Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Over 200 Economists Say 'We Must Act Now' On AI's Economic Impact

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: Hundreds of economists say in an open letter that institutions "must act now" to address how artificial intelligence could transform the economy and could put many people out of work. The statement released Monday was signed by top economists, along with computer scientists and some executives at tech companies including Anthropic, Google and OpenAI.

"AI may become radically more powerful over the next 10 years," says the letter organized by Stanford University's digital economy lab. "This could drive an unprecedented transformation of our economy, larger than the Industrial Revolution, but unfolding over a vastly shorter time frame. It could bring risks, including large-scale job displacement, as well as opportunities such as major gains in living standards."

The letter, which has only four sentences, says leaders must "build the incentives, guardrails, and institutions needed to steer AI in a direction that complements humans and benefits society." The Stanford lab says the letter has so far been signed by more than 200 economists and AI researchers, including 16 winners of a Nobel Prize. "We must be intentional and make collective, democratic choices, rather than letting market forces play out and risking leaving most citizens behind," wrote computer scientist and AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio, who was also among the signatories. He said it "it is highly plausible that AI will drastically transform our economies."

Other signatories include Google CEO Eric Schmidt, LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman, and Nobel laureates Joseph Stiglitz, Daron Acemonglu, and Simon Johnson.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Promises To Fix Search With Major Windows 11 Overhaul

Microsoft is overhauling Windows 11 search to prioritize local apps, files, and settings over web results while removing ads, promotions, MSN/Bing clutter, and other distractions. "You've have been asking for search that is faster, more relevant, and easier to use -- whether you're opening an app, finding a file, or changing a setting," Microsoft says in a new blog post. "Because the Windows Search Box is where many people start, we focused first on making results more dependable, easier to scan, and clearer before you click." Windows Central reports: The company is highlighting several key improvements, including clearer results that does a better job at showing why a search result is appearing when a query has been typed, alongside prioritizing local results before reaching out to the web.

Search is also getting better at handling things like typos, which should help surface the right results even when the user misspells an app or file. The search home pane will no longer show MSN or Bing content, and promotional content and ads will no longer appear in search results.

These upgrades are now rolling out to Windows Insiders in the Experimental Channel, and are expected to roll out to all Windows 11 users later this year. Insiders may not see the changes right away as they are rolling out in waves. The full list of changes can be found here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

US Government Warns That Russia State Hackers Are Coming After Your Router

CISA and allied governments are warning users to secure their routers as Russian state-backed hackers continue compromising the devices and turning them into proxy nodes to disguise attacks against critical infrastructure. The advisory urges users to disable outdated SNMP versions, use strong passwords, update firmware, and turn off unnecessary router services to reduce the risk of being swept into these botnets. Ars Technica reports: "Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) Center 16 cyber actors continue to exploit poorly configured and vulnerable networking devices worldwide, opportunistically compromising multiple critical infrastructure sector networks," the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said Monday. The hacking groups are tracked under various names, including Berserk Bear, Energetic Bear, Crouching Yeti, Dragonfly, Ghost Blizzard, and Static Tundra. The advisory was co-issued by governments from around the world, including Australia, Denmark, New Zealand, and the UK.

The primary means of compromise the agency warned about was hackers scanning IP ranges with active Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) agents that accept common or default authentication credentials. These scans are run by the very sorts of router botnets the actors are trying to enroll the targeted device in. By sending malicious traffic from spoofed addresses, the hackers can use the SNMP agent on poorly configured routers to run malware. SNMP allows users to collect and organize information about managed networking devices or to modify that information to change device behavior.

With control of a device, the hackers then use it as an exit node when probing or attacking targets in the communications, defense, energy, financial services, and government sectors. By funneling the malicious traffic through a benign-appearing device on a trustworthy IP address, the attackers are able to lower the chances of getting blocked by firewalls and other security defenses. Monday's advisory made no mention of identical operations carried out in recent years by China. So-called residential proxies are also a go-to tool used by financially motivated criminal hackers to obscure their true IP address. In many cases, these sorts of proxies are made up of millions of streaming devices that are sold with preloaded malware.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Princess and the Pea

Once we've fully explored this space, we can start varying the number of princesses.

Sears

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Sears

Nunca, Phoenix of Metal

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Nunca, Phoenix of Metal

I'm Gonna Live Forever

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

I'm Gonna Live Forever

Valley Relics Museum, Van Nuys, CA

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Valley Relics Museum, Van Nuys, CA

Found Photograph -- A Rochester Photographer Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph --  A Rochester Photographer Collection

God Bless You

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

God Bless You

20260712-L1001386

Vanillasludge posted a photo:

20260712-L1001386

As Angry as a Breeze

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

As Angry as a Breeze

NIght Moves

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

NIght Moves

Catch of the Day

Greg Adams Photography posted a photo:

Catch of the Day

Peggy's Cove

Fleeting - Railton Road Pt. III

niggyl :) has added a photo to the pool:

Fleeting - Railton Road Pt. III

Riding in the passenger seat heading south on a foggy morning. Railton Road, Latrobe, northern Tasmania.

Shooting randomly like this is not always rewarded with keepers... not entirely sure this is one!

Ricoh GRiii, 18.3mm GR lens, 1/1600th sec at f/10, ISO 400.

Air

Keith Midson has added a photo to the pool:

Air

Nelson Falls, west coast Tasmania.

MetaFilter

The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

Underground discovery could help save one of the world's rarest mammals

Underground discovery could help save one of the world's rarest mammals, Northern hairy-nosed wombats. One of the world's most critically endangered animals may be able to live in more areas than conservationists realised.

Komt er weer een ‘schijndeal’ tussen Iran en de VS?

Het was een week vol aanvallen en dreigementen tussen de VS en Iran. Het bestand tussen de twee landen lijkt nu definitief ten einde.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

India’s tech services giant HCL is getting into the AI datacenter business

Indian tech services giant and retro software house HCL has decided to get into the AI datacenter business. The company yesterday revealed its plan in an announcement [PDF] released alongside its Q1 results, which included news of three-percent year-over-year revenue growth to $3.65 billion and 20 percent growth in net income which reached $488 million. CEO C. Vijayakumar also pointed to 62 percent year-over-year revenue growth for a segment HCL calls “Advanced AI” that encompasses building its own AI platforms. The CEO said HCL’s strategy is to “Benefit disproportionately from the AI-native and AI-amplified opportunities” because they “together represent the fastest growing pool of enterprise spend.” The company has therefore decided to get into the datacenter business and has found ₹3,500 crore ($36.5 million) to put toward facilities it says have “potential to scale to 50MW of capacity.” That’s not a vast facility – just one of Meta’s datacenters will host 50GW of kit – but Vijayakumar said HCL can make it relevant by using its existing software to offer “full-stack” infrastructure. “The biggest opportunity is not to rent AI, but to own the full stack,” the CEO said. “The datacenters that compute the models built to address client-specific needs.” “This is a business which is shifting from physical infrastructure to higher value AI-ready solutions,” he added. “We will create full-stack offerings by combining our capabilities across AI datacenter design, DevOps, and cloud operations, as well as a software portfolio with our new datacenter business.” HCL’s focus appears to be on Indian customers, as Vijayakumar said the datacenter investment will “position us as a key enabler of India’s sovereign AI ecosystem, expanding our presence in the fastest-growing market among largest economies with differentiated offerings around sovereign cloud, secure AI, and managed AI infrastructure.” The CEO said HCL is already “in advanced discussions with clients to ensure we start with certain level of committed consumption from day one.” The company didn’t say where it will build its bit barns, when they might come online, or how it will secure energy supply – an important consideration given we yesterday reported on an effort to locate a datacenter in renewable-energy-rich Bhutan to serve Indian customers. Vijayakumar also revealed that HCL booked $2.4 billion of new business in the quarter, a record. The CEO pointed to one of those deals as an exemplar of HCL’s AI smarts, as it will see the services company work with an unnamed Fortune 250 semiconductor equipment OEM “to accelerate AI-driven transformation across its semiconductor engineering and manufacturing value stream.” To make that happen, HCL will deploy SAP, integrate it with existing systems, and establish “an enterprise backbone for a future-ready, scalable, AI-led digital supply chain.” Another new deal, struck earlier this month and therefore not included in the $2.4 billion of new deals won in the quarter ended June 30, will see HCL work with an unidentified “Europe-headquartered Fortune Global 50 firm as a technology partner to accelerate AI-led transformation and management of their digital workplace and enterprise networks.” Numerous reports in Indian media identified the new client as Mercedes Benz, and suggest the automotive giant has moved its business to HCL from Infosys, which announces its quarterly results next week. ®

Gobi X: Creating more energy for AI, not taking it from society

The hardest problem in AI is no longer the chip but the megawatt. For much of the past three years, the global AI race has focused on semiconductors, with governments competing for advanced chips, technology outfits scrambling to secure GPUs, and investors pouring billions into ever larger datacenters. Yet the binding constraint has shifted from compute to the power required to run it. For anyone trying to energize a new AI cluster today, the bottleneck is rarely silicon; it is grid access, interconnection delays, and aging infrastructure. That was the central message from Envision founder and CEO Lei Zhang at VivaTech in Paris this June, where he argued that AI amounts to an energy revolution as much as a computing one. The steam engine transformed the industrial age by converting coal into motion, and the GPU now transforms the AI age by converting electricity into intelligence. History offers another lesson: James Watt changed industry through the efficient use of energy rather than by producing more steam. AI faces the same problem today, because the binding constraint has shifted from how many chips can be built to how they can be powered. The real risk: AI competing with society for energy The numbers behind the argument are stark. Goldman puts US datacenter power demand at 31 GW in 2025, rising to 66 GW by 2027, while assuming only about 72 percent of scheduled facilities arrive on time because electricity, not construction, is what typically slips. The IEA estimates that datacenters consumed roughly 1.5 percent of world electricity in 2024, a share rising to 3 percent by 2030 as AI-specific demand triples. The structural mismatch sits at the heart of the problem: AI models iterate every six months and chips refresh annually, while power grids have changed little in decades. Rack densities that sat at 5 kW are climbing toward 200 kW, and the IEA notes that AI server power density rose elevenfold between 2020 and 2025, with a further fourfold rise expected by 2027, straining the supply chains for power electronics and transformers that keep a cluster stable. The growing gap raises broader questions about where the energy will come from and who will bear the cost. Around the world, communities are asking whether AI infrastructure should draw on electricity that households, factories, hospitals, and public services also depend upon, with familiar concerns surfacing about consumer bills, manufacturer access to limited grid capacity, and the burden that ever-larger models place on public infrastructure. Those questions have moved beyond the purely technical into the societal, because the future of AI cannot rest on a model in which humanity competes with AI for power. Mission Gobi: Let AI follow energy Envision's answer, Mission Gobi, unveiled at VivaTech, aims to develop 5 GW of green AI computing capacity across deserts and arid regions by 2030. For decades energy followed computing, and Mission Gobi reverses that logic on the premise that in the AI era, computing may need to follow energy. The logic is grounded in geography, because deserts offer some of the world's richest solar and wind resources alongside vast expanses of low-cost land, with the additional advantage of little competing residential or industrial demand. Rather than drawing power from homes, factories, and public services, Mission Gobi seeks to build entirely new renewable energy systems dedicated to AI, expanding the available supply instead of asking society to share a fixed pie. The philosophy reduces to a single idea: compute should chase power, not the other way around. The economics matter because electricity determines whether a facility is viable, with power consistently accounting for the single largest operating cost at a datacenter and some estimates placing it at as much as 60 percent of the operational budget. Building energy-native AI infrastructure Envision splits the system into three layers: an intelligent operating hub, Physical AI powered by its Tianji Weather Foundation Model and Dubhe Energy Foundation Model, and advanced power infrastructure. Together they integrate generation, storage, grid, power electronics, computing, and large-scale AI models into a unified architecture. The challenge lies in coordinating renewable power rather than merely generating it, because AI facilities require stable, high-quality electricity while solar and wind output fluctuate continuously. Envision argues that large-scale predictive models can help balance generation, storage, and demand in real time. The concept has already moved beyond theory. In Chifeng, Inner Mongolia, Envision runs a 2 GW system on 100 percent renewable energy, coordinating wind, solar, storage, hydrogen, and compute in real time, while a gigawatt-scale AI and computing campus in Ulanqab is being developed as a demonstration of what energy-native computing infrastructure could look like. A 5 GW pledge is ambitious, but the underlying read is sound: retrofitting decades-old city grids for gigawatt AI loads is a difficult undertaking, and purpose-built renewable compute, sited where power is cheapest, offers a credible alternative. SpaceX looks up, Mission Gobi looks out Envision is not alone in recognizing energy as AI's defining constraint. Elon Musk's SpaceX has explored concepts for orbital datacenters powered by uninterrupted solar energy in space, and the vision rests on the same recognition: the future bottleneck of AI may lie in energy rather than silicon. Both approaches seek to place computing where energy is most abundant. The two visions diverge in geography, with one reaching upward beyond Earth's atmosphere and the other outward toward deserts and Gobi regions, though both start from the same premise: AI should not compete with humanity for power. A new blueprint for AI infrastructure If the industrial age was built around coal and the electrical age around power grids, the AI age may be built around energy abundance. The success of future AI infrastructure will not be measured by GPU counts and model sizes alone. It will also depend on whether the industry creates new energy supply, eases pressure on communities, and enables technological progress without reducing others' access to power. Whether deserts become the preferred destination for future computing remains to be seen. What is becoming clear is that the next phase of the AI race will be defined not only by who builds the most powerful models, but by who can build the energy systems capable of sustaining them. The path forward runs through creating new energy supply rather than reallocating existing capacity away from households, factories, and public services. Contributed by Envision.