AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

US appeals court declares 158-year-old home distilling ban unconstitutional

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans ruled that the nearly 158-year-old federal ban on home distilling is unconstitutional, saying it is an improper use of Congress's power to tax. The decision, siding with the Hobby Distillers Association and four members, noted the ban actually reduces tax revenue by preventing distilling and could criminalize ordinary in-home activities. It upholds a 2024 district court ruling. DOJ declined to comment. The ruling signals limits on federal authority over private hobby activities and allows home distilling for personal use.

HN Comments

They See Your Photos

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

AI could be the end of the digital wave, not the next big thing

AI could be the end of the digital wave, not the next surge. Using Carlota Perez’s surges and Nicolas Colin’s late-cycle theory, the piece argues we’re in late deployment of computing and networks. Indicators: 2022 startup funding collapse; AI deployed by Microsoft, Google, Meta, Amazon; platform saturation nearly complete. Remaining gains are in a few sectors (healthcare, education, government). AI is the era’s efficiency breakthrough, not a new paradigm. Deployment deepens, with social pushback and bundling affecting profitability. China pursues lean, exportable industrial AI; the U.S. pursues broader tech ambitions.

HN Comments

Galactic Algorithm

Urges setting a user-agent and respecting the robots policy, with references to https://w.wiki/4wJS and https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T400119.

HN Comments

Point Cloud Allemansrätten

Sweden’s allemansrätten-inspired lidar project lets people explore open Swedish lidar data virtually. The author expanded from a single 20-million-point tile to a 3x3 grid (~194 million points) by storing data hierarchically using Cloud Optimised Point Cloud (COPC), enabling efficient zoomed views without loading all data. New features include additional data layers (land-cover classifications, tree-detection, SVT camera locations from The Great Moose Migration), and URL-based sharing of locations. The approach improves data accessibility but still faces optimization challenges; future work includes country-wide tiling.

HN Comments

Michigan 'digital age' bills pulled after privacy concerns raised

Michigan pulled two “digital age” bills (HB 4429, SB 284)—the Digital Age Assurance Act—after privacy advocates warned they would create an always-on identity layer by estimating user ages and transmitting a continuous digital age signal to apps. Critics cited weak privacy protections and liability gaps. Sponsors paused the measures and seek replacement legislation, with groups urging a comprehensive consumer data privacy framework granting rights to know, delete, opt out, and prohibiting data sale or misuse.

HN Comments

I went to America's worst national parks so you don't have to

The author visits America's worst national parks so readers don't have to.

HN Comments

Android now stops you sharing your location in photos

Terence Eden argues that Android now strips geolocation EXIF data from photos uploaded via the web, breaking geotagging sites like OpenBenches. He explains that HTML input type=file, Progressive Web Apps, Bluetooth/QuickShare, and email sharing no longer preserve photo geotags, forcing users to transfer photos via desktop USB if they want to keep location data. He criticizes Google’s changes as anticompetitive and privacy concerns, and asks for a way web browsers could access full EXIF geolocation or for a solution, inviting discussion and feedback.

HN Comments

Show HN: I built a social media management tool in 3 weeks with Claude and Codex

BrightBean Studio is an open-source, self-hosted social media management platform for creators, agencies, and SMBs. It provides multi-workspace teams, a rich content composer, scheduling calendar, approval workflows, unified inbox, media library, client portal, and per‑workspace RBAC, across 10+ platforms (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, YouTube, Pinterest, Threads, Bluesky, Google Business Profile, Mastodon). No paid tiers; deploy via one-click buttons (Heroku/Render/Railway) or Docker/local. Built with Django/PostgreSQL; AGPL-3.0 license.

HN Comments

Zed, A sans for the needs of 21st century (2024)

Typotheque's Zed is a highly accessible sans-serif type system designed for 21st‑century information access. It ships in two optical versions: Zed Text, with open counters, higher x-height, greater white space and looser spacing for small text; and Zed Display, with fully formed counters, lower contrast and tighter spacing for large sizes. Guided by reading science and tested with visually impaired readers, Zed outperforms Helvetica in reading speed in hospital contexts and includes wide family variants like Zed Text Extra-Wide. The system supports 547 languages, Unicode 16.0 extensions (Wakashan/Salishan chars), Braille, and icons, emphasising endangered languages and cultural diversity.

HN Comments

Caffeine, cocaine, and painkillers detected in sharks from The Bahamas

ScienceDirect shows an error delivering the requested content and asks the user to contact support with a reference number and IP address. It mentions a Cloudflare error 1000s box, lists site navigation links (about, remote access, contact, terms, privacy, cookie settings), and ends with a footer stating copyright © 2026 Elsevier B.V. with all rights reserved and licensing notes for open access content.

HN Comments

I ran Gemma 4 as a local model in Codex CLI

Could not summarize article.

HN Comments

X Randomly Banning Users for "Inauthentic Behavior"

Access blocked by network policy. To restore access, log in or create an account, or sign in with developer credentials if using scripts. Ensure your User-Agent is non-empty, unique, and descriptive; if using an alternate UA, revert to default to avoid blocks. Read Reddit's Terms of Service. To appeal, file a ticket with your Reddit account and the reference code: 019d85bf-855e-77d2-88fe-1f4f74509271.

HN Comments

The Economics of Software Teams: Why Most Engineering Orgs Are Flying Blind

Eight engineers cost about €87k per month (€1.04m/year). To be financially viable, their output must generate 3–5x that value monthly (€260k–€433k), via time saved, fewer outages, or revenue impact. Most teams lack metrics tying work to financial returns and rely on activity or sentiment measures that can rise while financial performance falls. Decades of cheap capital and later SaaS growth hid this misalignment; AI/LLMs now compress development time, challenging the moat of large, complex codebases. The winners will explicitly measure costs and connect them to business value.

HN Comments

Kindle users in uproar re: latest update, old devices now unusable: 'Fuck You '

Amazon will stop supporting Kindle devices released before 2012 starting May 20, 2026, meaning users of those devices can no longer buy, borrow, or download new content from the Kindle Store. Existing books remain accessible on those devices if already downloaded, and accounts with the Kindle Library stay usable via the free Kindle app or Kindle for Web. Affected models include Kindle 1st–5th Gen (2007–2012), Kindle DX/Graphite, Kindle Keyboard, Kindle Fire 1st–2nd Gen and Fire HD 7/8.9 (2012). Amazon says this helps transition to newer devices; fans online express outrage.

HN Comments

State of Homelab 2026

State of Homelab 2026 documents a self-hosting journey from beginner to amateur. Hardware shifted from OrangePI 5 to a 32GB RAM NUC and a Hetzner VM; Debian with no hypervisor. Exposed via Cloudflare Tunnels, Traefik, and Authentik; everything is managed with Ansible (IaC) and SOPS for secrets. Running: the *arr media stack (Prowlarr, Radarr, Lidarr, Bazarr, Tidarr), Transmission, Jellyfin; Immich, Syncthing, MinIO; Navidrome/Miniflux; LibreChat; custom tools. Monitoring with Beszel and Statsping. Missing: backups, RAID, and cloud independence; full IaC/CI. Cost ~7€/mo; ~100–150 hours. The aim: own your data and enjoy tinkering, not bunker-grade independence.

HN Comments

Apple's accidental moat: How the "AI Loser" may end up winning

AI intelligence is becoming a commodity, shrinking the moat around raw model power. Apple’s bet: build a platform for running models, not a flagship frontier model. With 2.5 billion devices, on-device privacy, and unified memory on Apple Silicon, Apple can run local LLM inference efficiently (e.g., 400B-param models streamed from SSD) and keep context on-device. Gemini is licensed for cloud reasoning, but Apple stores the context and mediates access via MLX and ecosystems. This could make Apple the de facto AI runtime platform, regardless of model leaderboards.

HN Comments

Haunt, the 70s text adventure game, is now playable on a website

Product spec for the Chez Moose Terminal Mk IV: Chez Moose Terminal Model IV with color options Phosphor Green P1, Amber P3, White, and speed modes Slow, Normal, Fast, Instant, Flicker.

HN Comments

A Perfectable Programming Language

The article argues Lean is a perfectable programming language—not perfect, but improvable via dependent types and a theorem-proving infrastructure that lets you reason about code inside Lean. It highlights seamless metaprogramming and custom syntax (e.g., a tic-tac-toe board DSL) that yields provable properties and allows the compiler to substitute equal code. The author claims this programming-plus-proving blend gives Lean a high ceiling and growing traction, unlike Coq/Idris/Agda, emphasizing speed and proof-based refactoring. The post itself is Lean code.

HN Comments

Uncharted island soon to appear on nautical charts

An AWI Polarstern expedition in the northwestern Weddell Sea discovered an uncharted island not yet on nautical charts. The ~130 m long, ~50 m wide landform rises ~16 m above water and was spotted while navigating near a marked danger zone on the chart. It was surveyed with the ship’s multibeam echo sounder and a drone to produce a coastline model. The team will propose a name and ensure the feature is added to international nautical charts and datasets (e.g., IBCSO). The 93-strong crew continues work until 9 April 2026, returning mid-May.

HN Comments

Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML