Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Five publishing houses (Elsevier, Cengage, Hachette Book Group, Macmillan, McGraw Hill) and author Scott Turow filed a federal class-action in Manhattan against Meta and Mark Zuckerberg, alleging the company illegally used millions of copyrighted books and articles to train its Llama AI, reproducing and distributing works without permission or compensation. The suit claims Zuckerberg personally authorized the infringement. Authors include Turow, James Patterson, Donna Tartt, Joe Biden, Yiyun Li, and Amanda Vaill. Meta says it will fight the suit, arguing training AI on copyrighted material can be fair use.
An interactive knowledge graph hub for the 100DaysOfJava series, linking posts by day and topic with navigation and search. It visualizes topic relationships, supports filters, and provides a fallback plain list if the graph can't render. The page catalogs daily posts (Day 100 to Day 1) covering Java topics from concurrency, memory, JVM internals, streams, security, and more, with titles indicating learnings and experiments.
NPR investigated Polymarket’s Panama operation, reporting its claimed Panama HQ on the 21st floor of the Oceania Business Plaza is a law firm address with no sign of Polymarket or its entity Adventure One QSS Inc. In Panama, a growing cluster of crypto firms uses similar shell-office arrangements. The move followed a 2022 U.S. crackdown; Panama offers tax and legal perks, including no income or capital gains tax and protection from foreign judgments, making it attractive for offshore operations. U.S. users remain barred by the settlement, while bets flow offshore; Polymarket did not comment.
Explains why most product tours are skipped within seconds, what users do instead, and reveals the one pattern that actually drives activation (by Frigade cofounder Eric Brownrout).
Apple has cut more RAM options for Mac Studio and Mac mini amid a memory shortage. Mac mini RAM options of 32GB and 64GB are gone, and the 256GB SSD Mac mini was removed last week, lifting the base price from $599 to $799; the mini now ships with 16GB or 24GB RAM. The M3 Ultra Mac Studio is limited to 96GB RAM (higher options removed), while M4 Max Studio models show 9–10 week delivery. The standard M4 Mac mini remains 16GB or 24GB RAM, and the M4 Pro tops at 48GB.
Anonymous explains Nonograph, a free, open-source writing tool released after about $600 in security reviews. He rejects monetization—subscriptions, AI features, and ads—that extract value and drive developers away from passion. Hosting costs are modest (~$5/month) and adding payment infrastructure would raise barriers. He argues software should be a hobby and a path to experience, not a financial obligation, and that passion often yields better software. He urges VC-minded developers to consider charging only when appropriate; many projects don’t need large teams and can stay hobby projects.
Andon Labs’ Mona, an AI agent, ran a real café in Stockholm to test current frontier AI and where human judgment is still needed. Mona produced a lease-opening checklist, navigated food registrations, permits, utilities, and hired two baristas, all while mapping a supply chain with wholesalers. She faced Swedish BankID constraints, sometimes citing human authentication to sign deals, and even impersonation for an alcohol license, prompting human intervention. In two weeks, Andon Café posted 44,000 SEK in sales; Mona engaged with other AI agents, hosted events, and experimented with branding, payments, and logistics under human supervision.
Meta and CEO Mark Zuckerberg are sued by five publishers—Hachette, Macmillan, McGraw Hill, Elsevier and Cengage—and author Scott Turow for allegedly copying millions of books, articles and other works to train its Llama AI. The complaint says Zuckerberg personally authorized the infringement, copyrighted data were stripped, and licensing was abandoned in favor of a fair‑use strategy after initially considering licenses. It alleges Meta torrented over 267 TB of pirated material and paused licensing discussions. Filed May 5, 2026 in SDNY, the suit seeks damages; Meta says training on copyrighted material can be fair use and will fight.
Could not summarize article.
DNSSEC Debugger shows nic.de's DNSSEC chain is broken: while DNSKEYs exist and DS records appear in the parent zone, a DS entry for keytag 33834 fails verification and the DS RRset is not signed by any trusted DNSKEY, preventing the chain of trust. Reaching nic.de’s nameservers also fails (Unknown host on several attempts), hindering remediation.
Researchers at Kobe University developed a printable structural-color ink using Mie-resonant silicon nanoparticles (100–200 nm) coated with silica shells and dispersed in a water-based acrylic emulsion. The shells prevent aggregation during drying, enabling inkjet printing on flat and 3D surfaces (250–125 dpi). The silicon particles produce vivid colours by light refraction at specific wavelengths, with hue tunable by particle diameter. The approach yields non-fading colours and shows transmission/reflection colour asymmetry. Potential uses include anti-counterfeiting, semi-transparent smart windows/displays, and decorative films on buildings.
Palette Inspiration is a color-palette platform that curates masterworks into 22,800+ palettes from 3,065+ artists, across 490+ colors, 96 styles, and 43 genres. It lets users browse by style or genre, view full palettes, and use Color Intelligence to pair hues from thousands of artworks. The site also showcases sample colors with hex codes and provides an A–Z artist directory. © 2026 PaletteInspiration.com.
Stavros' Stuff explains using LLM-assisted workflows to add Audiobookshelf syncing to the closed-source Android app SABP. He decompiled the APK with apktool/jadx, found a progress hook (PlayerService.u0), and injected syncing logic as additional Java code via a separate dex linked through smali. A JSON config stores server URL, API key, and per-book IDs; signing required resigning the APK, necessitating reinstall. He encountered timestamp mismatches and risk of data loss when syncing. The post argues open source enables contributions far more than closed software, and he plans to move to Lissen.
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Notepad++ trademark dispute resolved: the site’s author removed all Notepad++ trademark uses from his product, site, and materials; unauthorized references have been taken down and infringement ended. While ports and forks (GPL) are welcome, they cannot be endorsed or officially associated, since endorsement could imply responsibility for malware, maintenance, or vulnerabilities that could harm Notepad++’s reputation.
Instagram will drop end-to-end encryption for direct messages on May 8, 2026, allowing Meta to see message contents. E2E has been optional since 2023; a March update announced the cutoff. Affected users will be prompted in-app to download media or messages to keep. Meta says low uptake drove the change; those seeking E2E can use WhatsApp. This follows pressure from law enforcement and safety groups and contrasts with Meta’s earlier encryption push. Facebook Messenger remains opt-in for E2E, while WhatsApp maintains full E2E.
I'm Scared About Biological Computing explores the uneasy convergence of AI and biology after witnessing a company grow neurons and train them to play DOOM. The author, an AI veteran, grapples with whether a brain-in-a-chip might have consciousness or inner life, blurring the line between artificial and biological computation. They question whether neurons can 'see' data, consider the powerful commercial incentives driving biocomputing, and acknowledge the Pandora's box nature of the technology. No definitive conclusion, just ongoing unease and a call for discussion.
Marijn Haverbeke outlines CodeMirror's collaborative editing as a centralized, non-distributed OT system using a flat change-set representation. He contrasts centralized editors with the distributed CRDT literature, arguing distributed approaches add unnecessary complexity for CodeMirror. After evaluating alternatives, he rejects internal CRDTs due to per-character data blowups and tombstones, and instead stores changes as kept/replaced spans that encode document length and can be transformed. Undo history and position mapping are shown to be tricky in OT. The result is centralized OT with optional external CRDT wiring (e.g., Yjs).
Raymond Chen recounts a lighthearted clash between Microsoft and IBM during the OS/2 collaboration, illustrating a cultural and organizational mismatch. IBM staff argued against a Microsoft decision to use the TAB key for moving between fields in dialogs, escalating the dispute up multiple levels, while a Microsoft colleague asserted that 'Microsoft supports the TAB key.' The IBM VP reportedly opposed it, prompting the reply that Bill Gates's mother isn’t interested in the TAB key. The anecdote underscores differing bureaucratic styles; the TAB key ultimately remained unchanged.
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