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Personal Info on 17.5 Million Users May Have Leaked to Dark Web After 2024 Instagram Breach

An anonymous reader shared this report from Engadget:


If you received a bunch of password reset requests from Instagram recently, you're not alone. As reported by Malwarebytes, an antivirus software company, there was a data breach revealing the "sensitive information" of 17.5 million Instagram users. Malwarebytes added that the leak included Instagram usernames, physical addresses, phone numbers, email addresses and more.

The company added that the "data is available for sale on the dark web and can be abused by cybercriminals." Malwarebytes noted in an email to its customers that it discovered the breach during its routine dark web scan and that it's tied to a potential incident related to an Instagram API exposure from 2024.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

China Tests a Supercritical CO2 Generator in Commercial Operation

"China recently placed a supercritical carbon dioxide power generator into commercial operation," writes CleanTechnica, "and the announcement was widely framed as a technological breakthrough."

The system, referred to as Chaotan One, is installed at a steel plant in Guizhou province in mountainous southwest China and is designed to recover industrial waste heat and convert it into electricity. Each unit is reported to be rated at roughly 15 MW, with public statements describing configurations totaling around 30 MW. Claimed efficiency improvements range from 20% to more than 30% higher heat to power conversion compared with conventional steam based waste heat recovery systems. These are big numbers, typical of claims for this type of generator, and they deserve serious attention.

China doing something first, however, has never been a reliable indicator that the thing will prove durable, economic, or widely replicable. China is large enough to try almost everything. It routinely builds first of a kind systems precisely because it can afford to learn by doing, discarding what does not work and scaling what does. This approach is often described inside China as crossing the river by feeling for stones. It produces valuable learning, but it also produces many dead ends. The question raised by the supercritical CO2 deployment is not whether China is capable of building it, but whether the technology is likely to hold up under real operating conditions for long enough to justify broad adoption.

A more skeptical reading is warranted because Western advocates of specific technologies routinely point to China's limited deployments as evidence that their preferred technologies are viable, when the scale of those deployments actually argues the opposite. China has built a single small modular reactor and a single experimental molten salt reactor, not fleets of them, despite having the capital, supply chains, and regulatory capacity to do so if they made economic sense... If small modular reactors or hydrogen transportation actually worked at scale and cost, China would already be building many more of them, and the fact that it is not should be taken seriously rather than pointing to very small numbers of trials compared to China's very large denominators...

What is notably absent from publicly available information is detailed disclosure of materials, operating margins, impurity controls, and maintenance assumptions. This is not unusual for early commercial deployments in China. It does mean that external observers cannot independently assess long term durability claims.



The article notes America's Energy Department funded a carbon dioxide turbine in Texas rated at roughly 10 MW electric that "reached initial power generation in 2024 after several years of construction and commissioning." But for both these efforts, the article warns that "early efficiency claims should be treated as provisional. A system that starts at 15 MW and delivers 13 MW after several years with rising maintenance costs is not a breakthrough. It is an expensive way to recover waste heat compared with mature steam based alternatives that already operate for decades with predictable degradation..."

"If both the Chinese and U.S. installations run for five years without significant reductions in performance and without high maintenance costs, I will be surprised. In that case, it would be worth revisiting this assessment and potentially changing my mind."


Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader cusco for sharing the article.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

That Bell Labs 'Unix' Tape from 1974: From a Closet to Computing History

Remember that re-discovered computer tape with one of the earliest versions of Unix from the early 1970s? This week several local news outlets in Utah reported on the find, with KSL creating a video report with shots of the tape arriving at Silicon Valley's Computer History Museum, the closet where it was found, and even its handwritten label.

The Salt Lake Tribune reports that the closet where it was found also contained "old cords from unknown sources and mountains of papers that had been dumped from a former professor's file cabinet, including old drawings from his kids and saved plane ticket stubs." (Their report also includes a photo of the University of Utah team that found the tape — the University's Flux Research Group).

Professor Robert Ricci believes only 20 copies were ever produced of the version of Unix on that tape:

At the time, in the 1970s, Ricci estimates there would have been maybe two or three of those computers — called a PDP-11, or programmed data processor — in Utah that could have run UNIX V4, including the one at the U. Having that technology is part of why he believes the U. got a copy of the rare software. The other part was the distinguished computing faculty at the school.

The new UNIX operating system would've been announced at conferences in the early 1970s, and a U. professor at the time named Martin Newell frequently attended those because of his own recognized work in the field, Ricci said. In another box, stuffed in under manila envelopes, [researcher Aleks] Maricq found a 1974 letter written to Newell from Ken Thompson at Bell Labs that said as soon as "a new batch comes from the printers, I will send you the system." Ricci and Maricq are unsure if the software was ever used. They reached out to Newell, who is now 72 and retired, as well as some of his former students. None of them recalled actually running it through the PDP-11...

The late Jay Lepreau also worked at the U.'s computing department and created the Flux Research Group that Ricci, Maricq and [engineering research associate Jon] Duerig are now part of. Lepreau overlapped just barely with Newell's tenure. In 1978, Lepreau and a team at the U. worked with a group at the University of California, Berkeley. Together, they built their own clone of the UNIX operating system. They called it BSD, or Berkeley Standard Deviation. Steve Jobs, the former CEO of Apple, worked with BSD, too, and it influenced his work.
Ultimately, it was Lepreau who saved the 9-track tape with the UNIX system on it in his U. office. And he's why the university still has it today. "He seems to have found it and decided it was worth keeping," Ricci said...
The U. will also get the tape back from the museum. Maricq said it will likely be displayed in the university's new engineering building that's set to open in January 2027. That's why, the research associate said, he was cleaning out the storage room to begin with — to try to prepare for the move. He was mostly just excited to see the floor again. "I thought we'd find some old stuff, but I didn't think it'd be anything like this," he said. And Maricq still has boxes to go through, including more believed to be from Lepreau's office.


Local news station KMYU captured the thoughts of some of the University researchers who found the tape:


"When you see the very first beginnings of something, and you go from seed to sapling, that's what we saw here," [engineering research associate Jon] Duerig said. "We see this thing in the moment of flux. We see the signs of all the things changing — of all the things developing that we now see today."
Duerig also gave this comment to local news station KSL. "The coolest thing is that anybody, anywhere in the world can now access this, right? People can go on the internet archive and download the raw tape file and simulate running it," Duerig said. "People have posted browsable directory trees of the whole thing."
One of the museum's directors said the tape's recovery marked a big day for the museum "One of the things that was pretty exciting to us is that just that there is this huge community of people around the world who were excited to jump on the opportunity to look at this piece of history," Ricci said. "And it was really cool that we were able to share that."
Duerig said while there weren't many comments or footnotes from the programmers of that time, they did discovery more unexpected content having to do with Bell Labs on the tape. "There were survey results of them actually asking survey questions of their employees at these operator centers," he said.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader walterbyrd for sharing the news.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Ford Headquarters, Dearborn, MI

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Ford Headquarters, Dearborn, MI

Kitty Kat Club

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Kitty Kat Club

Alexanderplatz

Peter Kernwein posted a photo:

Alexanderplatz

Alexanderplatz

Peter Kernwein posted a photo:

Alexanderplatz

Alexanderplatz

Peter Kernwein posted a photo:

Alexanderplatz

Alexanderplatz

Peter Kernwein posted a photo:

Alexanderplatz

Alexanderplatz

Peter Kernwein posted a photo:

Alexanderplatz

Matsumoto Illumination

artiegillispie has added a photo to the pool:

Matsumoto Illumination

Winter illumination of Matsumoto Castle

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Zingende tatoeëerder uit Rotterdam gaat viraal met Nederlandstalige covers

Een volle baard, een kale kop vol tattoos en een rauwe stem. Seaneman is geen doorsnee artiest, die je in een talentenshow ziet. Sinds zijn deelname aan het SBS6-programma The Winner Takes It All en de filmpjes die daarop volgden, weten steeds meer mensen hem te vinden. "Ik doe het op mijn manier."

Sparta beloont zichzelf in wedstrijd vol kansen tegen Heracles

Sparta is uitstekend begonnen aan de tweede seizoenshelft. In de eerste wedstrijd van 2026 werd er eenvoudig afgerekend met Heracles. Door doelpunten van Tobias Lauritsen en Pelle Clement werd het 'maar' 2-0.

Hoe een meisje van 10 een enorme misbruikzaak aan het rollen bracht

Morgen start de inhoudelijke behandeling van de zaak tegen Mels van B. uit Barendrecht. Het OM verdenkt hem onder meer van het seksueel misbruiken en het filmen en fotograferen van minderjarige meisjes.

Astrid Roemer was ‘onverbiddelijk’ en ‘had lak aan iedereen die een gemakkelijke leeservaring eiste’

Schrijfster Astrid Roemer bleef conventies doorbreken en lezers uitdagen. Al vroeg ging haar werk over kleur, gender en ook over postkoloniaal Suriname – alles in een vorm die bewust ontregelde. „Ze wilde anderen wakker schudden.”

Extra journaals

Een moment van zelfreflectie: afgelopen week werd ik door twee verschillende talkshows gebeld of ik wellicht genegen was om iets te komen vertellen over het weer.

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

De EK in Polen waren vooral mentale graadmeter voor Milaan. Wat viel op?

Egyptische piramides? Die zijn het werk van buitenaardse wezens, zei auteur Erich von Däniken

Blue, green and white

Time Traveller2010 has added a photo to the pool:

Blue, green and white

Bremer Bay is a coastal town in Western Australia. Bremer Bay is well known for its beautiful beaches. I was really impressed by the colours- it seemed, the colours and the light changed every minute.

thexiffy

Last.fm last recent tracks from thexiffy.

Red Hot Chili Peppers - Midnight

Red Hot Chili Peppers