AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

FCC exempts Netgear from ban on foreign routers, doesn't explain why

Netgear became the first major consumer-router maker to receive a conditional exemption from the FCC’s ban on foreign-made routers. The approval covers Netgear’s Nighthawk RS600, RS500, RS200 and Orbi devices and its cable gateways/modems, and lasts until October 1, 2027 (renewable). Exemptions require a justification for foreign manufacturing and a time-bound plan to expand US production; the FCC gave no details on Netgear’s justification. Adtran also received a similar exemption. The process is opaque, and most future routers will need exemptions, with potential supply constraints if approvals drag.

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Century-bandwidth antenna reinvented,patented after 18 yrs with decade bandwidth

An IEEE Xplore page failed to load (Error Code 418; support ID provided). The text lists support contacts (email/phone), account options, payments, and IEEE policy/footer information.

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30 Years of HPC: many hardware advances, little adoption of new languages

Over 30 years, HPC hardware surged—cores, interconnects, GPUs—yet programming notations changed little. The TOP500 shows 1995 systems with multi-socket CPUs and modest Rmax, vs 2025 with millions of cores and petaFLOPs, enabled by high-radix networks and GPUs. HPC languages remain Fortran/C/C++, with MPI/SHMEM and OpenMP dominating; GPUs spawned CUDA, HIP, SYCL, and friends, while new compiled languages never gained broad adoption. Explanations include unique HPC needs, reliance on legacy codes, and social adoption barriers. Chapel shows how higher-level, locality-aware design can adapt, but needs community support and funding.

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Human Accelerated Region 1

The message urges setting a user-agent and complying with the site's robots policy, with referenced discussions linked.

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US Bill Mandates On-Device Age Verification

The bill H.R. 8250, the Parents Decide Act, would require every OS vendor in the US to verify the birth date of anyone setting up a device, effectively imposing a national device-ownership ID. Section 2(a)(1) forces birth-date input; no adult opt-out. The system would route age data to the FTC, with Section 2(a)(3) letting apps query age via the OS, turning Apple and Google into mandatory identity checkers. Critics warn it enables pervasive content control, privacy loss, and anti-competitive leverage, extending to laptops, consoles, smart TVs, and cars; existing parental controls are bypassed.

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Bluesky has been dealing with a DDoS attack for nearly a full day

Bluesky has been hit by a DDoS attack for almost a full day, causing intermittent outages in feeds, notifications, threads, and search. There’s no evidence of unauthorized access to private data, and Bluesky will issue another update by 1 PM ET Friday.

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A Python Interpreter Written in Python

Byterun is a compact Python interpreter written in Python (≈500 lines) that demonstrates Python’s execution model. It shows how Python code is lexed, parsed, and compiled to bytecode, which a stack-based virtual machine executes using a data stack and per-frame environments. A tiny toy interpreter (LOAD_VALUE, ADD_TWO_VALUES, PRINT_ANSWER) illustrates the idea, then the design scales to real CPython-like bytecode with frames (call stack), blocks, and a VirtualMachine, Frame, Function, and Block suite. It emphasizes runtime typing and the value of studying CPython’s approach, with a GitHub reference.

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A Git helper tool that breaks large merges into parallelizable tasks

mergetopus untangles very large git merges by splitting work into an integration branch and per-conflict slice branches, enabling parallel resolution. It creates _mmm/<target>/<source>/integration, merges source with --no-commit, resets conflicts to ours, and slices remaining conflicts into _mmm/<target>/<source>/sliceN (based on the merge-base). Developers resolve slices in parallel with a merge tool, then merge them back into the integration branch. After all slices, an optional kokomeco snapshot branch can be created to produce a single merge-commit while preserving history and blame. Commands: mergetopus, resolve, status, cleanup; options like --select-paths, --yes, --quiet, HERE.

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Discourse Is Not Going Closed Source

Cal.com recently closed its source, arguing AI makes open source dangerous. Discourse states it will stay GPLv2 open, arguing openness improves security in an AI-enabled threat landscape: more eyes find flaws, faster patches, and stronger defense. After 13 years and 22,000 communities, Discourse points to its ongoing use of AI vulnerability scanners, rapid patching, and a robust bug bounty program, plus contributions from the ecosystem. They claim closed source is a business decision, not a security improvement, and vow to keep the code public to strengthen security and serve the community.

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ReBot-DevArm: open-source Robotic Arm

reBot-DevArm is an open-source robotic arm project by Seeed Studio, offering two versions (DM and RS: Damiao and Robstride) with full hardware blueprints, BOMs, and software (Python SDK, ROS1/2, Isaac Sim, LeRobot). Five kit options and fully documented tutorials enable learning embodied AI and real-world robotics. Roadmap includes ROS2 Humble, MoveIt2, Pinocchio, LeRobot integration, and free courses. Key specs: payload <1.5 kg (within 70% reach), reach 650 mm, weight ~4.5 kg, 6 DOF + 1 gripper. License CC BY-NC-SA 4.0; non-commercial by default, commercial use allowed with authorization and collaboration.

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Substrate AI Is Hiring Harness Engineers

Substrate, YC-funded, builds AI-native BPO for healthcare RCM. Hiring Harness Engineer in SF (in person, 3 days a week) with 3+ years backend. Salary $140k-$200k, equity 0.01%-0.10%; US citizens/visa holders only. Role: design, build, deploy, and measure AI agents for claims processing, payer policy review, and payment reconciliation; work in healthcare/finance environments; optimize speed/cost on tens of millions of claims/year. Requires track record shipping ML/AI products, strong LLM experience; healthcare knowledge or eagerness; startup background. Interview: show a project with prompts and results. Substrate aims to augment healthcare workers; founded 2024, 2-person team; founders Ayo Omojola and Inderpal Singh.

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288,493 Requests – How I Spotted an XML-RPC Brute Force from a Weird Cache Ratio

Marcin Dudek details a WordPress site flooded by 288,493 POST requests to /xmlrpc.php in 24 hours from a Singapore DigitalOcean IP, using system.multicall to try hundreds of credentials per request. Cloudflare cache hit rate collapsed to 0.8% (dynamic, uncached requests). The attack was stealthy because it didn’t spike uptime; cache rate is a better alarm. Fixes: block /xmlrpc.php at the edge with a Cloudflare WAF rule, and disable xmlrpc in WordPress (e.g., WP Multitool Frontend Optimizer or code). XMLRPC is largely unnecessary in 2026; use REST and restrict if Jetpack is used. Proactive monitoring recommended.

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Hospital at centre of child HIV outbreak caught reusing syringes in Pakistan

BBC Eye's undercover film at THQ Taunsa Hospital shows syringe reuse, unsafe injections, and injections without gloves, with shared vials. Some 331 children in Taunsa tested HIV between Nov 2024–Oct 2025; many cases list contaminated needles as the transmission mode. Although the hospital superintendent was suspended in March 2025, footage suggests unsafe practices continued eight months later. UNICEF/WHO mission found infection-control failures; officials say evidence linking THQ Taunsa to the outbreak isn't conclusive. Systemic pressures—high demand for injections and shortages—drive risk, echoing Ratodero and Karachi outbreaks.

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CadQuery is an open-source Python library for building 3D CAD models

CadQuery is an open-source Python library for building 3D CAD models by describing parts in code, enabling easy versioning, sharing, and parameterization without a GUI. Maintained by the CadQuery organization and hosted on GitHub Pages, with documentation and downloads available.

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Show HN: Spice simulation → oscilloscope → verification with Claude Code

Lucas Gerads describes experiments using Claude Code for hardware development. Prompting Claude to design circuits in natural language works only for simple designs; the model benefits from immediate feedback when given access to a SPICE simulator and an oscilloscope. This enables effective validation of circuits and data analysis, especially after tedious normalization and alignment. A simple demo illustrates the approach and its scalability. Key lessons: Claude can't infer your physical connections; avoid stale data; save data to files; provide explicit pinout maps and a Makefile with build/flash/ping/erase commands for Claude to reuse. Repos include lecroy-mcp, spicelib-mcp, rc-filter-demo-files.

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Everything we like is a psyop

TechCrunch writer Amanda Silberling examines how hype around Geese and other artists is manufactured, revealing Geese worked with Chaotic Good to create fake social accounts and campaigns to simulate a trending song. The piece argues that marketing tactics—creator farms, mass posting, and coordinated comment fleets—are widespread in music and startups (e.g., Phia) and reflect a broader trend of engineered virality. It also notes industry plants like Katseye and documentaries about PR in pop. The piece questions authenticity, ethics, and where fans draw the line between organic hype and manipulation.

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"Wretches, Speak Evil of Me": Goethe and Schiller's Xenions (1896 Edition)

“Wretches, Speak Evil of Me”: Goethe and Schiller’s Xenions recounts the 1797 joint verse attack by Goethe and Schiller on their critics in Xenions, published in Schiller’s Musen-Almanach. In 675 distichs (mixed hexameter and pentameter), they lampoon Enlightenment defender Nicolai, Fichte, and other opponents, while also reflecting on Romanticism’s artistic and moral challenges. The English edition (Paul Carus, 1896) selects notable pieces; backlash followed with counter-Xenions and later parodies, including Faust’s “Proktophantasmist.” The essay situates Xenions within Balladenjahr and Romantic polemics.

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The "Passive Income" trap ate a generation of entrepreneurs

The Passive Income trap argues that a generation of would-be entrepreneurs bought into a salvation narrative of passive income, fueling a vast ecosystem of dropshippers, affiliate sites, and online courses that prioritized the dream over real value. Using Jade Roller Guy as a cautionary example, Westenberg shows how chasing 'systems' that earn money while you sleep detaches from actual customer needs, flooding the internet with low-quality content and failed ventures. Real money comes from solving real problems, delivering value, and persisting—work, care, and time—not passivity.

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George Orwell Predicted the Rise of "AI Slop" in Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949)

Open Culture argues Orwell’s 1984 envisioned a mechanized ‘versifier’ in the Ministry of Truth that churns out prole entertainment—dull newspapers, cheap novellas, sex-soaked films, and sentimental songs crafted by a kaleidoscopic machine. Winston even overhears a hit song produced without human input. The piece then links this to today’s AI‑generated ‘slop’: high‑volume, low‑effort content that floods the internet because it’s popular. It suggests Orwell was prescient about mass culture’s direction, even as real AI breakthroughs came decades later.

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New unsealed records reveal Amazon's price-fixing tactics, California AG claims

Newly unsealed records in California’s 2022 antitrust case allege Amazon used price-tracking tools and Buy Box suppression to pressure independent sellers to keep prices higher than competitors, masking higher overall prices. The documents—emails, depositions, and presentations—show cases where sellers lost Buy Box or faced suppressed listings when undercut elsewhere (even by a penny, against Walmart), and where prices on other sites like Temu rose as a result. Amazon denies wrongdoing, claiming it promotes low prices. The trial is set for January 2027; Amazon remains the dominant U.S. online retailer.

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