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Open source isn’t cost-free: maintenance labor, burnout, and harassment from big actors threaten sustainability as AI-generated contributions flood projects. Permissive licenses enabled corporate extraction, while restrictive/dual licenses often stymie adoption. Trust is eroded by rapid, viral growth and new attack vectors, with rising supply-chain risk. A radical shift is proposed: move from code-centric OSS to open specifications, with AI-generated local re-implementations, though this risks security and credit. To survive, teams should treat OSS as owned work: fund maintainers, enforce supply-chain audits, use internal registries, and ensure active corporate patronage.
S&P Global downgraded Oracle to BBB- (one notch above junk) with a stable outlook, citing massive AI-infrastructure investments driving up debt and capital needs. Oracle forecasts a roughly $42B free-cash-flow deficit in 2027 and total spending of $90–$95B, up from $60B. The company is shifting from software to a hyperscaler cloud, aiming for about 60% AI-driven revenue by 2028, but remains more customer-dependent and faces higher GPU/network costs. OpenAI is a central credit risk, with about half of contracted volume tied to it. Oracle has cut over 21,000 jobs to fund AI, while BIS warns of AI-debt risks.
Kontigo, a YC-aligned USDC-based neobank for Latinos founded in 2023 and based in San Francisco, is hiring a Head of Security / Principal Security Engineer / CISO. Full-time, remote option, visa sponsorship. Salary $120k–$220k plus 0.5%–1.0% equity. Founders: Jesus Alberto Castillo Ferrer (CEO) and Gino Guatavita. Requires 3+ years of security leadership; role emphasizes founder-mode security leadership to build a secure, globally accessible platform.
Armin Ronacher reimagines Babel via AI-assisted programming. He says progress depends on a shared language—the common understanding of concepts, boundaries, and ownership—not merely bricks. AI agents cut friction, letting changes be made in isolation, so large projects advance even when humans no longer agree on the architecture. Unlike the biblical tower, where the work halts, AI-enabled teams can continue building as shared understanding erodes. The tower keeps rising, with the risk that collaboration becomes mechanized and human coordination fades.
An end-to-end latency study using a USB light-sensor device attached to a monitor to measure click-to-brightness-change latency in Diabotical on Linux with Proton. Tests compare X11 vs native Wayland, VRR on/off, and dxvk-low-latency vs standard dxvk. Key findings: X11 is slightly faster than Wayland, but the gap is tiny (about 0.14–0.22 ms); XWayland adds ~3.1 ms. VRR reduces latency and jitter (≈0.26–0.45 ms and smoother distributions). dxvk-low-latency helps across the board (0.10–0.29 ms in capped tests; up to 0.84 ms uncapped; +2.1 ms gain on XWayland). Conclusion: avoid XWayland and enable VRR and dxvk-low-latency for lowest latency.
Robert Ross argues that autonomous agents are built from three integrated loops: the Inference Loop, Tool Loop, and Human Loop. The Inference Loop is the outer loop that calls the LLM’s chat completion API, passes along tools, and maintains chat history. The Tool Loop handles model-inferred tool calls, executes them (e.g., sending an email), and feeds results back to the conversation, guarding against hallucinated calls. The Human Loop provides an approval gate to authorize tool usage, enabling safe, durable execution. Together they power agentic systems for RAG and progressive discovery.
Agnost AI continuously analyzes real production conversations to uncover where users get stuck, frustrated, or fail to convert, turning the patterns into reviewed fixes (PRs) for your agent. It reads real chat and voice data, surfaces missed failures from evals, supports any LLM/framework, and integrates via OpenTelemetry with a 2-min setup. It offers intents, signals, automatic improvements, and failure detection. Pricing: Starter (free, up to 1,000 messages/mo), Pro ($499/mo, up to 100k msgs, 90-day retention), Enterprise (custom).
Terence Eden argues that USB-C should be the one true standard. During a seven‑week Europe trip he traveled with a single USB‑C PD charger that could power his phone, laptop, and other gadgets, plus a few USB‑C peripherals. His kit included Pixel 8 Pro, a Chuwi MiniBook, an eInk reader, a smartwatch, a cheap toothbrush, a PebbleBee tracker, a USB‑C power bank, headphones, and a bug‑bite zapper that uses the phone’s port. He avoided adapters, noted pass‑through sockets, and the ubiquity of cables; he skipped Switch and HDMI adapters to keep light. Overall, benefits outweigh glitches.
The piece examines a growing tendency to offload thinking to AI, from everyday choices to deep reasoning. It uses Ken Liu’s The Perfect Match and a ‘Microphone Man’ who lets AI do his thinking to illustrate the shift from autonomous thought to algorithmic guidance. AI can speed research, translation, tutoring, and data analysis, but final decisions may rest with machines, diminishing autonomy. The author weighs benefits—time saved and productivity—with risks: lazy thinking, sameness in student work, and reduced learning. He argues we must actively shape our desires and maintain human thinking alongside automation.
Researchers Jon Zehr and Kyoko Hagino uncovered that Braarudosphaera bigelowii, a marine alga, harbors a nitrogen-fixing bacterium that has become an integrated part of the alga—an endosymbiotic relationship so tight the bacterium functions like an organelle, dubbed Nitroplast. The bacteria had lost most of its genes, yet the alga provides proteins, a pattern seen at mitochondria/chloroplasts. This discovery breaks the long-held rule that complex life can’t fix nitrogen, with potential implications for agriculture and the nitrogen cycle. The teams collaborated across oceans, overcoming obstacles including lockdowns.
FSF sysadmins describe using the reaction tool (from Framasoft) to block botnet-driven scraping, especially Vo1d/Popa. They moved from fail2ban + ipset to a full reaction setup after firewall-rule limits; built custom scripts to manage patterns; created IP sets in the millions; improved with export/import to disk for fast restarts; published their configurations on the reaction wiki to help others. The approach complements other DDoS defenses; they solicit support via associate membership.
An informal guide to nudge Claude LLM’s vocabulary via a MessageDisplay hook. It shares a Python script that replaces phrases in Claude’s delta: 'load-bearing' → 'cooked', 'honest take' → 'spicy doodad', 'seam' → 'whatchamacallit', 'you're absolutely right' → 'I'm a complete clown'. Save as ~/.claude/hooks/wordswap.sh, make executable, and enable it in ~/.claude/settings.json under the hooks section. Hooks run at startup, so new sessions use the changes. Presented as a playful, customizable workaround.
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Juggler is an AI coding agent with a GUI-focused, tree-based session model instead of a linear chat. It lets you inspect, branch, backtrack, and edit tool calls and LLM prompts via a Finder-style interface. It supports multiple providers (Claude Code, OpenAI, Gemini, Ollama, etc.), runs as a desktop app with a headless server, and supports multi-client collaboration across local and LAN connections. Built in Go with a Wails UI, sessions use Yjs; extensions define contexts, strategies, and commands. Licensed AGPLv3 for the app and Apache-2.0 for extensions.
Thompson interviews Agnes Callard about the uni-context: a paradigm in which norms, once context-specific, converge into a universal set across all situations. Building on context collapse, it explains why online life emphasizes what’s universally bad, why identity supersedes character, and why attention is managed top-down. Technologies (radio, TV, smartphones) both reflect and amplify this impulse to be everywhere and know everything. The uni-context also accelerates comparison, drives market-like homogenization, and reframes ethics around inclusion and virtue. Its rise traces to early 20th-century modernists; it’s not inherently good or bad, but a condition of world openness that’s hard to judge.
Demis Hassabis frames the moment as pivotal: Artificial General Intelligence could be within a few short years, ushering in a new era. He outlines a framework for frontier AI to responsibly guide this transition and address the profound implications for humanity.
OpenAI will require Trusted Access for Cyber (TAC) members to use Advanced Account Security with hardware-backed passkeys to access frontier models, starting September 1. This phishing-resistant, passwordless setup replaces weaker MFA and raises the bar for access. Yubico promotes hardware-backed keys as essential, offering TAC members a 2-pack of YubiKeys (YubiKey C NFC and C Nano) at preferred pricing to enable easy deployment. The change also tightens access for high‑risk entities and jurisdictions. Enroll at chatgpt.com/advanced-account-security.
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