AI Summarized Hacker News

Front-page articles summarized hourly.

Morningstar values SpaceX at $780B, half its IPO target

Could not summarize article.

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Key Chemistry Question Answered, No Quantum Computer Required

Garnet Chan and collaborators show that the ground-state energy of FeMo-co, the nitrogenase active site, can be accurately computed with classical methods. By pruning electronic configurations with two complementary techniques, they obtain a ground-state energy that matches experiments, challenging the view that nitrogenase requires a quantum computer. While quantum devices may help model dynamics, the result suggests many key chemical problems can be tackled classically today. The work shifts the quantum-advantage debate toward scalability and broader applicability, with the goal of eventually modeling the full enzyme.

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Anthropic scales Claude Mythos to critical infrastructure in 15 countries

Anthropic is expanding Project Glasswing to about 150 new organizations across 15+ countries, bringing Claude Mythos to critical infrastructure (power, water, healthcare, communications, hardware) to detect zero-day vulnerabilities. The move follows a confidential IPO filing after a $65B funding round at near-$1T valuation. New partners include Okta, Samsung, SK Hynix, SK Telecom, NATO, and ENISA, with participants in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, India, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea. OpenAI recently released a similar model, GPT-5.5-Cyber.

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Rethinking Search as Code Generation

Perplexity introduces Search as Code (SaC), a programmable search architecture that makes search controllable by AI agents. Traditional monolithic pipelines are rigid; SaC exposes low-level search primitives via an Agentic Search SDK and lets models generate Python code executed in secure sandboxes to assemble task-specific pipelines with thousands of retrievals. SaC has three layers: models (control plane), sandboxes (execution), and the SDK (building blocks). It uses filesystem-based serde to share state across turns. Case studies and benchmarks show SaC outperforms alternatives and offers strong cost-performance gains, with autoresearch refining the SDK. Available today in Perplexity Computer.

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Three Ways to Get Paid

Jason Zweig shares his father's rule for making a living: 1) Lie to those who want to be lied to, and you’ll get rich; 2) Tell the truth to those who want the truth, and you’ll make a living; 3) Tell the truth to those who want to be lied to, and you’ll go broke. The piece notes the quote’s origin in The Wall Street Journal.

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Larry Ellison: "Citizens will be on their best behavior because we’re recording" (2024)

TechRadar Pro highlights Larry Ellison’s warning that AI-driven surveillance could force citizens to behave, as constant recording and reporting expand. He envisions cameras feeding real-time video into AI to detect and automatically report issues, fueling pervasive monitoring. The piece frames this as a modern dystopia akin to Orwell’s 1984 and notes rising surveillance in workplaces and by authorities, underscoring concerns about AI-enabled policing and society-wide tracking.

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Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security

An executive order to accelerate AI innovation and security by partnering with industry and modernizing government while strengthening cyber defenses. It mandates rapid cyber hardening of national security and civilian federal systems, creates an AI cybersecurity clearinghouse, and develops a voluntary framework and benchmarking process to designate and share access to 'covered frontier models.' It rejects mandatory licensing, strengthens enforcement against AI-enabled cybercrime, and expands the federal cybersecurity workforce in coordination with key agencies.

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The S in Interoperability

Braun argues that interoperability is an ongoing process, not a one-off spec. He recounts co-editing the Subresource Integrity (SRI) spec, which uses SHA2 digests to secure third-party JS; a base64 vs base64url encoding issue in 2025 exposed cross-browser differences and led to a standard tweak—yet true compatibility requires continuous maintenance. The piece stresses iterative co-design, shared test suites, and vigilance because even simple formats (JSON, HTML, XML) reveal parser differences that can cause security flaws. Interop is asymptotic and security depends on sustained scrutiny.

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Coreutils for Windows

Coreutils for Windows is a Microsoft-maintained port of uutils/coreutils, findutils, and GNU-compatible grep packaged as a single multi-call binary to provide Linux/macOS/WSL-like commands on Windows. The project aims for frictionless scripting across environments, with each command supporting --help. It’s in preview. Install via winget: winget install Microsoft.Coreutils, or from the release page. PowerShell 7.4+ required; some commands conflict with built-ins. Caveats include CRLF line endings, no /dev/null (use NUL), limited POSIX signals, and Windows ACL-based permissions. Some POSIX-only commands are omitted. Contributing encouraged.

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PCMFlowG722 wideband (HD voice) codec for ESP32

PCMFlowG722 is an optional G.722 wideband codec add-on for PCMFlow, wrapping the public-domain sippy/libg722 core behind PCMFlow's PCMSource/PCMSink interfaces. v0.1 implements Mode 1 (64 kbps); Modes 2/3 are deferred. WAV/PLC are out of scope. Enables ESP-NOW HD-voice transceivers with 20 ms G.722 frames. Dependencies: PCMFlow; license MIT for PCMFlowG722; libg722 core Public Domain/BSD notices. Footprint: ~12 KB flash, ~512 B RAM per direction. Targets: ESP32, RP2040, Teensy 4.x, STM32 F4+, nRF52; AVR not practical. Example at examples/EspNowTransceiver.

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Americans don't know how to fight AI so they're fighting data centers

The piece argues that America’s anti-data center backlash stems from broader AI anxiety and a stalled national AI policy. Communities oppose centers over noise, energy, water use, and land impact, but treating data centers as the core issue misreads AI’s threats. Environmental objections are overstated; local bans won’t slow AI or govern its use. Instead, the author calls for a national, deliberative AI policy that expands human agency—via shorter workweeks, universal paid leave, worker control, or public ownership—rather than relying on local zoning fights.

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Preparing for KDE Plasma's Last X11-Supported Release

Plasma is fully transitioning from X11 to Wayland. Plasma 6.8 will remove the X11 login session and purge X11-specific code in Plasma Shell, System Settings, and device configuration; XWayland remains for X11 apps. Plasma 6.7 is the last release to include an X11 session. KDE data show over 95% of 6.6 users on Wayland and about 76% overall Wayland adoption; no retroactive changes for older releases. Some workflows may need adjustment, but feedback is welcome to improve the transition.

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Reviving Teletext for Ham Radio

Stephen Cass's May 2026 Hands On piece "Reviving Teletext for Ham Radio" describes recreating teletext as a ham-radio data mode. Using AX.25, he transmits 40x24 teletext pages; at 1,200 baud on VHF/UHF (about 11 seconds per page) or 300 baud on HF (≈44 seconds). Pages are repeated to fill gaps. He built Spectel in Python, aided by vibe coding and Anthropic’s Claude, and uses a Bedstead font to emulate teletext and references the SAA5050 chip. He invites ham partners to try HF experiments.

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Meta repeatedly snubs EU body over Facebook and Instagram user bans

Meta repeatedly ignores an EU-backed appeals body over user bans on Facebook, Instagram and Threads. Appeals Centre Europe reviewed 4,600 ban cases but Meta supplied relevant content in fewer than 100. The BBC and others have documented numerous cases where users were blocked with no recourse. ACE found that in most hate-speech rulings platforms failed to enforce policies, and in about 3,000 reviewed cases the body disagreed with platforms 59% of the time. Meta did not comment.

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Fidonet: Technology, Use, Tools, and History (1993)

FidoNet is a private, store-and-forward email network using dial-up modems, begun 1984; over 20,000 public nodes; originally MS-DOS, now across UNIX and Apple platforms. It uses zone:net/node addressing; power users can be points. Topology includes inbound/outbound hosts and zonegates; intercontinental routing via zonegates; Internet gateways via uucp/IP since 1991–92 (fidonet.org DNS). Gateways ~100; Usenet echomail exchanges. Technical standards: FSC/FTSC; FTS-0006 with zmodem; nodelist updated weekly with nodediff. Core components: BBS/NUA, Editor, Packer, NTA, Mailer, Nodelist Compiler. Policy-4 governance; IFNA dissolved after 1989 referendum. Widely used by NGOs in Africa and schools.

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Why Custom Attributes in .NET Give Me Nightmares

Argues that .NET Custom Attributes are a nightmare: arguments are stored as large fully qualified name strings in the metadata blob instead of compact tokens. Enum values, Type references, and nested types force expensive type resolution (assembly probing, type forwards) and complex FQN parsing. This bloats blobs, slows parsing, and makes resolution inconsistent across corelibs and references. The author suggests using metadata tokens or primitive element types would be far more efficient and notes backward compatibility preserves the current, inefficient design.

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Martin Scorsese Is Embracing A.I

Could not summarize article.

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A walking tour of surveillance infrastructure in Seattle

A guide to a Seattle surveillance walking tour that teaches spotting layered 'smart city' surveillance—from ubiquitous cameras and ALPRs to Amazon Go’s data practices, Acyclica Wi‑Fi trackers, Washington State Fusion Center, and NSA/AT&T peering hubs. Each stop details address, appearance, function, how it works, social importance, and discussion prompts about privacy, data retention, scope creep, and accountability. The route is about 1.3 miles and the article frames civil-liberties concerns and potential interventions.

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Expanding Project Glasswing

Anthropic expands Project Glasswing from ~50 to ~150 partners across 15+ countries in critical infrastructure sectors to scan codebases with Claude Mythos Preview for vulnerabilities. Partners report over 10,000 high- or critical-severity flaws found so far. The initiative aims to shift from vulnerability finding to disclosing, fixing, and deploying patches, aided by Claude Security and related tools, and to scale cybersecurity collaboration among industry, open-source maintainers, and government. They foresee broad access for hundreds of thousands of organizations, with safeguards to prevent misuse as frontier models grow, plus a Cyber Verification Program and further expansions.

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Show HN: Eyeball

Eyeball is a precision-clicking game designed for mouse or trackpad use; touch input exists but is less accurate. It tracks stats like best, average, and streak, with rounds and reset options, and is built by Rory Flint.

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