the official premise:

Set 10,000 years before the ascension of Paul Atreides, Dune: Prophecy follows two Harkonnen sisters as they combat forces that threaten the future of humankind, and establish the fabled sect that will become known as the Bene Gesserit.

Emily Watson co-stars as Valya Harkonnen, leader of the Sisterhood, with Olivia Williams playing her sister, Tula Harkonnen. Mark Strong plays Emperor Javicco Corrino, described as “a man from a great line of war-time Emperors, who is called upon to govern the Imperium and manage a fragile peace,” while Jodhi May plays Empress Natalya, and Sarah-Sofie Boussnina plays Princess Ynez.

The cast also includes Shalom Brune-Franklin as Mikaela, a Fremen woman who serves the royal family; Travis Fimmel as Desmond Hart, described as “a charismatic soldier with an enigmatic past”; Chris Mason as swordsman Keiran Atreides; Josh Heuston as Constantine Corrino, the illegitimate son of Javicco; Edward Davis as rising politician Harrow Harkonnen; Tabu as Sister Francesca, the Emperor’s former lover; Jihae as Reverend Mother Kasha, the Emperor’s Truthsayer; Faoileann Cunningham as Sister Jen; Chloe Lea as Lila; Jade Anouka as Sister Theodosia; and Aoife Hinds as Sister Emeline, all acolytes at the Sisterhood School.

Power = control

A short teaser was shown in May during the Warner Bros. Discovery Upfront presentation in New York City. It was heavy on the exposition, with a voiceover describing the founding of a sisterhood assigned to the Great Houses “to help them sift truth from lies.” The result was a “network of influence throughout the Imperium… but power comes with a price.” They want to place a Sister on the throne and arrange a marriage to make it possible. Not all the Sisters were on board with the plan, however, with one warning that the Sisterhood was playing god “and we will be judged for it.”

This latest teaser opens with an admonition to acolytes of the Sisterhood: “You wish to serve the Great Houses and shape the flow of power; you must first exert power over yourself.” The emperor seems to be easily wooed by the “sorceresses,” much to his empress’s chagrin, but the more influence the Sisterhood wields, the more enemies it gains. Desmond Hart also has his suspicions about the Sisterhood, probably with good reason. “Our hands are poised on the levers of power but yet our grasp on it is still fragile,” Valya tells her sister Tula, assuring her that “I am trying to protect the Imperium”—and “sacrifices must be made.”

Dune: Prophecy premieres this November on Max.

Listing image by HBO Max

Witness the rise of the Bene Gesserit in new Dune: Prophecy teaser Read More »

samsung-delays-galaxy-buds3-pro-release-over-quality-concerns

Samsung delays Galaxy Buds3 Pro release over quality concerns

Delayed until August 28 —

“It tore from the inside instantly.”

Samsung Galaxy Buds3 Pro

Enlarge / A marketing image for the Galaxy Buds3 Pro.

Samsung

Samsung is delaying the release of the $250 Galaxy Buds3 Pro in the US from July 24 to August 28, per its website. The third-generation earbuds have Samsung moving from a bean-like shape to an Apple AirPods Pro-like design, including silicone ear tips. But some users have claimed that the new tips rip too easily.

Samsung confirmed to Android Authority today that it has temporarily stopped shipping units to stores. The devices were no longer available for preorder on Amazon or Best Buy as of this writing.

Samsung’s statement to Android Authority noted “reports relating to a limited number of early production devices” and asserted that it’s taking the problem “very seriously.” The statement continues:

We are urgently assessing and enhancing our quality control processes. To ensure all products meet our quality standards, we have temporarily suspended deliveries of Galaxy Buds 3 Pro devices to distribution channels to conduct a full quality control evaluation before shipments to consumers take place. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

Samsung also advised people who already have a pair to contact Samsung or go to a Samsung Service Center. Android Authority reported that some customers also received an email from Samsung informing them of the quality control concerns and offering a link where customers can find contact information to ask Samsung representatives about canceling their orders for a refund.

Samsung’s website says the earbuds have a one-year warranty that does not cover defects or damage “caused by accident, misuse, abnormal use, abnormal conditions, improper storage, neglect, or unusual physical, electrical or electromechanical stress.”

“It tore from the inside instantly”

Although the Galaxy Buds3 Pro were originally going to be available in the US on July 24, they have already been available for purchase in South Korea, per Android Police. Other people who already have the earbuds include reviewers, employees, and those who made their preorders early. (Some people also claimed that they were able to buy the earbuds at US Walmarts before Samsung announced them).

Some who reportedly had the earbuds claimed it was hard to remove their silicone tips without tearing them. Like AirPods Pros, Galaxy Buds3 Pros have a silicone tip that latches onto a plastic ring on the earbuds’ chassis. Various people reported trying to remove the tip and the tip ripping, with a piece of silicone remaining stuck on the plastic ring.

Some, including reviewers at The Verge and Android Authority, said they hadn’t experienced the problem yet. But others, including TechRadar, found it challenging to remove the ear tips without damaging them.

One Reddit user claimed that they pulled on an ear tip to remove it, and “it tore from the inside instantly.” They noted that because the silicone is clipped into the plastic ring, “you have to pull it strongly.” Similarly, another user said the “left ear tip ripped right off” when they tried to remove it.

Samsung has even published a support page on its Korean website explaining how to remove the ear tips to avoid damage. It notes various ways in which the silicone could tear, including, per a Google translation, if you hold them with your fingernails while inserting or removing, if you press or twist the ear tips hard, or if you pull the ear tips out quickly.

After numerous complaints online, including on Reddit (examples here, here, and here) and YouTube (examples here and here), Samsung has pushed back general availability. Complicating potential quick fixes, Samsung doesn’t yet offer replacement tips for the earbuds. People usually don’t have to frequently change their earbuds’ tips, but not offering replacement when Apple has for years seems like an oversight.

Samsung’s Galaxy Buds3 Pro look like the AirPods Pro that originally debuted almost five years ago, and it doesn’t care. What it definitely should care about, though, is a new design appearing weak and inferior before it’s even fully released. Samsung has at least taken the initiative in addressing early complaints rather than ignoring them and is instead offering refunds and delaying the release to limit the number of impacted customers. We’ll see if the earbuds are more sturdy by August.

Samsung delays Galaxy Buds3 Pro release over quality concerns Read More »

report:-apple-tv+-will-soon-get-a-lot-more-movies-made-by-studios-other-than-apple

Report: Apple TV+ will soon get a lot more movies made by studios other than Apple

Streaming services —

Apple TV+ series have made an impact, but its films have been less successful lately.

A photo of a TV showing the landing page for Argylle in the Apple TV+ app

Enlarge / Apple seeks to continue to augment its library of original films like Argylle with films from other studios.

Apple TV+ has carved a niche for itself with strong original programming, and while it’s still far behind the likes of Netflix in terms of subscribers, it has seen a fairly strong initial run. To build on that, Apple is talking with major studios about ways to complement its slate of original programming with films from other companies in order to expand and extend the service’s appeal.

That’s according to Bloomberg reporters Lucas Shaw and Thomas Buckley, who cite people familiar with Apple’s workings. Those sources say Apple is “having discussions” with more than one large film studio about bringing more movies to the service.

Apple previously experimented with this by licensing around 50 movies and making them available on the service for limited runs over the past several months. That experiment seems to have gone well, leading Apple to begin laying the groundwork for expanding on that.

That test run was just in the United States. Bloomberg claims the focus this time is international, with the possibility of new films not just in the US but in other regions, too.

Hollywood studios have reportedly been anticipating this move. As you may have noticed amid the numerous subscription service price hikes, media companies have begun putting greater emphasis on profitability after the conclusion of a long period where subscriber growth at any cost was the goal. Licensing deals like this can help with that new goal.

It’s worth noting that while Apple has found some big successes in terms of series (Ted Lasso, Severance, The Morning Show) it has struggled to make as much of an impact with its movies. Despite big stars and budgets, the films have not always made as much cultural impact as the shows.

That means that bringing in films from studios with a more proven record can be a win-win: It will help Apple bolster the TV+ subscription service while generating revenue for film studios that are struggling to keep up in the new era.

Services like TV+ are a growing part of Apple’s business, which has historically been focused on hardware sales. In the second quarter of its 2024 fiscal year, the services bucket accounted for $23.9 billion in quarterly revenue, which is more than half the revenue generated by iPhone hardware sales.

Report: Apple TV+ will soon get a lot more movies made by studios other than Apple Read More »

the-mazda-cx-90-phev-gives-luxury-car-vibes-for-a-mainstream-price

The Mazda CX-90 PHEV gives luxury car vibes for a mainstream price

love the interior —

This big Mazda is one of a handful of plug-in hybrid three-rows on sale today.

The front of a Mazda CX-90 with graffiti in the background

Enlarge / Can the big Mazda CX-90 make up for how disappointed we were with the last electrified Mazda we drove?

Jonathan Gitlin

Fairly or not, the Mazda CX-90 PHEV had a lot to make up for. The last electrified Mazda we drove was the abysmal MX-30, a cynical compliance car that proved too unpopular to remain on sale. That was a small hatchback crossover with suicide doors and a cork interior. The CX-90 PHEV, Mazda’s full-size SUV, is a much more substantial proposition, with seating for up to eight and starting at a reasonable $47,445.

You may miss out on some of the very newest bells and whistles found in the latest German or Korean luxury cars, but as electrified three-rows go, there’s a fair bit to like about this one.

Tech specs

The CX-90 uses a newly developed Mazda platform for larger vehicles, with rear-biased all-wheel drive powertrains. There’s a turbocharged mild hybrid inline-six cylinder engine available in two different levels of tune, but the one we’re interested in is the e-Skyactiv G powertrain, which pairs a turbocharged four-cylinder engine generating 189 hp (141 kW) and 192 lb-ft (260 Nm) with a 173 hp (129 kW), 199 lb-ft (270 Nm) permanent magnet synchronous electric motor.

  • If you need a gigantic SUV but also want it to be a PHEV, you don’t have too many choices. This one comes with a lot of good safety tech and not too much in the way of digital distraction, plus a great interior.

    Jonathan Gitlin

  • With the third row of seats in use, there’s 14.9 cubic feet (423 L) of cargo volume. Drop the third row flat and that grows to 40 cubic feet (1,133 L). Fold down the middle row as well and you can fit 74.2 cubic feet (2,101 L) of stuff back there.

    Jonathan Gitlin

  • A standard-size parking bay doesn’t leave much room.

    Jonathan Gitlin

Total combined output is 323 hp (240 kW) and 369 lb-ft (500 Nm), all of which goes to the wheels via an eight-speed planetary gear transmission that uses a wet clutch instead of a torque convertor. Mazda says there’s a North America-specific tune that, by the sounds of it, has a peppier torque curve for better acceleration than the versions sold in Europe or Asia.

There’s a 17.8 kWh lithium-ion battery pack with an EPA-rated electric-only range of up to 26 miles. Add a full tank of gas to that and the CX-90 PHEV should go 490 miles, according to the regulator. Charge times are about 2.5 hours with a 240 V level 2 charger, and there’s a charge button on the center console that will use spare power from the internal combustion engine to recharge the traction battery while you drive (with an attendant hit to fuel economy as you do).

In normal mode, as long as the battery has more than 20 percent state of charge, the car will default to using the electric motor alone for propulsion. In this combined gas-plus-electric mode, the EPA rates the CX-90 at 56 MPGe. Below 20 percent SoC, the engine stays on and maintains some charge in the battery, which Mazda says is so the EV assist is always available.

There’s also an EV mode, although if the throttle pedal passes the kick-down point, the ICE fires up again, and the car reverts to normal mode. Sport keeps the engine fired all the time and adds electric torque, but at 5,243 lbs, this is not an SUV that will ever feel sporty to drive.

  • I don’t know about you, but my trips to Costco are not often long enough to get a meaningful charge in the battery. Particularly if there’s snow on the ground.

    Jonathan Gitlin

  • In late spring, things went a lot better.

    Jonathan Gitlin

  • Charging stats.

    Jonathan Gitlin

  • The powertrain with a cutaway showing inside the electric motor, which is packaged between the engine and transmission.

    Mazda

Once the battery is fully depleted, fuel economy plummets as the relatively small engine works hard to keep this large SUV in motion—just 25 mpg (9.4 L/100 km) combined, according to the EPA.

The Mazda CX-90 PHEV gives luxury car vibes for a mainstream price Read More »

switch-2-is-around-the-corner,-but-nintendo-announces-a-new-switch-accessory-anyway

Switch 2 is around the corner, but Nintendo announces a new Switch accessory anyway

better late than never? —

Oddly timed accessory is released as the Switch’s life cycle is winding down.

  • Nintendo’s Joy-Con Charging Stand (Two-Way) seems useful, but it’s coming out at a strange time in the console’s lifecycle.

    Nintendo

  • The stand can charge the Switch Online NES controllers, something that Nintendo’s charging grip can’t do because the handles get in the way.

    Nintendo

  • The charging stand can be removed from the stand part to maximize flexibility.

    Nintendo

Nintendo’s Switch launched in March 2017, and all available information indicates that the company is on track to announce a successor early next year. It’s that timing that makes the launch of Nintendo’s latest Switch accessory so odd: The company has announced a first-party charging cradle for Joy-Con controllers, which up until now have been charged by slotting them into the console itself, via Nintendo’s sold-separately Joy-Con charging grip, or with third-party charging accessories.

The Nintendo of Europe account on X, formerly Twitter, announced that the charging accessory—formally called the “Joy-Con Charging Stand (Two-Way)”—will be released on October 17. It will work with both Joy-Cons and the Switch Online wireless NES controllers, and the charging cradle can be separated from its stand (where it looks a lot like the Joy-Con charging grip but without the grip part).

Power is provided via a USB-C port on top of the stand, which can either be connected to one of the Switch dock’s USB ports or to a separate USB-C charger. Other Switch controllers, including the Pro Controller and the SNES and N64 replica controllers, are charged via USB-C directly.

The Verge reports that the accessory has only been announced for Europe and Japan so far, though it will presumably also come to North America at some point. Pricing hasn’t been announced yet, either.

Switch 2 is around the corner

Why would Nintendo release a new first-party charging accessory for your old console just months before it’s slated to announce its next-generation console? Rumors about the design of the Switch 2 could hold some hints.

Accessory makers and others with firsthand knowledge of the Switch 2 have suggested that the new console will come with redesigned Joy-Cons with additional buttons and a magnetic attachment mechanism. This would likely make it impossible to attach current-generation Joy-Cons, which physically interlock with the Switch and its various accessories.

But reporting also suggests that the Switch 2 will retain backward compatibility with digital and physical Switch games, which could justify retaining some kind of backward compatibility with existing controllers. This new Joy-Con charging cradle could provide current Switch owners a way to continue charging Joy-Cons and NES controllers even if they can no longer be attached to and charged by the console itself.

But that’s just speculation at this point. It could just as easily be the case that Nintendo has to keep the Switch going for one more holiday season, and it’s eager to sell every accessory it can alongside the shrinking but still significant number of consoles it will sell between now and the time the Switch 2 is released. Nintendo recently announced new games in the Legend of Zelda and Mario & Luigi series, which will give past and future Switch buyers a reason to keep their Joy-Cons charged in the first place.

Nintendo has taken pains to make old controllers compatible with new consoles before. Most Nintendo Wii consoles came with built-in GameCube controller ports, which enabled backward compatibility with GameCube games and also allowed GameCube controllers to be used with compatible Wii games like Super Smash Bros. Brawl. Wii remotes also continued to function with the Wii U.

One thing we don’t know about the Switch 2’s backward compatibility is whether it will provide any kind of graphical enhancements for Switch games. Several titles released in recent years, including newer Pokémon titles, have suffered from performance issues. Nintendo had reportedly planned to release a more powerful “Switch Pro” at some point in 2021 or 2022, but the update was apparently scrapped in favor of the more modestly updated OLED Switch.

Listing image by Nintendo

Switch 2 is around the corner, but Nintendo announces a new Switch accessory anyway Read More »