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https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/05/26/2026259/mythos-detected-23000-vulnerabilities-across-1000-oss-projects#commentsSeguimos con la turra de Mythos, el modelo mágico que saca vulnerabilidades por un tubo. Merece la pena leer los comentarios ya que en slashdot la mayoría son informáticos de la vieja guardia.Básicamente lo que yo he sospechado dedicándole 10 segundos a pensar, es lo que parece que es: un listón muy bajo para interpretar lo que es una "vulnerabilidad", generamos un montón de marrones potenciales para los pobres infelices que tengan que revisarlas (pueden ser horas, días o meses de curro, según los casos) y nosotros nos ponemos medallitas por dar un 99% de falsos positivos. Y eso sí, pagad por esta basura ejecutivos ignorantes que si no os van a jaquear los internetes.
Condo Prices Already Dropped By Up To 33% In 24 Bigger Marketsby Tyler DurdenWednesday, May 27, 2026 - 01:15 AMAuthored by Wolf Richter via Wolf Street,The price drops are getting relentlessly steeper: In 24 bigger markets, prices of mid-tier condos through April have dropped by 15% to 33% from their respective peaks between 2021 and 2024.Each of the markets is shown in a chart below: 24 mindboggling charts, depicting breath-taking price explosions, especially from mid-2020 to mid-2022, exceeding 50%, 60%, or even 70% in just two years in some cities. In the 10 years to the peak, prices had soared by 180% to 350% in these markets. And these bubbles have started to deflate.In 2 of the cities, prices of mid-tier condos dropped by over 30%. In five other markets, prices dropped by 20% to 28%. In another 3 cities, prices dropped by 19%. These are starting to be substantial declines over a multiyear period.In several of these markets, condo prices have now dropped below their peaks of Housing Bubble 1 in 2006/2007 and are back where they'd been 20 years ago. In a few other markets, prices have dropped close to their peaks of Housing Bubble 1. Those charts are marked with a red line.There are also many smaller markets where condo prices have dropped just as much or more, but that are not included here because they're too small.Most of the markets here are "cities." But the line-up also includes three counties where the cities, though household names, are too small to be included individually. And it includes one metropolitan statistical area, the Lakeland-Winter Haven MSA in Florida, for the same reason.In some densely populated cities, condos and co-ops make up a big part or the majority of home sales. In most other markets, condos are a much smaller portion of home sales.Rank Market Since Peak Year Of Peak1 Cape Coral, FL -33% 20222 Oakland, CA -31% 20223 St. Petersburg, FL -28% 20224 Austin, TX -27% 20225 Fort Myers, FL -26% 20236 Sarasota County, FL -24% 20227 Tampa, FL -20% 20228 Garland, TX -19% 20229 Jacksonville, FL -19% 202210 Detroit, MI -19% 202111 Collier County (Naples), FL -18% 202212 Denver, CO -17% 202213 Arlington, TX -17% 202414 Lakeland-Winter Haven MSA, FL -17% 202415 Aurora, CO -17% 202216 Orlando, FL -16% 202417 Raleigh, NC -16% 202218 Port Saint Lucie, FL -16% 202419 Hayward, CA -15% 202220 San Mateo County (Silicon Valley), CA -15% 202221 Seattle, WA -15% 202222 Reno, NV -15% 202223 Mesa, AZ -15% 202424 Plano, TX -15% 2022Those That Didn't Make The 15% CutoffIn many cities, condo prices have dropped by 14% or less, and they didn't make the 15% cutoff here. Below is a sample list of 41 bigger cities where prices have dropped by 7% to 14% from their respective peaks.Rank Market Since Peak Year Of Peak1 Fremont, CA -14% 20222 Portland, OR -14% 20223 Boise, ID -14% 20224 Clarksville, TN -14% 20225 Chandler, AZ -14% 20226 Phoenix, AZ -14% 20227 San Antonio, TX -13% 20248 Houston, TX -13% 20249 Scottsdale, AZ -13% 202210 Glendale, AZ -13% 202211 Huntsville, AL -13% 202212 Irving, TX -12% 202313 Sacramento, CA -12% 202214 Fort Lauderdale, FL -12% 202215 Dallas, TX -12% 202316 Tempe, AZ -12% 202217 Corpus Christi, TX -12% 202318 Stockton, CA -12% 202219 Colorado Springs, CO -12% 202220 San Francisco, CA -11% 202221 Henderson, NV -11% 202222 Las Vegas -11% 202223 New Orleans, LA -11% 202224 Spokane, WA -10% 202225 Atlanta, GA -9% 202326 New York City -9% 202227 Washington, DC -9% 202228 Nashville, TN -9% 202229 Salt Lake City, UT -9% 202230 Elk Grove, CA -9% 202231 San Jose, CA -8% 202232 Memphis, TN -8% 202233 Gilbert, AZ -8% 202234 Miami, FL -8% 202335 San Diego, CA -8% 202436 Marietta, GA -8% 202437 Oklahoma City, OK -7% 202338 Tucson, AZ -7% 202339 St. Louis, MO -8% 202340 Long Beach, CA -7% 202341 Minneapolis, MN -7% 2021Methodology and data: These prices here are seasonally adjusted three-month averages of "mid-tier" condos and co-ops from the Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI), which is based on millions of data points in Zillow's "Database of All Homes," including from public records (tax data), MLS, brokerages, local Realtor Associations, real-estate agents, and households across the US. It includes pricing data for off-market deals and for-sale-by-owner deals. These are not median prices.The Condo Bust By Market In 24 ChartsThe tables for each market below show from left to right: price decline from the peak, change from prior month (MoM), change year-over-year (YoY), and remaining increase since January 2000.Market From Peak MoM YoY Since 2000Cape Coral, FL -33% -0.4% -14.2% 130%Oakland, CA -31% -0.7% -12.6% 140%St. Petersburg, FL -28% -0.5% -12.4% 181%Austin, TX -27% -0.8% -5.9% 107%Fort Myers, FL -26% -0.5% -14% 121%Sarasota County, FL -24% -0.3% -12.0% 134%Tampa, FL -20% -0.6% -10.1% 250%Garland, TX -19% -1.0% -13.1% 209%Jacksonville, FL -19% -0.6% -8.8% 144%Detroit, MI -19% -0.5% -7.2% 245%Collier County (Naples), FL -18% -0.4% -7.0% 158%Denver, CO -17% -1.0% -6.5% 130%Arlington, TX -17% -0.3% -5.8% 228%Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL -17% -0.4% -8.5% 125%Aurora, CO -16% -0.8% -7.5% 196%Orlando, FL -16% -0.7% -9.2% 150.4%Raleigh, NC -16% -0.6% -8.1% 134.0%Port Saint Lucie, FL -16% -0.1% -8.3% 229%Hayward, CA -15% -0.9% -8.9% 178%San Mateo County (Silicon Valley), CA -15% -0.4% -5.6% 194%Seattle, WA -15% -0.9% -5.2% 133%Reno, NV -15% 0.0% -4.1% 241%Mesa, AZ -15% -0.6% -4.4% 200%Plano, TX -15% -0.9% -8.6% 126%Prices in Oakland are back to where they'd first been in mid-2005, and that was 21 years ago. Prices are down a lot, but are still very high.Prices in Fort Myers are back where they'd first been in April 2006, exactly 20 years ago.Prices in Sarasota County are back where they'd first been in early 2006, exactly 20 years ago.The county forms the northern portion of Silicon Valley.Condos As Home, Rental Property, Or Speculative BetSome people buy condos as a home to live in an urban center or along the shore, to enjoy the big views, nice amenities, or central location. They value the worry-free living, such as not having to mess with maintenance, repairs, and yardwork; or having staff at a desk by the front door. Some value not having to climb stairs, etc.Others buy condos as rental properties as a way to get into the multifamily rental business, or they try their hand at short-term vacation rentals. Or they buy them as vacation homes. Others, especially nonresident foreign investors, buy condos to park some cash in the US and watch the price spiral higher from a distance. It's these investors and speculators that make condos particularly speculative.A Reminder Of The Special Issues That Condos Confront- Over the long term, land appreciates, most buildings depreciate to zero and are eventually torn down. The land that big condo buildings sit on can be very valuable, but each condo owner only owns a tiny slice of it. The rest of their investment is in the building. A single-family house may sit on less valuable land, but the homeowner gets 100% of any appreciation of the land.- Prices that exploded over the past few years ended up being way too high, once the mania settled down.- Hefty special assessments, or the fear of them, for long-neglected major repairs dog some older condo buildings.- Big increases in HOA fees at many properties, partly driven by spiking insurance costs in natural disaster zones, add substantially to the monthly costs of condos.- If a condo building is on Fannie Mae's Blacklist, financing a unit in that building gets very difficult, and sales may be limited to cash buyers who'll exact their pound of flesh.- The Free Money has ended, and mortgage rates are roughly back to a normal range. Buyers of single-family homes face the same issue.- Foreign-based owners who've had it with the US and want to sell. And there are fewer foreign-based buyers.- Investors in condos as rental properties are facing stiff competition from a wave of newly completed higher-end apartment buildings that developers are trying to find tenants for.
Tomasjos, entiendo que cada uno tiene sus tendencias políticas, pero de verdad que no veo como un cambio de gobierno afectaría al desarrollo de lo que tiene que ocurrir. Al final y al cabo la historia tiene leyes objetivas, ¿no?Por otra parte, ¿qué diferencia hay entre el PSOE y el PP? Elena Salgado, Pedro Solbes, Carlos Solchaga, Miguel Boyer podrían haber sido ministros del PP y nadie habría notado nada. Es más, yo creo que es mejor que gobierne el PP para zanjar la burbuja de una vez por todas. Por un motivo que no es político sino sociológico: Con el gobierno actual muchísima gente entendería que es normal que con un gobierno de comunistas corruptos e independentistas se vaya todo a la mierda. Pero confiarían en una recuperación, como ya ha ocurrido una vez. Si El Pisito se va a la mierda con un gobierno del PP se acabó. Pero si el razonamiento es incorrecto se agradecen los comentarios. Un saludo.