09 Dec 2025

feedSlashdot

Cold Case Inquiries Stall After Ancestry.com Revisits Policy For Users

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Since online genealogy services began operating, millions of people have sent them saliva samples in hopes of learning about their family roots and discovering far-flung relatives. These services also appeal to law enforcement authorities, who have used them to solve cold case murders and to investigate crimes like the 2022 killing of four University of Idaho students. Crime-scene DNA submitted to genealogy sites has helped investigators identify suspects and human remains by first identifying relatives. The use of public records and family-tree building is crucial to this technique, and its main tool has been the genealogy site Ancestry, which has vast amounts of individual DNA profiles and public records. More than 1,400 cases have been solved with the help of so-called genetic genealogy investigations, most of them with help from Ancestry. But a recent step taken by the site is now deterring many police agencies from employing this crime-solving technique. In August, Ancestry revised the terms and conditions on its site to make it clear that its services were off-limits "for law enforcement purposes" without a legal order or warrant, which can be hard to get, because of privacy concerns. This followed the addition last year to the terms and conditions that the services could not be used for "judicial proceedings." Investigators say the implications are dire and will result in crucial criminal cases slowing or stalling entirely, denying answers to grieving families. "Everyone who does this work has depended on the records database that Ancestry controls," said David Gurney, who runs Ramapo College's Investigative Genetic Genealogy Center in New Jersey. "Without it, casework is going to be a lot slower, and there will be some cases that can't be resolved at all."

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09 Dec 2025 3:30am GMT

193 Cybercrims Arrested, Accused of Plotting 'Violence-As-a-Service'

Europol's GRIMM taskforce has arrested nearly 200 people accused of running or participating in "violence-as-a-service" schemes where cybercrime groups recruit youth online for real-world attacks. "These individuals are groomed or coerced into committing a range of violent crimes, from acts of intimidation and torture to murder," the European police said on Monday. The Register reports: GRIMM began in April, and includes investigators from Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the UK, plus Europol experts and online service providers. During its first six months, police involved in this operation arrested 63 people directly involved in carrying out or planning violent crimes, 40 "enablers" accused of facilitating violence-for-hire services, 84 recruiters, and six "instigators," five of whom the cops labeled "high-value targets." [...] Many of the criminals involved in recruiting and carrying out these violence-for-hire services are also members of The Com. This is a loosely knit gang, primarily English speakers, involved in several interconnected networks of hackers, SIM swappers, and extortionists. Their reach has spread across the Atlantic, and over the summer, the FBI warned that a subset of this cybercrime group, called In Real Life (IRL) Com, poses a growing threat to youth. The FBI's security bulletin specifically called out IRL Com subgroups that offer swat-for-hire services, in which hoaxers falsely report shootings at someone's residence or call in bomb threats to trigger massive armed police responses at the victims' homes.

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09 Dec 2025 2:00am GMT

Nvidia Can Sell H200 Chips To China For 25% US Cut

The Trump administration will allow Nvidia to resume selling H200 chips to China, but only if the U.S. government takes a 25% cut. Axios reports: Trump said on Truth Social that he'll allow Nvidia to sell H200 chips -- the generation of chips before its current, more-advanced Blackwell lineup -- to China, with the U.S. government pocketing a quarter of the revenue. He said he would apply "the same approach to AMD, Intel, and other GREAT American Companies." American defense hawks fear that China could use Nvidia chips to advance its military ambitions. Trump said Monday that the sales will be subject to "conditions that allow for continued strong National Security." The blockade remains in place for Nvidia's current generation of Blackwell chips, which will be replaced in the second half of 2026 by even more advanced Rubin chips. Huang said recently he was unsure if China would want the older chips. "We applaud President Trump's decision to allow America's chip industry to compete to support high paying jobs and manufacturing in America," Nvidia said in a statement. "Offering H200 to approved commercial customers, vetted by the Department of Commerce, strikes a thoughtful balance that is great for America."

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09 Dec 2025 1:30am GMT

feedHacker News

The Lost Machine Automats and Self-Service Cafeterias of NYC (2023)

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09 Dec 2025 12:51am GMT

Scientific and Technical Amateur Radio

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09 Dec 2025 12:50am GMT

Horses: AI progress is steady. Human equivalence is sudden

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09 Dec 2025 12:26am GMT

08 Dec 2025

feedArs Technica

ICEBlock lawsuit: Trump admin bragged about demanding App Store removal

ICEBlock creator sues to protect apps that are crowd-sourcing ICE sightings.

08 Dec 2025 9:54pm GMT

feedLinuxiac

Bcachefs 1.33 Delivers Its Biggest Upgrade Yet With Full Reconcile Support

Bcachefs 1.33 Delivers Its Biggest Upgrade Yet With Full Reconcile Support

Bcachefs 1.33 Linux filesystem introduces a new reconcile engine that unifies data and metadata handling while simplifying replication and recovery tasks.

08 Dec 2025 7:13pm GMT

feedArs Technica

Paramount tries to swipe Warner Bros. from Netflix with a hostile takeover

Paramount has already proven it can get a controversial merger done.

08 Dec 2025 6:36pm GMT

feedLinuxiac

Manjaro 25.1 Preview Released, but Users Are Urged Not to Update Yet

Manjaro 25.1 Preview Released, but Users Are Urged Not to Update Yet

Manjaro 25.1 "Anh-Linh" preview ships major upgrades, but users are warned to wait due to several breaking changes requiring manual intervention.

08 Dec 2025 5:14pm GMT

feedArs Technica

F1 in Abu Dhabi: And that’s the championship

A three-way fight down to the wire as the ground effect era comes to a close.

08 Dec 2025 5:01pm GMT

feedLinuxiac

Firefox 146 Now Available for Download, Here’s What’s New

Firefox 146 Now Available for Download, Here’s What’s New

Firefox 146 lands with smoother visuals on Linux Wayland thanks to new fractional scaling support and important graphics updates across platforms.

08 Dec 2025 2:01pm GMT