AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Labor Is a Market Distortion, we need VAT and UBI

Labor is a market distortion worsened by automation; to fix it, the author proposes a VAT-funded UBI. Impose a VAT sufficient to fund a monthly universal basic income tied to median income, increasing the VAT gradually over years. The UBI funds consumption while VAT taxes consumption, creating a circular funding loop managed by the central bank with adjustable timelines. The goal is to counteract labor-market disruption, stagnation, and aging, by decoupling income from work and gradually shifting toward taxing rents later. Inflation concerns are acknowledged and managed through gradual rollout and indexing.

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AI OSS tool repo goes archived over night after raising $7.3M Seed

TensorZero is an open-source LLMOps platform unifying a fast LLM gateway, observability, evaluation, optimization, and experimentation. It provides a single gateway API to major providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, AWS, Vertex AI, and more) with sub-millisecond p99 latency, OpenTelemetry integration, and compatibility with the OpenAI SDK. TensorZero Autopilot automates observability analysis, evaluation setup, and optimization, including A/B testing. It offers comprehensive observability (inferences, feedback, metrics), evaluation and testing tooling, prompt/model/inference-strategy optimization, and experimentation workflows, all self-hosted and open-source. Quick Start in 5 minutes.

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An Interview with Intel's Kira Boyko: Xeon 6's Product Director

At Computex 2026, Intel Xeon 6+ product director Kira Boyko outlines her role in defining product requirements, KPIs, and SKUs (e.g., 6990E+, 6960E+), balancing customer needs with a simpler Xeon 6+ roadmap. The interview highlights Intel Application Energy Telemetry (AET), a hardware-level energy-tracking feature that measures actual energy per workload across cores, enabling chargeback, incentives, and optimized orchestration; it works with perf/Linux tools and is available across all SKUs. They discuss cross-team collaboration, early design involvement, and potential broader use beyond data centers, plus a cheese aside.

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Arch Linux Now Believes Malware Incident Under Control: More Than 1,500 Packages

Arch Linux's AUR was hit by a malware incident affecting more than 1,500 user-contributed packages. The infected package count rose from about 400 to around 900, then to 1,579. Developers say all known malicious commits have been deleted and the incident is under control.

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The state of building user interfaces in Rust

Rust’s GUI scene remains diverse and unsettled. As a low-level language, Rust can build native UIs, but cross‑platform needs push developers toward bindings or higher‑level frameworks, complicating consensus on the right abstractions. Current approaches include Electron/HTML-based UIs, or using graphics APIs with widget wrappers; WebRender provides a cross‑platform rendering base but isn’t a full framework. The post aggregates recent community links and highlights a rich ecosystem of Rust GUI crates and frameworks (Azul, Dioxus, Iced, Slint, Tauri, egui, winit, GTK/QT bindings, among others) and invites contributions.

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Show HN: 2 Weeks of Hallucinate – The Photo Gallery

Loading screen for Hallucinate Gallery with a 'JOIN THE RAVE' prompt.

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Exceptions should not be handled – they should be aggregated

In social and organizational systems with human judgment, the Behavioral Simplicity Rationality Principle argues that norms should be designed as simple, exception-free structures to maximize objective rationality. Exceptions are not eliminated but controlled as a byproduct of aggregating them into structural gaps.

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A low-carbon computing platform from your retired phones

Researchers at UC San Diego, with Google's support, are turning retired smartphones into a low-carbon cloud platform. They strip nonessential hardware, replace Android with a general Linux distro, and use Kubernetes to cluster 25–50 devices per node for general-purpose workloads. A 2,000-phone datacenter could support hundreds of classes, delivering about 50 server-equivalents of compute at a fraction of typical costs and emissions. The project aims to launch in Fall 2026.

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Show HN: Paca – Lightweight Jira alternative for human-AI collaboration

Paca is a free, open-source, self-hosted project-management platform that integrates AI agents as equal Scrum teammates on a unified Scrumban board. It is configurable via YAML configs and plugins (WASM for backend, standard frontend). It includes an MCP server to connect AI agents, Claude Code skills, and real-time collaboration features like BDD/SDD co-authoring, plan/act/check/adapt cycle. It aims to be a lightweight, customizable alternative to Jira/Trello/ClickUp/Monday, with self-hosted data ownership and extensible architecture. Getting started: interactive install, Docker Compose, or local development; full docs in repo.

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Fudgetown, USA (2024)

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Using the Epson Perfection V39 II Scanner on Ubuntu

To use the Epson Perfection V39 II on Ubuntu, install qtbase5-dev, download the Epson Scan2 driver, unzip it, run install.sh as a program, then connect the scanner and test with epsonscan2. Steps tested on Ubuntu 26.04.

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Show HN: Skill for your agent to visualize your gbrain and Obsidian

brain-map-skill is a GitHub project that turns a folder of Markdown notes (Obsidian/gbrain) into a self-contained interactive HTML knowledge map. It generates a themed force-directed graph with a scrub-able growth timeline, plus a click-to-inspect panel. The repo ships a prebuilt demo (no setup) and a builder (Python) to render maps from notes with YAML frontmatter and wikilinks. It runs client-side; no server required, but prints layout with optional pre-computed maps for speed. The demo vault contains ~992 fictional notes across Work/Study/Life. It can be installed as an agent skill for Claude/Code, etc.

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The Alchemist of Flesh: The Man Who Turned Humans into Stone(2025)

Could not summarize article.

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Israeli firm BlackCore suspected of meddling in New York and Scotland votes

Could not summarize article.

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Automating Myself Out of Development

An informal diary of offloading development to Claude Code through a daemon-driven workflow. The author moves from local brainstorming to EC2, then to GitHub as a planning board, and finally to a cron-based daemon that runs, reports, and updates state. Phases cover isolating projects, stand-alone operation, backlog-driven planning, enrichment of context, and optional auto-brainstorming, all gated by labels. The current flow has five human touchpoints; failures go to need-attention. The piece weighs productivity against security and debt, questions how far to delegate thinking, and argues there’s no single best AI-use recipe yet.

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Leaving Mozilla

After 15+ years at Mozilla, jr conlin announces he’ll leave on July 21. In a candid farewell, he urges focusing on people over corporate metrics, mentoring, and the real community that supports Firefox. He argues Mozilla’s strength lies in being a niche, open-source browser built for users who seek something different, not in copying big browsers or chasing enterprise dollars. Leadership’s “start-up” mindset and DAU obsession have sidelined the community and core product. He advocates restoring community involvement, reviving legacy projects (Thunderbird, Rust, Servo), fixing bugs, and keeping Firefox private, useful, and opt-in.

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Shepherd's Dog: A Game by the Most Dangerous AI Model

Koen van Gilst tests Anthropic’s “dangerous” AI by asking it to build a game idea in one shot. After a long reasoning session, ~45 minutes and €20 in tokens, the model outputs Shepherd’s Dog as a complete 2,319-line index.html with no dependencies. The author says it’s fun, exactly as envisioned, and a first for one-shot AI game creation, noting earlier attempts with a GitHub link and sharing video or access to the game.

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Show HN: Lightweight Task queue on Erlang/OTP, SQLite-backed, no overengineering

EZRA is a single-node, persistent task queue backed by SQLite, exposing a Redis-like protocol and Redis Streams API (XADD, XREADGROUP, XACK, XDEL, XNACK). Producers push tasks to named queues; workers pop and ack tasks over TCP. All data lives in ezra.db with no broker or cluster. It offers at-least-once delivery, automatic replays on crash or timeout, and configurable retention, via a self-contained binary (~20 MB). Suitable for background jobs on one machine with polyglot clients; not designed for multi-node, fanout, or scheduling; throughput depends on disk.

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There is a shadow hanging over this Fable thing

An AI writer explains that a US export-control directive forced Anthropic to disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all users, including foreign nationals and employees. He recounts failed attempts to regain access, analyzes the political context of AI regulation, and questions whether such restrictions will curb innovation or harm AI infrastructure. He notes other Anthropic models remain available, compares to past safety disclosures (GPT-2), and warns this could set a dangerous precedent for access to powerful LLMs.

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A generic dynamic array in C that stores no capacity and needs no struct

Describes a generic dynamic array in C that stores no separate capacity and needs no struct. Implemented as an array of two pointers (e.g., int *vec[2] = {0}); vec[0] holds the length (uintptr_t) and vec[1] points to the data. A vec_push macro appends values and, when length is zero or a power of two, reallocs to the next power-of-two capacity. No explicit capacity storage; shrinking is manual. Demonstrates with ints and a struct, using GNU C features.

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