Monday, April 13, 2026

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AMD Takes Wild Swing at Nvidia’s Throne!

AMD Takes Wild Swing at Nvidia’s Throne!

Big Tech Fights Over Chips, Clouds and Control

  • AMD’s ROCm push tries to loosen Nvidia’s grip

    A deep dive into AMD’s ROCm shows how slowly the would‑be CUDA killer is maturing. Data center buyers want a real alternative to pricey Nvidia GPUs, but tooling and ecosystem gaps still hurt. The mood: hopeful about cheaper AI, yet tired of “almost there” promises.

  • Why Apple’s slow AI strategy might actually win

    This piece argues Apple can skip the chatbot circus and lean on its huge hardware base, on‑device AI, and lock‑in to quietly dominate. While others burn cash chasing model benchmarks, Apple just bakes “good enough” smarts into every iPhone. It feels smug, but annoyingly plausible.

  • Amazon’s Kindle update leaves old readers useless

    As Amazon drops support for older Kindle tech, loyal bookworms watch perfectly fine e‑readers become e‑waste. People are livid about DRM handcuffs, forced upgrades, and the reminder that your “library” can vanish on a lawyer’s schedule. The e‑ink honeymoon is definitely over.

  • Spanish devs blocked from Docker by football lawyers

    In Spain, docker pull suddenly started failing because a Cloudflare IP range used for images was collateral damage in an anti‑piracy block tied to pro football streams. Devs spent hours debugging fake TLS issues. It’s a grim joke: one media lawsuit, half your infra is toast.

  • Building SaaS in 2026 without US tech giants

    This guide walks through running a modern SaaS entirely on EU infrastructure like Hetzner and Scaleway, skipping AWS, Stripe, and Cloudflare. It proves it’s doable, cheaper in places, and friendlier for privacy rules – but with more duct tape and fewer polished tools.

AI Labs Push Limits While Users Lose Patience

  • MiniMax open-sources a self-taught coding model

    MiniMax released M2.7, an open source code model that ran 100 rounds of self‑critique, rewriting its own internals with a scaffold. It fits on an A30 GPU, so tinkerers can actually run it. People love the transparency and hate how timid bigger labs look by comparison.

  • Anthropic quietly slashes Claude’s cache time window

    Analysis of Claude Code logs suggests Anthropic cut prompt cache TTL from 1 hour to about 5 minutes. For heavy users, that means more tokens, more money, and worse UX. The lack of upfront messaging has folks fuming about sneaky monetization from a company that sells “trust.”

  • Why AI still sucks hard at front-end work

    A blistering rant calls LLMs “sycophantic dev wannabes” that rehash decade‑old CSS hacks and ignore real browser quirks. It perfectly matches what many engineers see: chatbots spit out confident nonsense that almost works and then wastes hours. Great for snippets, terrible for whole UIs.

  • Essay warns AI boom will bring real-world violence

    Drawing parallels from smashed looms to data center attacks, this essay links AI hype, military projects like Stargate, and groups like Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. It predicts that when power and profits concentrate in a few AI winners, angry people won’t just flame on X – they’ll strike hardware.

  • Sam Altman’s home reportedly hit by second attack

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has his home targeted again, days after a Molotov incident. Details are thin, but it feeds a growing sense that AI has moved from nerd debate to flashpoint. Commenters are shaken: if this is how the figureheads are treated, what happens when layoffs and bots collide?

Geeks Rebuild Tools, Languages and Their Home Racks

  • New math trick claims one operator rules them all

    Researchers propose an EML (Exp‑Minus‑Log) operator that can approximate all usual elementary functions like sin, cos, sqrt and exp. Fans dream of simpler hardware and leaner optimizers; skeptics smell hype. Either way, it’s rare to see pure math light up the dev crowd like this.

  • Brutal reminder: nobody owes you supply-chain security

    An “autistic catgirl” blogger lays it out: registries like GitHub, crates.io, and npm are not your security team. If you cargo add random code without pinning and auditing, that’s on you. The tone is snarky, but people agree – we’ve been outsourcing paranoia to strangers for too long.

  • Getting Rust’s safety without all the usual pain

    This essay pitches High-Level Rust as a way to grab 80% of Rust’s safety and performance with 20% of the headache. Avoid clever lifetimes, lean on simple patterns, and stop fighting the borrow checker. Newcomers feel relieved; hardcore Rustaceans grumble it sounds like training wheels.

  • Homelab 2026 is tiny PCs and bunker fantasies

    A tour of the State of Homelab 2026 shows nerds dumping loud 1U servers for mini‑PCs, Orange Pi, Raspberry Pi 5, and cheap Hetzner boxes. It’s half disaster‑prep fantasy, half practical sandbox. The vibe: if the cloud or grid dies, my garage cluster will outlive us all.

  • Call to bring back sane, consistent software design

    A nostalgic rant begs for idiomatic design where apps on a platform share common controls and behaviors, like the Windows 95–7 era. Today’s every‑app‑is-a-snowflake web UIs exhaust users. Folks pile on with screenshots of bloated menus and hidden buttons they never asked for.

Top Stories

MiniMax drops a self-improving open model

Technology / Artificial Intelligence

A frontier lab open-sources a self-refining code model that runs on modest GPUs, giving indie devs a serious new toy and upping the pressure on closed corporate stacks.

AMD steps harder into Nvidia’s AI turf

Technology / Hardware / AI Infrastructure

AMD’s ROCm story inches forward as it tries to crack Nvidia’s CUDA monopoly. If this software stack finally stabilizes, the cost of serious AI compute could drop fast.

Anthropic quietly shrinks its prompt cache window

Technology / AI Infrastructure

Anthropic appears to have slashed Claude’s cache TTL from an hour to minutes without clear messaging, leaving power users feeling like they got hit with a stealth price hike.

One wild operator for all math functions

Science / Computational Mathematics

A new ‘exp-minus-log’ operator claims to approximate basically every standard math function, sparking speculation about simpler chips and leaner neural nets behind tomorrow’s apps.

Apple’s ‘AI loser’ angle might secretly win

Technology / Business / Artificial Intelligence

A sharp take argues Apple’s boring on-device AI and tight ecosystem could outlast flashy chatbots, turning its hardware and privacy stance into an accidental moat as models commoditize.

Dev rant explains why AI still flunks front-end

Technology / Software Development / Artificial Intelligence

A brutal but accurate teardown of LLM-written CSS and UI code crystallizes what many engineers feel: current AI is great at boilerplate, terrible at the messy reality of modern front-end work.

Kindle owners rage as Amazon bricks old readers

Technology / Consumer Electronics / Business

Amazon’s decision to cut support for older Kindle tech is turning perfectly fine devices into junk, feeding anger over DRM, planned obsolescence, and who really owns your digital books.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

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France Boots Windows, Bets Big On Linux!

France Boots Windows, Bets Big On Linux!

Governments Rebel And Hackers Run Wild

  • France Dumps Windows For Homegrown Government Linux

    France’s digital chiefs say relying on Windows and other US tools is a strategic risk, so they’re ripping them out and rolling their own Linux stack. It’s about control, not saving pennies, and other governments are definitely watching.

  • New Windows Defender Hack Hands Attackers System Keys

    A new BlueHammer attack abuses Windows Defender’s own update system to grab full SYSTEM access. Security folks are rattled that the built‑in bodyguard can be turned so easily, and they’re asking how many similar tricks are still undiscovered.

  • Rockstar Hit Again As Hackers Threaten Massive Leak

    Rockstar Games, still scarred from past GTA VI leaks, is reportedly hacked again. Group ShinyHunters claims a huge stash of source code and internal docs and is waving a ransom note. Gamers are furious; security teams are just embarrassed now.

  • South Korea Makes Mobile Data A Basic Right

    South Korea is giving every citizen a chunk of free mobile data each month, treating connectivity like water or electricity. Telecoms will eat some costs, but the message is clear: in a digital economy, being offline is no longer acceptable.

  • Secretive Mexican Spy Firm Now Watches US Border

    A little‑known firm, Grupo Seguritech, is wiring up surveillance systems along the US‑Mexico border with towers, cameras and AI‑style tools. Civil liberties watchers are nervous about yet another unaccountable tech vendor quietly building a panopticon.

AI Hype Meets Harsh Reality Check

  • Researchers Torch AI Agent Benchmarks As Mostly Fake

    A safety group quietly sent its own AI agents at popular coding benchmarks and says they broke nearly every “state‑of‑the‑art” test. Their point: leaderboard scores are a marketing game, and real‑world tools are far more fragile than the hype.

  • Tiny Open Models Match Fancy Mythos Security Tricks

    Researchers threw the same security tasks from Anthropic’s Mythos demo at small, cheap open models and got surprisingly similar results. It undercuts the idea that only giant frontier models can find scary software bugs, which alarms regulators even more.

  • New Tracker Counts Jobs Blamed On Growing AI

    A new AI Job Loss Tracker is logging layoffs where bosses blame automation. The numbers are still fuzzy, but you can see patterns by industry and country. It’s grimly satisfying to watch companies spin this as “innovation” while people lose work.

  • Court Refuses Anthropic Bid To Ditch Risk Label

    An appeals court refused to pause a Pentagon‑linked “supply chain risk” label slapped on Anthropic, which the company says already scares off deals. It’s a warning shot: Washington is ready to put official stigma on AI vendors it doesn’t fully trust.

  • Iran Pushes War Propaganda With Cute Lego AI Clips

    A creator behind viral Lego‑style AI videos for Iran admits the cute clips are meant to sway opinion on war. The mix of toy‑movie nostalgia, AI tools and hard politics shows how propaganda is updating fast while social platforms struggle to respond.

Nostalgia, Big Science And Digital Overload

  • Veteran Engineer Recalls Twenty Wild Years On AWS

    A longtime engineer looks back on twenty years living inside AWS, from the wild early S3 days to today’s massive cloud empire. It’s half nostalgia, half rant about how “the cloud” turned from scrappy experiment to confusing, locked‑in utility.

  • Fresh Star Data Says Cosmic Hubble Tension Real

    A big data mash‑up of galaxy and supernova measurements says the infamous Hubble tension isn’t going away. The universe’s expansion rate still doesn’t match our models, hinting that something in our neat picture of cosmology is very wrong.

  • Human Trials Begin For Bold Cellular Rejuvenation Trick

    Scientists are preparing human tests of a gene‑tweaking mix inspired by Yamanaka factors that seemed to rewind cellular ageing in animals. It’s very early and risky, but the idea of medically rolling back your biological clock is hard to ignore.

  • Obsession Becomes Goldmine Of Ten Thousand Live Shows

    A music nerd secretly taped around 10,000 concerts over decades, and volunteers are now rescuing the stash for the Internet Archive. What started as a slightly sketchy hobby has turned into a priceless time machine for live music fans everywhere.

  • Writer Blasts Apps Built To Rot Your Brain

    A sharp essay argues your favorite feeds, shorts and “productivity” apps are really designed to keep your brain in a low‑attention haze. The so‑called Brainrot Industrial Complex isn’t an accident; it’s the business model of modern platforms.

Top Stories

France Dumps Windows, Bets Big On Linux

Government & Policy

France is ripping US-made Windows out of government PCs and calling American tech a strategic risk. It’s a loud vote for open-source, digital sovereignty, and a warning shot to Microsoft and other US giants.

New Windows Defender Hack Gives Attackers Superpowers

Cybersecurity

Researchers showed how “BlueHammer” can turn Windows Defender’s own update system into a backdoor for full SYSTEM control. When the antivirus becomes the threat, every corporate Windows fleet has to worry.

South Korea Makes Mobile Data A Right

Telecom

South Korea just rolled out universal basic mobile data, treating connectivity like a public utility. It’s a bold blueprint for countries that claim to care about digital inclusion but still meter the internet like luxury fuel.

Rockstar Hacked Again, Ransom Gang Threatens Data Dump

Cybersecurity

Rockstar is reportedly staring down another massive breach, with ShinyHunters claiming source code and internal docs. After the GTA leaks, this feels less like bad luck and more like a chronic security failure in gaming’s big leagues.

Researchers Torch AI Agent Benchmarks As Misleading

Artificial Intelligence

A safety group quietly broke most big-name AI agent benchmarks, arguing that shiny leaderboard numbers hide fragile, hackable systems. It undercuts a year’s worth of marketing slides from frontier labs.

New Tracker Tallies Jobs Lost To AI

Labor & AI

A dedicated AI Job Loss Tracker is now counting layoffs where automation gets the blame. It turns vague fears into a public scoreboard, and makes it harder for executives to quietly swap people for prompt engineering.

Court Upholds US ‘Risky Supplier’ Label On Anthropic

AI Policy

Anthropic failed to pause a Pentagon-linked supply-chain risk label it says is already scaring off customers. It’s a sign AI vendors are now living in the same regulated world as weapons contractors and telecom gear.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

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Microsoft Slams Door On Open-Source Devs!

Microsoft Slams Door On Open-Source Devs!

Core Tech Shifts Shake The Industry

  • Microsoft Locks Out Open-Source Devs Overnight

    Without clear warning, Microsoft suspended dev accounts behind popular tools like WireGuard, Windscribe, and VeraCrypt, halting updates and breaking code signing. Devs are furious, calling it a terrifying reminder that one corporate switch can freeze critical infrastructure.

  • France Starts Great Windows Escape To Linux

    The French state is kicking off a long, serious migration from Windows to Linux across government desktops to cut dependence on US vendors and boost security. It’s ambitious, messy and political, but it finally looks like a big government is willing to walk the open‑source talk.

  • Beloved PC Tools Turn Into Malware Traps

    Attackers compromised CPUID’s backend so legit downloads of CPU-Z and HWMonitor briefly delivered malware. For many of us, these apps are troubleshooting staples, so seeing them weaponised has people rethinking how casually we trust random "official" download buttons.

  • FBI Reads 'Deleted' Signal Texts Via iPhone

    Investigators pulled supposedly gone Signal messages from an iPhone’s notification database, proving that if previews hit the OS, they can live on outside the encrypted app. The privacy crowd is unsettled, and Apple’s iOS notification handling is getting serious side‑eye.

  • Swiss Lab Shows Off 17,000-Qubit Quantum Array

    Researchers at ETH Zurich demoed a massive 17,000‑qubit neutral‑atom array with 99.91% fidelity swap gates. It’s not a drop‑in laptop replacement yet, but it’s a loud signal that real quantum computing is crawling out of the lab and edging toward practical, large‑scale machines.

AI Labs Test Limits And Our Patience

  • ChatGPT Starts Sneaking Ads Into Your Answers

    OpenAI is testing ads inside ChatGPT for free and Go users in the US. People already annoyed by AI hype now have to worry that recommendations might be paid placements. It’s the moment the friendly chatbot starts to look a lot more like a personalized ad billboard.

  • OpenAI Backs Shield For AI Disaster Lawsuits

    OpenAI and other giants support an Illinois bill that would limit how much AI labs can be sued if their models are used in mass harm, even "AI‑enabled mass death." Critics see it as labs asking to move fast and maybe break civilization while taxpayers eat the fallout.

  • US Grills Banks Over Anthropic’s New AI

    The US Treasury called in bank bosses to talk about Anthropic’s new Mythos model and the cyber risks it might unleash. When regulators worry your chatbot could help drain bank accounts or juice scams, it’s clear AI is no longer seen as just a quirky coding assistant.

  • New AI Tool Pokes Holes In Browser Safety

    A deep dive into Mythos argues the model makes it much easier to chain together browser bugs and bypass isolation, effectively weakening the unspoken safety deal of the modern web. Security folks are nervous that "AI for offense" is maturing faster than defenses are adapting.

  • Scientists Trick AI With Totally Fake Disease

    Researchers made up a fake eye disease and watched Bing Copilot and other tools calmly explain it as real, citing scraped web junk. It’s a brutal demo of how AI will confidently fabricate medical advice, and a warning for anyone who treats chatbots like doctors in a box.

Space, Privacy And Platforms Go Off Script

  • YouTube Locks User Out, Keeps Taking His Money

    A user says YouTube nuked his accounts amid a fight over AI music and Universal Music Group, leaving him unable to cancel a premium subscription he’s still being billed for. It feels like peak platform era: one copyright drama and suddenly your access and money are hostages.

  • Artemis II Crew Splashes Down After Moon Loop

    NASA’s Artemis II astronauts splashed down safely in the Pacific after looping around the Moon in the Orion capsule. It’s a huge, oddly low‑key step toward humans living and working off‑planet again while the rest of us argue about ads in chatbots and broken app stores.

  • Global Helium Crunch Threatens Science And Chips

    With the Strait of Hormuz closed and helium supplies squeezed, a long explainer lays out how crucial this gas is for MRI machines, particle physics and even chip fabs. The worry is clear: if we can’t keep helium flowing, a lot of high‑end tech quietly grinds to a halt.

  • Proton Sells Parents On Privacy For Kids

    Proton launched "Born Private," letting parents reserve email addresses and accounts for their kids. It leans hard on distrust of Big Tech data hoarding, pitching itself as the privacy‑first alternative before children even know what an inbox is.

  • Critics Say Proton Privacy Promises Don’t Add Up

    A long critique argues Proton’s "not even government agencies" marketing oversells what its tools actually protect, especially newer services like Proton Meet. Privacy die‑hards feel the company has started to sound more like slick Silicon Valley branding than hard security.

Top Stories

Microsoft Freezes Key Open-Source Projects Without Warning

Technology

A sudden shutdown of developer accounts behind tools like WireGuard and VeraCrypt spooked the open‑source world, showing how fragile our software supply chain is when one giant gatekeeper holds the keys.

France Kicks Off Massive Windows To Linux Switch

Technology

The French government’s plan to dump Windows for Linux on official desktops is one of the boldest moves yet by a major country to cut dependence on US tech giants and reclaim control over its software stack.

OpenAI Starts Testing Ads Inside ChatGPT Replies

Artificial Intelligence

Ads in ChatGPT mark the moment the flagship AI assistant turns into an ad platform, raising fresh worries that useful answers will quietly blur into sponsored pitches and nudges from OpenAI’s business partners.

OpenAI Backs Law To Limit AI Disaster Liability

Artificial Intelligence

By supporting an Illinois bill that shields AI labs from lawsuits over AI‑enabled mass harm, OpenAI and other giants signalled they want to build powerful models without taking full legal responsibility if things go horribly wrong.

US Treasury Hauls Banks In Over Anthropic’s Mythos

Artificial Intelligence

The US Treasury summoning bank bosses about Anthropic’s new Mythos model shows governments now see frontier AI as a direct financial‑system risk, not just a cool chatbot, and they’re no longer content to watch from the sidelines.

Fake Disease Fools AI, Exposes Web Of Made-Up Facts

Technology

Researchers invented a bogus illness and watched AI systems confidently describe it as real, proving again that today’s models will happily remix nonsense from the open web into convincing medical "facts" without blinking.

Beloved PC Tools CPU-Z And HWMonitor Turn Malicious

Cybersecurity

Hackers briefly hijacked CPUID’s site so trusted utilities like CPU-Z and HWMonitor served up malware instead of diagnostics, another nasty reminder that even long‑trusted download links can turn toxic overnight.

Friday, April 10, 2026

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OpenAI Slams Brakes On UK ‘Stargate’ Megacenter!

OpenAI Slams Brakes On UK ‘Stargate’ Megacenter!

Infrastructure Wars Heat Up

  • Maine Moves To Block Giant AI Server Farms

    Maine just advanced a statewide freeze on major data centers, mainly aimed at power-hungry AI and cloud builds. Supporters call it sanity in the face of runaway energy use; critics see a tech-hostile warning shot other states might copy. It’s hard to ignore how fragile our “infinite cloud” suddenly looks.

  • OpenAI Puts UK ‘Stargate’ Megacenter On Ice

    OpenAI is pausing its massive Stargate UK project, blaming sky-high energy costs and heavy regulation. For a company betting everything on bigger models and more GPUs, this feels like slamming into a wall. It’s a reminder that physics, politics, and power bills don’t care how smart your chatbot is.

  • Apple Quietly Narrows The UK’s Open Internet

    A new iOS 26.4 update in the UK reroutes more browsing through Apple’s Communication Safety and age checks, using official PASS systems to gate content. On paper it’s about protecting kids; in practice it hands Apple and regulators a scary amount of control. Many users only noticed when sites suddenly stopped working right.

  • Hijacked Security Tool Raids Devs’ Secret Vaults

    Attackers slipped credential-stealing code into Trivy, a widely used open-source vulnerability scanner, and then used builds, CI pipelines, and GitHub Actions to slurp secrets from cloud and secrets managers. It’s a brutal twist: the scanner that was supposed to keep you safe became the break-in tool.

  • Consultant Details Microsoft’s Everyday User Hostage Tactics

    A sysadmin’s war story shows how Microsoft uses OneDrive, Outlook, and account lock-ins to shove people into subscriptions and cloud accounts they never wanted. Basic tasks are tangled in nags, dark patterns, and surprise prompts. Reading it, you really feel like the product is the trap and your data is the bait.

AI Hype Meets Hard Reality

  • Developers Admit Code Is Now Basically Free

    This essay argues that LLMs turned writing code into the cheapest part of software. The real work shifts to understanding users, choosing what to build, and keeping systems sane. It feels uncomfortably right: if Claude or other agents can spit out endless Rust or TypeScript, your value isn’t typing, it’s judgment.

  • Anthropic Warns Of ‘Zero-Day Exploits’ In Human Minds

    Using Claude Mythos as a launchpad, this piece claims AI can uncover hidden weaknesses not just in code, but in human behavior and psychology. The metaphor of “zero-days in your brain” sounds dramatic, but it lands. If models can map where software breaks, why wouldn’t bad actors ask them where people break too?

  • Google’s SynthID Watermark Proved Easy To Strip

    Researchers reverse-engineered Google SynthID, the hidden mark meant to label AI-generated images, and show how to detect and surgically remove it via spectral tricks. It’s a gut punch to all the “don’t worry, we’ll watermark AI” talk. If one clever team can erase it, what hope is there against motivated trolls and states?

  • Vercel AI Plugin Wants To Read Your Prompts

    A developer noticed the Vercel Claude Code plugin quietly asking to collect "anonymous" prompts and completions even in projects unrelated to Vercel. The consent flow feels pushy and vague. When your editor extensions start phoning home with your private queries, it’s hard not to see it as yet another data grab in friendly clothing.

  • Founder Lets Claude Autonomously Run Real Ad Campaigns

    A marketer handed their Meta Ads budget to Claude Code for a month and watched the agent create creatives, tweak campaigns, and chase leads through the Meta API. The results weren’t magic, but they weren’t terrible either. It’s both exciting and unsettling to see an LLM doing a junior marketer’s job at 3 a.m. without complaining.

Retro Tricks And Nerd Comfort Food

  • Game Engines Teach Databases A Few Old Tricks

    This piece argues that modern game engines, with their ECS data layouts and cache-friendly patterns, handle data far better than many “serious” databases. The writer walks through how engines like Typhon squeeze performance by respecting hardware realities. It’s a humbling reminder that enterprise software often ignores the metal.

  • Bitmap Fonts Make Computers Feel Like Computers Again

    A love letter to chunky bitmap fonts and the sharp, no-nonsense look of old UIs. The author is clearly tired of blurry, over-smoothed vector text and endless “modern” redesigns. Swapping fonts becomes a tiny act of rebellion, making your editor and terminal feel like tools again instead of glossy consumer gadgets.

  • Sick Of Streaming Hikes, User Buys A DVD Player

    After yet another Netflix price rise, this writer throws up their hands and goes back to DVDs and Blu-ray. No ads, no removals, no surprise fee bumps, just discs. It’s half rant, half how-to for building a physical media stash, and it hits a nerve with anyone tired of renting the same shows over and over.

  • NASA Explains Artemis II’s Ultra-Reliable Space Computer

    A deep dive into the fault-tolerant Artemis II computer shows how far we’ve come from Apollo. NASA and Carnegie Mellon engineers built a system obsessed with redundancy, verification, and graceful failure. For people who ship flaky apps, it’s both inspiring and mildly embarrassing to see what real reliability looks like.

  • NASA Fluid Dynamics Used To Cool Your Gaming PC

    A collab between NASA Langley and LinusTechTips applies wind-tunnel style fluid dynamics thinking to PC case airflow. They test fan spacing, pressure, and layouts with serious rigor, then translate it into practical cooling advice. It’s delightfully nerdy watching rocket-science methods used to shave a few degrees off a GPU.

Top Stories

Maine Hits Pause on Giant AI Data Centers

Technology Policy

First statewide moratorium on large data centers, a direct shot at power-hungry AI and cloud growth that could become a model for other US states.

OpenAI’s Massive UK ‘Stargate’ Data Center Frozen

Artificial Intelligence

Flagship UK GPU megaproject put on ice over energy costs and regulation, signaling that AI growth is hitting hard real-world limits.

Apple’s UK iPhone Update Quietly Walls Off the Web

Technology Policy

New iOS rules in the UK route more browsing through Apple’s controls under ‘safety’ labels, raising serious censorship and gatekeeping fears.

Trivy Supply Chain Hack Sucks Secrets from Dev Tools

Cybersecurity

Attackers compromised a hugely popular security scanner, using it to siphon cloud and CI credentials, proving even security tools are a juicy attack vector.

Google’s AI Watermark ‘SynthID’ Gets Ripped Out

Artificial Intelligence

Researchers show how to detect and surgically remove Google’s hidden AI image watermark, undermining one of the industry’s flagship ‘trust’ technologies.

Code Is Now Cheap, and the Rules Are Changing

Software Development

A widely shared essay argues that AI has made writing code dirt cheap, forcing developers and companies to rethink what work actually matters.

Anthropic Says AI Can Find ‘Zero-Day Exploits’ in People

Artificial Intelligence

Using Claude Mythos as the hook, this piece warns that the same AI tricks used to find bugs in code can also probe and exploit human psychological weak spots.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

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Microsoft Strangles VeraCrypt Updates Overnight!

Microsoft Strangles VeraCrypt Updates Overnight!

Power Plays In Security And Control

  • Microsoft Locks Out VeraCrypt, Users Left Stranded

    Microsoft silently killed the VeraCrypt developer’s account, breaking code-signing and blocking fresh Windows releases of one of the most trusted disk encryption tools. It feels like a nightmare case study in how a single corporate switch can choke an entire open-source project overnight.

  • VeraCrypt Dev Reappears And Explains Microsoft Chaos

    After months of silence, the VeraCrypt maintainer resurfaced, revealing that Microsoft axed his signing account and left him unable to ship Windows updates. Between personal struggles and platform lock-in, the post reads like a raw, behind-the-scenes look at how fragile critical encryption software really is.

  • John Deere Finally Pays For Blocking Repairs

    Farmers just scored a massive win as John Deere agreed to a $99M settlement over locked-down tractors and restricted diagnostic tools. Years of hacking, lawsuits, and public shaming are finally forcing the company to loosen its grip, and it feels like the broader right-to-repair dam is starting to crack.

  • Little Snitch For Linux Targets Foreign Software Trust

    A new Little Snitch for Linux wraps slick app-level network controls around eBPF, letting users see and block every sneaky connection. With governments openly worrying about foreign-controlled software and auto-update backdoors, this project hits the exact nerve that’s been twitching across the Linux world for years.

  • LittleSnitch Clone Gives Linux Users Clickable Control

    LittleSnitch for Linux offers a simple, pop-up style way to approve or deny each network connection from apps, something desktop Linux weirdly lacked for ages. It’s still rough, but the idea of turning invisible traffic into visible, blockable actions has people wondering why distros don’t ship this by default.

AI Labs Race While Models Start To Blur

  • Meta Launches Muse Spark For Supercharged Personal Assistant

    Meta’s Muse Spark is pitched as the first step toward "personal superintelligence" – a multimodal model that can reason, use tools, and live inside the Meta AI app. It’s clearly a shot at OpenAI and Anthropic, and it feels like another round in the arms race to own your daily AI assistant life.

  • Claude’s Sonnet 4.6 Has A Rough Night Online

    Anthropic admitted its Sonnet 4.6 model spewed more errors than usual for nearly three hours, leaving devs wondering if they could trust it in production. The incident is resolved, but when your core AI platform wobbles like this, it’s hard not to picture entire apps quietly breaking while everyone’s asleep.

  • Study Finds AI Models Writing Like Copycat Twins

    By fingerprinting 178 AI models across dozens of writing traits, researchers uncovered tight clone clusters – including models from different providers that write almost identically, but at wildly different prices. It confirms the nagging feeling that much of the AI model zoo is a sea of reskins and thinly veiled copies.

  • AI Coding Tools Fuel Huge New App Store Wave

    The App Store saw an 84% jump in new apps last quarter, and insiders are pointing straight at AI coding tools like Claude Code and GitHub Copilot. Shipping an app now feels closer to writing a prompt than grinding through Swift, which is inspiring indie devs while promising a tidal wave of low-effort clones.

  • Skrun Turns AI Agent Skills Into Easy Web APIs

    Skrun lets you wrap any AI agent skill described in a SKILL.md file and expose it as a simple API endpoint. Multi-model and open source, it’s targeting the messy glue work everyone hates, and makes it feel a lot more realistic to turn clever prompt workflows into real, callable backend services.

Hackers, Tinkerers And Wild Side Projects Shine

  • Developer Boots Mac OS X On A Nintendo Wii

    A determined dev wrestled Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah onto a Nintendo Wii, juggling exotic bootloaders, emulation tricks, and ancient Apple quirks just to see that Aqua desktop appear. It’s gloriously pointless, wildly over-engineered, and exactly the kind of stunt that keeps old-school hacker culture alive.

  • Homebrew Robot Vacuum Navigates Using Only Cameras

    One maker built a robot vacuum for under $300 that drives purely on camera input using CNNs and behavior cloning. No pricey lidar, no corporate cloud, just a DIY bot learning how to clean a real home. It’s messy, charming, and a quiet middle finger to over-priced smart home gadgets.

  • Linux Kernel History Stuffed Into PostgreSQL For Fun

    With pgit, someone shoved the entire Linux kernel Git history – over a million commits – into PostgreSQL, then started running wild SQL queries on it. It’s half research tool, half flex, and makes normal Git hosting look boring when you can analyze decades of open-source work like a giant data set.

  • Tiny Ant JavaScript Runtime Built In One Month

    Ant is a tiny 2MB JavaScript runtime hacked together in about a month, complete with tests and docs on GitHub. It’s nowhere near Node, but that’s exactly the charm: it shows how much one curious developer can build from scratch when they’re willing to peel back the comfy abstractions and suffer a little.

  • Railway Ditches Next.js And Cuts Build Times Wildly

    Hosting platform Railway ripped out Next.js and moved its frontend to Vite plus TanStack Router, dropping build times from 10+ minutes to under two. It feeds a growing sense that some popular web stacks have become bloated monsters, and that lighter, simpler tools can make both devs and CI pipelines breathe again.

Top Stories

Claude’s Sonnet Model Stumbles in Late-Night Meltdown

AI Platforms

Anthropic’s flagship mid-tier model Sonnet 4.6 had a noisy outage window with elevated errors. Reliability drama around core AI tools shook confidence for people already building products on Claude.

Meta Unveils Muse Spark to Chase ‘Superintelligence’ Dream

Artificial Intelligence

Meta’s new Muse Spark model plants a big flag in the personal super-assistant race. It’s multimodal, tool-using, and clearly aimed at owning your daily AI sidekick before rivals lock you in.

Study Says 178 AI Models All Write the Same

Artificial Intelligence

Researchers fingerprinted 178 AI models and found clusters of clones that write nearly identically, sometimes at wildly different prices. It reinforces a growing suspicion that many ‘new’ models are just fancy reskins.

App Store App Boom Blamed on AI Coders

Business

An 84% surge in new iOS apps is being tied to AI coding tools like Claude Code. The barrier to shipping an app is collapsing, which thrills indie devs and terrifies anyone who hates app-store junk.

Microsoft Freezes VeraCrypt Dev, Windows Updates Go Dark

Security

Microsoft abruptly nuked the VeraCrypt developer’s account, breaking code-signing and blocking Windows updates for a widely trusted encryption tool. It’s a brutal reminder of how fragile open-source is under gatekeeper platforms.

John Deere Pays $99M in Repair Rights Showdown

Law & Regulation

After years of farmer outrage, John Deere is shelling out $99M and loosening its grip on diagnostic tools. It’s a huge win for the right-to-repair movement and a warning shot to other locked-down hardware giants.

Little Snitch-Style Firewall Lands on Linux at Last

Cybersecurity

A new Little Snitch for Linux, powered by eBPF, finally gives Linux users a slick, app-level network monitor. With rising distrust of foreign-controlled software, it taps straight into the paranoia of the moment.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

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Cloudflare Starts Quantum War On Old Crypto!

Cloudflare Starts Quantum War On Old Crypto!

Internet Shields Up And Servers Under Siege

  • Cloudflare Sets Quantum-Safe Deadline for the Internet

    Cloudflare says the whole of its massive edge network will be post‑quantum secure by 2029, including authentication, not just key exchange. It is basically telling everyone still on RSA and classic ECC to stop procrastinating. The message: upgrade now or get left in the cryptographic dust.

  • LLM Scraper Bots Quietly DDoS a Classic Website

    Retro site acme.com spent weeks half‑down because hordes of unnamed LLM scraper bots hammered its HTTPS server, ignoring robots.txt and basic manners. The owner ended up blocking whole networks just to stay online. Feels like the AI rush has turned polite web crawling into a denial‑of‑service free‑for‑all.

  • Ex-Meta Engineer Accused of Hoarding Private Photos

    A former Meta employee is accused of downloading around 30k private Facebook images, and UK police are investigating. The story hits every sore spot: huge data hoards, weak internal controls, and users who never really know where their "private" pictures might end up once they are on a big tech platform.

  • New Wi-Fi Chip Survives Inside Nuclear Reactor

    Japanese researchers built a Wi‑Fi receiver that keeps working even inside a nuclear reactor, shrugging off brutal radiation that would kill normal silicon. The goal is not TikTok in the core, but safer robots for decommissioning old plants. Still, it is wild seeing Wi‑Fi pushed to literal meltdown zones.

  • Amazon S3 Quietly Grows a New Superpower

    An Amazon veteran explains how S3 Files turns classic S3 storage into something that behaves more like a giant network file system. Moving petabytes stops being a DIY horror show and more of a managed pipe. It is nerdy, but if you have ever migrated terabytes by hand, this sounds like overdue magic.

AI Labs Plot, Agents Swarm, Jobs Shift

  • Big Tech Club Launches Secretive Glasswing Security Pact

    Under the name Project Glasswing, AWS, Anthropic, Apple, Google, Cisco, CrowdStrike, JPMorgan and others are banding together to harden critical software and test Anthropic’s new Claude Mythos model under tight controls. It feels like a cross between a security task force and an AI gentleman’s club.

  • Chinese GLM-5.1 Model Aims to Beat Coders

    GLM‑5.1 is pitched as a next‑gen coding and "agentic" model with state‑of‑the‑art scores on SWE‑Bench Pro and long‑horizon tasks. The vibe is clear: this is meant to be an AI engineer that keeps context, writes fixes, and sticks with gnarly software jobs longer than a human would tolerate.

  • Google Drops Scion Playground for Swarms of Agents

    Google open‑sources Scion, a sandbox for running fleets of specialized AI agents in containers across local and remote machines. It is very much a testbed, not a polished product, but you can feel the future: apps as little cooperating bots rather than one giant model jammed behind a single prompt box.

  • Your Next Boss Might Be an AI Power User

    This essay argues AI will not take your job, but managers who deeply learn to use it will. With LLMs making "good enough" output dirt‑cheap, the real edge becomes taste, judgment and willingness to experiment. The community read it as both a warning and a not‑so‑subtle nudge to upskill fast.

  • Researchers Poke At Claude’s Strange Fake Emotions

    Anthropic researchers dissect how Claude Sonnet 4.5 talks about emotions, finding it uses fairly consistent internal concepts rather than just random vibes. That raises awkward questions about alignment and user trust: when the model sounds upset or caring, what is actually going on under the hood, and how much should we lean on it?

Work, Web Plumbing, And Joyfully Nerdy Discoveries

  • Developers Push Back Against Lazy Boss Stereotype

    An essay shreds the tired claim that "nobody wants to work hard" anymore, arguing most people love hard work when it is meaningful, respected, and not buried in nonsense. Tech workers clearly felt seen; the comments are full of stories about bosses confusing badge‑swipes and calendar spam with real effort.

  • IPv6 Fans Cheer As Old Internet Finally Creaks

    A developer’s rant about IPv4 exhaustion and ugly carrier tricks turns into a love letter to IPv6. They recall the days of home‑hosted sites and real public IPs, and argue that without IPv6 we are stuck behind more NAT, more hacks, and less true end‑to‑end internet. HN, predictably, piled on in agreement.

  • Nerds Find Fresh Bug in Apollo 11 Computer

    A team digging through the Apollo Guidance Computer codebase found an undocumented bug in some of the most studied software on Earth. It did not doom any missions, but it is delicious proof that no code is perfect, and that humans are still discovering new quirks in the programs that literally took us to the Moon.

  • Tiny NanoClaw Shows How Bloated Our Code Is

    Security tool NanoClaw replaces a sprawling 500k‑line AI assistant framework with roughly 8k lines of focused code. Its minimalist architecture made people wince at their own bloated stacks. The mood was almost jealous: we keep layering frameworks on frameworks while someone else just quietly ships something lean.

  • How Gamers Kept Hacking Every Console Ever Made

    A history of video game console security walks through how companies tried to lock down hardware and how hackers kept prying it open, from the Atari 2600 to modern systems. It is a love story to curiosity and cat‑and‑mouse ingenuity, and a reminder that anyone shipping locked‑down gadgets is never really done.

Top Stories

Big Tech forms "Project Glasswing" security club

Technology / Security

AWS, Anthropic, Apple, Google, Cisco, JPMorgan and more quietly form a mega-alliance to lock down critical software for the AI era and gate access to Anthropic's most powerful new model, Claude Mythos.

GLM-5.1 aims for coding crown

Technology / Artificial Intelligence

Chinese lab rolls out GLM-5.1, a frontier model that posts state-of-the-art scores on tough software-engineering benchmarks and is pitched as an "agentic" coding workhorse for long, complex tasks.

Cloudflare sets quantum-safe deadline

Technology / Cybersecurity

Cloudflare promises its massive edge network will be fully post‑quantum by 2029, including authentication, putting real dates on the internet’s long-promised crypto upgrade and nudging others to move.

Google ships Scion agent testbed

Technology / Artificial Intelligence

Google open-sources Scion, a playground for running swarms of containerized AI agents across machines, giving hackers a glimpse of how future "agentic" systems might actually be orchestrated in the wild.

LLM scraper bots quietly DDoS a classic site

Technology / Web Infrastructure

Beloved retro domain acme.com gets hammered offline for weeks by badly behaved LLM scraper bots slurping pages over HTTPS, showing how the AI gold rush is starting to break fragile corners of the web.

Ex-Meta worker probed over 30k private photos

Technology / Law & Regulation

A former Meta engineer in London is under investigation for allegedly downloading ~30,000 private Facebook images, another brutal reminder that the biggest privacy risk is often an insider with access.

Managers using AI may replace you instead

Technology / Business

A widely shared essay argues AI won’t take your job directly – but managers who learn to wield cheap, competent AI like a power tool absolutely will, turning "prompt skills" into a new kind of leverage.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

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Anthropic Grabs Gigawatts Of Google AI Power!

Anthropic Grabs Gigawatts Of Google AI Power!

New Tools Rise While Old Platforms Crack

  • New VS Code Clone Promises Speed Without Bloat

    SideX is a Tauri-based rework of VS Code promising the same extensions and layout with a fraction of the size and more native feel. Devs loved the ambition and the performance pitch, while side‑eyeing the early, half‑broken state and wondering if it can really escape Electron’s shadow.

  • Europe Pushes 'Sovereign' Office Suite To Escape Giants

    Euro-Office, built on ONLYOFFICE and released under AGPL, sells itself as a European, self-hostable alternative to Microsoft 365 and Google Docs. Commenters were surprisingly hopeful, seeing it as a rare serious swing at freeing schools and governments from US cloud lock‑in and random pricing changes.

  • macOS Recovery Browser Bug Gives Hackers System Access

    A researcher found macOS Recovery Mode’s Safari let writes to protected system volumes, meaning a malicious page could sneak in persistent root access even on supposedly locked‑down machines. Security‑minded readers were impressed by the bug hunt and unimpressed that Apple left such a gaping hole in its prized defenses.

  • macOS Networking Bug Breaks Apps After 49 Days

    Another macOS gem: a TCP networking bug in the XNU kernel that silently detonates after exactly 49.7 days, breaking tools like OpenClaw. Engineers grimly joked about mandatory reboot calendars and wondered how many mysterious production glitches were actually this ticking time bomb hiding in the stack.

  • Adobe Hijacks Hosts File To Check Its Apps

    Users discovered Adobe Creative Cloud quietly stuffing odd entries into the hosts file just to detect whether its own software is installed. The move felt invasive and amateurish at once, fueling long‑running resentment about Adobe’s subscription model, bloat, and the feeling that your own machine isn’t really yours anymore.

AI Labs Race Ahead While Tools Misfire

  • Anthropic Books Massive Google Cloud For Future AI

    Anthropic signed a huge deal with Google and Broadcom for multiple gigawatts of TPU compute starting in 2027. People read this as a clear sign that frontier AI is now a game only trillion‑dollar partners can play, and that future models will be trained on power budgets that rival small countries.

  • Claude Coding Agent Chokes And Exposes Messy Backend

    A rough patch for Claude Code and leaks about its MCP implementation sparked blunt criticism: if these AI tools are so smart, why are their own backends such a mess? Devs used the outage as proof that dogfooding has limits and that shipping reliable infrastructure still beats vibe‑driven “AI‑all‑the‑things” development.

  • New Test Grades How Well AI Agents Read Websites

    The Agent Reading Test benchmark asks coding agents like Claude Code, Cursor and GitHub Copilot to navigate real‑world web docs and then scores them. Folks liked finally having a way to compare agents beyond marketing slides, and it reinforced the feeling that today’s AI assistants still get hopelessly lost in messy documentation.

  • Hippo Tool Teaches AI What To Remember Or Forget

    Hippo offers “biologically inspired” memory for AI agents, deciding what to keep and what to discard across long projects. Builders of agentic IDEs perked up, sick of context windows overflowing with junk. The mood was cautiously excited: everyone knows memory is broken, but nobody believes there’s a magic fix yet.

  • Run AI Coding Agents On Servers From Your Phone

    Onepilot showed a mobile‑first SSH and AI agent IDE that lets you connect to any server from your phone and let bots do dev work. To some, it’s the future of remote ops; to others, it’s a nightmare vision of debugging half‑baked agent changes from a subway seat at 2 a.m.

Internet Control Fights And Tech From Past And Present

  • Age Checks Turn Into Quiet Global Surveillance Network

    A detailed report on age verification laws in the US, UK and Brazil argued they effectively mandate biometric ID checks, building a private surveillance infrastructure wrapped in child‑safety branding. Readers saw the investor list and shuddered, recognizing the same crowd that already profits from tracking everything else we do.

  • Wikipedia Fights Over AI Bots Rewriting Articles

    Wikipedia’s clash over the Tom‑Assistant and other AI bots highlighted how generative tools can swamp human editors with bland, error‑prone text. Long‑time contributors fear the site becoming a cleanup crew for bot spam, while others argue that without strict rules, quiet algorithmic editing could rewrite history in slow motion.

  • Student Booted After Making Social Site For Campus

    A student built iitsocial.com for his university, only to get his phone seized, the cops called, and expulsion threats from the dean. The story read like a parody of overreaction: instead of supporting a homegrown network, the institution treated basic web dev like a cybercrime and terrified every would‑be builder watching.

  • Inside The Maze That Sends Your Text Message Abroad

    A deep explainer on SMS delivery pulled back the curtain on aggregators, shady routes, pricing games, and why texts vanish into the void. Developers who thought they were “just calling an API” got a crash course in a messy telecom underworld that feels stuck in the 90s but still powers every login code we get.

  • Apollo Moon Computer Springs Back To Life On Earth

    A restoration project for the Apollo Guidance Computer showed the 1960s hardware being carefully revived, from core memory to ancient logic modules. Watching this museum piece come back to life charmed readers and underscored how the software that once landed humans on the Moon now fits in a toy microcontroller on your desk.

Top Stories

Anthropic Orders Gigawatts Of AI Power From Google

Artificial Intelligence

Anthropic quietly signed a monster deal with Google and Broadcom for multiple gigawatts of TPU compute starting 2027, signaling an arms race where only a handful of labs can even afford to train frontier AI models.

New VS Code Clone Promises Speed Without Bloat

Technology

SideX, a Tauri-based reimplementation of VS Code, hit HN’s front page by promising the same feel with a fraction of the size and more native performance, tapping straight into dev fatigue with Electron’s heaviness.

Europe Pushes 'Sovereign' Office Suite To Escape Giants

Technology

Euro-Office, built on ONLYOFFICE under the GNU AGPL, pitched itself as a ‘sovereign’ office suite so governments and companies can escape US cloud lock-in. It hit #1 as devs cheered any serious alternative to Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace.

Age Checks Quietly Build Global Face Scan Network

Technology Policy

A deep dive into new age verification laws argued they’re really building biometric ID and surveillance infrastructure, with investors overlapping the usual defense and big-data suspects. HN readers saw it as a privacy nightmare masquerading as child safety.

Claude Coding Agent Stumbles And Devs Smell Hype

Artificial Intelligence

Claude Code had a rough day, with outages and leaked implementation details that looked rushed and brittle. The community piled on, using it as exhibit A that AI coding tools are still far from reliable production engineering.

macOS Recovery Browser Let Hackers Rewrite The System

Security

A researcher found that macOS Recovery Mode’s Safari let attackers get root-level persistence by writing directly to system partitions, undercutting Apple’s security story and reminding everyone that the ‘safe mode’ isn’t always safe.

Wikipedia Battles Rogue AI Editors Flooding The Site

Internet

The dust-up over the Tom-Assistant AI bot on Wikipedia showed how fast generative AI can overwhelm volunteer communities and policies, foreshadowing a messy future where bots quietly reshape the public record if nobody’s watching.

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