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Are Employers Using Your Data To Figure Out the Lowest Salary You'll Accept?

MarketWatch looks at "surveillance wages," pay rates "based not on an employee's performance or seniority, but on formulas that use their personal data, often collected without employees' knowledge."


According to Nina DiSalvo, policy director at labor advocacy group Towards Justice, some systems use signals associated with financial vulnerability — including data on whether a prospective employee has taken out a payday loan or has a high credit-card balance — to infer the lowest pay a candidate might accept. Companies can also scrape candidates' public personal social-media pages, she said...

A first-of-its-kind audit of 500 labor-management artificial-intelligence companies by Veena Dubal, a law professor at University of California, Irvine, and Wilneida Negrón, a tech strategist, found that employers in the healthcare, customer service, logistics and retail industries are customers of vendors whose tools are designed to enable this practice. Published by the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, a progressive economic think tank, the August 2025 report... does not claim that all employers using these systems engage in algorithmic wage surveillance. Instead, it warns that the growing use of algorithmic tools to analyze workers' personal data can enable pay practices that prioritize cost-cutting over transparency or fairness...

Surveillance wages don't stop at the hiring stage — they follow workers onto the job, too. The vendors that provide such services also offer tools that are built to set bonus or incentive compensation, according to the report. These tools track their productivity, customer interactions and real-time behavior — including, in some cases, audio and video surveillance on the job. Nearly 70% of companies with more than 500 employees were already using employee-monitoring systems in 2022, such as software that monitors computer activity, according to a survey from the International Data Corporation. "The data that they have about you may allow an algorithmic decision system to make assumptions about how much, how big of an incentive, they need to give to a particular worker to generate the behavioral response they seek," DiSalvo said.

The article notes that Colorado introduced the "Prohibit Surveillance Data to Set Prices and Wages Act" to ban companies from setting pay rates with algorithms that use payday-loan history, location data or Google search behavior for algorithmically set.

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

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Anthropic Announces Claude Subscribers Must Now Pay Extra to Use OpenClaw

Anthropic's making a big and sudden change — and connecting its Claude AI to third-party agentic tools "is about to get a lot more expensive," writes the Verge:

Beginning April 4th at 3PM ET, users will "no longer be able to use your Claude subscription limits for third-party harnesses including OpenClaw," according to an email sent to users on Friday evening. Instead, if users want to use OpenClaw with Claude, they'll have to use a "pay-as-you-go option" that will be billed separate from their Claude subscription.

Anthropic's announcement added these extra usage bundles are "now available at a discount." Users can also try Anthropic's API, notes VentureBeat, "which charges for every token of usage rather than allowing for open-ended usage up to certain limits, as the Pro and Max plans have allowed so far. "



The technical reality, according to Anthropic, is that its first-party tools like Claude Code, its AI vibe coding harness, and Claude Cowork, its business app interfacing and control tool, are built to maximize "prompt cache hit rates" — reusing previously processed text to save on compute. Third-party harnesses like OpenClaw often bypass these efficiencies... [Claude Code creator Boris Cherny explained on X that "I did put up a few PRs to improve prompt cache hit rate for OpenClaw in particular, which should help for folks using it with Claude via API/overages."] Growth marketer Aakash Gupta observed on X that the "all-you-can-eat buffet just closed," noting that a single OpenClaw agent running for one day could burn $1,000 to $5,000 in API costs. "Anthropic was eating that difference on every user who routed through a third-party harness," Gupta wrote. "That's the pace of a company watching its margin evaporate in real time."

However, Peter Steinberger, the creator of OpenClaw who was recently hired by OpenAI, took a more skeptical view of the "capacity" argument."Funny how timings match up," Steinberger posted on X. "First they copy some popular features into their closed harness, then they lock out open source." Indeed, Anthropic recently added some of the same capabilities that helped OpenClaw catch-on — such as the ability to message agents through external services like Discord and Telegram — to Claude Code...

User @ashen_one, founder of Telaga Charity, voiced a concern likely shared by other small-scale builders: "If I switch both [OpenClaw instances] to an API key or the extra usage you're recommending here, it's going to be far too expensive to make it worth using. I'll probably have to switch over to a different model at this point."
"I know it sucks," Cherny replied. "Fundamentally engineering is about tradeoffs, and one of the things we do to serve a lot of customers is optimize the way subscriptions work to serve as many people as possible with the best mode..." OpenAI appears to be positioning itself as a more "harness-friendly" alternative, potentially using this moment as a customer acquisition channel for disgruntled Claude power users.

By restricting subscription limits to their own "closed harness," Anthropic is asserting control over the UI/UX layer. This allows them to collect telemetry and manage rate limits more granularly, but it risks alienating the power-user community that built the "agentic" ecosystem in the first place. Anthropic's decision is a cold calculation of margins versus growth. As Cherny noted, "Capacity is a resource we manage thoughtfully." In the 2026 AI landscape, the era of subsidized, unlimited compute for third-party automation is over. For the average user on Claude.ai, the experience remains unchanged; for the power users running autonomous offices, the bell has tolled.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

No, AMD Is Not Buying Intel

"The April 1st timing should have been your first clue," writes Gadget Review. TechSpot's false story was just an April Fool's prank — although Gadget Review thinks it's still funny how "something about this particular piece of satire felt uncomfortably plausible."

Maybe it's because AMD stock sits around $196 while Intel hovers near $41, or perhaps it's the poetic justice of the underdog finally eating the giant. The semiconductor world has witnessed stranger reversals, but none quite this dramatic. Your gaming rig's CPU battle represents decades of corporate warfare, legal grudges, and technological leapfrogging that makes Game of Thrones look like a friendly board game.


Picture this: In 1975, AMD reverse-engineered Intel's 8080 processor, creating the Am9080 clone. The audacity was breathtaking — AMD spent 50 cents per chip to manufacture something they sold for $700. That's a 1,400% markup on borrowed technology, making today's GPU prices look reasonable. This relationship evolved from copying to partnership to bitter rivalry. The companies signed second-sourcing deals in the late 1970s, with AMD becoming Intel's official backup supplier. Then came the lawsuits. AMD sued Intel for antitrust violations in 2005, eventually settling for $1.25 billion in 2009. That settlement money helped fund the Ryzen revolution that's currently eating Intel's lunch. The historical irony runs deeper than your typical tech rivalry. AMD literally started as Intel's shadow, creating chips by studying Intel's designs under microscopes. Today, Intel engineers probably study AMD's Zen architecture the same way...

This April Fool's joke works because it captures something true about power shifts in technology.


The site TipRanks notes that both companies saw their stock price rise Wednesday, though that might not be related to the false article. "Positive analyst coverage from Wells Fargo could be acting as a catalyst for AMD stock today. Intel also announced plans to buy back its 49% equity interest in a joint venture with Apollo Global Management APO."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Amazon Must Negotiate With First Warehouse Workers Union, US Labor Board Rules

Amazon "must negotiate with a labor union representing some 5,000 workers at a company warehouse on Staten Island," reports Reuters, citing a ruling Wednesday from America's National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).

The union formed in 2022, according to the article, and "has been seeking to negotiate with Amazon over pay, working conditions and other matters."

The NLRB said in its ruling that Amazon "has engaged in unfair labor practices" by refusing to bargain with the labor group or to recognize its legitimacy... Amazon said on Thursday it disagreed with the NLRB's ruling. "Representatives of the NLRB improperly influenced this election," the company said in a statement, suggesting it planned to appeal. "We're confident an unbiased court will overturn the original certification, and we look forward to the opportunity for our team to fairly voice their opinions." An appeal would likely preclude Amazon from having to comply with the NLRB's order while it makes its way through the courts...

Related to the Staten Island case, Amazon has argued that the NLRB itself is unconstitutional and sued to block the agency from ruling on it. The matter is still pending.

After forming independently, that union "has since aligned with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters," the article points out. The Teamsters represent 1.3 million American workers, according to a statement they issued this week, which also includes this quote from the president of Amazon Labor Union-e Local 1. "We are making history at Amazon, and we are doing it through undiluted worker power..."
Their statement adds that the ruling "came only one day after the union announced another historic victory that upheld Amazon Teamsters' right to strike."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ink powder puff

BertvB posted a photo:

ink powder puff

What you see are actually not petals, but an enormous quantity of long, bright pink stamens that together form a small ball resembling an old-fashioned powder brush.

Tokyo, Japan 東京

Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) posted a photo:

Tokyo, Japan 東京

Dogpatch Historic District

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Dogpatch Historic District

Nasher Sculpture Center

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Nasher Sculpture Center

Exclusive

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Exclusive

Who Was It Made Your Eyes Flicker Like That?

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Who Was It Made Your Eyes Flicker Like That?

Found Kodachrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide

date stamped on slide August 1965

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Trump: militaire leiders Iran gedood bij aanval op Teheran

WASHINGTON (ANP) - Bij een grote aanval op de Iraanse hoofdstad Teheran zijn volgens de Amerikaanse president Donald Trump "veel Iraanse militaire leiders" omgekomen. Trump deelde daarbij een video van een aanval, het is niet duidelijk wanneer die plaatsvond.

"Veel Iraanse militaire leiders, die hun land slecht en onverstandig hebben geleid, zijn samen met nog veel meer uitgeschakeld bij deze enorme aanval in Teheran!", schreef Trump op zijn platform Truth Social.

De oorlog in het Midden-Oosten begon ruim een maand geleden met Israëlische en Amerikaanse aanvallen op Iran. Teheran heeft in een reactie raketten afgevuurd op buurlanden en de Straat van Hormuz, een zeer belangrijke zeestraat voor zaken als olie en kunstmest, grotendeels gesloten.


Iran dreigt bij escalatie hele regio in hel te veranderen

TEHERAN (ANP/AFP) - Iran heeft gedreigd de hele regio "in een hel" te veranderen, als Israël en de Verenigde Staten de oorlog verder laten escaleren. De Amerikaanse president Donald Trump zei eerder juist de hel boven Iran te laten losbarsten als het land niet snel de Straat van Hormuz heropent.

"Vergeet niet dat de hele regio in een hel verandert, als de agressie wordt uitgebreid", zei een woordvoerder van het Iraanse leger tegen Al Jazeera. "De illusie dat jullie de Islamitische Republiek Iran kunnen verslaan is veranderd in een moeras en daar zullen jullie in zinken."

Komende dinsdag loopt Trumps ultimatum af om een deal te sluiten. Daarna zullen de VS Iraanse energiecentrales aanvallen, aldus Trump. Israël zal mogelijk ook deelnemen aan die aanvallen.

Verwerping ultimatum

Het Iraanse leger heeft dat ultimatum verworpen en bestempeld als een "hulpeloze, nerveuze, ongebalanceerde en domme actie".

The Wall Street Journal schrijft dat Trump zich dit weekend in elk geval vast heeft laten bijpraten door zijn minister van Defensie Pete Hegseth en kopstukken uit het leger over de voorgenomen aanvallen op energiecentrales en civiele infrastructuur.

Mensenrechtenorganisaties hebben gewaarschuwd dat dat soort aanvallen zouden kunnen neerkomen op oorlogsmisdaden, maar volgens het leger zouden dat legitieme doelen zijn. Ingewijden zeggen tegen de Amerikaanse krant dat ook het Iraanse leger door dat soort aanvallen hard geraakt zou worden. Trump zou die lezing ondersteunen.


Behance Featured Projects

The latest projects featured on the Behance

GUACALA COLLECTION 17


"Unleash the joy of summer with a series of vibrant and full-of-personality digital illustrations, specially created for brands around the world! Discover fresh, fun and crazy characters, designed to capture the essence of summer." All rights reserved www.guacalastudio.com

Rijnmond - Nieuws

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

Excelsior zakt verder weg in strijd tegen degradatie door verloren wedstrijd tegen NEC

Excelsior verloor de wedstrijd tegen NEC Nijmegen. Op Woudestein kwam de ploeg van Den Uil verdedigend goed voor de dag, maar kon het aanvallend nauwelijks een vuist maken. Met dit resultaat staat Excelsior op de zestiende plek in de eredivisie.

MAIN GATE

photo-tez has added a photo to the pool:

MAIN GATE

建長寺

Japan April 2015. Kyoyo Nara. mazn standing at Station.

Jean-Paul Margnac has added a photo to the pool:

Japan April 2015. Kyoyo Nara. mazn standing at Station.

this isn't happiness.

ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, DESIGN & DISAPPOINTMENT INSTAGRAM ★ ELSEWHERES

Study for ‘Death in the Morning’, John Brosio



Study for ‘Death in the Morning’, John Brosio

MetaFilter

The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

The world at your fingertips

MMS Ceefax is a working recreation of the BBC Ceefax teletext service (1974-2012 RIP, previously).

"a voice telling stories"

Textile artist Anne Jackson makes knotted tapestries about women executed for witchcraft in England. She aims "to make something visually arresting, or even beautiful, which also brings to consciousness something deeper and darker". She gave a talk about her work, The Witchcraft Series: History, Magic & Metaphor, in 2020 (YouTube, 1 hr 25min). She discusses the history of witchcraft executions, the figure of the witch in western culture and in politics, prejudice about textile art, witches in the minds of gentlemen scholars, 1960s art education, her village's white witch who is "great friends with the vicar", and how her process of knotting threads together echoes the narratives we put together about the past.

There is a text interview with Jackson from 2012 at Blethering Crafts. You can see her work on her website, and she has two short videos showing the process of making her tapestries. You can read a machine-generated transcript of the witchcraft video at YT transcript io.